Feel'd Notes: Opening Up
 

When I met this being, it was only a mere few weeks after I realized that continuing to hold space for my marriage to come back together (despite how many times my co-parent implored me to move on and realize that it’s over) was actually an effort of not listening. Ultimately, it was unkind to continue to hold that hope, if that makes sense.

When I finally began to rest into a place of acceptance, I was driving back from witnessing two of my friends get married in Richmond (I was living in Lynchburg at the time). @420chocolatejuice was part of the wedding band, and rode back with me in my 1993 Volvo wagon. He and I became close during some of the most trying points of the separation, and it was easy to open up to such a willing and compassionate ear. He asked how I was doing, and I said I was doing well, and simply acquiescing to the reality that as a non-Christian, non-drinker that lives in Lynchburg, the chances of me finding a partner on a similar wavelength were essentially nil.

Judah wasn’t so certain. He encouraged me to be open to possibilities in unconventional places. Then he gasped. “Oh my gosh. You HAVE to meet my friend @veganastronaut. I think she’s dating someone who lives states away, but if nothing else I think you’d make great friends.”

Friends I was good with. After being with someone for 12 years, someone I was (and in many ways am) still in love with, dating was by no means of any interest to me. Just a week before that conversation, on what would have been our 10-year wedding anniversary, I was at a @sufjan5000 concert. A friend of ours we met in Argentina gave me two free tickets for the show. Sufjan is one of the few artists my co-parent and I ever mutually enjoyed. After not finding someone to join me for the show, I went alone, and wound up finding someone at the gate who could use my extra ticket. I wore an outfit that was much more representational of how I was feeling as a person. I stood out, I know, but I felt like me.


Out of curiosity (and for the first time in my life), I downloaded Tinder and Bumble. I swiped through, made a couple matches, and immediately deleted my accounts.

Even though I didn’t so much as talk to anyone on those apps, it still felt good to accept the fact that July 22 is now just any other day and that I am an autonomous being with the ability to connect with others in whatever capacity I desired. At that point I really just wanted to connect with myself.

I went home after dropping Judah off and looked up the person he mentioned I’d get along with. The strange thing is that I knew this person, but didn’t know her. I’d seen her at a music festival my friends put on two years prior. She was climbing up a tree that I was sitting beneath with my co-parent and our three kids. I remember noticing this free-spirited person and admiring how much fun they were having.

While it was somewhat synchronistic that the person Judah recommended I meet was this same creature I saw that day two years ago, it was surreal to discover that she was the same person I had seen at the same festival the next year. And the same person I saw the year after that at the same concerts and gallery showings I attended. It was weird because in each of those instances, she looked like an entirely different person. I didn’t know her, but I knew her, somehow. Like she was this beacon of energy that called to me, yet I felt too timid to meet. To discover that these seemingly three different individuals that I had noticed over the course of two years were actually all one person, however undergoing progressive transformations, struck me in a bewildering way.

That next weekend, I went to see Judah play bass in one of my favorite musical projects to date, alongside bandmates @jlloydharmon and @silentbetti. I had just moved into a new place with my kids, and wanted to celebrate the milestone by experiencing some local culture. I went to the venue — a vape shop — fully intending to leave if people were blowing plumes of the grotesque nicotine substance into the air my children were breathing. Not only was that not the case, but instead the lady in question was there smudging sage and dancing around. Her bright, gregarious nature intimidated me. I knew I could not keep up that speed. I kept my distance but I noticed her smiling at my kids at one point, which made me happy. Again, I wasn’t in a dating mindset at the time (and really I never am … I make close friends and sometimes those close friends become lovers or partners), but figured if there were to be some interest, any person I might see romantically would have to accept the entirety of me — minions and all.

I left that night without speaking to her, but not being able to help but be aware of her every movement. My kids said they were having fun (my oldest was being far more outgoing than me and made friends with people who later became MY friends), but it was time to get them to sleep. I drove off blasting the music from a somewhat obscure music project that included Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood called Junun, wondering if she would hear it and turn her head.

Later that week, my friend Jeremiah (who fronted the aforementioned band) posted about discovering that very project. I commented on his post, saying I’d been listening to it since that February. Oddly enough, she posted on it to, and had been enjoying it for a year. I mentioned that there was a documentary out on it, and that I was dying to know what the songs meant in English. She said she had the CD insert and would loan it to me. We all made plans to get together a few days later to watch the documentary.

In the meantime, Judah invited both she and I to his place for a vegan lunch that took place hours before the documentary screening. I arrived a few minutes past the agreed time, knowing that there’s no way I’d be able to match her energy. I was just coming out of a place of crisis. Just then allowing myself to enjoy social settings again.

When she arrived, it was clear she had just been crying. Or WAS crying. I felt a sudden sense of relief and concern. She and her partner of several years were breaking up right then and there. She recited poetry to help calm her nerves, and read a Frida Kahlo letter about being single. I was enraptured by her eloquence and literary recall. She mentioned that she’d spent 15 percent of her life with this person, and was reeling. I replied, “Try nearly 50 percent.” She must have understood what I meant, and gave me a big hug. She was leaving for work. She pulled back from the hug, held me by my shoulders. Looked straight into my eyes and said, “I don’t know you, but I know you, and then left.

We reconnected later that night at the documentary viewing, where we didn’t speak much but I was still so aware of her motions and posture. I drank (and shared) yerba mate to ground myself. After the viewing, I invited her outside to loan her a collection of Ralph Waldo Emerson essays, encouraging her to read “Self Reliance,” as it helped me so much during my own period of grief. I also gave her a typewriter, and said the kinesthetic, noisy, imperfect nature of it was cathartic to say the least. We spoke outside under a street lamp for an hour. I felt seen in ways I had never felt seen before. She said she felt the same way. We left that night with no expectations, just relief at knowing that after so many years on this planet, that truly there was another soul like me out there.

We shared our first kiss the following night, after accidentally meeting as guests of guests to a bonfire at @foraged.obscurities’s house. We spoke until nearly 4 a.m. At 8 a.m., I was to begin my first day on the job as an English teacher at a new high school. The kiss came without notice, but felt like something from long ago. Like we’d known one another for eons but only just then reconnected. We were (I thought) simply hugging to say goodbye and part ways, but she held on tighter and longer, then whispered, “You are so charming” in my ear. We pulled back and looked at one another. 

Our bodies separate, but I could feel her entirely as if we were one entity. She asked, “Who are you, perfect human?”

I replied, “I’m pretty sure I am you.”


Before kissing, I wanted to let her know some things about me. About how my last relationship ended similarly to hers. I had an affair in 2010. It only lasted a few weeks, but the effects of it continually reverberate in my life and the lives of those around me. (More on that later.) I had held in the secret for 5.5 years. The day I cam clean was the day my marriage was over. I tried to keep things together by holding in something so significant, but it only built a greater and more impenetrable wall between my co-parent and I. The guilt was part of why I used to drink so much. I figured I could bear it forever. That it would be too cruel to let her know this thing had happened that I would never do again. On top of how wrong and cruel it was, it also fucked ME up. And I needed to be honest with this new friend and not go too far down into the affectionate wormhole of a new connection without letting her know who I had been, and would understand if that would be a dealbreaker. 

She said it was remarkable how far I had come from the person I described myself to once be, and that she was glad to meet me “now” instead of then. Even a day earlier, and who knows if we would have allowed ourselves to connect so profoundly. Before that first kiss, we discussed how we wanted a partnership to look like: true companionship, total transparency, and mutual augmentation or BUST. We made out for what felt like an eternity, and stated tentative plans to meet up when we could, in a day or two.

We’ve now been together for three years. I’ve never experienced a closer friend, a more synchronous lover, and a more viable intellectual contemporary. We discussed being in an open (ethically non-monogamous/ polyamorous/whatever-you-want-to-call-it) relationship within the first couple weeks. At the time I thought the right answer to that was “oh HELL no,” but later, after much reading, was surprised by how much I resonated with that relationship structure: one built on avid, clear communication and trust, a understanding that we will likely feel connections/attractions to others at times (especially given that we are both queer), and a deeply affectionate bond that felt like any intimacy shared in addition to what we experienced together was more of an overflow of what we had rather than a detraction from the partnership.

We’ve had various trials and errors along the way, and often one or neither of us feels all that mentally well. Not because of our relationship or whatever shape it takes in a given period, but because we BOTH experience depression and anxiety in our own ways. We BOTH experience existential dread. We BOTH feel that this mess of a society is so backwards and doesn’t really have a place for compassionate people who would rather live in harmony with the environment than exploit it for momentary personal gain and pleasure. It’s a tough fight at times, but we are here for it, and eager to accept and overcome whatever new challenge with compassion (and grace for those moments of intense fear).

Ultimately, however, I know that this smiling face in the picture here is my partner, my lover, my friend, my companion, my contemporary. Regardless of how hard shit gets or how dissonant we can sometimes feel, we know that just beneath the membrane of illusory separation, that one thing is irrefutable: “I am you.”

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My name is Marcelo Asher Quarantotto.

I WRITE WITH WORDS, PHOTOS, VIDEOS, WEBSITES AND MUSIC.

I am a father of three beautiful daughters and husband to the most gracious, saintly creature I've ever met. (You'll find pictures of them here from time to time.) I am also a multidisciplinary storyteller.