One of my main reasons for wanting to move is that dude. We broke up back in January after long-distance dating for about ten months. At first the idea was to visit each other, see how it goes, and then likely one of us would move.
He got a job working for Amazon that he loves, and that pays really well. About three times as much as he used to make. I started thinking about what to do with myself, as I’d worked my way up a ladder of working admin jobs, which keeps you alive, but doesn’t really fulfill you (and look, I know that hardly anybody is totally in love with their job, but I was wasting my potential) and then I just up and got fired at the end of last summer.
I was already pretty much warm to the idea of moving to Seattle, but now I had been set back pretty heavily. Truth be told, I probably could have saved enough money at the time to have just moved up there after I got fired, if I had committed myself.
But I was a lot more up in the air about things, mostly personal issues about life directions, than I wanted to admit to. I was distracted. It’s why I lost my job, and it’s why the relationship started going wonky.
And the relationship started to deteriorate more. We were both going through big life changes and dating from hundreds of miles apart. Sure, he had just gotten a much better, higher-paying job, but it was a while before the money kicked in. He had to live on what he could scrape together from his old, shitty-paying job for about five weeks before his first check and hire bonus came through, and then a lot of that had to go towards bills.
I was now working two really crappy, low-paying jobs to get by, but now I had decided what direction I wanted to go career wise. I just had a lot of work to do to get there.
Anyway, we stayed friendly and fond of each other, but just…really strained. We basically both gave up and marched along because we still genuinely liked each other, but the relationship sucked. I tried to keep some blood flowing through it, just to make sure he knew I still liked him. It was just interpreted as despirate, and it probably kind of was.
Worst of all, at one point I even borrowed $150 from him. Talk about humiliating, having to borrow money from your boyfriend. When a few months passed and I was on the other end of Christmas, he refused my repayment. I wasn’t sure how to take that for a long time. It seemed more like a payoff and aknowledgement on his part to the fact that I was a failure than an act of friendly charity, but it wasn’t, he genuinely thought I deserved it.
In Janurary, we finally talked about the obvious lack of realistic devotion in the relationship, and that was the end of it. Things were weird for a long time and we were decent to each other, we obviously were still friends, but it was weird and occasionally avoidant.
At that point, I had enrolled in school and started studying graphic design. Something I should have done a long time ago. I really put myself into it and managed to always show up for class and get the homework done dispite my insane schedule of working two jobs and having practices for several bands. I occasionally got to get some sleep, too.
Then a few months later, he started being really, really attentive. I didn’t know how to take it. I feared a back-and-forth, on-and-off relationship. Breaking it off, and a few near-break-offs before it became official had put me through the mill emotionally as it was. This return to attention and affection was recieved with skepticism on my part, initially.
But finally one night, I had a long conversation with him in which he seemed pennetant, but realistic, and not unwilling to let me know how he had felt at times. It was refreshing, even if kind of humbling. We have not “gotten back together”, but we now talk more, and more openly and honestly than ever before.
I think we both realized the seriousness of being involved with each other entailed, and he was now sure that I wasn’t a total fuck-up on life. I have been really reluctant to appear too hard-set on moving up there because I don’t want him to think that I think that moving will mean that we’ll shortly have a lovely white pickett fence home together and live happily ever after, and I don’t want him to be afraid that I’m going to move up there and just mooch off of him.
Moving will be kind of a trick. I’m still not quite experienced enough in my chosen field to be able to move up there with a job secured, or even necissarily be able to find one super easily. I may have to keep working office/admin jobs or something like that for a while.
But I’m pretty serious about it. I will need to enjoy the town and build an independant social network for myself. I have a really great one here that I’ve developed in the last seven years. I’ll miss it.
But I think the opportunities, in the long run, for me are better up there than they are here. I sort of don’t feel like I’ll ever have as strong of a social network as what I have here. But there’s a bit of a sense of stagnation in staying here. Even if I continued school and secured myself a good job in the field I want, which I think I could do here.
I kind of like the “big fish in a small pond” feel here. I look at the Seattle “scene” and it just kind of annoys me. But I’ve also met plenty of people up there who just enjoy doing their own thing and making fun cooperatives in the way similar to what I see here in Sacramento.
I was talking with a friend of mine once about living here and pointed out that there’s a big risk you take in leaving, and she pointed out that there’s also a big risk to take in staying.
I’m gay. This isn’t a really big town, and in seven years, I’ve only dated one guy here for a while that I really considered to be all that interesting. I don’t want riches, fame or status. There is happiness and comfort here that I’ve never had before I moved out of my parent’s place. My friends are very decent, honest, caring and strong people. But I also know a lot of screwballs. The people I work with at my night job are mostly a bunch of slackers, kids. They’re all younger than me and they are all sort of social drifters. I love them a lot, don’t get me wrong, but they’re not super uplifting.
I know a lot of great people here who are superb friends and very stable and encouraging, don’t get me wrong. But I think a fresh change of scenery might help me take when I’ve learned from all my really substancial friends and not have to be constantly in the sphere of influence of more stagnant people. I’m sure a lot of the “stagnant” types are good people, and they will probably obtain a measure of sucess in their lives. But right now, I feel like a lot of them are drifting in a soup that I feel like I’m done with. Being around them so much is kind of a drag, and although knowing that I’m doing things to move me forward in my life helps me coexist with them happily without being dragged down by them, sometimes it’s still kind of difficult.
It’s a social issue that is unavoidable, but it is better if in your own life you know you’re doing things yourself that are constructive and positive. Taking that step, moving to a new town to continue my studies and career, I’d feel like that if for whatever reason I ended up in a similar situation (namely working a “make-ends-meet” job for a while with some fun but disaffected people, or even not so fun) I’d feel that much more personal strength in light of the situation.
But the guy. There’s no guarantee that moving up there is going to mean we’ll even go out, it’s been laid out flat and established. But I know I will have at least one really good friend there, somebody who will not turn their back on me, abandon me.
But the thing is, we’re obviously totally into each other right now. The distance is still awkward at times, but there’s far less awkwardness. Our relationship no longer hinges on my moving up there or not, and vice versa. Somehow, that has made it easier for both of us to accept it as something that can really happen, and something we’re both more excited about.
Yeah, I really, really like this guy. He is handsome, he is funny, he is talented, and he is a sweetheart. I told my brother once that his (the ex’s) encouragement in my studies and even my hobbies, and even at times giving me a good swift kick in the ass at times (metaphorically), with positive effect, illustrated to me that I had somebody in my life, even if they lived far away, who knew me better than I think anybody else in the entire world, and was honestly very interested in my well-being.
That means a lot. I have a good family, don’t get me wrong. But though my parents try to accept my being gay, they don’t understand it. They’ve come a long way in eight years, but I still can’t talk to them about relationships like most people can talk to their parents. My mom has really surprised me at times, though. But they still will never really understand.
Having somebody in my life who cares about me like a family member, who speaks his mind even if it’s not what I want to hear, but doesn’t throw things in my face, it’s rare. When it’s pretty evident that that person likes you back and appreciates you for the same reason, it’s even more rare.
I know it’s dangerous to move away from so much for the sake of affection for one person. I’ve known him for eight years, and for about six of those years, I wasn’t even that fond of him, I thought he was flippant and cocky. I’ve still got some issues with his occassional brashness, but a lot of it I’ve come to find endearing, because I know where he’s coming from now, and i know he is a sincere person who doesn’t mean anyone any harm, and that he is in fact a very sweet, caring person. I know what to expect from him.
How could I even try to pretend that he’s not part of my reason for moving. Whenever I’ve thought about moving before, San Francisco and Seattle were my two more ideal picks, the others were based more on their financial practicality than the actual allure to the town. I had even thought about the fact that he had moved up there (he used to live in the bay area, where I first met him, until 2001) and even though until about two years ago, I had a much different opinion of him than I do now, I did sort of think that maybe if we lived in the same town as each other, we might get to know each other better and maybe be better friends.
I have another ex who lives up there too whos is a nice guy. He’s sort of having a rough time, but he’s a survivor, so I’m not too worried about him. We’re good but distant friends, and it’d be nice to be able to see him now and again. His parents live in the same town as mine, too.
But the guy, THE guy, I’ve met a lot of his friends, and they’re great. I think I’d feel welcome among them. I sometimes even forget that some of them aren’t from among the group of people that I know here in Sacramento.
Anyway, the goal is starting to solidify more. I sometimes still feel like I have to convince myself that it’s a good idea, but I’m more ready for it now. School will be out as of next week, and even though I haven’t turned in either of my finals, I know I did well in both classes. I feel like I’m finally moving towards something in life. The road ahead is still hazy, but at least now I know which road I’m on.
Seattle is just a city, I know. My goal is really about more than just a place, but Seattle just happens to represent an apex for me, one that I’m moving towards. Hopefully I’ll see you guys in September, Seattle people.