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Love Songs: โ€œHang With Meโ€

Robyn. Photograph by Lewis Chaplin. Wikimedia Commons, Licensed under CCO 2.0.

This week, the Review is publishing a series of short reflections on love songs, broadly defined.ย 

Someone I recently kissed sends me a PDF of a rare, out-of-print book by John Ashbery. The fragment I tug from Fragment: โ€œSeen from inside all is / abruptness. As though to get out your eye / sharpens and sharpens these particulars; no / longer visible, they breathe in multicolored / parentheses the way love in short periods / puts everything out of focus, coming and going.โ€ Itโ€™s been a while since Iโ€™ve been in love, and, most of the time, the idea fatigues me: I can see the end before anythingโ€™s begun. But these lines make my clarity of vision briefly undesirable; I miss the blur.

When I was nineteen, an anxious wallflower at my first literary party, Ashbery barked at me to fetch him a gin and tonic. Now these lines of his wind back the tape to adolescence: when everything is seen from inside even as the self strains outward and time exits its usual shapes and the imagination knows no end. Teenagers make love and ontology anew. I remember the smell of wet grass on long night walks with the first girl I loved. The matching pale green stains on our white sneakers. Our long hair mingling, dark brown and red, in the stairwell, the party weโ€™d just left still loud down the hall. That this was the most surprising thing that had ever happened to my nineteen-year-old body, though it was also the culmination of months of cloaked flirting as well asโ€”it seemedโ€”the culmination of every desire ever. Yet I also glimpsed how much more wanting there was to do.

Since I am time-traveling back to that relationship, my first queer one, which careened to a slow disintegration I didnโ€™t see coming, I am listening to โ€œHang With Me,โ€ Robynโ€™s dance-pop love song that forbids love. โ€œWill you tell me once again / how weโ€™re gonna be just friends?โ€ she begins, a plea that morphs into command in the chorus: โ€œJust donโ€™t fall recklessly, headlessly in love with me.โ€ This is the brinkmanship common to teenagers and lovers, feigning control over feelings.

โ€œAnd if you do me right, Iโ€™m gonna do right by you,โ€ Robyn sings before she gets to that other condition, the one that gives the song its title: if you donโ€™t fall in love with me, you can hang with me. These are the stipulations of a contract thatโ€™s never going to work. Itโ€™s clear from the ecstatic production and obsessive insistence that Robyn herself is already in love. And in her demands, I hear seduction, the kind that plays out when youโ€™re already in bed with someone, whispering โ€œwe canโ€™tโ€ while you do.

Wild requests, wild promises, nothing that can be keptโ€”going as it comes. The โ€œheartbreak, blissfully painful and insanityโ€ that Robyn is worried about speeds toward her. It strikes me that this song is, like me, revisiting adolescent passions from a distance. The time travel is imperfect. โ€œHeartbreakโ€ is the tell. For falling in love to become possible, Iโ€™ll have to forget that heartbreak is equally possible, but the anticipation of pain worms into love that hasnโ€™t yet earned the name.ย 

The internet reveals that โ€œHang With Meโ€ hadnโ€™t yet been released during the short period of love Iโ€™ve just described. At first, I am sure that thereโ€™s a mistake. The song is overlaid on so many memories of her. But it seems I made a sequential connection simultaneous. At some point that I donโ€™t remember, I heard this song and remembered my ex, and then, at Ashberyโ€™s instigation, I remembered the song and the story together. Now that Iโ€™ve written this down, theyโ€™ll never be separate. Such a teenage word, never. Like: Donโ€™t worry, Iโ€™ll never fall in love with you.

ย 

Elisa Gonzalez is a poet, fiction writer, and essayist whose work has appeared inย The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, and elsewhere. She is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writerโ€™s Award.ย 

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