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When He Was Just Not That Into You, Me, Uh, Her

Monday, July 16, 2012
Once upon a time your Auntie Seraphic was in high school and she had a big old crush on an Eastern European. Actually, Auntie spent most of her years in high school with big old crushes on Eastern Europeans. Poor young Future Auntie Seraphic with her Caucasian Fixation. At least when Yugoslavia imploded, she was not taken by surprise.

Catholic students in my city usually went to Catholic schools, and in my part of Toronto at the time the smartest boys went to all-boys schools and the smartest girls went to all-girls schools. Thus the romantic entanglements of book-smart students of Catholic schools were situated outside of school, very often in the subway stations below ground and the bus stations above. Blue and green kilts fluttered like flags in the battlements of the bus stations as we hopefully waited for our grey trousered crush objects to ascend the escalators.

In one particular bus station your auntie used to lurk and hopefully wait for one particular Eastern European. Poor sixteen year old Seraphic. So hopeful, so good at English class, so dumb about boys. I have a lot of compassion for her now, poor young bespectacled shrimp. Being the future Auntie Seraphic, she had no Auntie Seraphic to guide her.

I'm sorry to say that she was very obvious. All her friends and enemies knew about her terrible hopeful crush on that particular Eastern European. They were a trifle bemused, for they didn't think he was that good looking, and they told her to snap out of it. They also deliberately mispronounced his Christian name, which drove Seraphic Aged 16 up the wall. Had I a time machine, I would merely take myself aside, lean down to look into her/my/our beautiful if bespectacled blue eyes, and say "He will marry a fellow X, you western doorknob." As it happens he did, and the likelihood of this happy fate should have been obvious even then.

But Seraphic Aged 16 was clueless, in part because she didn't know how to listen to what boys said and she most definitely did not know how to interpret what boys didn't say. She relied much too much on her imagination for information, and much too little on observation and verifiable facts. Oh, and she honestly thought boys enjoyed gentle raillery better than naive compliments, which was incredibly unfortunate from a teenage point of view.

(From an adult point of view, the only point of being a teenager is to get grades good enough for university or trade school and not get yourself/anyone pregnant. This second point is preferably achieved by Being Good, which in my high school locker room was expressed as "Don't be a putana.")

Just hanging around the bus station waiting for boys did not make you a putana, but it could make you obvious, and it never occurred to me that my crush object might have found me annoying. I would have found such a revelation deeply distressing, and in fact writing about it now, over 20 years later, is so deeply distressing I keep moving into the third person singular for safety.

Seraphic Aged Sixteen deserves some slack, for he did ask her out twice, although he stood her up the first time, and the second time it was just so he wouldn't have to help her with this school assignment he said he'd help her with. But subsequently, he was not home when she phoned (only two or three times, I hope and believe) and there was, of course, the story of the Gypsy Girl.

The Gypsy Girl (cue exotic Balkan music) was supposedly a girl with whom my crush object had a forbidden romance back home that summer. They were crazy about each other, but his parents had discouraged the whole affair, and that was it.

Sadly, Seraphic Aged 16 believed this story and did not for a second make the assumption that Seraphic Aged 39+ would immediately make today, which is that Balkan Crush Object had made the whole thing up as a way to tell Seraphic Aged 16 that he was just not that into her.

My heart is bleeding from telling you all this story, so I hope you're learning from it.

Over twenty years later, I had a conversation with a friend about why it is so embarrassing and distressing, as an adult woman, watching other adult women chase men. I have concluded that it is because it reminds us of the painful and embarrassing times we chased men ourselves. We don't want to remember those times, or admit that we ever did that, and it makes us feel vaguely ill when we do. Also, we don't like watching fellow creatures suffer.

Dear me, how very sad. Here's Nina Simone expressing the ultimate in crush-crazed female insanity. (I'm sorry the attached vid looks inappropriates like a perfume ad. Eye of newt, toe of frog would be more like it.) Take it away, Nina: