Mad About You
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Read between August 20 - August 22, 2024
3%
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They always meant well.
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“You really can’t cope with compliments, can you?” Jon had said, absurdly fondly.
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“I’m so glad you’re here,” Jon said, folding Harriet into a hug, and she squeezed back, mumbling, “Thank you for inviting me.”
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You’re one of the family. You’re more my family than they are.”
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“I’m the luckiest guy in the world!”
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Harriet had no moral objection to marriage; she just had no interest either. Doing it purely as a favor to someone else, and to meet society’s expectations, seemed wrong.
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the subject came up again, she reiterated her stance: Nope, not for me. Not now. Not ever.
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Two years of being fastidiously polite to them all, and for what? She was as much a disliked outsider as ever.
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No idea, so much to think about!
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“What the hell did you do that for?”
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How did she end up here? What was she like?
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“I don’t want to be with you anymore. This is over, Jon.”
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“You don’t love me?” Harriet closed her eyes. “Not in the way I need to.”
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What’s up next, you love me but you’re not in love with me?”
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“A moment ago, I was getting married to the love of my life. This can’t be happening.”
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we’re very different people, Jon. Tonight proved that.”
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Deep breath: Say it.
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“I very much do not want to see your family tomorrow,”
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“Please. I’m begging you. This is breaking my heart. I can’t imagine life without you, Harriet. Please. Stay.”
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Harriet said, her voice hoarse, “I can’t. I’m sorry.” “What if we agreed to some time apart, had a break?”
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“It wouldn’t change anything.” “Is there someone else?” “One ...
This highlight has been truncated due to consecutive passage length restrictions.
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“You haven’t done anything wrong. Apart from the proposal.” “Apart from not being who you want.”
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She was scared of her decision—scared at passing up someone who cared for her so much, scared of the loneliness on the other side,
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even in the teeth of that fear, she knew no part of it was second thoughts.
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As terrible as doing this was, knowing and avoiding that she needed to do it was worse.
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Stop being such a pathetic commitment-phobe, she’d told herself. Happiness wasn’t a constant with anyone, it was an elusive, nebulous, fluctuating thing.
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“I didn’t know what to say and when to say it. When is the best time to break someone’s heart?”
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“As soon as possible.”
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“I feel awful that I hurt him so much,
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He created gratitude in you. Constantly. You felt gratitude that he was so obsessed with you,
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Good women are not a rewards system for silly men.”
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“He couldn’t be more considerate and respectful.
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Harriet was hopeless at internet dating. Really, just shit at it. She didn’t sell herself well, didn’t choose well. By
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You always care what people think of you, which is wonderful, but sometimes to your detriment.”
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Harriet started to genuinely enjoy herself, and it was that double-plus sort of enjoyment you feel when it’s come out of left field.
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He wasn’t someone she’d usually find herself with, and that started to become attractive in itself.
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catch him looking at her sometimes, a sappy expression on his face, simply worshipping the fact she existed.
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was hard not to be affected by how intoxicated he was by her.
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Not only did being a Mrs. Someone not appeal to her, but she didn’t want the stress.
18%
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“An ancient thirty-four and antisocial as hell, to be honest.”
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not knowing whether to feel exhilarated at being so decisive or slightly idiotic at being hustled into it, and settled on both.
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Did he have a fundamental inability to take her seriously?
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Never having to suffer his parents again was a joyous bonus of leaving Jon, no doubt about it.
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By leaving Jonathan, she’d made herself a Bad Person.
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He no doubt meant well, but these minor manipulations were making her even more desperate to be free.
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She had empathy for Jon’s pain but no way to fix it.
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I know you do, most people do.
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I wish you hadn’t. If you’d let me help, I would have done everything I could to help.
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think it’s a huge loss for both of us. If
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It was pathetic really, but the fact virtually nothing here was hers felt like vindication that she was right to go.
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