RUTH SHOWED ME INTO THE LIVING ROOM. โWould you like a cup of tea?โ
The room was as it had always been, as Iโd always remembered itโthe rug, the heavy drapes, the silver clock ticking on the mantel, the armchair, the faded blue couch. I felt instantly reassured.
โTo be honest, I could do with something stronger.โ
Ruth shot me a brief, piercing glance, but didnโt comment. Nor did she refuse, as I half expected.
She poured me a glass of sherry and handed it to me. I sat on the couch. Force of habit made me sit where I had always done for therapy, on the far left side, resting my arm on the armrest. The fabric underneath my fingertips had been worn thin by the anxious rubbing of many patients, myself included.
I took a sip of sherry. It was warm, sweet, and little sickly, but I drank it down, conscious of Ruth watching me the whole time. Her gaze was obvious but not heavy or uncomfortable; in twenty years Ruth had never managed to make me feel uncomfortable. I didnโt speak again until I had finished the sherry and the glass was empty.
โIt feels odd to be sitting here with a glass in my hand. I know youโre not in the habit of offering drinks to your patients.โ
โYouโre not my patient anymore. Just a friendโand by the look of you,โ she added gently, โyou need a friend right now.โ
โDo I look that bad?โ
โYou do, Iโm afraid. And it must be serious, or you wouldnโt come over uninvited like this. Certainly not at ten oโclock at night.โ
โYouโre right. I feltโI felt I had no choice.โ โWhat is it, Theo? Whatโs the matter?โ
โI donโt how to tell you. I donโt know where to start.โ โHow about the beginning?โ
I nodded. I took a breath and began. I told her about everything that had happened; I told her about starting marijuana again, and how I had been smoking it secretlyโand how it had led to my discovering Kathyโs emails and her affair. I spoke quickly, breathlessly, wanting to get it off my chest. I felt as if I were at confession.
Ruth listened without interruption until I had finished. It was hard to read her expression. Finally she said, โI am very sorry this happened, Theo. I know how much Kathy means to you. How much you love her.โ
โYes. I loveโโ I stopped, unable to say her name. There was a tremor in my voice. Ruth picked up on it and edged the box of tissues toward me. I used to get angry when she would do that in our sessions; Iโd accuse her of trying to make me cry. She would generally succeed. But not tonight. Tonight my tears were frozen. A reservoir of ice.
I had been seeing Ruth for a long time before I met Kathy, and I continued therapy for the first three years of our relationship. I remember the advice Ruth gave me when Kathy and I first got together: โChoosing a lover is a lot like choosing a therapist. We need to ask ourselves, is this someone who will be honest with me, listen to criticism, admit making mistakes, and not promise the impossible?โ
I told all this to Kathy at the time, and she suggested we make a pact.
We swore never to lie to each other. Never pretend. Always be truthful. โWhat happened?โ I said. โWhat went wrong?โ
Ruth hesitated before she spoke. What she said surprised me.
โI suspect you know the answer to that. If you would just admit it to yourself.โ
โI donโt know.โ I shook my head. โI donโt.โ
I fell into indignant silenceโyet I had a sudden image of Kathy writing all those emails, and how passionate they were, how charged, as if she was getting high from writing them, from the clandestine nature of her relationship with this man. She enjoyed lying and sneaking around: it was like acting, but offstage.
โI think sheโs bored,โ I said eventually.
โWhat makes you say that?โ
โBecause she needs excitement. Drama. She always has. Sheโs been complainingโfor a while, I supposeโthat we donโt have any fun anymore, that Iโm always stressed, that I work too hard. We fought about it recently. She kept using the wordย fireworks.โ
โFireworks?โ
โAs in there arenโt any. Between us.โ
โAh. I see.โ Ruth nodded. โWeโve talked about this before. Havenโt we?โ
โAbout fireworks?โ
โAbout love. About how we often mistake love for fireworksโfor drama and dysfunction. But real love is very quiet, very still. Itโs boring, if seen from the perspective of high drama. Love is deep and calmโand constant. I imagine you do give Kathy loveโin the true sense of the word. Whether or not she is capable of giving it back to you is another question.โ
I stared at the box of tissues on the table in front of me. I didnโt like where Ruth was going. I tried to deflect her.
โThere are faults on both sides. I lied to her too. About the weed.โ
Ruth smiled sadly. โI donโt know if persistent sexual and emotional betrayal with another human being is on the same level as getting stoned every now and then. I think it points to a very different kind of individualโ someone who is able to lie repeatedly and lie well, who can betray their partner without feeling any remorseโโ
โYou donโt know that.โ I sounded as pathetic as I felt. โShe might feel terrible.โ
But even as I said that, I didnโt believe it.
Neither did Ruth. โI donโt think so. I think her behavior suggests she is quite damagedโlacking in empathy and integrity and just plain kindnessโ all the qualities you brim with.โ
I shook my head. โThatโs not true.โ
โIt is true, Theo.โ Ruth hesitated. โDonโt you think perhaps youโve been here before?โ
โWith Kathy?โ
Ruth shook her head. โI donโt mean that. I mean with your parents. When you were younger. If thereโs a childhood dynamic here you might be replaying.โ
โNo.โ I suddenly felt irritated. โWhatโs happening with Kathy has got nothing to do with my childhood.โ
โOh, really?โ Ruth sounded disbelieving. โTrying to please someone unpredictable, someone emotionally unavailable, uncaring, unkindโtrying to keep them happy, win their loveโis this not an old story, Theo? A familiar story?โ
I clenched my fist and didnโt speak.
Ruth went on hesitantly, โI know how sad you feel. But I want you to consider the possibility that you felt this sadness long before you met Kathy. Itโs a sadness youโve been carrying around for many years. You know, Theo, one of the hardest things to admit is that we werenโt loved when we needed it most. Itโs a terrible feeling, the pain of not being loved.โ She was right. I had been groping for the right words to express that murky feeling of betrayal inside, the horrible hollow ache, and to hear Ruth say itโโthe pain of not being lovedโโI saw how it pervaded my entire consciousness and was at once the story of my past, present, and future. This wasnโt just about Kathy: it was about my father, and my childhood feelings of abandonment; my grief for everything I never had and, in my heart, still believed I never would have. Ruth was saying that was why I chose Kathy. What better way for me to prove that my father was correctโ that Iโm worthless and unlovableโthan by pursuing someone who will
never love me?
I buried my head in my hands. โSo all this was inevitable? Thatโs what youโre sayingโI set myself up for this? Itโs fucking hopeless?โ
โItโs not hopeless. Youโre not a boy at the mercy of your father anymore. Youโre a grown man nowโand you have a choice. Use this as another confirmation of how unworthy you areโor break with the past. Free yourself from endlessly repeating it.โ
โHow do I do that? You think I should leave her?โ โI think itโs a very difficult situation.โ
โBut you think I should leave, donโt you?โ
โYouโve come too far and worked too hard to return to a life of dishonesty and denial and emotional abuse. You deserve someone who treats you better,ย muchย betterโโ
โJust say it, Ruth. Say it. You think I should leave.โ
Ruth looked me in the eyes. She held my gaze. โI think youย mustย leave. And Iโm not saying this as your old therapistโbut as your old friend. I donโt think you could go back, even if you wanted to. It might last a little while perhaps, but in a few months something else will happen and youโll end up back here on this couch. Be honest with yourself, Theoโabout Kathy and this situationโand everything built on lies and untruths will fall away from you. Remember, love that doesnโt include honesty doesnโt deserve to be called love.โ
I sighed, deflated, depressed, and tired.
โThank you, Ruthโfor your honesty. It means a lot.โ
Ruth gave me a hug at the door as I left. Sheโd never done that before. She was fragile in my arms, her bones so delicate; I breathed in her faint flowery scent and the wool of her cardigan and again I felt like crying. But I didnโt, or couldnโt, cry.
Instead I walked away and didnโt look back.
I caught a bus back home. I sat by the window, staring out, thinking of Kathy, of her white skin, and those beautiful green eyes. I was filled with such a longingโfor the sweet taste of her lips, her softness. But Ruth was right. Love that doesnโt include honesty doesnโt deserve to be called love.
I had to go home and confront Kathy. I had to leave her.