Monday, February 16, 2009

Heart Followup: It's Not About Me


Friend Augusta responded Saturday evening to the email that catalyzed the previous posting here, and weighed in gently on the heart-churning issues that have been occupying me: 
-----Original Message-----
From: Augusta Lovelace [mailto: AgustaLovelace@CondeNast.net]
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009 9:02 PM
To: 'Aging Child'
Subject: Re: Hi, Augusta!  
Hi Gene, 
I was very happy to hear that your Mother is leaving rehab within a short time. That is wonderful news. It will probably be an emotional boost for her to be with your sister and get back to a somewhat more "normal" routine. I know when my Mother had been hospitalized and then came home, her whole demeanor changed. It was as if she took a deep sigh as if to say "ah, I'm home". It did wonders for her to be in familiar surroundings with familiar people. 
Your brother Sarge will be in my thoughts and prayers. What a difficult position to be in. I feel sorry for his wife especially speaking very little English. She is fortunate to have all of you there to help and support her. I wish more people understood and appreciated the sacrifices that our military make. 
As far as the job hunt goes, I certainly hope that you find one soon. It is a difficult time to be searching for one. As i've said before, finding a job is like having a job. It takes so much effort. 
Now as far as your "rekindled" friendship with Guinevere. You sound as if you are stressing out more about that, than your job hunt. You are so fortunate - finding her again was a gift! As you have said, she has been through tough times in her life and for all you know she may feel the same way you do but is taking the practical route for the time being by following her head instead of her heart. "Oh ye of little faith". Have patience - be patient. Many life-long relationships started out as friendships. I never knew of a kind and decent man ever running a woman off. 
As far as you being conflicted with your thoughts of becoming a priest, friar, etc. that is another whole ball of wax. I think that would take some soul searching. Although I believe there are many ways you could serve your "fellow man" that would be just as effective, if not more, than becoming a priest, friar, etc. "The color of the package has no bearing on what's inside". If the desire is there it won't make a difference if you are dressed in robes, a suit and tie or bermuda shorts and a tee-shirt and if the desire is there - you will find a way - and who knows, it certainly wouldn't hurt to have a partner along side of you to take the journey. I believe Guinevere came along in your life at this moment for a reason - maybe someone has a bigger plan for you. I say we all need to enjoy what is in the here and now - it will give us some wonderful memories to talk about when we're old and dodgy. 
So now that I have forced my little "philosophical tidbits" on you, I will close for now and hope that you just enjoy the time you spend with Guinevere and let the relationship slowly evolve. Exhale! 
Talk to you soon, 
Augusta 
Guinevere and I had spoken that evening, and our short conversation lifted the great weight. Augusta's email supplemented the peace further; I wrote back: 
-----Original Message-----
From: Aging Child [mailto:AGeneChilde@YouWho.com]
Sent: Sunday, February 15, 2009
12:42 PM
To: 'Augusta'
Subject: RE: Hi,
Augusta!  
Good afternoon, Augusta: 
And thank you for your kind words and support for the many things pulling hard at my heart and attention lately! 
Yes, Mother's certainly been itching for as much of a return to normal as possible – and the possibilities themselves, speaking of which, keep looking better. Her spirit is very upbeat; she has darned few "down" days, and has buoyed us nicely, as we can clearly see we've been doing for her. The change of scenery to something even more homelike than the already-homelikeness of her rehab facility… will bolster and encourage her (and us!) even further. 
My brother: Sarge was in greater danger in 1991 when he was over in that neighborhood (mostly Kuwait and Saudi Arabia) during Desert Storm. It was tougher on us then, since it was much harder for him to get word out to us (and harder yet for us to get a note to him). Now he has occasional access to email (long lines, but this is still so much better than before), and reassurances can flow much more easily… both ways, too. 
With a sudden, dizzying flurry of interviews, plus some upcoming shorter-term assignments already committed to, things are looking better for me jobwise – at the very least, several good possibilities are much-more closer in reach. And every interview, even at very worst, is still real-world practice for the next, giving me opportunities to further refine how I present myself and sell my strengths to those companies that definitely need them. 
And re Guinevere… well, I was writing after a troubled night of lost sleep, and a heavy, unshakeable dread that my opening up to her that evening might have cast a doubtful light on my motivations for appreciating and valuing our friendship. (I hadn't meant to unload on you… so thank you for those "little philosophical tidbits"!) More than once in my life I've put my foot (or heart) in my mouth at a particularly vulnerable moment, and suddenly found myself, head still spinning, standing in the ruins, alone. 
So the heavy depression – despair, almost – surrounded and enwrapped me so much of the day, and this is the shape I was in when I wrote. But that evening, while I was visiting with my mother, Guinevere called (I am so glad for cellphones lately), and we chatted just a couple minutes. She talked with my mother a little – they'd charmed each other gently and sweetly at Guinevere's visit up here last Sunday – and remarked in amazement at how more clearly my mother was speaking even than just last week; she was really touched. 
That simple, two-minute call lifted my spirits tremendously, simply through its very mundane nature (other than my mother's particularly delightful share of it, of course), and that it was a not-in-so-many-words reassurance that all was/is well. 
Sometimes it's the little things. 
I've felt greatly relieved, and so much better and at peace, since then. Inside, I'm also very carefully and delicately seeing in what ways I can very gently detach some of my more vulnerable feelings, ones that can stand in the way of simply enjoying the relationship as it is, absent and ignoring the attraction. Small steps, little things… and hands folded. 
Thanks again, Augusta, and have a great remainder of the weekend, and upcoming week! 
Gene 
To my astonishment, gadfly "Eric" had for some unfathomable reason actually read the posting; he's as kindly, loving, empathetic, and sympathetic as always; I'm doing him the kindness of not including the Who-Is and email address my blogserver provided on him: 
-----Original Message-----
From: eric [mailto:EricIdol@YouWho.com]
Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009 1:43 AM
To: AGeneChilde@YouWho.com
Subject: [MT2mb] Comment: "It's a Heart Ache"  
New comment on your post #854 "It's a Heart Ache" 
You seem really lonely and desperate for some romantic love. Have you considered dating (like actively searching for female companionship)? This chick seems really complicated and if you're so terrified of scaring her off then honestly you should just keep her as a friend and find someone *else* to fall in love with. You obviously badly want and need a woman in your life and the whole priestly celibacy thing seems like a cop-out. Like, if you can't find a woman then you're just going to become a priest and then it will be like you didn't fall in love on purpose. Yeah right. If this "Guinevere" was as crazy about you as you were of her then the whole "white collar" thing would be history. So maybe be a little more honest with yourself about what you want...what you NEED and what you can do to GET it. Crying, blobbing, sending emails, and praying is definitely NOT going to move you closer to satisfaction. 
Quite the gentleman; thanks for your two cents', sir. Best response might have been to delete his note, or block him out of my blog. So I emailed back, instead… not bothering to point out that some of us men – even those living or contemplating the celibate life – do prefer the company of women who are "really complicated", and so prefer to engage these women with the emotional and intellectual parts of our being even more than the mere, uh, nether hookups. Or to quote Murray Head, "I get my kicks above the waistline, Sunshine!". 
-----Original Message-----
From: AGeneChilde@YouWho.com
Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009
10:32 AM
To: EricIdol@YouWho.com
Subject: RE: Comment: "It's a Heart Ache"
  
Eric, there have got to be far better and more worthwhile sites and blogs out there for you to be reading in the wee hours of the morning than my own at-times-troubled musings and ponderings. And just about anything else out there is much more interesting. 
The essence of the priesthood is to serve God and His people – both in the Church, and beyond – through bringing and opening up His word to them in the scripture, the Church's teachings, its sacraments, and ministries. The world is hungry and badly, badly in need of God's cleansing love and compassion; each priest serving Him stands as one more clear conduit of this love and compassion. 
The key, pivotal word there is "serve": the priest is serving people in need – all people – and the God who has put us here and is our ultimate destination. This kind of service must be one of selflessness: "Not my will, but yours", "Ad majorem Dei gloriam (To the greater glory of God)", and so on. 
By blunt contrast, the pursuit of interpersonal, intimate love is by definition anything but selfless: it is seeking the pursuer's worldly desires first, and not the needs of another person. Other than the massively ego-driven, just who is it that dates specifically to bring God's love into the world? Those folks "on the market" are looking for one (or more) other person to "complete" their lives – and are in it for themselves first. 
This is antithetical to selfless service. 
In trying to be selfless, the aim isn't to be a saint, or to be holy, or to clutch at a halo to wear proudly in public. The objective, rather, is simple humility. 
The concept, in fact, is so simple and basic that most people can't grasp it. 
Here's another one: that we have hearts and minds, feelings and dreams, clearly shows that we were not created for this world, and – as the cliché goes – are briefly passing through, entering empty-handed and leaving the same way. We are told, and not just by Christian teachings, that here we are to prepare ourselves for what comes next, and to not get lost in the distractions and demands of this life. 
Most of us still get lost. Why? Through stubbornly casting and following our paths to serve our own wants and needs, putting others no higher than second place. By seeking what we see as our own greater good first. 
So my struggle over Guinevere is to, first, ensure that the focus of my feelings and appreciation for her remain heavily on the non- self-serving side of the slate, that I be a trusted friend, sounding-board, advisor, confidant, listener, sharer-of-time. It's not about me. (Try saying those four words yourself, Eric, about anything/anyone of importance in your life: "It's Not About Me". Say them again. And again. Can you? Do they sound stupid to you? Why do you think that is?) 
It's not about me. It must not be about me. Or I am not a friend. 
Second, part of the struggle is, yes, to rein and direct my own, very-human and understandable feelings of attraction over to more selfless ones of what I can do to make her own struggles more bearable, to lighten the things that worry her and keep her up at night, and to be of a good, positive, supportive role in her life. 
That itself may be, or become, the environment within which a healthy, one-on-one love could indeed grow and be nurtured, if we both so desire it. Can it be done selflessly? I think so. But it takes two, and it's not about me. It can't be. 
So: Conflict One for this Aging Child is to be a friend first and foremost, and not be focused on myself when I'm with her (whether in person, on the phone, online, and so on), or when just dwelling on my thought of her. This is not easy, not for anyone with genuine emotional depth, even with a clear inner commitment to respect her first… or how else am I to maturely respect myself? 
Conflict Two follows on that: if Gwynne and I both decide to open ourselves to something far deeper than the friendship we each need, then I cannot be the priest/monk I've wanted to be for quite a few years now. 
I want to skip that celibacy non-issue for now; you and I will have at it some other time – I've been meaning to for a good many months anyway; concerns of my mother's health and my own intense job-search are of greater immediate need of my attention, as are other family issues, and pondering/taking further cautious steps (together with Guinevere, and alone) with this friendship I've been discussing. 
For now, in a nutshell: A married/dating priest by definition cannot be a selfless servant. His life-partner will be shortchanged, or his God and destiny will be. 
My challenge for you, Eric, is to do something today for someone else. Want to toughen the challenge, if that sounds easy? Do something particularly kind for someone who has been mean, rude, even hateful, to you. Further challenge: give something you value (money, property, time) to a complete stranger… especially someone in no position to give back. 
Take a peek at selflessness. And then look more closely. Can you step up to it? 
Regards,
A. Gene Childe 
Maybe I should also have inquired politely how many years now he's been happily married. But that would have been petty. 
Further, on the "then I cannot be the priest/monk I've wanted to be for quite a few years now": I was many years reaching the point where I've been more and more prepared to turn my life over to the Church, and serving it. This is a facet I would not release easily, though I find, most interestingly, that some part of me remains open to doing so, if I can still serve the Church and my God through a non-avowed/-professed life; this is referred to as "lay ministry", and does include the deaconate (which is a professed-religious life); deacons may be married. 
Oh, and Mr. Idol: don't give me a hard time over the word "lay" in "lay ministry". Grow up, sir.
Update: Sir Gad of Fly responded to my answer… twice:
phosphoro6 Feb 16, 2009
You’re probably right that there are better or more worthwhile blogs out there – but it appears that God has guided me to yours.
It's not about me. (Try saying those four words yourself, Eric, about anything/anyone of importance in your life: 'It's Not About Me'. Say them again. And again. Can you? Do they sound stupid to you? Why do you think that is?)
You are correct that these words sound stupid to me. And I know exactly why. Anything/anyone of importance in my life is a thing I regard as a value. It is a thing that I actively work to keep in my life because I have identified it as furthering my life. Certainly a thing that hurts me or seeks to destroy me would not be a value – by definition. Thus, for you to ask me to say something that I have identified as valuable in my life is in fact “not about me” – or NOT valuable to me – is a simple contradiction. We apparently have a different definition of value.
Let me ask you this, then. Think of something or someone of importance in YOUR life, Aging Child. Gwynne, for instance. Why is she important to you? Do you value hr? If so, what is valuable about her? The answer is that you have identified virtues in her that promote life – characteristics such as kindness, honesty, and intellect – You seek to spend time with her because it enriches your life. I hope you’re not so dishonest as to try and say that it is a one-way street – that you’re only Gwynne’s friend because you’re providing some sort of sacrificial service to her that you derive no pleasure from…And I don’t think she would appreciate being told that she is the recipient of your charity, either. You seek her because IT’S ABOUT YOU, because she is VALUABLE and you NEED human beings of VALUE and VIRTUE in your life…No greater compliment to receive, in my opinion, than to be valued and sought after.
If I’m wrong, tell me now that it makes no difference to you whether you deal with a genius or a fool, whether you meet a hero or a thug, whether you marry an ideal woman or a slut.
My challenge for you, Eric, is to do something today for someone else. Want to toughen the challenge, if that sounds easy? Do something particularly kind for someone who has been mean, rude, even hateful, to you. Further challenge: give something you value (money, property, time) to a complete stranger… especially someone in no position to give back.
You ask me to aide those who seek my destruction and to sacrifice my values to a non-value. You’re asking me to immolate myself, to approach death, to sip from the cup of altruism – that is, the cup of self-abnegation and self-destruction. WHY?
Unlike you, I love life, and have a rational code of values. Your morality is evil and spells doom for whoever consistently practices it. Take a peek at selflessness yourself, Aging Child. And tell me you don’t see death.
-Charles (Phosphoro)
phosphoro6 Apr 7, 2009
No response=I win
Sigh; eventually, I did get around to responding:
AgingChild Jun 1, 2009
No, sir — not a contest here: nothing to win, nor anything to lose. If you can’t think in those terms, picture, perhaps, Obi-Wan Kenobi refusing to battle Darth Vader ("Star Wars" Episode 4), or Yoda tending to Anakin and Obi-Wan (Episode 2) and letting Dooku buzz off: higher purposes and more immediate concerns.
Guinevere and I are fine (visited with her most of the afternoon and evening this past Saturday); and my own head, heart, and soul are on straighter than ever. Matters of personal urgency/attention have drawn my focus away from this blog, and will continue to do so for a bit longer. Some details likely once I take the e-treadmill back up again. Might even share with you.
Regards,
A. Gene Childe

Saturday, February 14, 2009

It's a Heart Ache


It's entirely coincidental – really – that I post here on Valentine's Day a pair of emails dealing with a deep struggle of my heart, one that's had me terribly engaged and distracted, battling even tears and genuine, hard depression. 
The intimate, one-on-one love between man and woman is a beautiful treasure that comes too rarely into one's hands and life, and seemingly too easily dribbles out before we can clutch it to the heart and appreciate it for all its worth. I've been there, I've done that… and gave up on it with true regret over five years ago. (Meaning, of course, that I've stopped dating and am celibate, not that this is anyone's business but my own.) 
Something also of great value, even more underrated and overly ignored, is simple friendship, especially of the deep, buddy-sort: a freeness to speak honestly, with little or no sugar-coating; a non- self-consciousness over dorky laughter, even the occasional accidental release of inner digestive gases; mentally, emotionally, and even physically leaning on each other as may be needed or just happen to happen; and just simply finding good, relaxed (yet rewarding) company in the other. 
It can be real eggshell-walking when this kind of special, too-rare friendship spans the gender-divide. Yet the comfort to the heart can also be especially deep.
Online-friend Augusta emailed me yesterday; I haven't been in touch with her, and she wanted to catch up: 
-----Original Message-----
From: Augusta Lovelace [mailto: AgustaLovelace@CondeNast.net]
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2009
7:33 PM
To: 'Aging Child'
Subject: Hi A. Gene
Hi Gene, 
How are you?  How is your mother.   
We are all fine now but everyone has been battling the stomach virus or flu-like symptoms that have been going around.  Hopefully at this point, everyone seems to be feeling all right.   For awhile there I was starting to feel like Florence Nightingale.  I was glad to see everyone finally feeling better.  No sooner did everyone get over their illnesses and my sister and brother came up to visit.  My brother had to come back up again to take care of some business so they came up yesterday and left today - whew!  I'm tired.  So now that it is calm and quiet I am spending a little time getting caught up on e-mails. 
Hope all is well with you and yours, 
Augusta  
In my response, I found myself unloading as well about this very personal issue, which I've thus far kept nearly fully private; I bcc'd friend Spartacus because he'd e-peeked in on me a few days ago, concerned about my near-silence of late, and he deserved to know the latest: 
-----Original Message-----
From: Aging Child [mailto:AGeneChilde@YouWho.com]
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009
10:36 AM
To: 'Augusta'
Bcc: "Spark" le Klaus [mailto:SpartaCuss@Yabbadoo.com]
Subject: RE: Hi, Augusta!
  
Good morning, Augusta: 
All's well, overall. Mother may be released from rehab within another week, most likely for a time staying at my sister's home (not as many stairs to contend with, day to day) before coming back home here. This is great news – the rehab folks let me know yesterday, and not everyone in the family even knows yet; I still need to get the news out. 
My older brother, Sarge, went off to Iraq with the Marines at the end of last month, one-year duty. His new wife speaks very little English (Korean only), and so my sister and my other brother and I take turns dropping by their home once a week to help out with errands, bills, maintenance, and so on. I do worry about Sarge; he assures us that he's in a safe, cushy desk-job far from any of the dangerous areas, but of course we'll keep worrying – and praying – until he's back home again next year. 
Besides for my brother, and for my mother, I've been doing heavier praying for my own job-hunt, and am seeing God's grace and compassion yielding a good several interviews lately, including one yesterday. For the last few weeks I've been working evenings and weekends (the shifts I've desired least) with a relatively easy job doing research surveys over the phone. The pay is low, but it's still money coming in to pay for groceries and the car… although just barely, if even that. I'm grateful for it (probably not enough, I admit guiltily), and also look forward to not being as dependent on it – i.e., these interviews yielding a full-time, daytime job at a much higher wage. But nonsensibly dread almost every shift. 
Further personal stress comes from a new, very heart-warming relationship I hadn't expected and am now inwardly finding this heart of mine in some ways seriously chewed up over. Guinevere and I had been gentle friends back in the early nineties, at a very different and extremely difficult time in our lives (and briefly a bit more than friends), before falling out of touch when I transferred out of state in 1993. I'd always worried how life had turned out for her, and with some persistence found her online in 2005 and briefly emailed with her, before losing touch again. 
Late last year we reconnected again via email, and met up again to say hi, the first we'd seen each other in nearly seventeen years. There was an immediate warmth and delight there as we sat in Pizza Hut talking; I gave her a book of hers she'd loaned me way back when (and I'd been holding to return to her someday), some music, and a magazine I'd tracked down and bought for her in Germany in 1993 and never gotten to give her (again, always hanging onto for her). 
It seems we've found a nice friendship – more new than renewed, I personally believe; we're both rather different people now, though the younger two-of-us still occasionally peeps out of our eyes, I think. I've visited her at her home in [a large nearby city] three times now (including yesterday evening), and she was up here last Sunday for a stroll through some of the nicer parts my own town, and to meet my mother (and bumping into my younger brother). And, yes, all has been G-rated. 
The stress I mentioned, though, comes to me from finding that one wide facet of my thoughts and feelings for Guinevere are much deeper than friendship-only, even while I know there is also a genuine friendship and respect for her in my heart too. She herself, owing to a particularly rough life and ongoing challenges (unemployment, and some other issues she's only been able to mention indirectly), is likely capable only of friendship-level feelings and responses. 
It's not that we're looking at a huge imbalance between us; it's more like an extreme struggle strictly in me at times, wanting to preserve that friendship against anything that might make it more vulnerable (e.g., going deeper – or just trying to), rather than strengthen it further. My struggle is to keep a lid on these deeper and more intense feelings in me, since I deeply value Guinevere's blunt honesty and candor, and so badly need that in a friend, and am genuinely frightened of losing her/our friendship through motivations that would be merely superficial, self-serving, and stupid. If I try to direct us into taking that path, it would put an absolute lie to all the focus and motivations I've permitted thus far, and – again – would cost me a relationship utterly unique in my life today, let alone for most of the past twenty years. 
I didn't plan on this attraction, never engineered or deliberately fed it (I think)… and have not found myself so attracted, either, for nearly those same twenty years. I keep it reined in, yes, with some difficulty… but there seems little more I can do about it – certainly can't kill it, and it's not likely to starve or fall into a coma anytime soon. This is very far out of my recent experience, and I am very, very close to being in deeply over my head… at least in over my heart.
And the struggle has an added, heavier dimension: indulging my deeper feelings for this good, sweet, fun, and patient (and spiritual) woman is totally at odds against my prime motivator for many years now: to turn over the rest of my life to serving my faith and my Church, either as priest or professed/avowed religious (i.e., monk/friar). That's the selfish-versus-selfless struggle: be a little something for many people, versus just try instead (with a lousy track record, and rusty skills at best) to be something for one person… and with no guarantee at all, and the frightful risk of ruining something new, treasured, and unexpected. 
The only resolution, of course, for all of this, is for me to keep that deeper interest banked, and simply enjoy her company when we're together. (And my heart wrings its metaphorical hands over how long before the next time I see her.) There's nothing wrong in valuing a friendship, nor even in there being much deeper feelings and desires for this person, so long as they don't control, don't overburden, don't distract, don't detour me – nor us. 
There's the crux of it for me. I've lost hours of sleep over these feelings on more than one night (including last night), and at times find myself deeply depressed and helplessly/hopelessly vulnerable. Much of this I must keep to myself (Guinevere and I did discuss a bit last night, and last Sunday), since I know it would put an unfair burden on her, and on our friendship… given especially that her level of comfort – and her understandable concern over how much even of my friendship-feelings may derive from simple loneliness, and a desire to seize hold again of something from my/our younger days (not true, by the way) – is much more fixed and content at the friendship-side of it all than my innermost heart is. And, in cold, hard, fact, this friendship is new, and so still has much of that just-hatched, new-colt fragility throughout. 
The inner stress and struggle have sapped me a good deal, and lately have been affecting my other outer expressions of inner self, such as my writing (both blog and novel), and my focus on my future: mapping out classes to take once the income is coming back in, detaching myself further from this world; also even on some stuff around the home (painting, winter garden-maintenance, etc.). 
Even gathering info on your ancestor's German stamps has been almost impossible to put some needful focus on, so I can get them identified and back to you for his album. I do apologize for that (they're still here on my desk; I will get on them as soon as I can give them the attention due)… and for how needlessly long this email's gotten, too. 
So let me close for now by asking that you keep my mother and brother in your prayers, and me – and Guinevere, too. We each need it, and all. 
Always,
Gene 
And to a gentle followup question from Spartacus, I answered at even greater length: 
-----Original Message-----
From: Aging Child [mailto: AGeneChilde@YouWho.com]
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009
2:34 PM
To: "Spark" le Klaus [mailto:SpartaCuss@Yabbadoo.com]
Subject: RE: Girl, and Buoy
  
This wrenching struggle I've kept almost entirely to myself (since it's strictly confined to my own heart and will), sharing just a Readers'-Digest version with my mother – who was warmly charmed by Guinevere, and vice-versa, this past Sunday – and sharing also just some of the more difficult parts with Miss Gwynne herself. 
This extreme sensitivity's had me nearly at tears, now and then, these past several weeks… including while visiting with my mother this morning, and skimming off some of the choppy froth of these tossing waves to share with her.
She'd asked how yesterday evening had been (I'd brought "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" along to Guinevere's for us to watch and munch popcorn over – and though I'd left at close to midnight, we – I – had as always stayed completely G-rated). And Mother even asked "Did you break up?" I forced a chuckle and told her there's no dating to break up from, and that I'd probably be back down there (or Guinevere up here) again next weekend. (Maybe; last night Guinevere also said that next weekend's "up in the air". Far from comforting… but I'm not about to push.) 
Just because she's recovering from a debilitating series of strokes doesn't mean my mother's blind. She saw how a couple times my lips pressed shut tight and I looked away as my eyes began to fill a little, and heard my voice needfully pause and catch itself. She sent me home right before lunch, and told me, "No more tears." I hugged her there in her wheelchair, and kissed her fluffy hair. 
Spartacus, the tears and depression aren't over anything Guinevere's said or done. She's been warm, welcoming, and friendly; honest and utterly BS-free where only sincerely open friends can be; she has a big sweet heart that will inevitably have her smooching the nearest fuzzy four-legged critter, whether her own or one passing by on the sidewalk, or even peering out a neighbor's window. 
The ache feeding the tears (kept at bay, although that's just barely upstream from here) is from the seemingly irresolvable three-way, entirely-inner struggle between a) cherishing this friendship I seriously need, plus holding fast to an unshakable commitment of my heart to take care of this unexpected gem of a rare kind of friendship and not wreck it; b) a staggeringly powerful yearning to cast down my inner walls and let myself simply fall in love with her… but quite obviously this would require the same of her (and she's had too many emotional roughings-up since childhood; and has in not-so-many-words gently explained that she's in no emotional shape for anything of a beyond-friendship nature) – this yearning really wants to pilot me to where she and I would be/become everything to the other; and c) an unwavering (well, okay… near-unwavering) commitment of soul and spirit to continue detaching myself from the world – and relationships – and take on the tonsure or white collar, thus giving my heart and life away to all, not to merely one. 
"b" and "c" are of course absolutely mutually exclusive, and even "a" and "b" not at all necessarily hand-in-hand allies, since "a" requires a strong degree of selflessness, and "b" by its nature is a kind of selfish thing. Only "a" and "c" can work together with certainty, and these mark and define the path my intellect and soul want me to keep to. 
Brother; I'm so incredibly over my head and out of experience in this stuff! Azey (2003) never had firm hold of my heart, so we just fizzled out, though she was there when I needed help through my grief over my father; the girlfriend before her (oddly also a Gwynne – well, Gwen – and same city, too, 1999) never got off the ground; before her, Lannie just outside the Poconos (1996) lived too impossibly far away, and also never had my heart; and before that, PauliPortia's mom – did indeed have all my heart at the end (1992), but it was too, too late… and that one will never stop hurting. And it was then – 1992-3 – that today's Guinevere first passed through my life (including, admittedly some brief intimacy) when I was hurting badly enough to rationalize a little selfish reaching-out. I had no heart left to give her then, nor did I receive hers. 
Now this same heart of mine is almost throwing itself against the bars of my chest to get out to her, even though there's no clear, discernable perch inside Guinevere for it to land on. Said heart responds poorly to reason, chafes at restraint. 
Again, this struggle is entirely internal – I'm not fighting her for her own heart, nor even (I sincerely hope) trying to make a case for the dating/love scenario. In fact I really have told her, when outlining (considerately keeping the toughest details to myself) to her a bit of what's going on inside here, that I don't want my being open/candid about this to be a thing of even the least pressure on her, that I'm only showing her what's inside so she can know a bit more about me as I am today. 
One of the keep-me-awake-in-the-night thoughts/fears is that, deep inside herself, Guinevere may never get past a hunch (incorrect… but how do I prove it?) that the foundation of what I feel for her now – friend and crush (a feeling I guardedly admitted to) – is founded on a passing-though-needed friendship that back then had a patina of FWB, a facet I am rather ashamed to recall… but not her lovely ivory skin, and a beautiful body the years since appear not to have badly marred. 
It may help me (but would it hurt the friendship?) to sit beside her and let the tears flow. I've cried in her presence already, although this was at emotion-saturated scenes in "Mr. Holland's Opus" and "What Dreams May Come". I don't know. 
(Playing incessantly in the background – I really don't need this! – is Robert Palmer's 1991 cover of Marvin Gaye's "Mercy, Mercy Me" – just the second half, where medleys into "I Want You (to Want Me)".) 
Thanks, anyway, for the thoughts and wishes. I have to work on this myself, and thus deeply appreciate (and can definitely use) the bolstering. 
Gene
Update, 5:36 PM: I dashed over to Mother's rehab facility after posting this blog, and sat with her a while -- even mentioning what I'd put up here in this posting. Just before I left again, she looked at me and said, "It's good for life."
Topics had changed a couple times; I didn't know what she was referring to now. "What's good for life?" I asked.
She answered: "Friendship."
And I nearly started crying.
Update: a couple days later, a comment came through unexpectedly from a very occasional-reader/-commenter:
phosphoro6 Feb 16, 2009
You seem really lonely and desperate for some romantic love. Have you considered dating (like actively searching for female companionship)? This chick seems really complicated and if you’re so terrified of scaring her off then honestly you should just keep her as a friend and find someone *else* to fall in love with. You obviously badly want and need a woman in your life and the whole priestly celibacy thing seems like a cop-out. Like, if you can’t find a woman then you’re just going to become a priest and then it will be like you didn’t fall in love on purpose. Yeah right. If this “Guinevere” was as crazy about you as you were of her then the whole “white collar” thing would be history. So maybe be a little more honest with yourself about what you want…what you NEED and what you can do to GET it. Crying, blobbing, sending emails, and praying is definitely NOT going to move you closer to satisfaction.