In our last year together, T and I faced some home improvement challenges that we did not handle well as a couple. My sense at the time - and even more so now - is that in both circumstances she was weirdly unreasonable. I never said that to her because it would not have helped things in the moment. Though I held my tongue, in both cases, she was mighty angry with me anyway. It proved a can’t-win-for-losing-proposition.
I thought of these challenges on Tuesday afternoon, when I popped into the basement and discovered that my water heater had dumped a whole bunch of water on the floor. A cursory feel below the tank revealed that it had sprung a leak. I have a service contract on home appliances like the water heater and I called the repair service. They came out that night to confirm what was already clear: I need a new hot water heater. I made arrangements for installation the next day. Then I reported on the situation to a couple of friends and prepared to finish out the evening.
I did all this confidently, in full command of the facts, and by myself. I was organized and decisive and grateful that there was no one to doubt me or raise barriers to the obviously simple solution at hand. Because that’s the thing about me: I am capable and independent and I know it. I ask for help when I need it; I do not doubt what I know to be true and I don’t dilly-dally around because that makes an already- challenging circumstance harder. That was what made the last two home improvement repairs with T so difficult: she made everything much harder than it needed to be, doubting my judgement in the absence of any valid reason to do so.
Once the repairman left on Tuesday evening, I made myself a delicious late-night BLT supper (it’s Jersey tomato season, after all) and texted my sister that the hot water heater and I had a good run together. ”14 years,” I texted, “longer than any adult relationship I’ve ever had.” She gave the appropriate "ha, ha" response.
I know there is something sad about that claim - it’s no secret that in my darker moments I wonder if it’s something wrong with me that explains why both of my long term relationships have failed. I sometimes fear that my independence is something that partners find threatening. But there is also this: I am damn good at looking after myself. I always have been and over the years I’ve gotten better at it because I’ve had to do so. While I wouldn't mind someone taking care of me every once in a while, I suspect that is not in the cards for me. So I recognize the blessing my independence has proven to be. I don't apologize for it and I never will.
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