Sometimes I try to recall my teenage years. I try to remember the girl, I used to be when I thought that life was just beginning. I see my younger self, laughing and having a good time. She has a future ahead of her that would include a career, marriage and children (especially children). What would I say to my younger self, if I could? What would I tell her to do differently? And what would her reaction be?
I can see her so clearly, walking home from school with her boyfriend, holding hands. One of the neighbours disapprovingly tells her mother, "they walk so close, no light can pass between them."
"Ashton" was my first boyfriend. We met when we were sixteen. I was in grade 11 and he was in grade 12. He was a year ahead because he was born in England and moved to Canada in his early teens. Their school system was ahead of ours.
We met in an arcade. I approached him because I mistakenly thought he was a friend of my friend "David." We talked and he walked me home. From then on we started dating regularly. I remember that initially I was not interested in him and I tried to discourage him from liking me but eventually we fell in love. (That sounds corny, even to me but I do believe it is the truth.)
I don't often think of that relationship any more. In fact, I don't remember much from the two years that Ashton and I were together. But the pictures I have from that time are of two young people, who look very happy and very close. I've saved his letters after all these years, and they too reveal a very intimate relationship. I kept the letters all these years because I thought that one day, I may want to show them to my oldest son. I want him to know it was a good relationship and not just a "fling." The pictures and letters are important because they are all he may ever know of his biological father.