Love Always

Free Love Always by Ann Beattie Page B

Book: Love Always by Ann Beattie Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ann Beattie
imaginable.
    Maureen had decided that she needed to change her life. She had lost her sense of herself, and she had to regain it. It was not that she had been Hildon’s wife too long, but rather that it did not seem that she was anybody’s anything. When she decided to be Matt Smith’s lover, she thought that would spite Hildon, but actually doing something like that was self-destructive: she was only being spiteful to herself.
    She did what people always did in the movies when they were having a crisis. She looked in the mirror. Even trying as hard as she could, her face was so familiar to her that she did not know how objective she could be.
    She was at least attractive. It might make her prettier if she had her hair streaked, lightened around the face. She might go back to buying and wearing the candy-colored clothes she had liked as a student at Mary Baldwin College. She might affect that southern accent again, slightly. None of it would do any good if she continued to be surrounded by the bizarre, self-indulgent people who had been part of her life since Hildon’smagazine became such a success. But before she could meet new people, she would have to restore her self-confidence. And today, Davina Cole, for a mere $50 an hour, was going to help her to be the best person she could be.
    As Davina explained it, her approach was part psychotherapy, part whole body reconditioning, and part assertiveness training.
    In preparation for their session, Maureen, as Davina had instructed, had tried to get a good night’s sleep and had had mineral water with orange juice for breakfast and eaten lightly. Davina had had a photograph of Maureen enlarged, cut out, and backed with cardboard. She leaned it against the wall as they talked. This black and white Maureen was almost life size. It was quite eerie, having it there in the living room: Maureen in her sarong, smiling.
    “When you look at that, what do you see?” Davina said.
    Maureen looked at it a long time. “I don’t know,” she said.
    “You see an attractive woman smiling, don’t you?”
    “Maybe I look silly.”
    “Please don’t think of the statue as ‘I.’ Try to tell me only what you see.”
    “I think I see a woman who isn’t especially attractive. Just an ordinary woman.”
    “What is the part you think is most attractive?”
    Maureen thought about it. The legs were nice; the calves thin and shapely. The hair was long, thick, and rather dramatic. She knew that her eyes were probably her best feature, but the blowup had almost obliterated detail, so that they were oval, muddy pools. “The hair,” she said.
    “Good,” Davina said. “Concentrate on that for a few minutes.”
    Maureen tried to concentrate on her hair, but her attention kept drifting. She was more worried about Hildon coming home while this was going on than she had been the time she went to bed with Matt Smith.
    “Reach up and stroke your hair,” Davina said. “Say out loud: ‘I have lovely, luxurious hair.’ ”
    “I have lovely, luxurious hair,” Maureen said, stroking her hands down the sides of her hair.
    “Do you believe that?” Davina said.
    “Well, of course, many people …”
    “We aren’t interested in many people. We are interested in you. Do you believe that this is true of you?”
    “Yes,” Maureen said.
    “Society has taught us to turn aside compliments, which is wrong enough in itself, but which is very harmful if we take a simple fact to be a compliment. Now, tell me something else about your hair.”
    “My hair is long.”
    “Your hair, then, is the most impressive thing you notice about yourself; it is luxurious, lovely, and long. That’s very good, and easy to remember, because it alliterates.”
    Davina opened a canvas bag she had brought with her. She took out a white towel, went over to the statue, and draped it over the hair.
    “Find something else to admire,” she said.
    Maureen smiled; with the sarong tied around her and the towel thrown over

Similar Books

Liesl & Po

Lauren Oliver

The Archivist

Tom D Wright

Stir It Up

Ramin Ganeshram

Judge

Karen Traviss

Real Peace

Richard Nixon

The Dark Corner

Christopher Pike