When someone breaks up with you, you may find yourself saying a whole host of things you don’t actually mean: “I hate him,” “I wish we had never met,” “I wish he’d just die.”
After my ex-boyfriend broke up with me outside a Thai restaurant in the middle of Newtown’s King Street, I spurted any number of variations of those phrases at anyone who would listen to my post-breakup drunken ramblings.
And then, he did “just die.” For real.
When you’re twenty-one, you don’t really expect to receive a phone call on an ordinary Wednesday evening telling you your ex-boyfriend has passed away.
It seems more likely that you’ll be receiving such a call about a parent or grandparent than an ex-boyfriend you’d happily been watching movies and brunching with not six weeks before.
You’re mostly just hoping that you won’t run into him on a bad hair day, or without the attractive, successful new boyfriend you just know is in your future.
Because, let’s face it, sometimes we just kind of want to rub it in someone’s face when they’ve broken up with us how much better we are than them. To prove to them how foolish they were for letting us go. That revenge tactic is perhaps a little bit insensitive when they’re dead. “Oh, dead you say? That’s a shame, I’m doing so well, still walkinng around, breathing, got a nice new haircut the other day.” It’s just a bit cruel to try and one-up a dead guy.