Two blogging buddies recently wrote that no one knows them completely. I know this feeling too well - to want to share everything with someone, yet know that you can’t is painful, torturous even.

My divorce left me relieved and happy with my newfound freedom, but it also left me broken. What had been a hopelessly romantic girl had given way to a slightly jaded woman, and it was evident. Ripping my heart off of my sleeve, I stashed it away in a soundproof vault and began to believe in things like “the only person that will ever look out for me is me” and “no one ever loves someone just as she is.” It never occured to me that this could be my heart’s defenses clicking into place; instead, I thought that I had finally discovered a Universal Truth.

I think there’s a process that every recently-single person goes through: First, there’s anger and rage toward the person you no longer love, and a spiteful satisfaction that you don’t have to tolerate his presence anymore. holding handsThen you graduate to the insecure phase, wondering how much of the breakup is your fault, and eventually convincing yourself that you are completely unlovable and will never walk hand-in-hand again. During these first phases, there is much introspection and self-discovery, and it can be excruciating. But when we allow ourselves to deal with our inner demons, we emerge as happier, healthier individuals. We move into the final stage of self-acceptance where we’ve come to terms with our past and are willing to move into the future, ready to love and be loved.

Those first two stages were hard for me, tossing me around like a kayak that had been carried into the Bermuda Triangle by a tidal wave, only to be welcomed to that maritime hell by a class-5 hurricane. But after confronting and dealing with each one of my fears, I knew that I would love again. And I was certain that our love would be perfect enough to make Aurora, Cinderella, Ariel, and all the rest of them absolutely green with jealousy.

I was single for 28 months before I met the last man I will ever love. For the first few weeks, I showed him my wildly confident, slightly flirtatious side. I was so convincing that I think I scared him a bit. But on the inside, I was terrified, and had no idea what I was doing. But with a good dose of humor and a generous serving of patience, we made it through the awkward first encounters and became a couple.

So then I thought, “finally! now is when it gets easy!” Wrong again. Opening up to Fabi — letting him into the confines of my soul — was anything but easy. Because when we finally let someone in, we give him the ability to hurt us. As I whispered my secrets and ground him a copy of the key to my heart, I felt vulnerable and fragile. And that is the opposite of easy.

But fear is no excuse to hold back. If we never risk, we never gain. And that it is why we must do the very thing that stands to lose us the most: open up and give of ourselves. With baby steps, I began to confide in Fabi and tell him my past, show him dreams, and share confidences. And with each little test I gave him, he proved that he was worthy. And knowing that was worth far more than 28 lonesome months.

My relationship would not work for everyone, but for me, it is the best union that will ever exist. With confidence that he will always love and accept me, I can share my laundry list of fears, mistakes, insecurities, and sins. I know that he will not always agree with me, but that his love will never waver and our relationship will strengthen, not weaken, from our complete, naked honesty. And this is why, someday, Fabi will know everything that there is to know about me.

Sharing yourself with someone will never be easy. In fact, I think it’s the most risky and frightening thing that we can ever do. But if you start small and open yourself up like a flower in bloom, you’ll find that this leap of faith is the best one you’ll ever make.


6 Responses to “Here, I Give You My Heart”  



  1. Gravatar Icon 1 lisa

    i love when i inspire people to write ;)
    erin, you’ve explained much more eloquently than i ever could the fear involve. it’s hard telling someone everything, but it’s harder still to hand them the key to your heart and trust them to know everything and not hurt you.

    i’ve never been seriously hurt by a relationship, but i think that’s because i’ve never given anyone, ever, the key to my heart. i’ve opened windows here and there, but the door has never been wide open, either from fear that someone wouldn’t walk through it, or that they would, and destroy me from the inside out.

    i am envious of you and Fabi for that. i don’t know if i’ll ever get to that point, but i know that i want it more than anything. my fear, though, is large. it’s going to take a long time to be able to let someone in that deeply.

  2. Gravatar Icon 2 Fabi

    HI Erin, my baby!

    Lisa says something that apply to my self for my past romantic life:
    “i’ve never given anyone, ever, the key to my heart”…. but know all is different because of you!!! You have the key of my heart and my soul… My partner, my friend, my lover!!

    Baby, Gracias por existir y darle un nuevo sentido a mi vida….. :D

  3. Gravatar Icon 3 Fabi

    I love you :D

  4. Gravatar Icon 4 Leigh

    I really enjoy your blog and your writing. I admire the level of honesty you touch here. I can’t say I do quite the same in mine. I’m glad we met as well.

  5. Gravatar Icon 5 Fabi

    Te amo…. we miss your blogs! :)

  6. Gravatar Icon 6 Xavier

    Hello Erin.

    I am a man from Catalonia that loves Costa Rica. I’ve visited the country 3 times, and it has been even better than what I expected. It was really love, I will try to retire there, because I feel Costa Rica as my contry in my heart. Believe me, it’s much deeper than “oh what a pretty sunset”, or “aww look at the toucans”.

    Your blog is one of the best 5 I’ve visited about CR (and I’ve read dozens of them). This last writing has been really inspiring, and I agree with you about most of the things you wrote. You know, after receiving some injuries inside me during life, I believe that it’s very strange when the end of a relationship is only one side’s fault. In almost 100% of the cases each one in the couple has some responsability. And it doesn’t mean that any of the two are a lesser being, or a person of a low value. Almost surely both persons are good and love-deserving beings who deserve the best, but don’t mix well. Just that, and I agree, it hurts, but you’ve got to take good things and keep them inside forever, it’d be sad to bury them below sadness and anger. One positive weights more for me than 10 negatives.

    That was all, I hope I’ve written clear enough, sometimes it’s difficult to me to express feelings in words.

    I hope you’re ok and things are on the best way for you. Take care and pura vida. :)

    Xavier

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about

I'm Erin, a twenty-something freelance writer living in Costa Rica and trying to make sense of this crazy thing called life.

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erin [at] gringuitica [dot] com

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