Heavyweight - #5 Galit
Episode Date: October 25, 2016Galit was Jonathan’s first girlfriend. When she dumped him, he cried a lot and then locked away his emotional vulnerability in a safe for the next several decades. In this episode, Galit sends Jonat...han a Facebook message asking if he’d like to meet up. Credits Heavyweight is hosted and produced by Jonathan Goldstein. This episode was also produced by Chris Neary and Kalila Holt. Our senior producer is Wendy Dorr. Editing by Alex Blumberg, Paul Tough, and Jorge Just. Special thanks to Emily Condon, Stevie Lane, John K Samson, and Jackie Cohen. The show was mixed by Haley Shaw. Music for this episode by Christine Fellows, with additional music by Frisco J, Y La Bamba, Keen Collective, Hew Time, and Katie Mullins. Sam Kogon’s song “My Love It Burns” can be found here. Our theme song is by The Weakerthans courtesy of Epitaph Records, and our ad music is by Haley Shaw. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello?
Hey, Jackie.
Oh, God.
Hey, Jackie.
John, I'm not doing it.
Hey, Jackie.
I was reading and taking notes on Lyme disease.
I feel like it's more important right now.
Hey, Jackie.
John.
Hey, Jackie.
I said, hey, Jackie. I said, hey, Jackie.
I think I hear my neighbor.
There we go.
Hey, Jackie.
I think I hear it again.
You're wanted on the telephone.
And if it isn't Johnny, I'm not home.
See, there you go.
Can I go now?
Do you remember when we used to sing that song on the school bus?
Yeah.
When's the last time you sang it?
It's been a while.
I sing it all the time.
Bye. Have a good one.
You too. Bye.
From Gimlet Media, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and this is Heavyweight.
Today's episode, Galit.
When Galit found out I was living in New York, she sent me a Facebook message.
When Galit found out I was living in New York, she sent me a Facebook message.
Hi Jonathan, I ran into an old friend from Montreal who mentioned that you got married and moved to New York City.
Hope you are happy and thriving.
Smiley face.
I close Facebook, then open it again, re-read the message, then close it.
Open it, close it, check Twitter, open it back up again, and read it one more time. Galit was my first love. We dated when I was 18. It turns out that Galit was also now living in
New York. Before her, the only people who'd ever even seen me naked were my parents and my family
doctor. There was one experience with a girl
named Darlene. As we kissed, she waited patiently as I snaked my left hand around her back in order
to touch the breast kitty corner to the opposing hand. This maneuver almost left my shoulder
dislocated from the socket. But it was worth it. I had reached second base.
For U.S. listeners, the Canadian base system is metric.
Two of our Canadian bases only equal 1.4 of yours.
So I really knew nothing.
But what need could a mama's boy, a boy loved openly, lavishly, and oftentimes insanely by his mama,
have for romance?
Until the age of 18, the mere act of making my bed in the morning
was enough for my mother to proclaim me a genius, a saint.
My great-aunt, fingers brittle with arthritis,
played endless games of go fish with me,
and my grandparents, diabetic, palsied, and in continuous pain,
would drop everything to watch me lip-sync to the Bee Gees' Tragedy,
a song they could have only taken to be about the pogroms.
This feeling of unearned love, love for merely existing,
that would all end with Galit.
After asking around, I learned that, like me,
Galit had remained single into her mid-40s.
I only got married last year,
and for me, this unusually long and circuitous path to the altar certainly began with my heartbreak over Galit.
I'd always wondered if our relationship had the same impact on her.
It now looked like I'd get my chance to find out,
because a week after the first message, another one arrived.
Galit wanted to see me.
Why did she want to see me?
Let me get a level on you.
Hello, hello, one, two, three.
My name is Emily.
This is my wife, Emily.
Unlike most people, she doesn't seem to mind
when I bring along a microphone
to hold between myself and the world.
I'm from Watertown.
Hello.
Hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello.
We're walking to work together
when I bring up Galit's invitation.
In the short time I've been married, if I've learned anything at all, it's this.
In matters of connubial delicacy, it's best to get straight to the point.
So, um...
Um...
So, you know, my...
Um...
My first girlfriend...
Galit...
Uh, just recently got in touch with me on Facebook.
I know her name.
You do?
Did you know that it means little wave in Hebrew?
Yes, you've told me that like six times.
Anyway...
It's a long time ago. I don't know what you're getting so worked up about.
Who's worked up?
So jealous about. She's living in New York now. And she wants...
Look at the smile on your face before you even get any words out. Look at the delight.
It's a delight to be walking to work with you.
Oh.
I don't know why I'm so giggly about this.
But anyway, she asked if I wanted to...
Maybe that's a question you should ask yourself, Jonathan.
Why are you so giggly about this?
I think you're making me giggly.
But she asked if I wanted to get together.
You should.
Emily is not jealous.
She trusts me.
She's accepting not only of my quirks,
but of my shortcomings too.
Among them, a tendency to cut myself off emotionally.
Where are you right now, she asks sometimes,
when we're arguing,
and I recede so deeply into myself
that she can no longer see even a flicker of the man she married.
What Emily doesn't know
is how this defensive crouch all started.
Like I know sometimes you feel I could be sort of emotionally, I don't know, like stoic, I guess.
It's a generous term for it.
In some ways, I feel like as much as like my upbringing or my education or my whatever,
I just feel as though she probably played as major or maybe even more major a role in who I became.
in that like I don't think I've ever been able to make myself quite as vulnerable as I was in that relationship I just didn't know any better I had no defenses I had
no game isn't that what love is sort of about just being vulnerable in that way
I want to be vulnerable with you but I think in some ways
sorry I just dropped the recorder way? I want to be vulnerable with you, but I think in some ways...
Sorry, I just dropped the recorder.
After we say our goodbyes, I'm left wondering whether, like me,
Galit also now finds herself incapable of laying her heart out,
wide open like a dropped Gimlet-issue tape recorder that I know Alex is totally going to blame me for breaking
even though it never really rewinded properly
and there's peanut butter smeared into the headphone jack
that I didn't even do.
So I head into the subway and set off to see Galit.
Stand clear of the closing doors, please.
It was soon after we started dating
that together Galit and I discovered New York.
Twice a year, our junior college would charter a bus
that set off at midnight from Montreal to New York. Twice a year, our junior college would charter a bus that set off at midnight from Montreal to New York.
Getting off the bus at 8 a.m.,
I tilted my fedora towards my ponytail and took it all in.
New York was where we discovered my two new best friends,
art and culture.
It was where my friend Parker and I stayed up until 3 a.m.,
inventing the philosophy of what we called the even now, a tractatus that, best I can recall, had to do with how life was continually and constantly happening.
Even now.
And now.
And even now.
And it was.
And it was. A typical journal entry from the time would read,
saw a man on the subway with no shirt reading a book about life and other galaxies.
Every thought, every sight was a new journal entry,
because life was brand new and my heart was wide open.
Galit had my heart at its most open.
After me, Galit, did your heart start to close up too? Outside the Arlington
waiting for Glead.
Our plan was to meet outside
the old hotel where the bus used to drop us.
It's where our love affair with New York began,
a love that would eventually bring us both back here
in adulthood.
It's hard to imagine Galit as a woman in her 40s.
I'll be dead by 32, she would say,
when we were teenagers,
if not physically, then spiritually.
She was precocious about death,
a gothy kind of girl before there was such a thing.
Galit would dress in black,
cutting off her black tights at the thigh
to make them into old-fashioned stockings.
She looked like one of those creepy Edward Gorey children,
all grown up.
Would she still dress in black,
still possess a frown that lit up a room?
and black, still possess a frown that lit up a room?
As I wait, I study the women walking towards me.
Any one of them could be Galit.
A heavyset woman with something of Galit's slinky, tentative gait.
A businesswoman making eye contact as she speaks into her Bluetooth.
Someone eating a honeydew. Had
Galit become that type? With each person I audition a different feeling. Panic,
regret, cowardice, and... Just got a text that she's going to be ten minutes late.
Of course my go-to, gum-chewing pocket watch swinging casualness, masking a bad case of the trots.
And then... Hi.
How are you? I recognized your walk.
Sorry.
I'm recording, is that okay?
Yeah, sure.
Okay.
I feel like it's self-conscious.
Do you want me to turn it off for now?
Yeah, maybe just a few.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, yeah.
Yeah, okay.
You're gallant, boyish,
as though any change from the Jonathan you were at 18
will mark you as a phony.
You are the way you always were,
and she is smilier than you remember,
pretty, with long straight hair,
big eyeglasses, and in tights that are than you remember, pretty, with long straight hair, big eyeglasses,
and in tights that are no longer black,
but colorful.
What do you remember about those trips?
I remember tons about these trips.
For the next couple of hours,
Glit and I tour through the lobby and hallways
of the old Arlington.
Oh, do you remember this?
And through the nearby parking lots
that housed flea markets, where we once shopped for broken pocket watches. Oh, do you remember this? And through the nearby parking lots that housed flea markets
where we once shopped for broken pocket watches.
Yeah, remember?
We would spend hours going through people's junk.
Now it's just filled with cars
that used to be filled with magic.
We catch up, but mostly we reminisce.
I remember looking for Kerouac tapes.
Remember that?
Yeah, Kerouac recordings and Ginsberg recordings.
Galit's memories run towards the splendor of youth,
buying bootleg audio cassettes on Spring Street,
drinking peach schnapps on the hotel fire escape.
But I have other memories, too, and questions.
Among them, how did I get this way?
I just don't know how to bring any of it up.
Do you want to sit?
Yeah.
Seems like the benches are named after racing horses.
You haven't changed.
I'm bald.
You were joking about being bald when you were 16.
I wasn't joking about it.
You must remember, my hair was already thinning.
Right, so it was an ongoing narrative that you've embraced completely.
I have embraced it. It's very healthy.
My therapist encouraged me to go bald.
You are saying, see, I'm still funny.
Back then, when alone, you'd tell her jokes in your head
to get the wording just right for when you'd see her next.
Keeping Galit loving you felt like a full-time job.
But now your full-time job
is hosting and producing a podcast,
which requires sponsors.
After the break,
The Breakup. Uh...
Did you have any more memories?
As the daylight starts to fade and the weather turns cool,
I try to guide our reminiscences away from the feel-good
I've-had-the-time-of-my-life-and-I-owe-it-all-to-you montage
to the digging-up, I've had the time of my life and I owe it all to you montage, to the digging up memory lane to expose the soil from which this clenched, constipated flower of my heart refused to bloom montage.
As hard as it is, I have to ask the question.
Do you remember, like, what do you think went wrong?
Like, why didn't it work out between us?
Like, why didn't it work out between us?
Um, I'm trying to remember.
Galit looks off to the side and screws up her mouth.
It's the same move as when we were teenagers.
I could never tell whether she was being reflective or just buying time.
I still can't.
I don't remember the end of our relationship. I guess I just buying time. I still can't. I don't remember the end of our relationship.
I guess I just remember that... that feeling of fighting.
But I don't know what it was about.
But do you remember, like, a lot of weeping?
I do, now that you mention it.
I do remember.
I wept over Galit a lot.
In weeping, I was a brave barbarian.
I wept at friends' houses, on park benches, in darkened video arcades.
While in the past ten years I've only cried once,
I used to cry in front of Galit all the time.
If she failed to choose me for her trivial pursuit team,
I'd be sure I'd blown it, that it was all over between us.
When we went to the movies,
I'd stare at her face more than the screen.
And one day, while following behind her on the highway,
she in her mom's Honda, me in my dad's station wagon,
I was so afraid of any cars getting between us
that I almost lost control of the car.
In my mind, she was always trying to get away.
I don't think I was probably very fun to hang out with at all.
I mean, I think that I was probably anxious and depressed and not a lot of fun, really.
and depressed and not a lot of fun, really.
Yeah, I guess I don't, I just remember our relationship as my first love,
and so I just think of that part of it.
I don't remember the rest, but now that you bring it up,
I guess maybe you weren't that fun to be around.
Maybe I wasn't that fun to be around.
I remember how one day,
as we watched a couple chase each other around a maple tree,
trying to spray each other with water,
how Galit had wistfully asked,
why can't we be more like that?
And I'd said, because we're nothing like that.
And then she started to change,
wanting to be like that,
leaving me behind because I didn't know how to be like that.
No matter how hard I forced myself, and I forced myself with clenched-fisted determination, I could not come off as unforced.
Whenever I tried to be free and easy, foot racing, tickle fighting, a lamp would get broken, a testicle accidentally sat upon.
Instead of allowing her to grow away from me,
I tried to impose a closeness that only pushed her away faster.
I remember, like, we were in Westmount, like on Grosvenor Street,
and like a huge, thick blanket of snow had fallen.
It was nighttime. We were outside my dad's house, and we were having like a huge fight.
And I remember these huge snowflakes just kind of like falling down around us in slow motion.
It's like one of those moments where it was just so picturesque and so emotionally painful
that you know you're going to remember that moment.
Maybe we were breaking up.
Was that the breakup moment? I don't remember.
I did remember.
As she talks, I see us on the driveway, like figurines in a snow globe,
neon snowflakes the size of boxing gloves, gently somersaulting to earth
all around us. There were so many false endings and trial runs, but that evening, her resolve was
strong. She had guests inside that she wanted to get back to, and I begged her, all pride gone,
to please stay with me a little while longer so we could talk, but all I could do was sob and shake.
a little while longer, so we could talk,
but all I could do was sob and shake.
I was still on the cusp of childhood,
and it all had something of the toy store tantrum about it.
My reasoning was that if someone I loved as much as her thought I wasn't worth being with,
then I didn't want to be with me either.
In solidarity with Galit,
I wanted to walk away from me too and go with her.
I wanted the impossible.
It was a scary feeling to want someone that much,
and I spent the rest of my life running away from that feeling.
I don't know if you would call it traumatized,
but I definitely don't think I ever allowed myself
to be quite as vulnerable in relationships.
Did I leave a lasting impact?
I wish I could answer your question.
I wish there was one way that I could frame our relationship
having a monumental impact on the rest of my life.
But, I don't know, it was so long ago.
And we were together for, like, a year? I don't know.
Two years.
Two years?
Two years?
That's like 20 years in dog years or whatever.
For U.S. listeners, Canadian dog years are measured on a metric scale.
Oh, who am I kidding?
This hurt.
It's beginning to dawn on me that the real reason Galit wanted to see me,
her big secret agenda, was to have a nice afternoon.
She wanted to catch up and have fun, and I wanted to overanalyze
and parse. In other
words, our dynamic hadn't changed.
But even if I wanted
to, I couldn't stop asking
these questions.
You can't really
point to things that you've learned
from our relationship in retrospect,
can you?
I'm trying to remember.
Drawing a blank.
I mean, are your questions coming from your own thoughts about that?
Yeah.
Like, I think I had this idea that, like, love is unconditional,
and you could just keep testing it and testing it.
But I learned that eventually it'll break.
And I think going into my first relationship,
I sort of felt like you just put everything out there,
and you make yourself vulnerable,
and if you get hurt, it's not your fault because you were just being sincere.
And then I think I learned that you can't do that.
But I think at the expense maybe
of feeling maybe
like I need to keep myself reined in.
Yeah.
Like you got to see the face
that like I ended up shutting away
in an iron mask
for the next 20 years.
Do you feel like in your relationship now
that that's a face that you can show again
or that face that you want to reclaim a little bit?
I'm working on it.
Eventually, it gets too cold outside,
so we decide to leave the park in search of soup.
Do you want to go in here?
Yeah. Yeah? It's amazing. Okay. I will turn this off. outside, so we decide to leave the park in search of soup. Do you want to go in here? Yes.
Yeah?
It's amazing.
Okay.
I will turn this off.
At the lunch counter, as we sit there, side by side, I ask her how it feels to see me,
and she says it feels like getting together with family.
And I could feel it too.
Two people who felt comfortable and close,
the details of their shared past no longer important.
We were just together, eating soup.
After we eat, we head to the subway,
Galit going uptown, and I back to Brooklyn.
We say our goodbyes and something about them
feels final,
like maybe this is
the last time
we'll ever see each other.
When I get home,
the apartment's empty.
Emily's out with friends.
I sit for a while
in the quiet
and then
pick up a novel
I've been reading
for the past six months.
But I keep putting it down to look around my living room, at the records and paintings,
both mine and Emily's, and wonder what my 18-year-old self would have made of my New
York existence.
At close to midnight, I'm awoken by a text.
From Galit.
I had a few thoughts I recorded just now on my phone, it says. Do you want me to
send them to you? I close the app, then open it again, reread the message, then close it,
open it, close it, check Twitter, open it back up, and read it one more time. Then I write back saying, sure.
Hey Jonathan, I just wanted to add to our conversation that I don't think I was able to absorb everything you were saying, but walking away from it and having a chance to think just brought up a lot of emotion and sadness, and I just wanted to say if anything I ever did in our relationship caused you pain and led you to put up walls.
I just wanted to say I'm sorry.
And, yeah, I don't know why I'm getting so emotional,
but I just thought I'd share this, and that's it. Thanks.
I write Gleet back, telling her that there's nothing to apologize for.
Then I apologize for making her feel bad and say that, in fact, considering how young we were,
she'd been really mature and patient with me.
It feels terrible to have made her sad.
Somehow, through the course of our day, Galit and I had switched places.
My heaviness had given way to what, in my life, passes for understanding,
and her nostalgia had become tinged with sadness.
Eventually, Galit writes back.
We all get hurt, she writes, and we all build walls to protect ourselves
and then spend the rest of our lives trying to take down those walls.
So hearing you talk about that was just a reminder of my own struggle
to take down those walls. So hearing you talk about that was just a reminder of my own struggle to
take down those walls and open my heart. It also reminded me of the purity of young love
and how the ability to fully give and receive love seems to get more complicated as we get older.
In short, it's all good.
Gleet was right.
It does get more complicated.
But it also gets simpler.
The one time I've cried in the past ten years was at my wedding.
And I wasn't crying for fear that Emily would leave me.
I was crying because I knew she wouldn't.
You move from teen pain to adult pain.
You build up walls, then tear them down,
build them up again, check Twitter, and then, hopefully, take them back down for good. Thank you. guitar solo Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home
Furniture's returning to its goodwill home Now that the last month's rent is scheming with the damaged deposit
Take this moment to decide
If we meant it, if we tried
Or felt around for far too much
from things
that accidentally touched
Heavyweight is hosted
and produced by me,
Jonathan Goldstein,
along with Chris Neary
and Kalila Holt.
The senior producer
is Wendy Doerr.
Editing by Alex Bloomberg,
Paul Tuff,
and Jorge Just.
Special thanks to Emily Condon, Stevie Lane, and by Alex Bloomberg, Paul Tuff, and Jorge Just. Special thanks to
Emily Condon,
Stevie Lane,
and the inimitable,
the inimitable,
Jackie Cohen.
The show is mixed by
Haley Shaw.
Music by Christine Fellows.
Additional music credits
for this episode
can be found on our website,
gimletmedia.com
slash heavyweight.
Our theme song is by
The Weaker Thans,
courtesy of Epitaph Records,
and our ad music is by Haley Shaw. Follow us on Twitter at heavyweight, Our theme song is by The Weaker Thans, courtesy of Epitaph Records, and our ad
music is by Haley Shaw. Follow us on Twitter at heavyweight or email us at heavyweight
at gimletmedia.com. We'll have a new episode next week. Hey, Alex.
Do you need the studio?
You down in here?
Yeah, yeah, just wrapping up.
Get my stuff here.
Yeah, take it easy.
Okay, thanks.
Okay. Yeah, take it easy. Okay, thanks. Testing, testing, one, two, one, two, testing, testing.
Hello and welcome to Startup.
I'm Alex Bloomberg.
Is that peanut butter?
Gold state!