How to Avoid Leaving a Relationship Bruised in the Face
by Jason Nellis.
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A warning to men everywhere:
Don’t be stupid. I’ll be the first to admit, I am not, nor can I ever be, the perfect date or boyfriend. In fact, sometimes, I’ve been downright moronic. Chalk it up to being male (a commonly-blamed attribute), young (though this tends to shift—the older I get, the younger I claim to be), or impetuous (or, really, more like ADD, because—hey, look, a kitty cat!). Whatever the case may be, I’m not without faults. Most of the time, I end up getting myself into heaps of trouble by ignoring them rather than admitting to them. |
Let me explain:
At the beginning of my junior year of college, I met a girl named Deanna. She was a freshman straight out of the South, twang and all. She was only four foot eleven, so I towered about a foot over her, but I found that more endearing than funny. She also called me on whatever BS I happened to be spewing (usually when I made outrageous claims to get attention, like “I invented the stapler.” I’m like that sometimes).
She was very cute, and I was very interested. So, of course, I made a move.
I was very smooth, of course. We’d just watched a movie in her dorm’s common room, and everyone else had left. I said something smooth, like “that was a great movie,” and she responded “yeah,” and then we started making out.
Like I said, smooth.
We started seeing each other fairly regularly after that. We’d watch football games together, have dinner, go to the movies. You know, normal dating stuff. She even met my mom, when she came to visit. It felt like the beginning of a good, solid relationship.
Except, of course, that after two months, I got bored. This isn’t uncommon, I suppose. Once you get into a rhythm, it’s tough not to feel things get a bit stale. So, I did what any normal guy would do to remedy the situation.
I ignored the problem. Literally.
One day, I just stopped calling her, ignored my phone, didn’t read my email. I took an exit off the freeway that was our relationship and didn’t even bother to tell her.
Okay, okay. It was a really, REALLY dumb move. I really was young and stupid, and somehow thought that this was a nicer, less painful way to break up with a girl. I have been informed by MANY of my friends since then that this was a bad choice. In retrospect, I tend to agree.
However, the time came when I finally manned-up and confronted her.
Two weeks later. Yikes.
I dropped by her dorm room unannounced one night, and the conversation went something like this:
“Hey, Deanna, how have you been?”
”WHY HAVEN’T YOU CALLED ME?!”
“Uh, I’m sorry, can we talk for a minute?”
“YOU HAVEN’T ANSWERED MY QUESTION!”
(Okay. Clearly, this was going to go well.)

I came up with every lame, sorry, tired excuse I could think of.
“I feel terrible, I’m so sorry.”
“It was wrong of me not to call, I’ve been so messed up lately.”
“It’s not your fault, it’s mine.”
(By the way, girls really hate it when you use any variation of “it’s not you, it’s me.” Again, something I had to learn the hard way.)
Of course, the best part was yet to come. Before dropping by her dorm, I’d been by a friend’s house to pick up a book I needed. A large, thick text on the development of the South Side of Chicago as it pertained to gentrification. (You know, a real grabber.) The thing was probably five hundred pages thick, hard cover. You could use it to weight a stack of papers during a tornado.
As I was explaining how bad of a human being I was, I tried to make light of the situation.
“I’ll understand if you think I’m a bad person. That’s fair. If you need time, if you don’t want to talk, I completely understand,” I said.
“Heck,” I chuckled, “if you want to throw this book at me, that’d be okay too.”
(Disclaimer: unless you are a brilliant, witty person who can change the mood in a room instantaneously, joking during a bad breakup is a STUPID MOVE.)
Whoops.

Without missing a beat, she grabbed the book, and with both hands, chucked it straight at my face. It slammed into me like an anvil. My vision was blurred, my balance was shot, and my cheek was bruised. I’m fairly sure that I had a near death experience, because I swear, I saw dead family members pointing and laughing at me. Which, whether I’m going up or down when I die, is not what I want to see.
“Okay,” I said, my eyes tearing up from pain, “I brought that one on myself.”
I left immediately after that, embarrassed that not only had I been a jerk, but that I’d literally just had the book thrown at me.
I deserved exactly what I’d gotten. Not only was it not okay for me to ignore her like that, but I’d been ignoring the real problem, which was that, given the choice to do the right thing or do the easy thing, I’d chosen the easy thing. Captain Obvious here should have known better.
Still, in the end, things worked out. A few months later, we reconnected, I apologized, and we ended up becoming friendly. She even apologized for chucking my textbook at my head, which she didn’t have to do.
So the end of the story? The overall moral to this fiasco of a relationship?
Don’t bring heavy objects when you break up with a girl. Probably not a good call.
About the author: Jason has lived in Washington DC, Chicago, and now resides in Los Angeles, where he’s trying to make enough money to eat. A graduate of Northwestern University’s Theatre program, he hopes to find work in the entertainment industry, while at the same time looking for that special girl–or, at least, one who won’t injury him, no matter what he says or does. When not writing, Jason is an actor, director, and producer, having performed in or worked on such plays as Romeo and Juliet, Taming of the Shrew, The Time of Your Life, The Last Five Years, Side Man, and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.
Jason’s personal blog can be found Here.
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October 28th, 2007 at 5:26 pm
here is a good point from jason “Don’t bring heavy objects when you break up with a girl. Probably not a good call”
guys remember it. i was break up with my gf last 2 year i think that i lose all, i wont go to work, every night i drink and gambling, not until 3 month my 4 year saving finish and i sell my house to pay my debt. guys when broke up just find a new one, is very easy to approaching women or date with them.
October 29th, 2007 at 4:44 am
Men, the moral of this story is: dont be such an idiot. man up.
October 29th, 2007 at 7:00 am
haha hilarious post. Sounds like you learned from that experience which is awesome. I’ve had guys break up with me by ignoring me and it is the worst. so hopefully other guys will learn from this post as well!
October 29th, 2007 at 3:58 pm
“Twang and all”? Hmmmmm, I am from the South and that is not a trait we all share, lol. Loved the article though, very interesting.
October 29th, 2007 at 6:09 pm
You asked for it, Jason.
October 30th, 2007 at 12:13 am
wow- well i underdstand your issue you wanted to forget and move on-but left her hopes and dreams wanning in the wind-ouch that book musta really hurt
if you think that was funny-lol
October 30th, 2007 at 3:43 pm
het, im glad you made the effort to make good on your not calling her. women hate dishonestly and being used. ive been there way too many times. there is no worse feeling at least you have a conscience.
October 30th, 2007 at 6:07 pm
great article! I hope this is just the first, because if you were that stupid to begin with, I’m sure you have a lot more stories like this!
October 31st, 2007 at 7:03 am
You should have called the cops and had her arrested for domestic battery.
October 31st, 2007 at 3:04 pm
Thanks for the comments, everyone. I just wanted to respond to a few, briefly:
@Dariana: I should have been slightly more specific. She was from Little Rock, AK. I know enough people from there to know there’s a twang in that part of the South.
@Andrew: I don’t know if, at the time, I just wanted to forget things and move on, or if I somehow really got it into my head that it’d be better for both of us if I just ignored the situation. Either way, it clearly didn’t work out, which is why I don’t recommend it!
@Kimchihead: Don’t you think that would have been a bit excessive? It wasn’t exactly a fight so much as a response to some bad humor on my part. Plus, I’m not sure that would have sounded good on the phone–”Hello? A girl that’s a foot shorter and half my weight threw a book at my head!” I just think of it as a balance of karma–I hurt her emotionally, she hurt me physically. Not that I’m EVER a fan of physical violence, but in this case, I literally suggested it, so I had no recourse. Besides, in retrospect? Pretty damn funny.
November 25th, 2007 at 2:06 pm
Hi Jason,
I was lol regarding your responce to Kimchihead(typical Asian reaction), no offence. Yeah, it’s better to fess up rather than leave us hanging. We’re emotional while men are more physical.
April 15th, 2008 at 11:56 pm
The moral of the story is if your gonna drop a bitch do it. Don’t go by her dorm room afterward. You didn’t deserve a book in the face. Relationships end. You don’t deserve punishment for that.
April 16th, 2008 at 5:25 am
I got punched in the face at a bar by my ex girlfriend because I told her I didn’t want to talk to her.
She was the one that dumped me, too, about 6 months before punching me.
June 15th, 2008 at 1:40 am
Great story! Sound’s like you’ve learned your lesson and hopefully now, come out of relationships a little less bruised.