Tantrum No. 1

Before I continue with the short summary of my demented life with Derek, and since I keep referring to his abusive behavior, I thought I’d post about one of his Childish tantrums. It’s a particularly bad one, one of the worst, about 16 months into our life together.

It’s “No. 1” because it’s the first one I’m writing about, certainly not the first one chronologically, or the last. I wish. There were so many.

In July of 2010, two weeks after I made the irreversible decision to give up my housing subsidy and move in with Derek, we went to Hillside, the gay campground in NE Pennsylvania, to check out Bear Weekend. It was sold out, so we got a hotel room relatively close by and bought day passes for the campground. There were some people we knew there and we stayed on the grounds most of the day, leaving to get some dinner and take a nap. For the most part, we had a great time and there were a lot of really good-looking men. Since it was a Saturday, there were parties all over the grounds and we wandered from place to place, hanging out and talking to people.

We drank all day. And I mean all day.

After dark a lot of the men go down to the “disco” to continue drinking and socializing. It seems to me there were several hundred guys there. There were only a few inside on the dance floor, so almost all of the men were outside.

To get to the bathroom, we had to walk though a large covered area, open on three sides, with picnic tables. After one of his piss breaks Derek sat back down and told me there was a man naked, on all-fours on one of of the tables with an open can of Crisco® next to him! (Bear Weekend is one of several weekends during which Hillside’s nudity and public sex policy is “relaxed.”) He appeared to find it amusing, and I said “Oh really? Let’s go look!” We walked up to the bench and had a look. I then I retreated to the wall to see if anything was going to happen.

Something happened alright…in Derek’s head.

He picked up the can of Crisco®, threw it at my feet, and screamed “This is what you really want!!”

[Long-time readers of this blog (all two of you!) know that I was very into fisting for some years. I hadn’t done it for a long while, even before I met Derek, and I’d told him numerous times, truthfully, that I didn’t care if I ever did it again. It was something I enjoyed, and it certainly brought the men to the yard, so it was good to have on my sexual menu at the time. I was still on the Handball List, an email list for guys into fisting. The list was mostly dead, with only one or two messages a week, and I read it because I was amused by the obsessiveness of some of the men on the list. They’re a strange group. The fact that I was ever into it remained a bug in Derek’s brain. In fact, my entire sexual past, including thegloryhole.net and this blog in particular, bothered him. He wanted me to delete highstrungloner.com and my ten-year collection of dirty pictures completely. ("None of those guys look like me!" I'm not even kidding. ) I refused. I always replied that I wasn’t ashamed of my sexual history and I wouldn’t hide it.]

Anyway, I was utterly shocked when the Crisco® came flying my way. (And I do appreciate how totally hilarious this is. It’s, in a way, a funny story to tell.) Despite being quite drunk, I kept my wits and went back to where we had been sitting. Derek was relentless. He insisted that I was still into fisting and, somehow, this fantasy of his was a reflection of my feelings about him—in a negative way, of course. He got louder and louder. I was mortified. He kept going on about the Handball List in a ridiculous, accusatory way, demanding that I unsubscribe.

Public scenes are something that I won’t tolerate. I just will not be that couple,” so I told Derek I was leaving. He dangled the car keys in my face. Really. I didn’t care; I’d walk if I had to. He followed me through the crowd, still screaming like a lunatic.

Someone must have called Security because we were approached and asked to leave. "Oh, believe me, I’m leaving!”

"Oh great," I thought. “Now we’ll never be allowed back.Wonderful.

There was more drama when we got to the car and he wouldn’t let me in at first. I didn’t say a word. It seemed pointless. When we got back to the hotel, I went right to bed. He eventually gave up yelling and left the room. There was a lot of door slamming. I know he eventually came to bed but he said nothing, thankfully.

It was a long, long drive back to Philly in the morning.

In the car Derek couldn’t apologize enough. He told me he had talked to his brother in Los Angeles on the phone when he left our room the night before and got some sensible advice. Jeremy said that it was senseless to hold my past against me. The past has already happened and there was nothing that could be done about it. (Doh! No shit. I guess this wasn’t already obvious to him.)

I started talking on the way home. I reminded Derek of his promise to do something about his insane outbursts. I certainly wouldn’t have agreed to give up my housing subsidy without that assurance. Now, less than two weeks later, he did it again. I didn’t know what to do. I felt foolish for even thinking he could do it. I couldn’t even cry; I was just so terribly angry.

Ultimately, we agreed that Derek would stop drinking and I would, too, to support him. (As I've said before on this blog, I had previously been sober for 20 years. As much as I loved drinking, I could do it again. Piece of cake. And it was…for me.) He promised to return to therapy and go to AA. I knew that simply being sober wouldn’t fix this. The behavior would eventually return if he didn’t try to deal with it. And boy, did it ever!

Things between us were “good” for a bit but they slowly got really unbearable again once we'd been in Maine for a while. By then my options were terribly limited. After all, I had left my entire life behind to follow him there.

I’ll document the long, horrible decline in future posts. Thinking about all of this again is not easy but I’m hoping it helps get the last several years of living with insanity out of my system. We’ll see, I guess.

Thanks.

One Response to “Tantrum No. 1”

  1. I rather like that very few people read this blog. It gives it a thin nimbus of exclusivity that you just can't feel on a site with thousands of annual visitors. In all fairness, the old version of this blog saw its fair share of traffic over the years, to judge by my recollection of the hits counter on the front page (at least I *think* there was one).

    I'm pretty shocked by this vignette with your ex-boyfriend. For one thing, I'm no stranger to hissy fits or temper tantrums from either gender I've dated, casual or committed. But their common refrain was that they were usually triggered by a sweeping statement or facetious remark that just didn't go over well with the other party. That's NEVER an excuse to go overboard and ruin an otherwise nice experience at a party camp, of course. But it's understandable, and I've done my share of kneeling and appeasing to help them come back to their senses. This story, however, lacks that crucial element. I mean, it literally makes no sense unless he'd been holding in some unspecified resentment and simply needed the most threadbare of pretexts to vent it out. Even by that logic, it should've been a red flag. I mean, I wasn't even there and it scares the shit out of me.

    What's wrong with fisting? It's an enjoyable and safe activity (when correctly executed) that opens up new avenues of pleasure for the receiving partner. One can certainly keep it in one's sexual repertoire without being a regular practitioner. In any case, any objections to it are nullified by the mere fact of having been transparent about your sexual history in the first place. But the thing about emotionally-abusive people is they practice selective memorization. When things are going well, they keep the things they hate about you in a "miscellaneous" folder in their mental filing cabinet. As soon as their ego's bruised, usually by a jealous fit of pique, it all comes tumbling out in a torrent of verbal obloquy. I've been on the receiving end of THAT too. What sucks is that despite being free now of that kind of codependent abusive bullshit, I still miss being in a relationship. It's infuriating when it's the other guy's fault that it didn't work out. I'd say the main cause of failed relationships isn't cheating or serodiscordancy. It's selfishness.

    (BTW. So glad you still post about these real-life anecdotes. Some of us do care, as we can relate to it. Not to mention I'm happy that after 24 years, you're still alive. Gives the rest of us hope, even if our physical constitution may vary.)

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