Chapter 21
A month had gone by since my conversation with Isaiah, and I'd had four therapy sessions in that time. I hinted at potentially wanting to think about relationships at the first session, but I wasn't feeling confident. I think Leah knew I had more to say but she didn't push. Instead, we talked about my parents.
"So you told them about your boundaries?" Leah asked softly.
"Yeah, I sent them that letter that we wrote. Well, actually, I emailed it, but still..." Leah and I had been working on physically writing out some of my boundaries with my parents. It was hard for me to find the line between emotionally distant and protective since I was close with them, but Leah was incredible at it. For example, she told me that it would be okay for my parents to vent to me about anything besides their marital issues, but the second it turned to that, I was to simply remind them of my boundary. I also told them about the Congress in Chicago through the email, which played nicely with my boundary of not living in a home with both of them until they'd gone to therapy themselves.
We had also set up some boundaries with my friends, although, they weren't as set in stone.
"It takes a village." Leah had said with a reassuring smile. "Humans are social by nature. We can't always do all the emotions on our own. And that's okay, as long as the help you implore doesn't hurt anyone else."
For example, Leah said that it was fine—good, even—that I'd tried to set up Yael and Rebecca. It went wrong when Rebecca asked me to talk to Yael about her and I'd agreed. Leah assured me that, someday, that probably wouldn't be too much for me to handle emotionally, but right now, with everything else I was dealing with plus work and school, it wasn't within my capabilities.
I hadn't seen Rian since late January—almost a month—and I was definitely missing him. I brought this up to Leah at my fourth appointment.
"Do you miss his company, or do you miss the sex?" She asked pointedly.
I thought for a while and said, "Is it wrong if I say both?"
Leah smiled at me and set her notebook down to learn forwards. "No, Dot. That is perfectly okay. Actually, I think it's a good sign."
I paused, summoning the courage to ask the question. "Leah, do you... do you think I could be with him? Would I have the emotional capacity?" She didn't say anything, so I pressed on. "I really do like him. He's a friend... and more sometimes... and I miss that. I'm just so afraid I'll hurt him. He's a good person and I don't want all my..." I motioned vaguely around the room, "emotional baggage to weigh him down." I sighed, bracing myself for her answer.
"Dot, the fact that you can admit that you like him and want to be with him—let alone that you don't want to hurt him—tells me that you are ready for it. Obviously, I've never met him, but he sounds like an abnormally patient man. I think he would be more than happy to help carry some of your baggage."
I smiled wide and considered the whole new world of possibilities that just opened for me.
Chapter 22
It was March 13
th
, the Saturday before classes resumed after spring break. Ruth and I hadn't gone anywhere; we just slept, read trashy books, and ate cookies all week. It was glorious.
I knew from Isaiah that Rian had gone home to Pittsburg to visit his family and interview for a summer internship. Given the time he had left to come back to school, I knew he should be getting home around 1 PM. Plenty of time.
My contact with Rian had been limited to a few texts and sharing the occasionally funny tweet or Instagram post with each other. Leah assured me that this was just fine; that's what 100% platonic friends did, too, right?
I had written a very sincere letter to Rian (thanks to Leah, that was the way I could currently cope with strong emotions) telling him all the things I liked and loved about him and why I wanted to be with him. I also included my reservations; Leah agreed that being honest and straightforward about that kind of thing at the start of a relationship is important. My plan was to be in the house with Isaiah when he returned, hand him the letter, give him a hug or something, and peace the fuck out.
At 12:22, just when I was about to head over, my phone rang. I looked at the screen to see Rian's name. I answered quickly before I had time to overthink it.
"Hi Rian." I said quietly.
"Hey, Dot. I'm driving home from Pittsburg right now, I'm probably 10 minutes from campus. Do you think..." he trailed off and cleared his throat. "Would you be able to meet me at that café on Poplar Street?"
I nodded, confused but interested. "Treetop? Yeah, I can do that. What time were you thinking?"
"I was thinking right now. I could just come right to Treetop. But if that—"