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  • The Romantic

    The Romantic

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/06/05/the-romantic/
    B y Tamar Kevonian on Jun 5th, 2009 and filed under Columns,
    Commentary, People & Places.


    `Actually yesterday I was pretty depressed. I am a very romantic
    person and I kind of feel like I missed that era in my life,' says
    Melanie, known to her friends as Melo. `Now I find I'm not that
    selfless anymore. I would not do things because they're romantic, I
    would do things because they're logical or they make sense.' Romance
    and its changing nature as we evolve into the different stages of life
    is the topic of discussion. Whether married or single, everyone longs
    for its illusive magic. `Right now I'm so mechanical. If I meet
    someone I just have a face on where I'm totally shielded, I don't let
    them get into me. There's no feelings involved.'

    Our two cups of Persian tea give up their plumes of steam as Melo
    ruminates about the changing nature of relationships. She finds that
    she has become more wary and calculated in her search for love and
    misses the spontaneity that used to define her.

    When asked to define romance she quickly responds, `love at first
    sight,' but admits that it no longer happens that way at her age. She
    sounds like an old matron but, at thirty eight, Melo is far from being
    old. Her English has a distinct Iranian accent with a heavy European
    overlay. Although born in Iran, she grew up in Europe and moved to
    California in her twenties. She's become aware that now, the person
    she may fall in love with at first sight may not be the person she
    ultimately wants to be with. `That's not how I think
    anymore. Appearances may be just 10% of the whole thing.'

    `You're older and wiser and have more experience now,' I agree with
    her.

    `Yeah but that's just so boring - like going to the dentist,' she says
    and laughs, displaying her wry sense of humor.

    Melo believes that culture along with community pressure and family
    expectations have become restrictive when trying to find a soul
    mate. `It's kind of sad and in my particular situation there's another
    barrier,' she says referring to the fact that she is gay.

    `I've been a coward. I haven't admitted my lifestyle,' she says and
    tells how there's a new generation of women who live a much more open
    life than hers. Her voice is quieter and more withdrawn during this
    shift in the conversation. It's no longer a lighthearted discussion of
    the fun side of relationships but a deeper exploration of
    identity. `It's hard to be Armenian, to be romantic, be in a
    relationship, and have a certain lifestyle,' she explains but admits
    that it's difficult for everyone, regardless of their way of
    life. `Look how hard it is for Armenian girls to meet a man.'

    `Do you think it's really that hard or we just make it hard?'

    `We make it harder. Our surroundings make it harder. It's a
    combination,' she concludes.

    She tried to make things simpler at one point in her life. `I always
    thought if I moved away from my family I would be freer. But it's just
    the opposite because when you're away from your family you don't have
    anyone to share those intimate thoughts with.' Although Melo didn't
    give herself the time or the opportunity to share her emerging
    identity with her family, she thinks that eventually she would have
    been forced to. `When you run away you come up with excuses and that
    takes a longer time.'

    Even though her family now knows the whole truth about who she is, at
    the time she believed that she could disguise any aspect of herself
    that would cause them pain or disappointment. `I regret lots of
    stuff,' she says as her voice catches in her throat. `Now I think
    differently.' Her younger self only saw the situation from her
    personal point of view without giving her family a chance to see if
    they would accept her the way she was. `Now when I look from their
    point of view, after undermining them for so long, [I realize] that I
    could have taught them to be more understanding but I never even
    tried.' It would have made her life and her relationship with her
    family much more comfortable. `But unfortunately, our community makes
    us do things which make life even more difficult. That's what we're
    all dealing with, regardless of what lifestyle we have. So this is
    applicable to any Armenian.'

    `How does this stop you from being romantic?' I ask bringing back the
    original topic of our conversation.
    `I want someone else to take the initiative for once. But it's so hard
    and I'm tired,' she responds and explains that everyone else also
    wants the same thing and so everyone is at a stalemate. `That's why
    you kind of stay very neutral and not show any feelings. After a while
    you get tired of that so you just let it go. So the romance dies.'

    Like most people in the Armenian Diaspora, Melo has a long resume of
    countries in which she's lived. The experience has enhanced and
    enriched her world view but made her much more cautious towards
    people. `It's taken its toll on me,' she says of the constant moving,
    `you become very fragile and very careful in people. You don't want to
    invest so much of yourself because you've done that so many times
    before. No one is around from your past.'

    Melo finds it hard to connect with someone who has lived in only one
    place most of their live. `They're [like] an open book. Things are so
    simple for them,' she says and admits that she doesn't feel like she
    `fits in.'
    And of the illusive nature of romance, Melo concludes that being
    romantic means showing your feelings. `I think there's a lack of
    romantic people.' She means that there is a lack of people willing to
    be open enough to show their true emotions.

    `But at my age,' she says, `romance is secondary.

    What she considers a primary requirement in a partner is someone who
    is `self sufficient, not needy, has lived alone at least at some point
    in their lives, not attached to their parents, have [an] identity,
    have some education, [have] goals in life, etcetera, etcetera,' with a
    twinkle in her eye and a shrug of her shoulders indicating that she
    could go on and on about the values and qualities she now looks for in
    someone beyond the initial feeling of love at first sight.
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