Back to work for most of us.
I remember my very first job. It was a little over a couple of months after we came here to Canada from the Philippines. It was a receptionist position. I filled in for their previous one whom they would have let go anyway had she not gone on maternity leave. If I was shocked at the speed of that office’s pace, I did a good job concealing it. if I looked frazzled at times like there’s something I couldn’t calculate in my mind, or if I looked like I’m constipated, they probably assumed that my English-speaking ability tank is running on empty when truth was I had 12 lines I’ve put on hold and I’ve forgotten who they had called for.
I got the hang of it quickly and they were impressed. There was a look of pride plastered on my face that they most likely assumed was a result of the praise they gave me for a job well done. They were unaware of the smidgen of haughtiness in it for I honestly believed I could learn their jobs in less than half the time it took them to learn it, and be able to spell attorney as it is and not “athorney” on top of it all.
I started acquiring more to do outside the realm of reception. They probably rejoiced over the fact that they’ve found a pushover to do their menial work for them without complaints, but the truth is, I was simply bored out of my mind. My conscience kind of attacked, and I’ve realized that it’s not good work conduct to finish a novel and a half while on the job for 8 hours a day.
If I did a good job masking my conceit, I did exactly the opposite in hiding my intense like for someone I worked with. I didn’t tell anyone I had a big crush on this guy I’m going to hide under the name Mr. Cute and Educated, but it must have been written on the hearts in my eyes on my silly face that has a stupid grin on it every time I see him. He would take time to actually talk to me several times throughout the day, not counting the work-related instances when he did need to talk to me. He probably enjoyed my version of a blush. I’d just came from the Philippines and was therefore dark beyond what they’d call a nice tan. If I blushed, it wouldn’t have been red. Maroon, perhaps, but not the cute kind of pinkish glow I’ve read about in teensy romance books.
But I digress. When Mr. Cute and Educated talked to me, it’s as if my body heat travels all the way up to my face and my heart seemed to have stopped and beat 3x as fast at the same time, if that’s not a virtual impossibility. I know it’s cheesy but it’s a result of having read too much Sweet Dreams and Love Stories in high school.
I was 21 at that time and he was 32. In fairness, he looked like a mature 25 instead of a youthful 32, so one cannot argue that my ability to predict a person’s age was severely impaired. I’ve always noted in my head that his and my mother’s age difference was less than ours, but in the world of a girl who’s watched one too many Sharon Cuneta movies, I only saw that as a cute story to tell our grandkids someday.
I tried to cheat myself out of the crush by saying it was a professional defense mechanism I had no control over that my body kicked into to make me want to go to work every day and not succumb to the laziness that the winter cold or my having to take a bus to work brought. But I knew at the back of my head that’s not the case. Heck, I knew at the front, left, right and top of my head that wasn’t the case.
He was cute. Half-Asian and Half-European, sort of like Jon, minus Kate and 8. Only Mr. Cute and Educated was good-looking. I looked over his work files to try to find words he might have misspelled, or if he’s used your instead of you’re, but his grammar was always devoid of errors. One more point for him.
He would always ask me about books and movies. I feel silly now remembering how I thought we had so much in common, and how we we're a cinematic and literary match made in heaven when millions of other people have read the same books and watched the same movies. I just grabbed on to anything that he would hand me so that my hyperactive imagination, fuelled with my stupid infatuation, can spin it into another romantic possibility. Pathetic, I know, but I couldn’t help it at that time.
If he made small talk with me and asked, “How’s it going?” or “what’s up?” my mind kicks into a higher stupidity gear and I start thinking, “Omigosh, he wants to know what I’m doing tonight.” I think he thrived on seeing me all flushed, that arrogant, cute, literate son of a gun.
He came up to my desk one time and asked me about my family and I thought, “Omigosh, he wants to know about the people I’m bringing him home to.” He asked if I can cook, to which I’ve cleverly retorted that I can set up an entertainment system, hook up the surround sound and all, but the farthest I got to cooking was pressing the start button on the microwave for a frozen dinner. He smiled that stupid, turn-my-knees-to-jelly-and-my-brain-into-a-big-blob-of-useless-matter kind of smile and he called me HIS sassy girl from then on. By the time he has completely turned around to walk away, I had chosen the song of our first dance as a couple on our wedding day.
He must have felt me still staring because he turned around to face me again and said, “Checking out my butt, eh?” Without missing a beat, I replied, “No, I’ve done that a billion times already. I’ve moved on to a different butt.” Then I pointed to the person walking in front of him whose butt I wouldn’t even give the time of day even if he didn’t have that lisp and didn’t shower anyone within 2 feet radius with saliva when he talked.
Mr. Cute and Educated laughed again, but I didn’t hear because the truth that I have indeed checked him out a lot of times was still ringing in my ears. I wouldn’t have minded missing the bus that night. I believed I could’ve floated home.
I went online as soon as I got home and reported to my guy best friend the highlight of my day, injecting romantic notions I’ve imagined in the lines that I’ve read in between Mr. Cute and Educated’s words. I was telling my guy best friend that he was going to be my male of honor, when he gave me such a reality check that he could’ve slapped me silly all the same.
He said, while laughing arrogantly for that matter, “Mr. Whatever Educated doesn’t want you for a girlfriend, you dumb girl! He’s interviewing you to be his maid!” Then he laughed even more, and the half-a-world distance that separated us is what saved him from a severe beating from me. He added, “Your Mr. Dream Guy wants to know if you still live with your family because he doesn’t want a stay in maid. He just needs you to cook for him which is why he's asked if you know how.” Then he laughed diabolically as if he was a mad scientist who just invented the cure for stupidity, and not some friend who’ve just sent another friend come crashing back to reality after living in fantasy land for so long.
Now that I think about it, my best friend did invent the cure for stupidity. MY stupidity. With a very generous dose of reality check, he pulled me out of the clouds and put an end to my silliness.
Next day at work, I saw Mr. Cute and Educated. Only then, I didn’t call him that anymore. He’s turned into Mr. Not-Bad-Looking-Who-Can-Spell. I no longer get flustered when he gave me the time of day, which, I could do well without, I’ve realized. I was able to joke freely with him. I was able to discuss books and movies with multi-syllabic words in sentences that were put together coherently, without feeling like I was going to pass out any moment. I found I liked that better.
Though it helped pass what could’ve been painfully boring days at work, and though it helped whet my creativity to the point where I could’ve written my own short story about crushes with fairytale endings, I was glad I no longer wasted my time thinking of different ways our conversations, no matter how mundane and trivial, could lead to him asking me out. I have exhausted all possibilities of how a simple “How’s it going?” could maybe turn into, “Would you have dinner with me?”
I didn’t even stop then to think about what I might have looked like from his point of view.
Gone are the days when he left me searching for better ways I could’ve answered his questions. I was finally able to just answer. Gone are the times when I’d read between lines that weren’t there. I was able to relax. After months of holding my breath when he passed by, my respiratory system returned to functioning at a human rate.
He probably wondered what happened to that girl who did all but squirm on her chair when he talked to her. The girl was replaced by a more mature girl who knew better than nourish an unrealistic infatuation with a guy who she knew wasn’t for her anyway. I got over it. Him. And the quickness of how I was able to do that proves that he wasn't meant to resemble the groom figurine at the top of my wedding cake someday.
I said to myself then that I’d take a hiatus from liking cute and educated guys. Not long after that, I fell for a guy who’s cute in a Robin Padilla kind of way. I’ll hide him under the name Mr. Charles-Who’d-Been-Going-Out-With-His-Fiancée-For-6-Years-But-Could-Not-Resist-My-Charm.
But that’s a whole different story.