Monday, May 25, 2015

Vermont City Marathon 2015

Life has been busy recently with the end of school, senior week activities, graduation and moving to Essex Junction, Vermont but yesterday I ran the Vermont City Marathon as a 2-person relay with Adam. I hadn't trained too much for this event, having taken time off after ski season ended in early March and from there only training casually, typically logging less than seven hours a week. I was excited to get back into running now that my ski career is done though and thought this would be a good way to start making that happen post-grad.

Adam ran the first leg so I got the hand-off in Oakledge Park, getting to run the second and more scenic half of the course. I ran up Battery Hill to some intense drumming, through neighborhoods filled with generous supporters and lots of orange slices, and finally finished along the waterway.

The first five miles flew by and I felt as if I wasn't working at all.
But by mile nine I knew I had gone out too hard (my first two miles covered in a mere 14 minutes) and definitely started to pay for my mistake. Usually a conservative starter, I fell victim to the excitement of the day and my own competitive nature as I tried to chase down the numerous competitors surrounding me. I managed to motivate myself through to mile 10 but hobbled though mile 11 and 12 as my quads and calves tightened with every footfall. And as someone who generally avoids running on roads whenever possible, the balls of my feet felt as if they were being beaten and flattened against the hard pavement, forcing me to choose the slower but softer bike trail's sandy edge. In all honesty, the best part of the last few miles was when a little kid handed me an blue ice pop. It was hands down the best thing I have ever tasted.

At the finish I met up with Adam and we loaded up on food from the runners tent. A friend had held onto our backpack full of gear, including our cell phones, and having not set a meeting time or location we had a brief fiasco as we attempted to find her, opening our eyes to how much we rely on our cell phones and always being able to be in constant contact.

Overall it was a really fun and extremely well-attended and well-staffed event for those who haven't been. I ended up running a 1:42:58 and Adam ran a 1:28. For those in the mixed gender relay category we ended up placing 14th out of 286 and for all the relay teams we were 42nd out of 873. Not too shabby for his first half and a bad race day for me.


Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Student Loans: Till Death Do Us Part

As my bio says I go to St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. Located in a small rural community, St. Lawrence and the other surrounding colleges (Potsdam, SUNY Canton, Clarkson) are similar to the tan Cheerio-like pieces in Lucky Charms cereal, easy to pick out and not the best part of the mix as the beautiful farmland is interrupted by ugly academic buildings. While I can only speak for my own college, and even that has it's merits, basically what I feel as a senior about to graduate in less than two weeks isn't nostalgia or sadness but is instead jaded at the system.
While I was able to get a lot out of the university academically, graduating with an English and Government double major (honors in both) and a Peace Studies minor, in addition to being on the Varsity Nordic Ski Team for all four years, I believe that the school asks for a lot financially from it's students. With full tuition pushing $60,000 per year a good majority of students, myself included, attend the school on scholarship. And I fully recognize that it is because of the generous donations to scholarship funds that I am even in attendance at St. Lawrence. Yet despite having received over $20,000 from the university I am still leaving the school with excessive, although sadly not abnormal, loans. And on top of the money I received from St. Lawrence I also applied for other annual scholarships including the Elks and St. Mary's and received a number of financial awards from high school. And still in spite of all this the loans remain.
In no way do I want to sound ungrateful for the opportunities I have been granted or the financial gifts that I have received. I appreciate that I was able to attend a prestigious liberal arts college and recognize that I am exceptionally privileged. And St. Lawrence is certainly not an anomaly as tuition costs are on the rise for most colleges across the board. Rather I believe that the price of getting a college degree is becoming more and more out of reach for a number of families and students. 
As someone who comes from a very middle-class family (my mother was a middle school math teacher for over thirty years and my father has been a firefighter since getting out of the Navy in his twenties and has since risen to the rank of Assistant Chief) my parents have definitely struggled to put three children through college. I clearly remember sitting on the landing of my stairs eavesdropping on a conversation between my parents when I was in about first grade school having to do with the price of college. My dad had suddenly freaked out about how expensive sending all three of his children to college would be. He promptly got a second job at Stewart's warehouse loading and unloading trucks. His schedule at the warehouse had him arriving home around two or three in the morning and involved him having to get up only a few hours later to be at the firehouse by eight. He continued to do this job throughout my middle school days eventually leaving it because of how much time he was missing with the family.
And my father wasn't the only one taking on the load of college tuition. Since retiring from teaching two years ago, my mother got a job at Merrell and continues to substitute teach and chaperon events at the school to help reduce the burden college loans for my brothers and I. 
And my siblings and I are of course not immune to work, having all had jobs since we were of legal working age. I personally spent most of my summers and schools breaks working the 4AM-12PM shift at Dunkin Donuts. I got prematurely judged by most customers as incompetent based on my place of employment, probably thinking that a fast-food restaurant would be my career as they were unaware of my academic pursuits. 
One fun story about just such ignorance was when a regular customer asked me where I had been for the past few months, that they hadn't seen me in awhile. I replied that I had been at college. The look of surprise on their face and then the shock when I informed them that I attended St. Lawrence ("that's a good schools!") confirmed for me the judgement most customers, even nice ones, make about fast-food employees.
While I'm at college I work at sporting events, babysit, move furniture, do lawn work, and participate in on-campus experiments ranging from salivating in test tubes to answering computer questions. On our schools website (SLUWire) I answered any call for help as long as it was attached to some cash. Finding the time for this is of course all in addition to a full course load and a year-round sport. 
My point with this is that even people who have saved and explore any financial option, no matter how degrading, continue to be plagued by student loans. In my opinion the cost of higher education is astronomical and students shouldn't have to give up the opportunity to attend a top college because of the cost. And as the "Loan Counselling Exit Survey" that all seniors with loans had to take kindly informed us, death is the only option for not repaying your loans.
***
I want to be clear again that I am appreciative of the opportunities that I have been given and that I acknowledge many students are in worse situations. But this is the situation of a very average person and represents the struggle of an average student dealing with student loans.



Sunday, May 3, 2015

A Living Legend

A Living Legend’s Final Season: Bill Parks, Glens Falls High School Head Coach

A "vintage" photo of Glens Falls Head Nordic Coach Bill Parks with Doug Gaulin after a sectional victory at Central Park in Schenectady, N.Y., in 1977. (Courtesy photo)
A “vintage” photo of Glens Falls Head Nordic Coach Bill Parks (r) with Doug Gaulin after a sectional victory at Central Park in Schenectady, N.Y., in 1977. (Courtesy photo)
The following is “but a small tribute to a man who has impacted hundreds of high-school athletes in northeastern New York,” submitted by one of his former athletes. If you have a coach or mentor you’d like to honor, email info@fasterskier.com.
“A man likened to ‘God,’ Mr. Bill Parks recently wrapped up his final ski season as head coach at Glens Falls High School in Glens Falls, N.Y., after serving the school for three-and-a-half decades. With two grandchildren now in the mix of things, he will move from being a coach to a self-named ‘child-care specialist.’  He will be greatly missed from the Section 2 arena, but I believe we can all agree that being coached by Mr. Parks was a pleasure and privilege, and moments he spent inspiring us will not soon be forgotten.
***
When I was in ninth grade at a cross-country running race, a man I knew by reputation alone came over to me and introduced himself. After going through some pleasantries about how my race went, he asked if I did a winter sport. I proudly told him I played hockey and basketball. Nodding his head, with a slight look of disappointment, he told me to come see him if those sports didn’t work out, that he was the Nordic ski coach and would love to have me on his team. I politely replied that I would do that, without the intention of that ever happening.
But as it turned out, a few weeks later I ended up in classroom 102, the designated meeting place of the Nordic ski team. Feeling more than a little out of place, I piled into an old, red 12-passenger van with the rest of the skiers. We traveled the short distance to the local bike path, a 12-mile stretch of pavement that I would end up spending hundreds of hours of my life rollerskiing on over the next few years. And so began my introduction not only to a new sport, but to a new way of life, new friends and new opportunities.
Glens Falls High School Nordic Coach Bill Parks doing his thing on the trails. Parks coached the team for more than 3 1/2 decades  (Courtesy photo)
Glens Falls High School Nordic Coach Bill Parks doing his thing on the trails. Parks coached the team for 3 1/2 decades (Courtesy photo)
My recruitment experience was no doubt similar to that of many other Glens Falls skiers, just as the love I developed for the sport is likely similar to other Glens Falls skiers.
Throughout my four years at Glens Falls High School, Mr. Parks taught me more about the sport of Nordic skiing and helped me to discover more about myself than another other singular person. Whether he was motivating me with words of encouragement, timeless jokes, or his defining whistle that would echo through the woods and instantly incite better technique, what I always knew to be true was that Parks was a coach that believed in his athletes, oftentimes more than they believed in themselves.
He would tell us that, “Dedication to improving your technique every practice is practice for real life” or “practice doesn’t make perfect, perfect practice makes perfect.”
Parks always expected the best out of each of us, from the most to least motivated athletes, and he had a way of dragging the best out of his athletes without us even realizing it was happening.
Whether he was motivating me with words of encouragement, timeless jokes, or his defining whistle that would echo through the woods and instantly incite better technique, what I always knew to be true was that Parks was a coach that believed in his athletes.
Parks continued to inspire success during the 2014/2015 season, what would be his last as head coach. Mr. Parks started with a group of forty athletes due to his recruiting efforts at the middle-school level, not only did Parks manage to bring in numbers but he sent five athletes to the state meet this past season, with the Glens Falls women representing a third of the Section 2 team. The women were led by senior Mayr Sawyer, a member of the Section 2 bronze-medal relay team as well as the female recipient for Section 2 sportsmanship award at the state meet. All in all, a great note to end a career on.
***

Friday, May 1, 2015

The "Yes" Column

As promised here is the story of my boyfriend and I. This was written in April 2014 for a creative non-fiction class and covers our general relationship up from my freshman year of college (2011-2012) until that time.
The “Yes” Column
Every year when I go in for my annual physical, there are forms in the doctor’s office asking about depression. They’re ironically on a sunny yellow sheet of paper, in an attempt to mask the gloomy questions with the brightness of the paper. They’re something my mother and I would make light of, make into a joke. The forms have two columns: check yes if you experience these symptoms or no if you don’t. I’ve always checked no. But going into my sophomore year of college, I actually read through the list because it was the first time I thought maybe I did have some of the “yes” symptoms. I scanned down the list, conscious of those around me, embarrassed I needed to think about if I was actually depressed, the bright yellow paper on my lap like a beacon. Symptoms such as problems sleeping, extreme restlessness or hyperactivity, decreased feelings of self-worth and changes in diet practically throttled me. But I lied. I went down the columns checking “no” before handing the clipboard to the nurse with an extra cheery smile, trying to fool both of us into believing I really belonged in the “no” column.
My development of “yes” symptoms began after the spring semester of freshman year. It was the best and worst time of my life. I had been slowly falling head over heels for a teammate, Adam, all year, but I had always viewed him as inaccessible because he was a senior and I was a shy freshman who couldn’t form sentences when he would talk to me. I couldn’t get past his deep brown eyes that seemed to read right through me, or his perfectly proportioned skier body of narrow hips, wide shoulders. But, miraculously, at our end of the year team formal, we got together, my shyness overcome with the help of a little liquid courage.  We stayed together throughout the spring, with our time together rapidly dwindling as graduation approached.
I never had any real belief that we would stay together beyond that spring. I could barely believe we were together at the time, let alone imagine it to last. But as the spring progressed, he was hired as an assistant coach and decided to get graduate school out of the way at St. Lawrence too. At the time, I considered myself lucky. The fact that he would still be here after graduation, elevated our potential in my mind.
One night, we spent the evening in a lean-to located a little ways off campus. After burying my face in my sleeping bag, I told him I didn’t want things to end. He pulled me closer to him and stroked the length of my arm as he explained that things between us would have to end with the semester. He would be my coach and having a relationship with one of his athletes simply wouldn’t be appropriate. Being with me was not an option.
I stayed at school as late as I could, willing time to stall and my remaining days with him to lengthen. On my last day, I brought cupcakes over to his townhouse and we hugged goodbye. I was still too intimidated to go for a kiss myself. As I walked away into the rain, Ray Charles’s “Every time We Say Goodbye” played on repeat in my mind. I willed him to come outside after me and say he had changed his mind. I prayed this wasn’t the end and that he would snap out of responsibility and into a relationship. But my luck had run out and as I climbed into my suburban, I choked back tears as my father unknowingly drove me home and away from the guy I’d fallen harder for than I ever planned.
The first week of being home was the hardest. I missed the weight of his body on the mattress next to me, the warmth of his hands on my waist, the fluttering, heart-wrenching feeling I got every time I opened my eyes and saw his beautiful face just inches from mine. I could still feel the thickness of his hair beneath my fingers, taste his lips and smell his combination of Old Spice and Suave for Men shampoo. I couldn’t sleep, I was never hungry and long bouts of endurance activity became my saving grace. I came to understand despair at that point in my life. Whenever Adam would email about how training was going I would comb through his words hoping for some indication he had changed his mind about us. Whenever he would call to discuss skiing and the workouts I was doing, the conversation would begin with a normal, impersonal “How are you?” and I would revert to my automatic answer of “fine” because that’s what I needed to tell myself too. I needed to deny I was anything but fine in order to bear it. 
In my denial, I felt that I could overcome any of my emotions. If I suppressed them long enough, hard enough, they would eventually dissolve and dissipate somewhere inside of me. I firmly believed that I could conquer any pain, physical or emotional. But in order to better understand my emotional pain I often transferred it into physical pain. I literally ran and skied myself into the ground. I developed hip problems over the summer that made it painful to climb stairs but a few ibuprofen pills every few hours enabled me to go on runs and skis that lasted for hours. I went to physical therapy for my hip, only to hit the trails right after promising my therapist I would take a day off. Physical pain was more tangible, I could understand it. But even more than understand it, I was its creator, I was in control. I could say how badly I would hurt by how hard I pushed my body. I was also the one who could make the pain stop. Physically at least.
By the time I returned to college, I was obsessed with exercise because it was the only thing that made me feel good and it was the only thing I had control over. When I went on a run I would run at race speeds just because it made me feel powerful, my deteriorating body be damned. I had told my coaches I went to physical therapy over the summer and they encouraged me to keep up with it at school but I never wanted to show weakness in front of Adam so I never went except on threat of not being able to attend practice.
Interactions between Adam and I were awkward because I reverted back to being unable to speak in front of him. He acted like nothing had happened between us so I followed his lead and never mentioned it. Instead we just let an awkward tension grow that was only dissipated when he would scold me for not taking care of my body. As my physical injuries became more problematic, additional issues such as my insomnia came to light, giving him one more thing to be angry at me for. When I would be in meetings with the coaches about these issues, the unavoidable inquiry of “why do you think this is happening?” would always arise and I would lie. How could I say that Adam was the real problem, that I couldn’t sleep because I couldn’t stop thinking about him or that I couldn’t stop exercising because it was the only way I could deal with the pain of not being with him? How could I say that the real problem was that I loved him but he didn’t love me back?
By the time skiing was over, my feelings for Adam had only grown. My attempts to get over him were discouragingly unsuccessful and my body was so broken (I had developed a stress fracture) at this point that exercise was no longer a viable outlet. I turned instead to alcohol. I would only drink on the weekends, blending in with the other college students, but would fantasize about being intoxicated all week. It made me numb. It took away all pain. It became my new and improved saving grace for the spring semester of my sophomore year.
I wouldn’t qualify myself as an alcoholic during this time but it made me understand alcoholics. I sympathized with the fact that alcohol could, not take away my problems and pain, but make them not hurt so much, even if just for a little while. I got it. Every hour I was drunk was one less hour I hurt over Adam. But it wasn’t who I was and I slowly began to resent myself for relying on it. Over the summer I gained substantial weight from it and would train only a fraction of the amount I had the previous summer because I no longer cared. I didn’t care about my body or skiing or myself. Nothing really mattered.
At this point I obviously knew that Adam and I were a thing of the past, smoke in the wind. I wasn’t ignorant, I knew that for him at least time had sealed off those feelings and he was past it. Although I couldn’t say the same for myself I knew I had to try harder as I faced another ski season with him as a coach. Whatever it would take to move past him this school year I would do.
Yet when I returned to school for my junior year, I wasn’t who I thought I would be. I drank and partied heavily, I hardly cared about athletics, my body was a wasteland, and I was rapidly losing more and more respect for myself after every random guy I kissed.  I thought that maybe if I put enough people between Adam and myself I’d forget how he’d begin his kisses slowly, concentrating on my bottom lip and gradually build into the toe-curling whoppers that we all dream of. If I kissed enough boys my age who barely needed to shave, I’d forget how it felt to cup Adam’s occasionally scruffy jawline in my hand.  But instead, as I was kissing too-much-tongue guy or holy-shit your-mouth-is-not-a-Hoover guy, I just wanted to kiss Adam more.
So I came up with a new please- get-over-Adam- now plan. I’d try something with a little more substance, something more than a make out. I started seeing one guy regularly and we became a “thing,” then together, before finally starting to date in December. He was funny and young, carefree and enjoyed partying. I liked him, I really did, but my best friend still heard more about the funny things Adam did at practice rather than anything about my boyfriend. 
Spending hours in a ski van driving to races and practice with Adam likely didn’t help the please-get-over-him-now plan. I had long gotten over my inability to hold a conversation with him, and the more we talked the more I liked him. We talked about writing and books, roommates and professors, class and family. There was never a shortage of things to discuss as long as it wasn’t us. Over the two seasons we spent as coach and athlete, we never discussed what happened his senior year. The closest time we came to it was when a teammate was describing how I had been talking in my sleep and snoring the previous night. Adam commented that he doesn’t snore but people have told him he breathes heavily and looked over to me as if for confirmation. I acknowledged it but quickly changed the subject before anyone could wonder why I would know anything about Adam’s sleeping habits. 
In addition to loving talking to him, it wasn’t helpful that I could openly look at him as we talked. Constantly looking at him from the side gave me an appreciation for the straightness of his nose, something my own is lacking due to a street hockey puck to the face when I was seven. I noticed that the two lines on the corners of his mouth had become more prominent than I remembered and they made him look older, more thoughtful. And whenever I’d ask a question that required his opinion, his jaw would clench and relax twice before responding. But his hands captivated me. They have a light dusting of brown hair, his nails are always neatly trimmed, and his fingers are long and beautifully straight. He doesn’t like having rough calloused hands but even regular application of lotion doesn’t stop his skin from becoming firm and established. I loved watching them slide smoothly around the steering wheel or tap out the rhythm to whatever classic rock song we were listening to on his leg.
After our the last weekend of racing he prompted the team to signed up for the Stowe Derby, a twenty kilometer ski race that combined alpine and cross country, with him on the Sunday after our last collegiate race. During the week leading up to the Derby, teammates who had expressed interest slowly decided that it wasn’t something they wanted to do or it was too expensive, so at the end of the week I was the only one that signed up. We left the carnival together, talking as we always do as we drove to Stowe, not once mentioning the elephant we had crammed in the car with us for the hour long car ride. We then picked up our race packets, and checked into our single hotel room for the night. We showered and watched the Olympics, talking casually, with me sitting on my queen bed and him sitting on his queen bed, yet neither of us dared to address the throttlingly obvious fact that we were alone in a hotel room together. Alone. In a hotel room. With Adam. Basically, my every fantasy come true. Except that he was still the coach and still didn’t want me.
For dinner, we drove around on a mini-adventure before going to “Jimmz” a scruffy little pizza shop. Deciding to split a large pie, I surprised him by wanting bacon and agreeing to his addition of pepperoni because “girls typically always just go for cheese.” I was tempted to get a beer, thinking that a slight buzz would make this situation less awkward and maybe give me the courage to address the insanity of our situation. Instead I ordered a water.
On the way out of the restaurant, he strode a bit ahead of me so he could open the van door for me. It had become a joke earlier in the day when I laughed at him for holding the door, telling him his mom would be proud. For the rest of the weekend I never touched a door handle.
Back in the hotel room, we watched Borat, a movie we had picked up earlier for a few bucks from the gas station before we went to bed. Not that I really thought I would need them but I wore nice underwear and a lacy pink bra to bed, just in case. As we lay in our separate beds, all I could think about was a scene from What Happens in Vegas when Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher were sharing a hotel room. The camera flashes back and forth between them as they lay awake staring at the ceiling waiting for the other person to make a move. Since he hadn’t started breathing heavily, I guessed he was still awake too. I desperately wanted to bridge the gap between our beds and snuggle into him. I wanted to speak up and address the awkwardness, to tell him things aren’t over for me, that if he would just say yes I’d be all his. Instead I just laid there, shuffling my feet and playing with my fingers, staring at the ceiling.  
We both woke up around six, well before the alarm, because the room next to us was playing loud country music. He told me I had been talking in my sleep, and I instantly panicked. I remembered having a dream that I was talking on the phone to one of my roommates telling her everything I wanted to say to Adam. Thankfully he said he could only make out a few words that it was mostly just mumbling. Breathing a sigh of relief, I sank back onto my pillows. After a moment though, he said, “Ok I’m just going to say it, I’m just going to say it, this is awkward.”
In an instant, his words released the tension that the room had been suffocating with, the rigidity with which I had held back my feelings for the past two years, every obstinate refusal to address our past whenever we had been alone together over the past twenty- four months, every suppressed nervous giggle, every tongue-bitten comment, every bottled-up, stuffed aside, thought, feeling and action I had regarding Adam, was finally let out into the open. And what was more; he was addressing it, not me.
He began by saying we have never talked about what happened, that he has thought about it constantly since his senior year, wondering what would have happened if he hadn't said no to me. He said he thinks we’re compatible and talking to me in the vans is easy and fun. Adam said that he likes that I recognize the real reasons he says certain things, like introducing the idea that there might be another person as assistant coach for the coming season just he gets validation from the team that they’d like him to stay another year. He said he knows that relationships between assistant coaches and students happen all the time because we’re all basically the same age and went to school together and he wasn't as worried about having a relationship as he once was. He kept saying all of these perfect, beautiful things to me as I laid there in my bed, still fiddling my hands and jiggling my legs, wanting to record it so later I could prove it wasn’t a dream.
Yet even as he said all of these perfect, beautiful things, I was skeptical, one hundred percent on the defensive. If I admitted the depth of my feelings what would become of it? Could I handle another insomniatic summer? What if he was only saying these things because we were currently in this safety bubble of a hotel room and we were so removed from the reality we’re typically in? What happens when we get back to campus? Do I return to being an athlete and we hover around the awkwardness and pretend nothing happened when he inevitably decides he can’t be with me after all? Could I handle returning to all of those “yes” symptoms if this doesn’t work out again?
Instead of just lying there, this time I took some initiative. This was my golden opportunity to tell him, almost two years after the fact; he was still everything I wanted. I took a deep breath and told him I liked him, choosing to keep my feelings lighter than they actually were to guard against potential heartbreak. Then I got off the bed, and started to brush my teeth, knowing that I needed something to physically prevent me from blurting out more emotions than I was ready to share. Plus, if we were to kiss, I didn’t want to have morning breath.
My movement seemed to remind him that we needed to get to the race and signaled a pause in the conservation. There was still heaviness in the room, as both of us crashed from the high of boldness we, both passive people, seldom took advantage of. We hovered around one another, quickly packing up our bags and checking out of the room. As our hotel door closed, all I could think about was how we were leaving our little safety bubble and moving closer towards our reality.
The car ride was short and nearly silent, only occasionally interrupted by Adam offering me bits of advice on the race. We took a shuttle bus up to the mountain where we rode the chairlift together and got in a short warm up before lining up for the start of our wave. He quickly took off as I approached the alpine slope more cautiously on my Nordic skis, taking my time on the tricky corners and attempting to keep my mind focused on my pole plants and foot movements and not on the fact that the guy I have wanted to be with for the past two years finally wanted to be with me. I tried not to think about the conversation that had taken place only hours before, tried to put it out of my mind so I could concentrate on racing but instead I recreated every word he had said to me and constructed the likely conversation we would have on the long van ride back to campus and crafted the perfect answers, preparing what I wanted to say so that when the time came I would be ready.
Two months later, I could see the collar of his undershirt: a light grey t-shirt from a summer ski camp at Stratton Mountain School, recognizable by the slightly frayed collar, a glimpse of his rugged personality. But it was hidden under a white collared shirt that had a light blue checkered pattern and my favorite heather-grey, high collared quarter zip up sweater. He had on a pair of olive green khakis and his dressier tan shoes that he got from Goodwill, a reflection of his frugal nature.
Adam had said we needed a classy night because we hadn’t gone out yet that week. We went to a nice restaurant in the neighboring town, ironically called “First Crush.” For dinner we both ordered the chicken special and walked across the street for some after dinner fro-yo. Adam mocked the way I said fro-yo, drawing out the ‘oh.’ We split a neon green cup of frozen yogurt, before heading back to his house. When we got settling in bed we watched an episode of The Office, me lying on his chest while he leaned up against the wall with his arm around me. When the episode ended he declared it time for bed, snapping his computer shut as he put out the light.
In the darkness, he reached out a hand and slid it up until it lay on my cheek, using my face to orient himself in the dusky darkness. He found my lips and pressed his against them, while he placed one hand on my waist as the other held my hand. I boldly slid my fingers under his shirt, nervous as I inched my hand over the hills of his abs, to the plane of his chest and back down to his waistline. I felt him unbuttoning my sheer black top. I shrugged out of it and pulled off my camisole. I could make out his movements in the invading streetlight as he grabbed the back of his t-shirt and pulled it over his head. Stripped of our tops, we both scooched closer to one another. He slid one arm around me; the other unclipped my bra as I undid his belt, his button, his zipper. He slipped the straps off me and I used one-hand to slide his pants off his hips. While he got his pants the rest of the way off, I freed myself of my bra, dropping it over the side of the bed. Then he wrapped one arm around me, leaning on the other as he hovered over me, kissing me slightly differently now, harder, and used his other hand to undo my belt, button, zipper as I self-consciously thought considered the imperfections of my naked body.
In the morning, we lay curled together in bed, both shirtless but wearing bottoms. My right leg was intertwined with his, his left arm under my neck, his hand cupped around my shoulder, holding my body against his. We were listening to the Allman Brothers but the song playing in my head was John Legend’s “All of Me,” on repeat in my head from the night before. We had been laughing a few minutes before as Adam tried to sing along, purposely distorting his voice, alternating between soprano and the deepest bass. Then we were quiet for a moment before he said, “I love you Kate.” I felt my heart stop, as in the rarest of moments it fell out of sync. Heat flooded my body, like I was sitting in a sauna, going from comfortable to squirming in the sudden unescapable heat.  I felt my face turn scarlet and my eyes flickered quickly to his face, my attention diverted from the pattern I had been drawing on his chest, as I tried to assess the seriousness of his words. His mouth still held the smile of our laughter, his deep chocolate eyes brighter than usual, but his face solemn enough to let me know he meant it. He said it easily, matter-of-factly. Not hurried, not passionately, not a whisper, just a straightforward up front statement of fact.

I awkwardly laughed and nuzzled my face in between his shoulder and neck, unable to quell my laughter. It wasn’t a product of sarcasm or any sort of distrust but in bliss and overall nervousness. Realizing I had to do something I smiled hugely and kissed him, again and again and again. He smiled, his cheeks curving in deep lines along his dimples, as he said, “you’re so happy,” like he was surprised. Like he didn’t know I had been waiting to hear those words for the past two years.
***
I'm planning on writing more about what has been going on with us since then (can't believe that was a year ago!) because so much has happened, both good and bad. We have definitely gone through a lot but sometimes that shows you something about yourself and the person you choose to be with despite everything that tries to get in the way.
(Adam and I on Mount Philo in Vermont, March 2015)