The Painful Side of Pillow Talk

By: Freya Linden (View Profile)

I might be an awful cynic, but I’ve found that the small space between two people as they lay next to one another can become an emotional minefield. I’ll take a small chapter out of my past as an example. I was in love. Not the warm and fuzzy kind, but the sort where there are either fireworks in the sky or bombs dropping on the ground. It was a violent sort of feeling, and the mellow person that I had known myself to be was somewhat lost in the wake of that romance. He had been married before, and his divorce and separation were only a year old. His hurt and anger always simmered just below the surface and he often refused to speak his ex-wife’s name, referring to her simply as “what’s her face.” Great, right? He hated her, wanted nothing to do with her, so I should have been an obvious shoe-in. But I really didn’t see it that way. The more we dated, the more insecure I became—not of his affection for her, but of his feelings. It didn’t matter that they were all negative.

So, I commenced hostilities. He had just returned from his first parent/teacher conference as a fully divorced man. I could see his tension and his grief; but instead of feeling sympathetic, I felt threatened. We lay next to each other, faces close, tenderness palpable, and I shot my first little missile under the cover of caring inquisitiveness. I asked about his night, hiding my fear and that strange twisted urge to know something that would ultimately hurt me. His previous life, or more importantly, his previous wife, was like a sore in my mouth that I couldn’t stop picking.

It didn’t take much to turn a little shot here and there into a full-on invasion. He needed to talk; I needed to know. I remember one exact phrase, “Her hands were so cold and white…like marble. She’s just so cold.” Do you know what my little mind took from all that? I didn’t congratulate myself on being a wildcat in bed, or an affectionate friend and partner. My first thought was “He’s never noticed my hands.” Writing those words now, I see how much I ached to be the center of his universe, but his grief alone would have kept that from being a possibility for a very long time. The details of “me” were lost on him. I told myself that what I really wanted was just to know, so that I might extricate myself from a situation that would never work. After that, my subtlety was lost, and the little attacks made under the guise of curiosity were thrown to the wind. Pillow talk became a pillow fight, a strange defense mechanism to protect myself from an eventuality that terrified me—a life with a man who couldn’t love me the way I wanted to be loved.

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posted: 09.02.2008
beachgirl
thank you for an amazing insight.
posted: 06.08.2007
Amayzingme Hello
You are one awesome person! Your insight is so captivating to me i long to have a person such as you in my life to express my deepest emotions, i feel so conected to you in many ways. You make me think and feel and know what true love is. Thank you for your writings I am inspired by you!!
posted: 04.06.2007
Wolfram Arnold
Well said. We owe it to ourselves and the people and lovers in our lives to know what we want and when enough is enough.
It feels good to write.

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