To English Gent: I Miss You Like Hell
Dear Ether,
Edna St. Vincent Millay wrote, “Where you used to be, there is a hole in the world, which I find myself constantly walking around in the daytime, and falling into at night. I miss you like hell.”
This is how I feel about English gent.
Yes. He lives here. I see him. But who he WAS and who I WAS and who we WERE……….there is a giant abyss. I reckon loneliness might be one of the most painful emotions of the human heart and mind. Many a man and woman will die shortly after a spouse passes away–they call this “the broken heart syndrome.” When English gent and I used to be separated, I would feel so alone and be in such a catatonic state that I couldn’t eat, interact with anyone and would force myself to sleep hoping I’d catch him in a dream.
In so many ways I have let this poor guy down. He left London, his family, a great job, a lovely flat, friends–the lot–to follow me and a pipe dream to Los Angeles. He did this because his love for me was so great that the above paled in comparison to being alone. And I, partly through selfishness but mainly because I was madly in love, allowed him to give these things up to come West. So how did things go so South?
When he looks at me, his once warm eyes narrow and ice over. I even see them flicker with impatience as he listens to me speak. He sleeps constantly (not in bed with me) even though he drinks constant cups of coffee to try and fight, what I think is heavy depression. He still dresses up every day, dapper as a dandy, as if he has a destination. But sadly, he just sits in his office or walks in the garden smoking cigarettes. When I hug him he is rigid. When I touch him he stiffens.
I don’t want this post to be about what I’ve done wrong or what he’s done wrong. Nope. That’s been written about countless times. This piece is about missing someone. Feeling their presence. Hearing their monotone voice. And feeling that “there is a hole in the world.”
Poor English gent. He has no one to talk to about his woes. Nowhere to go and hide. No money to treat himself. Ethers, I can’t fix this. I can’t fix him or our problems–at least not in the immediate future. But he’s a good person and I remember so many wonderful moments that we shared that changed both of our lives. I can’t bare watching someone so key in my life suffer. Yep. Maybe I miss a ghost. An ethereal object that will never return. It haunts me.
What he doesn’t know is that I still smell his jumpers—right around the neck (that’s where he carries his wonderful smell). I still look at him and think he embodies utter beauty. When he speaks sometimes I close my eyes and listen because his voice is so melodic and his thoughts so intelligent—I even tear up. And I watch him in that garden smoking those cigarettes. Pacing back and forth. Smoke billowing out of his mouth. I know he can’t see me, but, like a voyeur I try and guess what he’s thinking about. To try and crack his secrets. And he thinks I’ve just discarded all of his handwritten notes that he’s sent to me over the years. Gorgeous letters written in a fountain pen with beautiful drawings around the edges on cream paper. I’ve kept every single one and have them in a special drawer. I take them out and read them, crying line after line.
One day I hope this will pass. That we can either move on and go our separate ways content with our parting. OR, we can finally accept one another and embrace our future. But right now, like a horrible nightmare, I keep walking in circles day and night around the space we’ve created.
So, to you English gent, “I miss you like hell.”
Dedicatedly yours,
—One of 365






