People always tell you to be yourself. And you should. But not for the sentimental reasons you see splashed across some nymphette's Instagram feed. No, you need to live your life your way because whatever life you live, you have to live it. Whatever fallout comes from the actions you take, you have to deal with them. If you let other people make your decisions for you, you'll still be the one cleaning up if it all goes south.
This was the mistake I made when I got married.
My wife, Angela, and I came from the same world. Small towns, red states, that variety of Christianity that will support a politician who cheated on his wife so long as he opposes gay marriage. The difference between us is that she was a good girl and I rebelledโhard. I went emo in middle school, then shifted into goth.
Freshman year of high school, I buddied up with another small-town outcast, Jen, over a mutual love of Marilyn Manson. She got me into Rob Zombie and from there my goth phase began shifting. At 16, I used my part-time job money to buy a used Harley. By the time I finished high school, I was a full-on gear head. I was friends with every other biker for three towns in any direction. On weekends, we'd get together to ride, drink, smoke weed, and fuck whatever girls were into it.
I didn't go to college. I just moved to the nearest big city and got a job in a repair shop. The other guys in my high school circle stuck around, as well. One or two moved away, in time, but for three years, I was living an insane life. There are a dozen stories there of all kinds of craziness. I could tell you some of those, but I honestly don't remember them that clearly. Too many shots, pills, and sleep depravation.
In that third year, when I was twenty, I felt something shifting in me, again. It all started feeling like something I had to do, like an obligation. One night, I was going out with some friends and I just did not want to drink, much less anything harder. So, I told them I wasn't feeling it, tonight. To my surprise, they were cool with it and bid me good-night. I'd been afraid to say anything, but the guys were cool with it.
Walking home, I started remembering all those scared-straight types churches had talk to the youth group. They were always washed up partiers who hadn't been fulfilled by all the blah, blah, blah. I got it into my head that that was what was happening.
Six months later, I was starting university, studying business. My plan was to open up a car detailing and tuning shop of my own. I was trying to get straight, be the man my parents had tried to make me. It didn't fit, but I kept trying. Loving cars and motorcycles was fine, just no more booze, fights, and certainly no more tattoos.
Angela and I started dating in school. She was a couple years younger than me and exactly the kind of girl my parents had envisioned me ending up with: blond hair kept a respectable shoulder-length, knee-length skirts, never went outside in anything so revealing as a tank top. She was part of me getting my life together. We had a few big fights over the years and even sort of broke up a couple times, but I had really good lines to get her back.
We graduated and I got a job at an up-scale auto shop. Rich guys brought in their mid-life crisis mobiles and we turned them into things of beauty. It was my menagerie of tattoos that got me the job. The clients loved the idea of having a reformed-biker-gang guyโI was not that, but I had the lookโapproving of their vehicle choices.
Not long after that, my parents started pushing me to marry Angela. We weren't even living together, like most of our friends. Marriage held no interest to me. I loved Angela, sort of. Looking back, I would later realize that I loved the idea of the life she represented. But after a couple long nights of fighting with myself, I decided to do it. I proposed, we got married, got a house together. It was all as it should be.
We had problems from the very beginning. Neither of us had ever lived with a significant other before, so there was all of that relearning how to be at home. It was deeper, though. We simply did not belong to the same world. I was bored by her friends and she was always worried I would lapse back into the liquor, drugs, and sluts. After two years, I admitted to myself that the marriage had been a mistake. However, it had been my mistake. There was no reason for her to suffer for it.
I scheduled us a cruise and took tons of photos for her Instagram. She loved it and every time I started to hate it, I would just space out and think about cars. You're allowed to space out for a bit on vacation, so it worked out. I put some randomly timed reminders on my phone that just said her name. When they came up, I'd have flowers delivered to the dentist's office where she worked or make reservations at a restaurant. One time, I just arranged a bunch of tools in a heart and texted her a picture.
She was trying, as well. Her lingerie game went way up. The vague stories I had told her about my life before university gave her the impression I was kinkier than I really was; so a lot of her lingerie choices did nothing special for me. Then, she got a tattoo. It was a typical good girl tattoo, but I saw what she going for. We did our best to be romantic, but it didn't help us talk. It didn't help us spend time together. We weren't connecting, anymore, and by the time our fifth anniversary swung around, neither of us had much in the way of illusions. We decided to just give each other gifts and call it a day.
She had actually gotten really into tattoos, sending me pictures and asking what I thought. That was all over for me, but it was nice that she had a hobby I understood. So, I got her a gift certificate to the place where she had gotten her last two. By this time, she had five; all small and in styles I wasn't into, but it was her canvas to paint. She got me a beat up old Pontiac Firebird Trans Am, so I could fix up a car for myself instead of for some old, rich dude. I had no special connection to that model, but it was still a nice gesture and I did want a car to fix up on my own.
It was nice. We were less a married couple than roommates, at that point, but our relationship was supportive, if nothing else.
A couple months later, one of my regular clients offered me a business proposition. He wanted to open up a muscle car shop out on the west coast. He and his business partner were going on a buying spree soon, but neither of them were mechanics. They loved driving the cars and knew the history, but worried someone would see them coming and unload a bunch of lemons on them. Six weeks in California, inspecting the new cars and hiring a competent team of mechanics; that was the job. The money he was offering was half a year's salary for me.
I told Angela and she looked as excited as I should have been. Once I got her approval, I started getting excited, myself. I actually couldn't sleep the night before my flight. We said goodbye and I was off. We texted and had a few phone calls while I was in LA. I was having a ball and she was happy for me. All was normal. Then, two days before I was to return, she told me she would meet me at this hotel near the airport, the Skyview. After that, silence. I would text her and she would just say 'See you at the Skyview'. You know what that can do to a person and, by the time my plane touched down back home, I was convinced that she would have all my things at the hotel with a room key and divorce papers.
I got a cab to the hotel and went to the bar. Where else do you meet people at a hotel?
I ordered a drink so as not to piss off the tender. I texted her and waited. The mood I was in, waiting for my impending divorce, I barely looked up from my glass.
"Excuse me," a woman said, pushing in beside me to order a drink.
I shifted over in my seat a little and turned to look at her. She was turned away from me. Her vibrantly red hair hung halfway down her back, brushing the skin exposed by her profoundly backless dress. That skin was covered in an intricate black ink tattoo. I hadn't seen anything like that so up close since I was a biker punk. It depicted a grand building, like one of those city halls built in the 1920's, with muscular men holding lightning bolts on the front. The building was crumbling, being reclaimed by flowering vines growing up around it. The dress framing the scene was, fittingly, the color of dried blood and she had to have chosen it to give the monochrome tattoo a little extra something.
Somewhere in admiring the art, part of my brain registered that the redhead wasn't wearing a bra.
"Why don't you take a picture?" She asked, her voice husky. I looked up and she was regarding me from over her shoulder, face mostly obscured by that cherry-red hair.