Today, just before Valentine’s Day, I found an old love letter from a “soul mate” from years ago, a restless, poetic man who stirred and quickened my heart with his artistic brooding and literary references.
Some 30 years later, I was touched again when I read the intimate thoughts, revelations and literary allusions we shared in expressing our exciting chemistry and the irresistible attraction of the power of the words we gave to each other.
We were both struggling to be understood and self-realized through our writing.
We wrote to each other with great fervor and flourishes, the struggling Irish poet submitting his work to New York magazines and a cocooned woman who wanted so much to just be free to express herself, trapped in her stable but stifling middle class life.
Our real passion was expressing our yearnings and desires as writers to be understood and connected in a creative sharing where we dared to write our personal and confessional thoughts, touching with our minds and heartfelt outpourings.
Looking back, it was a secret love as if written in another era, a series of lovers’ letters in a Victorian novel.
The idea of being with each other through our love of language was more exciting than any other intimacy. It was a “love match” of words where we indulged ourselves in our intimate correspondence.
At times it was excessive and very much like a suffering Lake Poet speaking to a love he could never have, but the wanting brought such ecstasy of what could be and fueled desire.
How ironic that the letter should reappear just before Valentine’s Day. I’ve been single for a long time, and it’s been years since I’ve had a “real” valentine.
I found myself holding the letter against my heart as if hugging it would bring back the sentiments expressed by my “unrequited” love.
It spurred me to see if I could find my restless poet online, but I didn’t; and even if I had, who would he be now?
I prefer to preserve the memory of my long, lost love because it’s part of the romance that will never end. It will always be there in the letters.
I returned the sweet, weathered letter into its envelope and safely back into the nightstand.
It is a cherished reminder of a brief, romantic period of writers’ passions awakened but not fulfilled, that were never meant to be.
For me, it was the beginning of the woman who would eventually set herself free to someday write from her heart.
Today, just before Valentine’s Day, I got a valentine that warmed my heart.
Copyright © Erana Leiken, 2010-2011 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Valentine photo by Billy Alexander
Envelope photo by Kriss Szkurlatowski
Baby Sitting
14 years ago
Oh.. such beautiful thoughts!
ReplyDeleteToday I am feeling all nostalgic!! Maybe you did too, when you would've seen that letter.
A small thought on nostalgia here on my blog :
http://catchtheasteroid.blogspot.com/2011/02/why-does-nostalgia-always-feel-so-good.html