Mapping the Way  
    to True Love
Janet Kuypers 
1/24/17
I’ve always taken charge 
and led the way. But even on my own, 
I accomplished more than anyone. 
I was invincible. 
I was doing so well, 
I quit my job as an art director 
in the second largest city in the States, 
kept paying for my Chicago apartment 
and traveled around the country by car... 
Until I was stopped at a light, 
and one car slammed into me, 
and then another. 
Then 
      I fought for my life. 
And this sounds very sad, 
and I’m telling you, it was, 
but this is a part 
of my invincible life — 
because doctors from other floors 
in the hospital read my records 
and called me “miracle girl” 
because of my miraculous recovery. 
But this was the first time 
in my invincible life when I felt 
alone, because the only thing missing 
from my invincible life was true love. 
You know the kind, ‘cuz 
in this hectic modern world 
it’s next to impossible 
to find your philosophical equal. 
So now, because I’m a journalist 
forced to take the train 
because my car was totaled, 
I’d ask passengers questions. 
Tell me something about yourself. 
Because my life was almost 
taken away, I wanted to learn 
everything about life I could. 
Let me at least vicariously live. 
Tell me something about yourself. 
And one man answered 
in the cold of January, 
while I kept myself covered 
in a coat, hat, scarf, gloves. 
he asked me what book 
was I currently reading — 
I said a philosopher’s name. 
He said he knew their writing; 
he had read their novels, then 
he named their non-fiction books, 
and he even said he read 
the lexicon on their philosophy. 
I stopped him. “You’re telling me 
you read a dictionary.” 
He said yes, and the information 
comes quite in handy in his life. 
And on our first date 
we talked philosophy 
more than half the night 
when not asking each other 
vague “tell me about yourself” 
questions. And though we had 
only known each other 
for two weeks when 
Valentine’s day came, he decided 
to give me an expansive map 
of the United States, 
because I had just traveled it. 
He carried the large tube 
to his work on Valentine’s Day. 
A coworker saw it, inquired. 
When he said he was giving 
his girl a map for Valentine’s day, 
the coworker laughed — 
“She’ll hate that. Women want 
chocolates and flowers,” he said, 
but when I got that map, 
I asked if it was okay 
if I kept it curled up 
until we had a home for it. 
When I look up in my office, 
I see that map on the wall. 
And when I walk out of my office 
I see a wall displaying his guitars. 
He likes that I wanted 
to display his music. And he likes 
that I’m a creative person 
with an engineering side, 
because he’s an engineering 
person with a creative side. 
But that shouldn’t surprise him, 
and it shouldn’t surprise him 
that we were engaged 
four times longer than we dated. 
Yes, our dating was accelerated. 
Because not many people 
talk philosophy on their first date, 
and not many people realize, 
even before they start dating, 
that they can’t be without the other. 
Because now that we found 
each other, we want to lock hands 
and scour those maps, 
because we want to see 
every part of the world together. 
Because when you get to this point, 
celebrating alone isn’t celebrating, 
and living alone isn’t living, 
when you could be 
with your one true love. 
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