Joe Girardi isnt the only ones having second thoughts about getting in
over his head this month
.
There are plenty of now-or-soon-to-be singles in Hoboken who are
looking to run and hide as well
Ah, May. Home of Cinco de Mayo, multiple beach house happy hours,
and, of course, the unofficial start of summer otherwise known as Memorial Day weekend.
Unlike any other season, the summer means more than a little
long-term planning
whether that itinerary calls for a jaunt through Europe, a camping
trip in the Berkshires, or--from what some of you may have only heard about but never have
experienced--the sometimes-financially obnoxious purchase of a share in a co-ed,
pro-procreation beach house anywhere off of Exit 98 to 63
With Memorial Day Weekend comes the obvious and well-documented
temptation that strikes fear in the hearts of those deciding whether to maintain or
discharge a long-term relationship. For those off you reading this column who chose yet
another season of fun and frivolity at the Jersey shore and own that pesky
conundrum in the form of a significant other, decision time of whether IT is working or
not probably manifested itself the moment you got an "Are you coming back to the
shorehouse?" email from one of those bothersome people who run beach houses. You
know
the kind of people whose ego is writing checks their bodies cant
cash
The options are as limited as the band selection at the Osprey this
summer:
1) You can join a predominantly singles house along with Mr. or Mrs.
Right (now).
2) You can stay home with Mr. or Mrs. Right and resent him/her for
keeping you in this sweaty, people-free ghost town on summer weekends (but at least you'll
have each other).
3) You can kick the relationship to the curb because you feel this
puppy will never be housebroken the way you desire but haven't been motivated enough to go
through the hassle of ending it.
A fork in the road comes in many forms, and for those living in the
Mile Square, this ride down Decision Drive has a fork in it the size of the one in the
Yankees season.
The sound of 80s punk permeates the air:
"Should I stay or should I go now?
If I go there will be trouble
But if stay it will be double
"
It all seems shallow on the surface. If two people have what only
that nauseating couple who feels compelled to make out on the PATH enjoy, then why let
something as insignificant as a warm season during the year destroy what the great thing
that was built during all of those cold nights of winter? If someone is good enough to go
to dinner with on a dead Saturday night in January, or is worthy of making it an
Apprentice night with in March, then why can't that same person suffice in June, July and
August?
Answer: Note the choice of the words "good enough" in the
previous sentence.
It's like driving down the road with Phil Collins on the radio.
Do you like Phil Collins?
Well sure, who doesn't like an oldie like Separate Lives every
decade or so?
Still, as you listen to the duo stating you have no right
to
ask me how I feel, you're not quite satisfied. In an effort to find something better, you
speed-search around the dial, but all that can be found are commercials, talk stations,
Mariah Carey and John Mayer.
Same goes for the average wintertime romance, except the commercials
represent those people you would skip over if humans could be TIVOed, the talk stations
are those you would rather ignore. For the men, Lindsay Lohan is the sorority chick that
always found a way to get to the fraternity house at 3:00 AM (too obtainable), while the
ladies see John Mayer as the guy who always has a girlfriend (unobtainable unless
youre an actress).
The choices on the radio, like relationship choices in the winter,
are slim.
So with options like that, you turn back to Phil.
Because he's safe
But you also know that the words "summer" and
"safe" rarely appear in the same sentence in a number of contexts. The thought
of taking a cooking class together or spending a Saturday afternoon at IKEA horrifies you.
But your bed partner didn't get the memo. He or she thinks the
status quo is fine, that life or something like it will continue as it had through
Christmas, Valentine's Day and St. Patty's.
A second email from the shore house coordinator comes into your
mailbox.
Like a bar at 3:00 AM, the coordinator tells you its last call. As
Clooney said in Ocean's 11
you're either in or you're out (Note: 11 is the
only good one of the three
13 was practicably unwatchable).
And blanket ultimatums disguised as debates are never fun.
"I think we should take some time off," you tell your cold
weather non-platonic friend.
The news hits them like one of those people who thought they won the
$100,000 Daily News Scratch n Match Game, only to be told the ticket was invalid. There
were such high hopes and big plans for the future, only to watch those dreams taken away
with a cold declaration from the power that be.
"I thought everything was okay," is the common response to
the time-off statement.
"I just need a little space to discover myself," is the
almost-automatic response.
If you remember anything about this column, sponge this: Whenever an
alleged significant other offers this excuse in the name of a better long-term solution to
an already flat-as-two-week-old-Pepsi-without-a-cap, save yourself something called
dignity and say, "Thanks but no thanks." Otherwise, the stench of hope will
linger like a fart in an elevator to nowhere.
Because while
you're waiting for that gal or guy to discover his or herself, Your Ex(plorer) is out to
sea
No, check that
The Explorer is at Club Med (otherwise known as Edgar's or
the Marlin at the beach) looking to improve the wind beneath the sails.
For those experiencing this first hand, this kind of written candor
isn't fun, but as we see on TNT every night in the form of the climatic scene in A Few
Good Men
You want the truth?
I think I'm entitled
Do you want the truth?
You can't handle the truth!
So go ahead
order the Code Red and see if you can get away with
it.
Maybe youre letting go the greatest thing that has ever
happened to you
All in the name of a summer reality show that is based in anything
but reality
And when it ends, your ex will have already moved on, while whatever
that semblance of a subletted relationship you had at 2:00 AM on a boardwalk in Spring
Lake isnt exactly looking for a relationship right now.
Then again, how much would it suck if you stayed in your rudderless
romance
only to see it ultimately fail, say, on Labor Day Weekend?
Another year gone
Another summer wasted
Fuck
I wouldnt want to be you right now.