Closed File

I had a post mentally ready to go, I don’t remember how it went now, something about how I’ve been watching the Veronica Mars movie (takes place after the end of the TV series) and having a few surprisingly Team Logan dreams—and then I found out that one of my high school friends died this week, of a routine illness. We weren’t close anymore and I had mixed feelings about him, so I feel weird telling you about this because then some of you are going to feel like you should say “Sorry about your friend” and it feels wrong to accept even that degree of sympathy. But we were close back then, and it’s startling to think someone can just DIE like that. Not heart attack, not stroke, not cancer, not old age, but just, like, a virus. It makes it harder to do that human thing humans do, where they self-soothe their Death Fears by victim-blaming: “It’s fine, I’m okay, that can’t happen to ME because I [take care of myself / eat right and exercise / am not fat / get medical care when I need it].” He died because he got sick from a virus and the treatments were not effective and the virus took him down, and that sometimes happens to mortal beings no matter how many magical kale and yoga spells they cast.

The reason my friend and I stopped being close is that he wouldn’t stop pursuing me romantically. At first it was awkward (I didn’t feel that way about him at all) but also cute and flattering: I’d just had a bad break-up with my high school boyfriend, and it was nice to feel as if other guys might like me. And he was a nice, smart, funny guy, and fun to be around, and a great part of that friend group. But then it got distressing when I turned him down and it didn’t stop. He was the stereotypical Nice Guy, who thought I was dating jerks and I should just realize the perfect guy was waiting for me all along—and I was 17-18 years old when this all started, so I was theoretically on board with that narrative and couldn’t figure out why it seemed so icky in practice (answer: because that kind of thing only works when two people like EACH OTHER, not when it’s one-sided). He kept inviting me to go places, implying it was with the group, and then it would turn out to be just him. He would invite me to see a movie just as friends, and then put his arm around me. He’d bring me presents, not MEANING anything by it. I’d get mad and he’d back off, but then when I was like “Whew, now we understand each other and everything’s okay!” and be friendly again, he’d take it as an encouraging sign that this time I was starting to LIKE-like him.

It seems so clear that I should have broken off the friendship entirely over this, but I was young, and I DID like him as a friend, and he was part of a friend group I absolutely didn’t want to leave. Even now it makes me angry and upset to think that in order to get away from HIS inappropriate behavior, I would have had to give up that whole friend group. Meanwhile our friends were saying I should give him a chance: he’s such a great guy! you guys would be so good together! But there was NOTHING THERE except warm, fond, friendship feelings. I knew he was great! But he wasn’t FOR ME.

I was so glad when he finally seemed to hear me on the subject and he moved on and started dating someone else and she was really great for him and they seemed to be getting serious. This was a few years later, when I was in college and dating someone myself. Then when I was home on a break he took me out to lunch and told me that he still had feelings for me and would dump his girlfriend if I said the word. You might think that would be heady stuff, but it made me feel sick, and my heart sank, and I was angry, and it made me think very poorly of him that he would do this to his girlfriend. Also, it didn’t feel as if he really DID like me. It was as if he had some sort of Ideal Girl in mind, and he’d put my face on it, and it wasn’t me at all.

We had another talk in which I tried to explain that it was Never Going To Happen and that I wanted him to stop all this, and he became angry and accused me of “using him.” I couldn’t think of how to explain how wildly that assessment missed the mark, and I thought maybe it would finally end his stupid crush if he believed that about me. We parted on very dicey terms. Then one of his parents died suddenly, and I found out about it from the newspaper and sent him a condolence note, and he responded petulantly that he hadn’t told me about it because he didn’t think I wanted to be that kind of friends. That led to an I-give-up silence of a number of years, and then we became Facebook friends but never interacted directly, and it’s been that way for many years. You can see why you don’t need to say “Sorry about your friend.”

I think what’s hard to work out is that he really did seem like a great guy. It doesn’t seem as if that can be true based on the stories I’m telling about him, but he REALLY DID or else I wouldn’t have kept trying to be friends with him. It seemed as if he just had this ONE glitch and if I could just EXPLAIN things well enough to him… Well. I was happy for him when he finally did get married. I have a lot of good memories of him as a friend from the days before he became problematic. But the fact is that this friendship ended because when I didn’t like him the way he liked me, he first blamed my judgement (she just dates jerks; she can’t see the great guy right in front of her) and then my character (she’s “using me”; she’s not a good friend), and then he used it against me (if she doesn’t like me romantically, she doesn’t get to hear about important things that happen in my life). He was manipulative and petulant and unfair and unreasonable, and he managed to spin that into a narrative where he was doing it out of love for me and I was not appropriately appreciative.

But so much of that could have been chalked up to being really young and stupid and inexperienced and immature. And so many genuinely good guys DO fall for the Nice Guy theory of why a woman doesn’t like them, before they’ve realized they can use mirror-empathy to find another solution (i.e.: “Sometimes a woman likes me but I don’t like her—not because she’s a Nice Girl and guys don’t like Nice Girls, or because I’m an idiot who can’t see true love right in front of my face, or because she needs to work harder or wait longer to make me love her, but because she and I just don’t click; maybe it’s the same way sometimes when I like a woman and she doesn’t like me that way”). So I was kind of hoping that one day I’d get an email from him saying that now that he was older and was in a real relationship and had a good life, he saw the situation more clearly and realized what an idiot he’d been, and was sorry for acting like he thought we were actors in a dumb teen movie. His death means this is never going to happen and I am always going to remember him this way.

16 thoughts on “Closed File

  1. Gretchen

    Ooh, I dated (very briefly) a guy who put the Ideal Girl persona on me. It was beyond creepy. Fortunately I was old enough to know the creepy feelings meant something and it didn’t go far. He was also just a “good guy” who couldn’t figure out why women didn’t appreciate how awesome he was being.

    Reply
  2. ernie

    Wow, that is unfortunate. I know high school kids can be dopes, but I don’t remember anyone in high school being this persistent and annoying – not just directed at me (no one in high school directed that kind of energy towards me!) but directed at any of my classmates either. I’m glad you had a strong enough sense of self to know what you wanted and what you didn’t want.

    Also, when someone dies young-ish it always makes me stop for a minute and remember that all the running around and stressing about things or trying to order things/clean things/cook things isn’t all that important when push comes to shove. I think they call it perspective.

    Reply
  3. Shin Ae

    Death will do this, make you stop and think for a little while. I’ve been doing some stopping and thinking, too.

    He lied to you repeatedly, and he did it to get what he wanted from you, even though he knew very well it wasn’t what you wanted to give. That’s not a great guy, and I admire you for having instincts that told you not to get too close, and for listening to them.

    Reply
  4. Sarah!

    I’m sorry you lost someone who could have been a quality friend if only they had gotten over their shit. You lost him years ago; dying just makes it permanent.

    Reply
  5. Surely

    What Sarah just said is just what I was going to say. (good job, Sarah!)

    I think BECAUSE it was complicated, it makes the loss a little more poignant. So, I am sorry for your loss because it is a loss, no matter the connection.

    Reply
  6. Gigi

    A loss is a loss…no matter the circumstance. I lost someone this week who was an old friend that I loved – but we weren’t in contact for various reasons – that doesn’t make it easier. The processing of a loss with so many complications is harder, I think.

    Reply
  7. Suzanne

    I had a friend like this. And it does tarnish the person a bit (a lot) and makes the good memories seem… devious somehow; disguised as happy but concealing that thing you didn’t yet know.

    I am sorry for your loss, and sorry for the mixed feelings it brings up.

    Reply
  8. Phancy

    I’m just still baffled and surprised that high school friends dying is starting to become a common occurance instead of a surprising and devastating young death. I knew I’d reach the life point where it happened, but I still am not prepared. It is a lot.

    Reply
  9. ccr in MA

    It’s hard to lose the potential of a relationship that way. When our cousin died, I was the one who told my brother, and he said sadly, “We weren’t that close lately, but I thought we had time.”

    Reply
  10. Barb

    Very unnerving and sobering and complicated. I’m sorry for the loss of this person and for all the feelings (new and old) it dredges up.

    Reply
  11. el-e-e

    I had nearly an EXACT replica of this Nice Guy in my high school life. Reading your memories made me uncomfortable with recognition.

    I love how you titled the post.

    Reply
  12. Kate

    I’m sorry for your loss. I sometimes think it’s actually harder to lose someone about whom you have mixed or complicated feelings because you can’t be straightforwardly sad, or feel weird being straightforwardly comforted, and that makes it harder to feel the feeling and move on. Anyway, I’m sorry he wasn’t always a good friend to you, and I’m sorry that a generally good person is gone. I hope you’re giving yourself space to grieve both of those things.

    Reply
  13. Shannon

    I’m sorry for the loss you felt when you lost that friend, repeatedly, and for the loss now. I too had a friend like that, albeit with a somewhat more storied history together, who continued advances even after I repeatedly told him that it wasn’t going to happen the way he wanted it to. That friendship crashed and burned (#metoo), and in hindsight I can see where and how it all went wrong on both our sides. While I wouldn’t mourn the loss, if I were to find out that he was permanently gone, I would certainly have *some* sort of feeling about it. All this to say, thank you for articulating something so complicated so very well.

    Reply
  14. Shawna

    I had a guy like this in high school. What was worse, I was berated by others for not liking him enough even though he was a Good Guy, AND for “using him” or “stringing him along” when I spent any time with him in my efforts to actually just be friends with him or even see if I could maybe have romantic feelings for him (answer: NOPE). Even my grandmother once said “some day you’re going to turn around and he won’t be there anymore and you’ll realize what you lost”, because all she could see was how much he liked me and she felt that women were better off with men taking care of them. Ugh.

    Reply

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