This is the latest installment in my memoir project, written as a series of letters to my future daughter. Here are the previous entries: Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six, Part Seven, Part Eight, Part Nine, Part Ten, Part Eleven, Part Twelve, Part Thirteen, Part Fourteen, and Part Fifteen
When your mother and I officially got together, we came to an agreement — we’d be free to date other people as well. Part of it was due to your mother’s asexuality — there were certain things she couldn’t give me that I needed in a relationship, and I didn’t want to ever pressure her or make her feel uncomfortable by making her do physical things with me that she didn’t want to. But I never had any desire to date around or meet anyone else. I was content to be a one-woman woman.
That changed when I met Olivia.
When I first saw her at a Valentine’s Day art show, she was wearing a tight little skirt and a mess of short dark blonde curls. She was playing electronic music behind her then-friend’s poetry. She had this air about her, graceful and effortless, and I knew I had to get to know her. We ended up in the kissing booth that had been set up, trading life stories between smooches, and she told me about her life, how she was struggling with her gender identity and how to tell her parents, and how she’d been very ill until recently, putting a strain on her relationship with her ex. I listened as if she was telling me the secrets of the universe, enthralled at her every word. When we parted, we traded information, promising to meet somewhere between my home in Michigan and hers in Indiana someday.
About a month later, someday happened. I booked a hotel halfway between Ypsilanti and South Bend, in a town called Kalamazoo. It was reckless and unlike anything I’d ever done before, but something felt so right about this perfect stranger. I wanted to know more about her. I wanted to know everything about her. I kept trying to tell myself this was just a fling, just a way for me to blow off steam in a way I couldn’t with your mother, but I knew deep down in my heart that something else was happening.
Another month later, we met for a third time at an indie music festival in East Lansing. At some band’s show in some random person’s backyard, we drifted off together in a hammock, tangled up in each other’s arms. It was in that moment I think we both realized what this was.
It was love.
We continued to meet every month or so, sometimes in Michigan, sometimes in Indiana. I met her friends and family, and she met mine. She even met your mom, and while your mom was slightly overwhelmed by her exuberance, she gave us her blessing.
I still remember the afternoon we took a boat out on the lake together. We held each other close on the tiny inflatable vessel and daydreamed about the future, uncertain as it seemed at the time, and you came up! She mentioned that before she transitioned, she took steps to ensure she’d be able to have kids someday, and she said she wanted them with me. I told her about you, and how badly I wanted to have you one day. We promised each other that when the time was right, we’d bring you into this world together. It wouldn’t be easy, raising a child with this unique arrangement, but we’d be damned if we didn’t try.
I know this love is not conventional, but I’ve never been one for conventional things. I love your mother with all my heart, and I love Olivia with all my heart, and I wouldn’t trade either of them for the world. They’re my soulmates, my true loves. Love is not a finite resource, and I’ve got so much of it to give. Sometimes I fear we’ll receive pushback or discrimination for choosing to love the way we do, but it’s a chance I’m willing to take. The world may never understand, but so long as I’m alive, I’ll fight for this strange, beautiful thing we’ve built together.
I could write an entire book about all the memories I share with Olivia, and I just might eventually. But the story isn’t over yet, and I pray it never ends.
