“Where your friend?”
That’s what the waiter asks when I sit down for dinner in a thatched-roofed beach hut on stilts. The hut has floor
cushions and a low table, and there four or five similar huts scattered around, all facing the same stretch of turquoise ocean, over which a magnificent
sun is setting. The other hut occupants, however, are couples, and are more
enchanted with each other than with the view. The waiter and I watch for a
second as they take selfies, gaze into each other’s eyes and grope each other
with abandon.
“No friend,” I say. “Just me.”
He smiles apologetically and hands me a menu.
I am on Gili Meno, the smallest of the three Gili islands
off the east coast of Bali. You could walk Meno’s entire circumference in two
hours, or you could take a horse and buggy… because there are no motorized
vehicles here. There are also no nightclubs, no giant hotels, and no crowds. Instead,
there are crystal clear waters, white sand beaches, and the friendliest bunch
of locals you could hope to meet. I’m trying to think of another significant thing to
add to that list, but I can’t. A few restaurants? A bunch of guesthouses? Some
really friendly cats? Everything moves so slowly here it makes Bali seem like Times
Square.
It is also not exactly a mecca for solo travelers - I can count the ones I spot on one hand. There are a few families, and the odd group of friends, but everyone else must either be on their honeymoon, recently engaged, or out to win the Madly-in-Love Olympics.
Sunset view from my hut. Don't hate me.
It is also not exactly a mecca for solo travelers - I can count the ones I spot on one hand. There are a few families, and the odd group of friends, but everyone else must either be on their honeymoon, recently engaged, or out to win the Madly-in-Love Olympics.
I, however, am on the longest relationship-free stretch of
my adult life.
My decision to be alone is a conscious one. At first, it was
like learning a new language, in a place where no one speaks English (or
French,) and where there are different laws of gravity. It was disconcerting.
It was humbling. And it hurt. It was also necessary. I had realized, over the
course of the previous months, that I’d spent almost all of my twenties and thirties in
relationships, and had spent much of those relationships hoping the other person would love
me enough for both of us. It was time for that to change.
Ours is not a culture that encourages such admissions. I
can’t believe I’m stating it publicly, but the more I pay attention to it,
the more I feel like it's something we need to be talking about. How
many of our songs point to happily-ever-after, you-complete-me-soulmates, or at
least agonize about said soulmate fucking up/fucking someone who’s not us? How
many of our stories and movies encourage getting over someone by getting under someone
else? Women, especially, are encouraged from the get-go to rely on partners for
validation, reassurance, and self-esteem. Don’t get me wrong: I’m all for love.
But doing it the healthy way, without giving up giant swaths of my internal
real estate, was not a skill I possessed. Learning to be alone has been one of the
toughest rides of my life.
And it is by no means over. But being on Gili Meno,
surrounded by lovey dovey couples and yet totally at peace, I know the worst
has passed. I have stumbled upon the delicious freedom of not having to
run a single decision, plan or change of plan past anyone else. I am - after
much practice - treating myself the way I wanted to be treated.
Now, my only regret is that I didn't give myself more time on
Meno. There is such stillness here, such beauty, such a sense of safety. As I walk
back to my guesthouse at night, every local I pass says hello, or offers directions if I’m
looking lost. If anything were to happen in such a small
place, everyone would know. There is community. There is trust. And there are
sea turtles.
I spend my last full day on the island snorkeling with them,
suspended in delight as they rise to the surface, paddling past with their
great, turtley fins. I float through schools of electric blue fish, fish with
black bowties, tiny yellow fish the size of thumbnail clippings. I glide over
bright blue coral, and moving sponge finger things so magical I keep having to
remind myself they’re not CGI. That night, I settle happily onto a beanbag chair at
another beach restaurant. Some locals are piled around a table the bar, playing
guitars and singing.
Last one, I promise.
The waiter ambles over, and I order dinner.
Last one, I promise.
“You have friend?” he asks.
“No friend,” I say, happily. “Just me.”
“Oh.” He frowns and looks down at his notepad. “I am sorry.
It’s just… you order so much food.”
*
The next morning, I wake up with insane vertigo.
I turn over in bed, and the room spins like a theme park
ride. I have to get back to Bali today, which means two boat trips and a very long,
twisting bus ride, in the suffocating heat, without anyone to carry my backpack
or, for that matter, me.
If there is a karmic law about single traveler smugness, it
is now biting me very painfully in the ass.
I force myself out of
bed, but within three seconds, the world tilts on its axis and I am horizontal
again. I swallow my pride and text Morris, the lovely man who owns the
guesthouse I’m staying in. He ferries me
to the medical clinic down the road, and translates my situation to the doctor,
who gives me god knows what kind of pills. A few hours later, Morris carries my
backpack to the boat, and firmly instructs me to ask someone for help if I need
it.
The first boat trip passes without incident. By the end of
it, I am feeling somewhat more human, but also exhausted, cranky, and very
jealous. As I wait for the second, I spy on couples from behind my book. Some
wear rings, some don’t. Some hold hands as they chat away, clearly fascinated
by each other. I watch enviously as guys carry backpacks, haul rolling
suitcases, bring food and cups of coffee to grateful partners. I wonder what
their secret is, and how some people can so
effortlessly pull off what I could not.
As we board the next boat, a French couple takes the two
seats next to mine. We make small talk, but in my grouchy state, I
don’t let on that I speak French. I read for a while, until the waves pick up.
Then, the waves really pick up.
Water is sloshing into the open window next to me, so the
French husband and I wriggle it shut. This works for a minute, until spray bursts
through the cracks in the pane. The boat rises and drops, lower and higher.
Some of the waves totally obliterate the horizon. The French wife starts to
turn pale. I start to turn pale. And I realize, with bone-chilling certainty,
that I am going to be sick.
That might not sound like a big deal to you, but I have a lifelong phobia about puking. Even typing the word is hard.
If I were stationary in a 5-star hotel room, I would be
almost as panicked as I am now. But I am at the front of a boat, with
toilets that are at the rear of the boat, past some 200 people, some of whom,
certainly, are feeling the way I do. There is another rise, another
wave, another thud. I clutch my water bottle and stare at a cloud in the
sky. I cannot be sick. I cannot. Not on this boat. Not alone. Not now.
People have started shrieking. I can hear the rustle of
plastic bags, and the idea of others being sick makes me even more nauseous.
The swell is getting bigger, and French wife is starting to freak out.
Her husband rubs her back and tells her there’s nothing to be scared of, but he
also seems to find her fear amusing, and makes snide remarks about the shrieks
of the other passengers. I want to smack him, but this, too, will probably make
me hurl.
More waves. An enormous one crashes over us, water
gushing into every orifice of the boat. There is actual shouting from the back.
Seized with panic, I try to remember every trick I know - and some I’ve made up - about seasickness.
Stare at a point on the horizon! Fuck, there is no horizon! Stare at your feet!
Take deep breaths! Think about cold icewater! Think about your friends! Think about your
dog! PRAY! French wife and I grab each other’s hands. She is
hyperventilating now. I notice she looks a lot like a dear friend of mine at
home, and have the urge to put my arm around her, but that would be weird and
also probably make me sick. So I squeeze her fingers, and think about rainbows
and puppies and gingerale. In a brief lull between wave bursts, French husband
drops a comment about how hilarious it is that everyone’s faces are yellow and
terrified. He laughs like a bad guy in a superhero film. His wife tells him
he’s not nice and I really want to chime in and agree with her except I still
supposedly don’t speak French. She starts sobbing. I feel the tears come.
Don’tbesickdon’tbesickdon’tcrydon’tcryDONOTCRY.
French husband kisses French wife, which is I guess is sweet
except that I can’t stand being touched when I’m nauseous, and even their by-proxy
touching is pushing me towards the edge. I also desperately need to pee, but
that would be impossible, and I’m so soaked that it probably wouldn’t matter
either way. The waves carry on, I have no idea for how much longer. But minutes
or days or hours later, the impossible happens: the swell starts to let up. There
is more space between dips, and the drops are less drop-like. We all share a sigh
of relief as the engine slows and we approach solid ground.
*
There are echoed murmurs of “never again” as people wobble
off the boat, wide-eyed, some of them so drenched they look as if they’ve been
swimming. I am directed to the squat toilet at the taxi stand, and my legs are shaking
so hard I almost fall in. On my way to my shuttle bus, I pass French wife.
She’s sitting on the curb, drinking a bottle of Coke, looking pale but
grateful. My instinct is to walk past and leave her alone.
Instead I lean down, drop my hand in front of her line of
vision and wriggle my fingers. She looks up at me and smiles.
“Goodbye,” I say, quietly. “And thank you.”
Her smile widens. “You are welcome. Goodbye.”
The shuttle bus is packed to bursting – me, a German/Spanish
couple, and a group of Finnish girls. But we’ve all literally been on the same
boat, so there is immediate camaraderie. We share our respective snacks and
drinks, and trade travel stories and tips. I help the couple figure out where
they’re staying. Eventually, we lapse into a comfortable silence.
During the boat ride, my room back on Bali had felt like it existed
in another dimension – like I would never get there, like the world would never
stop moving, like I was doomed to stay in nautical purgatory forever. But it
is, shockingly, exactly where I left it. I collapse onto the bed, shoveling
half a serving of fried rice and chicken into my mouth with my fingers because
I am too tired to get a fork and there is no one to see me anyway. Cars and
motorbikes hum past on the street, beeping and accelerating. Dogs bark in the
distance. Mosquitos buzz through the crack in the doorway. Life on Bali carries
on, as if there were no tragedies in the world, no victories, no tears. Or
maybe because there are.
I stretch out right in the middle of the bed, say a prayer
of gratitude, and fall asleep.
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