Valentines from the dearly departed

Within the past year I have lost several old loves, all within a short time; the ubiquitous hearts of Valentine's Day remind me of them. When I learned of each I felt a pang, for they were all good men, or well on their way when we crossed paths in our late teens and twenties.  

One was my first husband, a gentle hippie when we married at age 22 and parted three years later; he had a sudden heart attack, when alone at home. Another was an entrepreneur whose unerring aesthetic sense was a gift that I carry to this day; he died after a stroke. The third, for whom cigarettes were so present that I can't recall ever seeing his face without a rollie clamped in his mouth, died of lung cancer, no surprise.

I thought of them for weeks, remembering moments that I had unknowingly retained. The Smoker and I took a starlit trip on a ferry, watching the northern lights arc over Lake Michigan. On Valentine's Day he traced a heart with our initials inside on a frost-glazed window. The Entrepreneur, who always visited with treats for my Burmese and a few new record albums, gave a valentine to both me and the cat. The Hippie and I spent three Valentine's Days together; on one, he cooked a crock-pot stroganoff that reduced to scorched sludge because he set the temperature to high for eight hours, so dinner was a baguette, potatoes, and a bottle of Mateus.

I wonder if I loved them as persons, or conflated my feelings with the rhapsodies of romance, but this was our youth, so I didn't parse the difference—we had said, "I love you", and meant it. "Was he the love of your life?" my friend Rachel asked, when I spoke of the Entrepreneur. "No", I replied, "nor was I his, but he was like no one else."  

The partings, with the exception of the Hippie, were not dramatic breakups, more like a mutual letting go at the end of a dance. Each eventually created other memories with partners who appreciated the same qualities I had. 

My friends are losing their parents now, along with relatives from that generation. When I write to reminisce about them, most of the time I say that the loss is especially deep because no one loves you like a parent; however, when anyone who loved you dies, it's a sorrow.

The number of persons who loved me is finite, and though some are still here, I'm suddenly down three and that's not good. "Love" includes all variants, from romantic attachments to platonic friends; from humans to animal companions. I miss that cat more than many boyfriends.

Lenny Bruce once said, "There are never too many I love yous"—a departure from his usual acerbic wit, and wise. And, I thought, these losses remind me to offer that "I love you" to those still here.





Comments

I love you. I have for years. You inspired me to start blogging, and you convinced me that my unique voice was enough. There's nobody in the world like you, and we are all lucky, and grateful, for your presence here with us.
Janice
Laura J said…
Such a beautiful post…”

“Though I know I'll never lose affection
For people and things that went before
I know I'll often stop and think about them”
Kamchick said…
You are a person who knows the meaning of life and I do so admire you for that. All these losses which bring sorrow when they happen seem to me to add a depth of experience to our existence because of the memories they hold. I'm interested in the Burmese cat...we had a sable one for seventeen years - Hershey (aka The Bar). He will never be forgotten - a fine gentleman of a cat.
Beth said…
You've touched a lot of truth here. I was so shaken, several years ago, to hear of a former boyfriend's death - someone I had felt very close to, a unique individual, highly talented musician. I wished I had called him more recently...but I hadn't. As you say, the time to tell people you love them is now.
Allison said…
In the past ten years I’ve lost a brother, mother in law and both my parents as well as two long lived beloved pets. The Universe must abhor a vacuum because during those sad years three great loves entered my life, my grandchildren.
At this age it’s rare not to hear of the loss of a former love. Do we not only mourn the loss of that person but perhaps, even for a moment, that chapter of our own story?
Bonne Saint-Valentin, I will be celebrating with my cupids!
Duchesse said…
Janice: Thank you for your warm message; I'm up one.
Duchesse said…
Laura J: Exactly; and this song is the one the Hippie and I played at our wedding ceremony.
Duchesse said…
Kamchick: Mr. C. was a deep-chocolate Burm who would be cuddled by only me; he terrorized dogs and vets. His party trick was to jump to the top of an opened door and wait in the dark till someone entered the room, then launch himself at their head. He taught himself to use the toilet. I think he thought he was a panther. Not a gentleman like yours, more like a vigilante.
Duchesse said…
Beth: It can be a delicate balance to achieve, when to make contact and when to not intrude in someone's life after you've been their partner. In the case of someone I still correspond with, I keep boundaries but am watching how they are doing, as he's on his own. Occasionally I think, "Oh no, 45 years later I am still fussing over this guy."
Duchesse said…
Allison: So many losses! Grandchildren are 'the next story'. I do feel wistful about those long-ago chapters and am relieved, too, that those old paths did not continue into my present.

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