You should date an illiterate
girl.
Date a girl who doesn’t read.
Find her in the weary squalor of a Midwestern bar. Find her in the smoke,
drunken sweat, and varicolored light of an upscale nightclub. Wherever you find
her, find her smiling. Make sure that it lingers when the people that are
talking to her look away. Engage her with unsentimental trivialities. Use
pick-up lines and laugh inwardly. Take her outside when the night overstays its
welcome. Ignore the palpable weight of fatigue. Kiss her in the rain under the
weak glow of a streetlamp because you’ve seen it in a film. Remark at its lack
of significance. Take her to your apartment. Dispatch with making love.
Let the anxious contract you’ve
unwittingly written evolve slowly and uncomfortably into a relationship. Find
shared interests and common ground like sushi and folk music. Build an
impenetrable bastion upon that ground. Make it sacred. Retreat into it every
time the air gets stale or the evenings too long. Talk about nothing of
significance. Do little thinking. Let the months pass unnoticed. Ask her to
move in. Let her decorate. Get into fights about inconsequential things like
how the fucking shower curtain needs to be closed so that it doesn’t fucking
collect mold. Let a year pass unnoticed. Begin to notice.
Figure that you should probably
get married because you will have wasted a lot of time otherwise. Take her to
dinner on the forty-fifth floor at a restaurant far beyond your means. Make
sure there is a beautiful view of the city. Sheepishly ask a waiter to bring
her a glass of champagne with a modest ring in it. When she notices, propose to
her with all of the enthusiasm and sincerity you can muster. Do not be overly
concerned if you feel your heart leap through a pane of sheet glass. For that
matter, do not be overly concerned if you cannot feel it at all. If there is
applause, let it stagnate. If she cries, smile as if you’ve never been happier.
If she doesn’t, smile all the same.
Let the years pass unnoticed. Get
a career, not a job. Buy a house. Have two striking children. Try to raise them
well. Fail frequently. Lapse into a bored indifference. Lapse into an
indifferent sadness. Have a mid-life crisis. Grow old. Wonder at your lack of
achievement. Feel sometimes contented, but mostly vacant and ethereal. Feel,
during walks, as if you might never return or as if you might blow away on the
wind. Contract a terminal illness. Die, but only after you observe that the
girl who didn’t read never made your heart oscillate with any significant
passion, that no one will write the story of your lives, and that she will die,
too, with only a mild and tempered regret that nothing ever came of her
capacity to love.
Do those things, god damnit,
because nothing sucks worse than a girl who reads. Do it, I say, because a life
in purgatory is better than a life in hell. Do it, because a girl who reads
possesses a vocabulary that can describe that amorphous discontent of a life
unfulfilled—a vocabulary that parses the innate beauty of the world and makes
it an accessible necessity instead of an alien wonder. A girl who reads lays
claim to a vocabulary that distinguishes between the specious and soulless
rhetoric of someone who cannot love her, and the inarticulate desperation of
someone who loves her too much. A vocabulary, goddamnit, that makes my vacuous
sophistry a cheap trick.
Do it, because a girl who reads
understands syntax. Literature has taught her that moments of tenderness come
in sporadic but knowable intervals. A girl who reads knows that life is not
planar; she knows, and rightly demands, that the ebb comes along with the flow
of disappointment. A girl who has read up on her syntax senses the irregular
pauses—the hesitation of breath—endemic to a lie. A girl who reads perceives
the difference between a parenthetical moment of anger and the entrenched
habits of someone whose bitter cynicism will run on, run on well past any point
of reason, or purpose, run on far after she has packed a suitcase and said a
reluctant goodbye and she has decided that I am an ellipsis and not a period
and run on and run on. Syntax that knows the rhythm and cadence of a life well
lived.
Date a girl who doesn’t read
because the girl who reads knows the importance of plot. She can trace out the
demarcations of a prologue and the sharp ridges of a climax. She feels them in
her skin. The girl who reads will be patient with an intermission and expedite
a denouement. But of all things, the girl who reads knows most the ineluctable
significance of an end. She is comfortable with them. She has bid farewell to a
thousand heroes with only a twinge of sadness.
Don’t date a girl who reads
because girls who read are storytellers. You with the Joyce, you with the
Nabokov, you with the Woolf. You there in the library, on the platform of the
metro, you in the corner of the café, you in the window of your room. You, who
make my life so goddamned difficult. The girl who reads has spun out the
account of her life and it is bursting with meaning. She insists that her
narratives are rich, her supporting cast colorful, and her typeface bold. You,
the girl who reads, make me want to be everything that I am not. But I am weak
and I will fail you, because you have dreamed, properly, of someone who is
better than I am. You will not accept the life of which I spoke at the
beginning of this piece. You will accept nothing less than passion, and
perfection, and a life worthy of being told. So out with you, girl who reads.
Take the next southbound train and take your Hemingway with you. Or, perhaps,
stay and save my life. |
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