Peoplewatching on MUNI
Today I missed the streetcar and went down to the underground trains to try to catch up. The underground trains don’t go near my office, but they do go up Market and are faster than the “Historic F‑Line” streetcars, so I hoped I’d get up to Embarcadero before the streetcar I’d just missed.
What I observed were, I believe, signs of attraction. I don’t think that these two were a couple, but I could be mistaken about that. They certainly were not strangers to one another.
The man was unremarkably still. He responded in conversation but there was no accompanying movement and no gestures. At one point he moved to accomodate other passengers getting off the train, but other than this betrayed nothing by way of movement or gesture.
This woman, by contrast, was absolutely animated. She leaned in to his personal space several times without touching him, and it looked a couple times as though she would lean her head on his arm, which was outstretched to hold on to a support pole. She didn’t actually touch him at any point, though. She’d lean in and right back, almost as if testing the bounds of his space as she talked.
Her eyes were alight, and it seemed to be her custom to glance down at his shoulder and then follow her own gaze back up to his face. She was savoring every moment of living in his presence, and although I could discern nothing notable about him, clearly there was something she found not just fascinating but distinct about him. She was unselfconscious in her appreciation of him and exuberent in her engagement in the conversation.
Sometimes I see this in a person in a spark or a flash. They will suddenly be their best selves for a fleeting moment. It’s amazing to see someone shine like that. Usually it’s short-lived. They let themselves free momentarily and then almost immediately crawl back into their shells. Not this one. This one sustained it effortlessly from Powell Street to the Embarcadero.
A certain sadness covered me as I watched from the outside in because I recognize that freedom and joy as an alien artifact. I don’t know if I remember feeling that envigorated about someone else and I’m certain I don’t recall seeing that in anyone else’s behavior toward me. On the latter point, I see three possibilities don’t know what of them is least damning.
Is it that no one has ever expressed that sort of reaction to my presence? That’s a rather grim proposition, one that triggers distressing pains in my solar plexus. But the alternatives are similarly unappealing: that I have either blocked the memory of anyone being thus visibly gladdened by my presence, or that at such times I have ignored, rationalized, or otherwise dismissed the possibility with such thouroughness that it went beyond my notice.
This would be completely in line with my particular brand of self-flagellation, and of course just pondering the question or writing about it is continuing the feeding frenzy.
Still it comes back to what Plato said about the roles of the lover and the beloved. Is it true that two lovers are incompatible? That one can ever fill one of those roles? I wonder if it’s possible to switch roles at a point in one’s life, to stop being the lover and become beloved.
So all the whining the poets do about unrequited love is redundant; of course love is never returned. It is at best tolerated or perhaps appreciated. But if reciprocated it is doomed to implosion?
It seems so much easier, if perhaps less noble, to be the beloved. But also how hollow, never to pursue, never to chase. With what would one fill one’s days? And such an exercise in tolerance to grow old with one to whom one feels no obsession.
I’ve long suspected that this falls along gender lines. Being male I am in the role of lover, never loved but hopeful to be tolerated. Ever eager to prove one’s utility and earn one’s place on the planet and ration of oxygen. Thus our successes eventually destroy us. If the world were to become so safe and so comfortable that utility was no longer desirable, we the lovers of the world, would have to resort to making money or killing or driving automobiles at ever greater speeds or some form of competition until the end when we would wither alone with nothing to offer.
..And then there was this woman on MUNI who reminded me that it’s all pigshit, that it’s not everyone. It’s only me and the stupid rules I construct in my head to make sense of a life that, by very nature, I can never comprehend.
One of the great things
One of the great things about my love and I is that we tend to seesaw back and forth between roles. Sometimes she is the lover, and I the beloved, and sometimes vice-versa.
…but most of the time, we are just good friends, and in that relationship, we try to be equals.