Years ago, when I saw "When Harry Met Sally," I was on Sally's side. I
didn't see anything wrong with being chums with the opposite sex; in
fact, I counted a good half of my friends as male (or vice-versa,
depending on your perspective or what they were wearing on a given
day.) However, that was long ago, the 80s. Let's review where things
stand today. It's 2001. And yes, while there are many supposed
male-female platonic couplings roaming about the U.S. landscape --
careful not to trip over them as you maul your romantic partners in the
park -- I seriously doubt said couplings will last. Why?
Here goes: Because Harry got it right. I should know. At 39, I've left so
many male friends behind they're beginning to look like a wedding train.
Oh sorry, poor simile. Why the death of these friendships? Because
always, inevitably, one or the other of us wanted more. Sorry -- that's
just how it goes. And when neither of us really wanted more, or only
wanted more for, say, a month or so, inevitably one person got married
-- at which point if you think the wife would put up with ol' stinky me
then I've got some cheap property to sell you on Nob Hill, girlfriend.
Case in point: my friend Jack. Not his real name, but close enough.
Well, Jack and I have been buddies for at least a million years. Let's
see: we met in a bar when I was 23 (and fell all over his good looking
friend Dave the comedian); I'm 39 now, that makes us friends for 16
years. OK, 16 years -- got it? A helluva long time. So after all this time,
do you think Jack has ever gotten so much as a peck from me, let
alone a feel? No! Why? Because Jack, though he has the heart of
Bambi, is no Chris Noth -- but no one on Planet Earth is. And moron
that I am, I am only drawn to men with "Sex and the City" looks and the
soul of an electric barbed-wire fence. Anyway, Jack gets invited to
Christmas dinner at my mom's. Not by me, mind you, but by my mom,
who runs into him at a fair in San Francisco. "He's so excited about
coming," she tells me long-distance. "You should have seen him!"
"That's great, Mom." But I am thinking I better not wear my red sweater
and tight black pants so as not to excite the man ... I'm already
mentally planning my "buddy wear" -- baggy shirt and pants, little
makeup, and definitely no perfume. "He said he'll be here after he's
done playing piano at the old folks' home." "That's great." When we
hang up, I am feeling guilty. Jack has nowhere to go on Christmas; how
can I be so selfish? What is it I am feeling?
When I put my finger on it, I realize I am not being selfish -- I am being
human. And after 16 years, it still gets me that I cannot be attracted to
Jack. As my biological clock ticks so loudly it's beginning to wake the
neighbors, why can't I just, well, jump Jack? He loves me, that's
obvious, and there's no question about his character: for Chrissakes, he
plays piano for the elderly at Christmas!
Well, fast forward to Christmas. Guess who is suddenly disinterested in
coming for dinner. "It's a long drive," he tells me. "It's 40 minutes." "45
with traffic, maybe 50." "But Jack, it's Christmas," I implore. "All the
more reason to stay home. Double the traffic." He always makes me
laugh, but this time I just want to cry. Home alone on Christmas? I hang
up the phone, silently wondering if I somehow caused this. Did he read
my thoughts? ...'She doesn't want me to come ... Her mother invited me
... I'd be intruding ...' The sad fact is, in male-female friendships,
inevitably one or the other of youse gets left in the dust. And I have all
too often been the Jack in these scenarios. I've even had friends write
me off because their girlfriends just didn't like the idea of these men
retaining female friends. Or been written off the old-fashioned way --
through disuse.
Once married, these men somehow lose my number somewhere midst
the baby rattles and dirty diapers. And don't even go there with the 'gay
friends' thing. They are the worst. Believe me, you can fall for a gay man
just as easily as a straight guy. I should know; I've fallen for at least
three of them. The last one got to the point where I just had to admit my
feelings --(mistake: warning! Warning! Never go there!) -- outside a
restaurant. As he was massaging my hands (is this normal gay
behavior?) and we were trying to sober up (don't ask, and yes, we were
on foot) I unleashed all my better-hidden emotions.
"Oh Jeff ... there's really only one person at that whole office I'd want to
be with ..." And as I looked him in the eye, I could tell he wasn't ready
for it. "That's nice," he said, "now here's your cab." He gave me a kiss
on the cheek and a pat on the bum. Then with a wink he added, "Some
things are better left unsaid, hon." Ahhh, yes. But a 6'5" redheaded
drink of water like him, with the cutest collection of baseball caps I'd
ever seen ... not to mention a shared love of films like "The Opposite of
Sex," a wicked laugh, and a twisted sense of humor ... Well, those
qualities were just not that easy to come by. "I'll catch ya later," I said,
falling into the back of the cab. Jeff shut the door, kissed his fingertip
and placed it to the window. I waved goodbye as we sailed out into the
warm Pasadena night. But I knew, more clearly than ever, that I had to
add him to the list of casualties. "