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THE BORROWED-TIME Episode 6 ALMOST podcast This is ‘Almost’. A field guide to the relationships that don't have names. The Between-Thing was about two people who used each other as waiting rooms during a transitional season and stayed past the transition. This one is different. The Borrowed Time has a full relationship inside it. The intimacy is real. The domestic weight is real. The problem is structural and visible from the beginning. Both of you know the end date. Both of you have agreed, without saying so, not to look at it directly. The move date was April 14th. Both of you knew that in September. Seven months is a long time in which to keep acting as though a date on the calendar has no authority, and the two of you got very good at the act. Sunday mornings proceeded as Sunday mornings do. You made plans for March with the full confidence of people who have not yet agreed to look at April. The relationship moved forward in the way relationships move forward, accumulating texture, shared references, the particular knowledge of another person that takes months to build. Then it was April. The Borrowed Time calls itself making the most of it, which sounds like optimism. Sometimes it calls itself not wanting to waste what we have, which sounds like maturity. In its most candid version it becomes let's just see, which usually means the outcome is already visible and neither person wants to say so yet. What it is, in practice, is a relationship with a confirmed end date that both people have agreed, without a formal conversation, not to discuss. The ending is structural. One of you has a visa with a limit on it. One of you accepted a job that was always going to require departure. One of you has a life in another city that you returned to eventually, and both of you knew that from the first week. The ending is not hypothetical. It is not the kind of ending that could be prevented by a conversation or revised by mutual effort. It is already on the calendar. The Borrowed Time is the stretch between knowing that fact and arriving at it. Both people choose, repeatedly, to spend that stretch treating the certain thing like a rumor. That treatment is not exactly a lie. The relationship inside it is real. The time inside it is real. Pretending otherwise is the method by which the time stays livable. The Borrowed Time keeps making plans. It books the weekend away in March when the move is in April. It talks about the summer as though summer belongs to both of you. It makes reservations with lead times longer than the relationship has remaining. The plans can look like faith. They can also look like the particular kind of avoidance that wears faith's clothes because faith is harder to argue with. The more revealing sign is the word that never appears. Neither of you says last. You go to the restaurant you both like without calling it one last time. You spend Sunday morning exactly as you always spend Sunday morning and neither of you narrates what is happening. You have the same argument you always have, about the same small thing, and it resolves the way it always resolves, and neither of you pauses to register that the pattern is running out of runway. All the work goes into preserving ordinary time while the goodbye proceeds underneath it in installments. That was episode 6, The Borrowed Time. Next week: The Convenience. A relationship held in place by the cost of leaving more than by the value of staying. Both people are fine. Fine is the whole problem. Subscribe wherever you’re listening. And if you want the full field guide in one place, the book is free to download [https://aleksfilmore.com/almost] at aleksfilmore.com [https://aleksfilmore.com/].
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