"Life doesn't suck. It just runs out of *room* sometimes."
Anonymous (in the gutter)
EDITORIAL: A BIT OF HUMAN INTEREST
(FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN THE HUMAN BEHIND THE EDITOR)
by Richard Karsmakers
Those of you who have been with ST NEWS for an extended time may
remember some of the various girls that came and went in the
lives of the two main people of its editorial staff. Stefan, I
seem to recall, had Evelien around Volume 3, Alida around the
change of Volume 3 into Volume 4, and Yvette around my taking
back over the editorial sceptre at the beginning of Volume 9,
this year. At the moment I don't believe he's seeing anyone in
particular after the Yvette thing went, well, Unexpectedly and
Horribly Wrong. At least not permanently.
On my side there have been Willeke through most of Volume 2, and
at the end of Volume 3 there were Trea and Patricia (that I'd
rather forget, to be honest). But, as of the middle of Volume 4
there had been only one girl, Miranda. Up to recently there was
no reason whatsoever to expect that this girl would ever vanish
from my life, much less that I would ever want to vanish from
hers. However, even somewhat to my own befuddlement, the latter
has happened.
I write this editorial in a new place of residence, because
circumstances have made it necessary for me to move myself and my
belongings there. I now live once more in a single room, at about
5 minutes from my previous address. I share the house with a
landlady and another student, a female Drama School student by
the name of Femke. But please first allow me to illustrate how
things could have come this far - up to the point that I can
understand these things myself, that is, for matters of the heart
are notorious for their complexity when you want them to
translate, in some way, to words of the brain.
In early spring of 1993 I spent an enjoyable week in the city of
Cambridge, England, with several dozen other students of
English at Utrecht University. I hung around with about six
others and got along fabulously. We probed the many Cambridge
pubs, visited just about every fascinating University College and
raided the book stores for cheap editions of various works. We
even checked out a Cambridge Hardrock Café of sorts which, apart
from a few electric guitars attached to walls and ceiling, did
not at all seem like a hardrock place to me.
One of the people I got to know that week, a girl called Karin
who was one year my junior at University and who I had somehow
never met before, attracted my fancy. She had a laugh like
sparkling water and had a lot in common with me. Besides that,
she was quite gorgeous. We related excellently and had a lot of
harmless fun. Nothing at all happened between us, except perhaps
for some basic attraction that neither of us voiced at the time.
We just liked each other a lot, a thing that can happen between
people now and again.
I rarely saw her in the long period - some 15 months - after
Cambridge. We sometimes met at "De Gasterij", the pub opposite
the English Department buildings in the centre of Utrecht. This
was usually a coincidence, as vertical integration seems to be a
rare thing here. Quite spontaneously, however, in spring of this
year when I met her again there, I asked her if perhaps she'd
like to do the 1994/1995 Academic Year freshmen Introduction with
me. This would mean that we would be mentors, sortof "mum and
dad", for approximately 10 new juniors that would be starting
their English studies in September of this year. Because we had
gotten along excellently back in Cambridge, the cooperation was
agreed upon.
The first night of the Introduction, August 31st, at the
Amerongen Youth Hostel where the majority of the Introduction
programme was to take place and where we had ended up sleeping in
the same bunk bed, we talked - whispered - a lot. There were two
first year's students in the room too, who we didn't want to wake
up. Between us, intricate chemical processes started to work
rabidly. Before we knew it there was True Magic coupled with
Genuine Affection and a Thunder'n'Lightning effect, all of which,
miraculously, Worked Both Ways.
Neither of us understood how things could have come this far.
Before long we ended up in the same bed, lying close to each
other, savouring the other's warmth, kissing and holding each
other and sharing some beautiful moments, while at the same time
we both knew I had Miranda back home who, certainly, I would want
to continue the rest of my life with.
Or would I?
The thing I felt for Karin was indescribably intense and
wonderful in ways I had never felt before. Was not the fact that
all of it had come this far, the fact that I had taken the
initiative in every aspect and sortof maelstromed Karin with me
in all this, proof enough that somehow there was something wrong
between Miranda and me?
In retrospect I think this must indeed have been the case. I
wouldn't go as far as saying that the thing between Miranda and
me had slowly transformed into a brother<>sister kind of thing,
because there was some genuine passion at instances, but the
feelings I had so far interpreted as True Love quite obviously
weren't. Close, but no cigar. I'd had nothing to compare it with
so far, but now I had. It's easy to soothe my guilt - and that of
Karin - by saying that a break-up would have been inevitable
anyway, that I would eventually have found out that the thing I
had with Miranda was not The Real Thing, no matter how close it
had actually been. Fact is, however, that Karin was a kind of
catalyst. The happenings on that August 31st started to make me
think about my life and future in a different light.
Many things I had felt in recent months suddenly fell in place.
I had been starting to fall out of love with Miranda - very
slowly, almost imperceptibly - and now the process had merely
gained momentum. I had felt comfortable around Miranda, felt
good, felt at ease, but I hadn't expected it to be possible to
feel more comfortable, better, and even more at ease. But it was.
Most of this happened within about 10 days. I met Karin a few
more times, sortof covertly, to generally spend time with each
other and talk a lot about the future and my predicament. How to
break the news to Miranda? Should I break the news to Miranda at
all? Or should I just perhaps consider Karin a casual thing and
continue my life like it had been before? Tell Miranda about it,
tell here it had meant nothing, and then forget everything had
ever taken place?
I surely couldn't do the latter. Something had changed
dramatically, and Karin most certainly wasn't a fling. Never
before had I felt so loved, adored, sexy, everything, in the way
Karin made me feel. And never before had I been able to make
someone else feel as loved, adored, sexy, everything - it showed,
I sensed it. Words fail to describe the attraction between us and
the way things automatically fall in place meticulously whenever
we're together, or even when we talk on the phone or TALK via
the Internet. We're almost extensions of the same of pre-
creature, fitting perfectly in every tiniest aspect. If you've
ever felt like this, you'll know what I mean. We're totally 'in
sync' mentally, too, right on the same wave length. I sounds like
a cliché to tell you I have never been this much in love, but I
am! Until Karin I had seemed to adore girls primarily either for
their mind or their body, but now everything was coupled together
in a perfect balance.
All the girls I'd ever been in love with had been in some way
unattainable. They didn't like me, or I felt in some weird way
inferior or superior to them, or they had character traits that I
wasn't particularly happy with. Willeke was alight with the flame
of religious fervour (that I could never quite relate to, though
I tried), Patricia was a physical thing (she smoked as well, and
was not particularly smart) and Trea was a left-wing radical with
too dominant a mind (and she smoked, too). Miranda had been the
only exception so far, but now I had discovered that something -
a thing I couldn't quite put my finger on - was in some way
lacking between us. Everything was different with Karin,
refreshingly so. Stupidly, the only thing I've discovered about
Karin so far that I don't like too much is a trivial thing like
the fact that she likes olives.
I had to be honest with myself and conclude that Karin was too
good to let go of, no matter how self-centred a decision this
would ultimately have to bring with it. I had to be honest with
Miranda and tell her about it. I wanted to be able to look her in
the eyes in the future without needing to feel embarrassed, I
didn't want to cheat on her. Miranda had never done me wrong, and
I most certainly didn't want to do anything to her except for the
actual breaking up. That was bad enough already, more than bad
enough.
On the evening of September 12th I broke the news to her. It was
a heart-rending evening, very much like a hideous nightmare that
I couldn't wake up from no matter how hard I tried. I felt like a
twat, a complete bastard, a total and utter git. But you rarely
meet the perfect Someone in your life, let alone get a second
chance at an even Better Someone. I would not have been able to
look in the mirror each morning without hating myself if I hadn't
grabbed hold of this golden occasion with both hands.
Even after having broken the news to Miranda, however, I knew
things would continue to be difficult for the time being. Miranda
and me rented a house, the landlord being her father. Would he
consent to my staying in the same house as his daughter until I
had found a new abode after my having, well, sortof dumped her?
Would he perhaps bear a grudge, hop in his car after the news was
brought to his attention, and kick me out of the house? He had
every right, for my signature wasn't on the renting contract.
With this nightmare scenario in my head I already envisioned me
sitting on the cobbles of the Looplantsoen, surrounded by my
wordly belongings.
The love between Karin and me was of such intensity that I had
already taken the chance. I had forfeited a life as a houseman on
the side of a female veterinarian with an excellent annual
income, I had forfeited the security I had that Miranda and me
could stick together indefinitely. So I had also taken the chance
at no longer having a roof above my head. In the best of cases,
it would mean my having to get back from a comfortable three-room
private house to something a lot smaller in a house shared by up
to a dozen or more students, something like the place I had lived
in from August 1988 to October 1989, just before I started
working for Thalion.
A few days later, Miranda's dad told me I had to be out of
Looplantsoen 50 by October 31st, including the last of my
possessions. I saw his point, and I guess he had even been
lenient with this deadline. Initially I felt really freaked out -
after all, Utrecht is a city where a few thousand students need
rooms to live in every year. After having done a fairly big "room
wanted" advert in the local newspapers, however, I got over two
dozen reactions among which was one from a really nice Surinam
woman that had a room to let. I could move in on October 15th,
the rent was agreeable, and the accomodations more than
satisfying. I'd also have a separate kitchen that I only needed
to share with one other student that also rented a room in the
house, and a bathroom and second toilet that only needed to be
shared between the three of us. In the near future, a phone
answering machine, microwave and other nice things were in the
pipeline.
However, I have not told you all of it yet. I've left out an
ingredient that accounts for my feeling wretched, too, as opposed
to just feel excellent, loved, and in love.
To make The Whole Thing even more - all but infinitely - worse,
Karin has in the mean time joined an exchange program and is
spending a year at the University of Bristol until June 1995. It
was a thing she had been arranging for over a year already,
something she had worked towards and to which she was looking
forward enormously. After I had broken up with Miranda, all Karin
and me had left were less than 10 days to make things work, to
make sure those preciously few days would give enough loving
memories to last for the 9 months we would spend apart. I myself
carry with me many insanely beautiful memories of that period,
and I think she does, too. We write a lot and phone occasionally,
and she also has email so we can get in touch whenever there is a
need.
I guess it's the Ultimate Test for a relationship to be apart
for such a prolonged time after having been together for a few
weeks only. We'll see each other regularly during the few weeks
around Christmas and New Year's Day when she'll stay in the
Netherlands again, and I'll most likely visit her for around a
week in March. But I don't think my life will be complete until
her return, by the end of June next year. I wouldn't be as
arrogant to assume things will work out, but I do hope they will
for I've never felt like the way I feel around her.
It is, truly, a kind of magic. It damn near makes me feel
immortal.
So that's how and why it happened, the reason why I am now on a
different address altogether with a totally changed future and a
mental state that is at once totally cool and immensely
unsatisfying.
My new room is 4,20 by 3 metres, which is basically not too
small although, of course, I had been used to the comforts of a
three-room flat before. The atmosphere is quite homely, there's a
phone connection in my room, a huge spider in front of the
biggest window, and the other student living in this house is a
very nice girl by the name of Femke. And around the corner there
are a bus stop (with a direct connection to Utrecht Central
Station) and a mailbox, with a shopping mall at a bit more than
five minutes' walking. As a matter of fact the only two
disadvantages I've discovered so far are the fact that only two
wall sockets have all my gear plugged in (electric guitar, stereo
equipment, TV, computer, most lamps) and that the shower is
really a bath (with no shower curtains - yet - to prevent the
surroundings from being bespattered). Neither of them have proved
unsurmountable, I should add.
I will spend the time until June next year in perpetual hope
tinged with a bit of fear of losing Karin. Although I intend to
release three issue of ST NEWS in 1995, the Whole Karin Thing
added to the fact that it's kindof my graduation year at
University now might actually cause only 2 issues to be released.
We'll just see what happens. If you really think it would be a
total outrage if a mere 2 issues are released in '95, feel free
to write and lessen my workload.
I hope you'll like reading this issue of ST NEWS, anyway!
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THE ULTIMATE "WHAT IS KARIN ACTUALLY LIKE?" GUIDE
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Karin, born in Deurne (in the south of the Netherlands) on July
12th 1973, is 1.66 metres in size, with densely cropped mound of
dark-blonde hair, really curly and quite beautiful, that reaches
until a bit below her shoulders. She's got deep-set, grey-blue
eyes under fairly bushy eyebrows. She's quite slim, has an
unbelievably nice tight pair of buns and, well, all the other
bits and bo(o)bs are the way they ought to be, too. She has a
lovely smile and really soft lips that make it a joy to kiss, if
possible forever.
Character-wise she is a lot like me, probably because we share a
similar background (we were born in about the same area of the
Netherlands, and we both study English and like it a lot), she's
intelligent, a bundle of laughs (I think humour is probably the
most important thing in a relationship) and she makes me really
feel at ease. Whenever I am with her I feel like me. She's really
sweet, warm, sensuous, sporty and sexy.
Enough of this!
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