I think every writer alive has experienced this: having
what seems like a great concept, but it just doesn’t come together. Sometimes
things just need time to develop more before they click. I first had the idea
for this post a year ago today.
Pictured: Proof |
I’m glad I didn’t write this a year ago. Somewhere deep
down I knew that something was wrong, but now I have the perspective to know
exactly what that something wrong was.
As Facebook’s On This Day app helpfully reminded me, this
time a year ago I was on the first out-of-town trip with the guy I was seeing
at the time, Asshole. It’s not like I didn’t know it was coming. I can read a
calendar. I expected that seeing those memories would be depressing, or make me
angry at him all over again. Nope. It’s like he wasn’t even there. They’re not
“us” memories. They’re my memories.
Quick recap: I had to go to western NC for work that
weekend. Asshole and I weren’t exclusive yet, but we had been seeing each other
for about four-ish months. I say “seeing each other” because we were still
using Asshole’s deliberately ambiguous language. He didn’t consider it “dating”
until you’d had The Talk and agreed to an exclusive relationship. Of course,
this allowed him to go from “Let’s hold hands and have dinner at my Mom’s
house” to “We’re just friends, why are you so clingy?” whenever he felt like
it, but whatev.
Anyway, we had a great time that weekend. Everything was just,
easy. (Me getting locked out of our hotel room while he was in the bathroom
texting another “friend” was something I glossed over.)
Two things about me to note: I am a huge film nerd, and
also a giant dork. You may or may not know that the train wreck scene from the movie “The Fugitive” was filmed in Dillsboro, NC. And for some reason, they
just left the wreck there, between the river and the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad
tracks. Has finding the Fugitive Train Wreck been on my must-do list for, oh,
20 years? Um, was Harrison Ford my first celebrity crush?
(Yes. And duh,
Indiana Jones.)
So there was no way I was going to be in a hotel 10
minutes from Dillsboro and NOT track this thing down. Asshole was actually
pretty into it; a nice surprise given how he ripped anything I cared about and
he didn’t. The problem was that the precise location of the FTW is not
*anywhere* that Google could find. Oh yeah, it’s in Dillsboro, it’s visible
from the Railroad, yada yada. No, like, actual address or nearby landmark.
Spoiler: I found it. |
But since Dillsboro is about the size of my college’s
campus, and the FTW is, after all, an actual train wreck, I figured it couldn’t
be that hard to find. LOL. I would say we spent about two hours altogether,
interspersed with more normal tourist stuff. We made one pass up and down all
three roads in town (a couple of times each), then drove over to Cherokee, up
to a waterfall on the way to Maggie Valley. Then we headed back to Dillsboro
for dinner… and what’s the harm in looking again on the way? (By the way, the
people at the front desk of the Best Western in Dillsboro – which, I should
mention, is right next to the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad – have never heard
of the FTW – which, I believe I mentioned, is on the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad.)
At the restaurant where we had dinner, our server, the
cashier and a couple of guys someone pulled out of the kitchen didn’t know
either. Though they at least were aware of FTW’s existence. One of them thought
it might be near the town landfill. I’d seen this on one of our several passes
down Haywood Road just west of town.
Excited about our new lead, Asshole and I hopped in the
car and drove only three or four more times up and down Haywood Road in the
area of the landfill. The road is on a bluff, with the river and railroad down
a steep drop, not visible from the road. Just as we were starting to *maybe*
think about giving up, a car coming from the other direction pulled over. I figured
there was only one reason to stop a car on a busy road across from a landfill,
so I pulled over, too.
Sure enough, it was a local person with a couple of
out-of-town guests who wanted to see the FTW. (See? It’s not just me! Though
they probably didn’t spend two hours looking for it… But that’s only because
they already knew where it was. I’m not defensive.) So, for the record, pull
off Haywood Road near the Jackson County Green Energy Park and try not to get
hit by a car. It’s also across the river from a private lane called Fugitive
Run, which in retrospect probably should’ve been a tip-off.
Train is at bright red arrow, roughly. Please note for the record the approx. distance between the wreck site and the Best Western. I mean, you could probably get a whole football field in there. |
On the way back home Sunday, Asshole and I got to talking
about why our four-month casual whatever wasn’t a “relationship,” and did he
see that happening… Which turned into a massive fight that lasted from Statesville
until I kicked him out of my car in front of his house in Winston-Salem. I don’t
think I even came to a complete stop.
And that’s where I thought I was going to leave it. A guy
that I liked, and who would enthusiastically spend two hours looking for a 20+-year-old
film set, but who was probably incompatible with me in more important
ways. But I didn’t know what I was dealing with. I’d never dated a narcissist
before. I thought the nice guy routine he broke out the next day meant he
genuinely valued me and our relationship. I got sucked right back in.
So many times over the next few months, I thought back to
that train wreck. (Geez, how is that for ironic symbolism…) I understand now
that so much of why Asshole had a hold on me was down to times like the Great
Fugitive Train Wreck Hunt. I’m a giant dork. My family and close friends love
me, and handle my dorkiness to a point. But I can’t think of a single person in
my life who would’ve spent two hours looking for the FTW. At some point, anyone
else would’ve said, “I love you, but we are officially in let’s-not-and-say-we-did
territory.” Asshole didn’t. I couldn’t shake this niggling thought in the back
of my mind: I will never find someone else who will run with me on stuff like
this, who will not make me feel like there’s something wrong with me because I
refuse to leave Dillsboro without a picture of a decomposing film location. I will
never have another relationship where I can be my dorky self.
I don’t know if Asshole really did appreciate my dorky
self, or if he just appreciated my attention. I don’t really care. He’s out.
Those pictures are my memories. But this interests me… When relationships end,
we tend to focus on the loss of things we liked and wanted. We forget that we’ve
also lost a bunch of stuff we didn’t
like or want. At some point post-Asshole, I figured that out. There were so
many more important “I will nevers.”
It’s probably true that I will never find someone who
will be dorky enough to be right there with me driving around for two hours to
find a couple of rusted-out train cars that Tommy Lee Jones once stood near.
But there’s also this:
-
I will never be in a relationship with someone
who thinks it’s reasonable to yell at me because I startled him… while I was asleep.
-
I will never date someone who can’t be bothered
to show up on time to my birthday brunch with my friends, or who forgets to
plan anything for my birthday or get me a present.
-
I will never find someone who cuts off all
physical affection with no explanation while at the same time sexting every “adult
model” on Twitter. And sending them birthday presents.
-
I will never date someone who never once in
seven months tells me I’m pretty.
-
I will never be with someone who lies to me
about who he’s texting and the nature of his “friendships” with other women, or
who plans secret trips with these “friends.”
-
I will never have something special with someone
who promises to go to church with my family, then – oops! – makes plans to go
to Carowinds instead.
-
I will never meet someone whose idea of
couple-time is watching a DVR full of week-old hockey games and sitcom reruns.
-
I will never date someone who shows no interest
in my accomplishments, my friends or my family.
-
I will never be in a relationship with someone
who won’t take the ONE CLASS he needs to finish his bachelor’s degree.
-
I will never be with someone who doesn’t seem to
care one way or the other if I’m in his life.
-
Best off all, I will never be in relationship
with someone who dismisses my concerns by telling me I’m insecure, cynical and
have “trust issues” (no shit, Asshole).
Actually, I feel pretty good about what I lost. And I don’t
really need anyone to tell me it’s okay to be a giant dork. I like being a
giant dork. When you’re awesome and you know it, what else do you need?
Okay, fine. You need Indiana Jones.
2 comments:
I hope you feel comforted by the fact that you are not the only nerd/dork out there. In November, while visiting my son in the Hudson Valley area, I found out that the house the Band recorded 'Music From Big Pink' was in the area. After an exhaustive Google Earth search, I found it -- still took almost two hours to get to "Big Pink" Of course the relationship thing was different. My daughter had to put up with it -- I was driving.
Also, many moons ago, while visiting LA, I found a book that listed many important film sites in the SoCal area. Besides the Hollywood Cemetery (saw the gravesites of Alfalfa, Bugsy Siegal, Peter Lorre and Fay Wray) I saw the old RKO Pictures building with the globe on top, the stairway that Laurel and Hardy carried the piano up and the parking lot that is where L Frank Baum's house used to be. Yes, I was psyched about finding a parking lot.
Solidarity!!
Mike
Haha, that's awesome! I'm glad I'm not the only movie-location-dork out there. I love watching movies that were filmed in North Carolina because it's fun (if a bit surreal) to spot the familiar landmarks. For instance, also in The Fugitive, there's a shot during the scene where the police are chasing Dr. Kimball in the stolen ambulance. In the background of one shot, there's a road sign pointing to Murphy. It's probably not something you would notice if you weren't familiar with the area.
Post a Comment