
Is it fear of commitment? A phone call takes a kind of two-way participation, energy and attention that email doesn't, and so much of modern communication doesn't.
Or maybe it's a fear of rejection, that weird sense of loss and disappointment that happens when the person I'm calling isn't home and I have to leave a message.
Or maybe it's the uncertainty and unpredictability? I don't know if I'm going to have a conversation with a real person or leave a message with a machine.
Whatever it is, it's positively pathological, and I think it's gotten worse with age. Too many years of job hunts and phone solicitation and ambushing blind-sides from students' parents have solidified what was once just a minor discomfort into something one step away from phobia.
I'm 46 years old. I shouldn't be bothered by such a little thing. I should be able to move through it, right? Or maybe, when it's something this little, I can let it go and let it be one of those idiosyncracies about me.
The thing is, sometimes this phobia gets in the way of relationships. My friends may think I don't care about them. They may get tired of always being the one who initiates contact. They're wonderful, forgiving people, but still ...
It's a little thing with bigger consequences. So I guess I'll push through it.