About two months ago, I received a Facebook friend request
from a familiar name from my past. There’s
not much that really shocks me in life, but there was definitely a moment of
surprise as I realized that I was being contacted by the man to whom I lost my
virginity. He was a coworker of mine the
summer before I went away to college; I was 18 at the time and he was
significantly older. He was also my
manager and I was the restaurant hostess (some stereotypes are true!). We had a summer fling before I packed up my
stuff and moved across the country.
I had no hesitation in accepting the friend request. I followed that up by browsing through his
pictures, noting that he is now married with three kids and still lives in
Southern California. It wasn't long before
I received a message from him with a quick hello and surprised congratulations
on my marriage (the surprise was fair enough, given that his experience with me didn't exactly indicate that I’d be married to a woman). We chatted back and forth a bit, simply
updating each other on the significant events in our lives…no big deal.
Then, seemingly out of nowhere, he brought up our past. He said that he wasn't sure whether my wife
was reading his messages (she wasn't) , or whether she even knew about him (she
does), but that he felt awful about everything that had happened and wanted to
apologize to me. Honestly, I was
probably more surprised by his apology than by the friend request. First, I was the one who initiated our entire
encounter 15 years ago. I approached
him, I told him what I wanted, and I explained that it would be a
no-strings-attached fling. Second, while
I completely understand that the experience wasn't really the way a “first time”
should go (no romance, no magic, not even an actual relationship), I have never
regretted what we did. Not for a
second. In fact, I’m still proud that I
felt like I was in control of my decision and that it was never something that just
happened to me. I’m not sorry.
We discussed his worry that he has taken advantage of me; I
told him that I understood where he was coming from, but that I had never felt
that way about it. I pointed out that
many (most?) 30-something men would react the same way to an eager 18-year-old. He held to his apology, telling me that I was
a tremendous young woman back then and that he hoped I had gotten great things
in life.
I reflected upon my utter naiveté about the whole situation
and laughed (groaned? rolled my eyes?) at how little I knew about
physical/emotional entanglements. Back
then, I thought I was so mature and understood so much. Looking back, I was ridiculous. He assured me that we’re all pretty different
from who we were 15 years ago. I think
he intended to show me that I shouldn't be so hard on myself for being a silly
teenager; I turned it back on him so that he would let himself off the hook a
bit.
It also made me think about how much we are always
changing. I mean, 10 years ago, 5 years
ago, 1 year ago…I was not the same person I am today. It’s actually funny to imagine the things I would
tell my past self, and even more interesting to think of things that I would
intentionally withhold from myself. What
should I have known then, and what was I better off not knowing? I may shake my head at that inexperienced girl,
but she did pretty well all by herself. I’m
not sure I’d change a damn thing.