Twenty years
ago, I wrote an unsigned love poem to a girl I barely knew. I told
Brianna, among other things, that life was a blaze of magnificence, that
she made it even brighter, and that someday I would spend every day with
the prettiest girl in the world.
When she read
the poem she got goose bumps, smiled from ear to ear, and daydreamed
about the gentleman behind the poetic prose. She showed it to her sister
who sighed and said, “How romantic! I wish someone would write me a poem
like that.” Then she showed it to her parents. Her mom smirked, but her
dad frowned and said, “Don’t waste your time on a foolish boy hiding
behind a silly poem.” Finally, she let her new boyfriend read it. In a
grim voice he said, “Let me know when you find out who wrote it, because
I’d like to give him a piece of my mind!”
Despite
reactions ranging from enthusiasm to aggravation, she kept the poem and
still has it in her possession today, two decades later. Her younger
brother, Jose, recently found it neatly folded and tucked between two
pages of an old photo album she keeps in her den.
I know all of
this because Jose told me. He and I met in school twenty years ago and
we have been best friends ever since. He was, frankly, the reason I
wrote the poem.
A Second
Glance
“Your sister
is pretty,” I told Jose during my first visit to his home.
“Forget about
it,” he said. “Brianna has buff guys fighting for her affection every
day. You couldn’t hold her attention long enough to get a second
glance.”
“I could if I
wrote her a poem,” I replied.
“She has guys
writing her romantic crap all the time,” he said. “She’ll just toss it
out with all the other failed attempts.”
“Not mine,” I
insisted.
“You’re
crazy,” he chuckled. “Go ahead and try. Make me laugh!”
I wrote the
poem that evening and mailed it anonymously the next morning.
I Thought I
Was Special
The poem I
wrote Brianna wasn’t genuine, at least not in my mind. I wrote it
because Jose doubted me. Sure, I thought Brianna was pretty, but I
didn’t want to settle down with her. At the time, I didn’t even know
her. And as it turns out, she and I have almost nothing in common.
The last
genuine love poem I wrote went to a girl I met a month before I met
Brianna. She was on the varsity soccer team, and her beauty was
majestic. I wrote Sara a poem and slipped it into her locker the same
afternoon. I confessed my desire to be a soccer ball, and risk being
kicked around, if it was the only way I could catch her attention. She
caught up with me the next morning and told me I didn’t need to
transform into a soccer ball to catch her attention. I asked her out on
a date a few minutes later.
Our first
date went well. But the next afternoon Sara spoke to a few of her
teammates, two of which I had previously dated. She was appalled when
she found out that I had written Jackie a poem about innocent kisses
blown her way in the breeze, and Carol a poem about the lucky sunshine
that glistens off her skin. Needless to say, a second date was not in
our future.
“Stupid me!
When I read the poem you wrote me, I actually believed you were being
sincere! I thought I was special,” Sara screamed!
“I was… and
you are,” I mumbled as she stomped away.
But Sara had
a point. Although I had never summoned the desire to be a soccer ball in
any of my previous poems, I did use similar analogies that carried the
same fundamental message of flirtatious affection.
I wasn’t
trying to hurt her. I thought she was gorgeous. I thought she carried
herself with amazing grace. I wanted to be around her. I wanted to be
hers. She was the most perfect girl in the entire world… and I felt this
way a hundred times before.
No Two Words
Would Rhyme
Roughly six
months after I met Brianna, I met Angel. I realized shortly thereafter
that she moved me in a way the others had not. I couldn’t consciously
pinpoint it, but I knew our relationship felt special. Even after the
initial excitement fatigued, she kept me captivated in awe. I was wide
awake in the second inning for the first time in my life.
Angel and I
have been together for nineteen years now—we’ve been through a lot
together—and I appreciate her more and more with each passing day. Yet
despite my love for her, she’s never received a love poem.
It’s not that
I haven’t tried. I tried, once, to write her a poem about the depth and
beauty of her hazel-green eyes. I stumbled over my words. Another time I
tried to write her a poem about the mornings I wake up early just to
watch her sleep. I failed again. And just last month I tried to write
her a poem entitled “Amidst an Angel.” But no two words would rhyme.
Nineteen
years and not a single love poem written. Of course, Angel knows I love
to write, so she has occasionally questioned my motives for never
writing her a romantic piece.
Yesterday
evening I found myself trying again. I tried to poetically recreate the
story of our first encounter. I wanted to make it cute. I wanted to make
her smile. I wanted to make her cry. I wanted to typify our tale in
exquisite prose. Nothing came.
The Most
Profound Affirmation
I fell asleep
around midnight last night thinking about my predicament. Have I
completely lost my touch? Has someone cast an evil spell on me? Or is
there a more profound, philosophical explanation?
Zzzz…
I dreamt I
was sitting at round table in a dimly lit room. There was a man sitting
across the table from me. He looked a lot like me, only his hair was
silver and his skin was worn.
“I’m here to
answer your question,” he said.
“What
question?” I asked.
“The one
you’ve been asking yourself for almost two decades,” he replied.
“What’s wrong
with me?” I huffed. “Why can’t I write Angel a love poem?”
“Perhaps you
can’t write her a love poem because you realize, subconsciously, that
leaving it unwritten is the most profound affirmation of love you can
make. Because you truly do love her, and true love cannot be translated
into words. Because words alone could never do her any justice.”
I nodded in
agreement.
He went on,
“The sad truth, of course, is that this affirmation of true love will
always remain unnoticed. Because there is no visible output to notice—no
poem to read.”
My eyes
popped open.
Inspired to
Write
It was 4:30
AM, but I was wide awake and inspired to write about the epiphany I had
in my dreams. I leaned over, kissed Angel on the forehead, and rolled
out of bed. I powered on my laptop and opened the word processor I use
for blogging. After gazing at the blank white screen for several
minutes, I placed my fingers on the keyboard and titled the page:
The Unwritten
Love Poem: Why True Love is So Hard to Express
. . .
Afterthoughts
& Questions
Why did I
just share that story with you?
Because doing
so helps remind me.
And, I know
you need a reminder sometimes too.
Sometimes we
all need to be reminded of the beauty and sweetness of truly loving
someone without the forced glitz, glam, and airbrushing of the
Instagraming world we live in. Because it’s so easy to forget. It’s so
easy to see the fairy-tale highlight reel of staged romance that scrolls
across our screens, and feel inadequate by comparison.
We need to
remind ourselves that loving someone—truly and profoundly loving
them—isn’t about crafting the perfect love poem, photographing the
perfect internet kiss, or showing off in any way; it’s about showing up
every day behind closed doors to quietly respect and support someone who
means the world to us.
Do you agree?
Do you feel
like your love is hard to accurately express?
Do you have
your own “unwritten love poem” pulsing through your heart and mind?
I know this
blog post is a little different, but I’d love to know what you think.