My Estellas & the Death of Romance
Monday, May 29, 2017
Cornelia sitting on floor left, her mother Jeanette siting behind her. |
This theme has been in my head since I received a Facebook
Messenger response from Cornelia a few weeks ago.
At age 74 almost 75 my romantic past (and by this I mean
romance since I can remember it) has flickered past like a silent movie.
I guess it all began when I was around 8 and my parents took
me to the Buenos Aires suburb of Anchorena. There I met a lovely little girl,
serious and remote called Ysabel Opisso. All I can remember of her was that
remoteness. She became my first Estella. It was in subsequent years but still
in Buenos Aires when we read Great Expectations that the name Estella became
part of my distant relationship with girls and women I admired.
It was Cornelia in Nueva Rosita, Coahuila who became a
memorable Estell of mine in the back seat of a Buick Roadmaster sometime around
1958. I was in the back seat with her. Her mother Jeanette was driving to the
US trough Eagle Pass, Texas to take her to a school in Uvalde. I was then to be
driven to the San Antonio Greyhound bus station to take my Scenicruiser to
Austin and to my boarding school St. Edward’s High School.
I remember absolutely nothing of anything we might have said
in that back seat. She was as patrician as her mother (who was my mother’s best
friend in her isolation in Nueva Rosita where she taught a few children (and
me) whose parents worked at the American Smelting & Refining Company.
But I remember that she was an Estella and I had never
forgotten her.
In the beginning of this century I was able to find her
mother who was living in Eagle Pass and we had long conversations on early Skype.
She told me that Cornelia had married a gentleman from those parts and now also
lived in Eagle Pass.
Cornelia finally answered and was elated. But romances of
the past are doomed to a stifling unease from the other party when they note my
approach which seems strange to them.
I never let go of any women in my life except one. She was
as old flame who was going to travel to see me during the 1968 Mexican
Olympics. I had to reveal to her that I had just married my Rosemary.
What I want to assert here is that I love in some way all
those women from my past.
This romantic balloon can burst particularly as I have
imposed a rosy permanence that cannot withstand the progress of time.
Take for example my teenage flame from Austin. She was a
cute very short cheerleader. I had two dates with her after agonizing a fear of
an Estella rejection.
In 2011 I found her in business ( she owned a cheerleading
supply company) in San Antonio. After my initial attempts of communication with
her she must have found me to be strange. And that was it.
Until a couple of months ago when she requested to be my
friend in Facebook. Wow was I excited at reliving that rose past. But no. It
has been a steady disappointment for me as her postings were either about
watching San Antonio Spurs games or postings of the altar of the church she
attends on Sundays. Religion and basketball – that to me has ended somewhat
(but not completely) whatever romance I had.
My next step, without unfriending her is to block her posts.
The death of romance it is.