Because nothing says âweâre overâ like yelling next to someone eating tuna salad at 0615.
If New York is the city that never sleeps, and Paris is the city of love, then DC is the city of loud, public, deeply personal arguments happening in confined public spaces at the most inconvenient hours. And nowhere is this more perfectly illustrated than in the DC Metro system, where romantic implosions occur with the frequency and theatricality of a long-running off-Broadway show.
We don’t have live musicians in our stations.
We don’t have charming street performers.
What we do have is raw, unfiltered relationship carnageâlive and underground.
And this morning? This morning was the Super Bowl of breakups.
Scene of the Crime: The Blue Line, 6:15am
It started like most tragic love stories: at Potomac Ave Station, between a man, a woman, and a car full of silent, judgmental witnesses.
They boarded in a visible huff. She was tight-lipped and vibrating with emotion, he was already rolling his eyes before the doors had closed. An aura of tension and pre-regret clung to them like an overly ambitious morning fragrance.
By Eastern Market Station, it was clearâwe were in for a show.
Letâs call them Dramatic Sigh and Exasperated Eye Roll.
- Dramatic Sigh, wrapped in performative sorrow, had clearly been building to this moment since last Thursday’s couples therapy that he forgot about.
- Eye Roll, armed with only a flimsy defense and a short fuse, just wanted to make it to work without becoming public enemy #1.
But alas, the Metro gods had other plans.
Act I: âYou Donât Respect Meâ
âI just donât think you respect me,â said Dramatic Sigh, loud enough that even the trainâs squealing brakes couldnât drown her out.
It wasnât a new line. It was said with the practiced cadence of someone who had run this monologue past multiple group chats for refinement.
She had notes. She had pacing. She had eye contact with the reflection in the train window.
Eye Roll, meanwhile, looked around like he was desperately hoping a sinkhole would swallow himâor at the very least, that the train would go express to Vienna and leave her behind.
But no. This train was making all stops. Including emotional ones.
âYouâre so dramatic,â he muttered, sealing his fate.
âïžMETRO BREAKUP RULE #1: DO. NOT. ESCALATE.
The collective posture of the train shifted.
A man in a Nationals hoodie subtly paused his podcast.
A woman reading The Atlantic stopped mid-sentence, finger frozen on her Kindle.
Even the AirPods guy (who we all know was listening to NOTHING) tilted his head ever so slightly, signaling: âThis is the content I came for.â
ACT II: âCAN YOU BELIEVE THIS?â
Dramatic Sigh, sensing the moment, unleashed the gasp heard round the rail.
It wasnât just a gasp. It was a full-throated, chest-expanding âI am the victim in this narrativeâ Reality TV gasp.
âYou think IâM dramatic?!â she thundered, turning not to him but to usâthe crowd, the jury, the unfortunate passengers who did not pay extra for this drama but were now spiritually invested.
âCan you believe this?â
Maâam. Yes. Yes, we could. And we LOVED it.
You could feel the emotional oxygen being sucked out of the car.
One woman clutched her purse with the intensity of a person remembering their own breakup in 2016.
Another man silently mouthed âdamnâ.
I felt a visceral flutter of excitement and dreadâthe kind you only get from live train drama and unmuted Zoom meetings.
ACT III: THE FEDERAL CENTER SW ESCAPE PLAN
At Federal Center SW, the train paused longer than usual.
You could tell Eye Roll thought this was his moment.
He shifted. He made a break for it.
But Metro, being the petty, vengeful spirit it is, slammed those doors shut right as he reached them.
The sound?
A soft âwhooshâ with the emotional force of a trap snapping shut.
The entire car exhaled as one. A collective âoofâ echoed in the car.
Even the guy whoâd been pretending to sleep peeked through one eyelid, just to enjoy the pain.
Eye Roll sighedânot just any sigh, but the sigh of a man who had lost every major battle that day and had just realized this wasnât even the final boss.
ACT IV: EMOTIONAL COMBUSTION
âOkay, so I forgot your momâs birthday,â Eye Roll muttered, in what may be the most ill-advised attempt at justification in commuter history.
People on the train physically winced.
Even the train itself groaned. The brakes squealed louder.
The DC Metro was trying to drown out the drama, but we would not be denied.
âShe raised me,â Dramatic Sigh hissed. âAnd you forgot. But sure, Iâm the dramatic one.â Clearly, this showdown was more than a missed outlaw birthday…but the jury lives for these moments!
The woman next to me clutched her pearlsâliterally. I think they might have belonged to Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The guy with the Nationals hoodie whispered, âHeâs not making it to LâEnfant.â
And we all nodded solemnly.
Final Act: LâEnfant Plaza and the Emotional Fallout
By LâEnfant Plaza station, the mood had shifted.
Eye Roll had shrunk into his hoodie. Dramatic Sigh was staring out the window like she was in a movie montage where she finally leaves him to start a new life in Portland.
The vibe?
Post-explosion emotional ash cloud.
They didnât speak.
But everyone knew the relationship was over.
And somehow, it felt like we all helped end it.
As I stepped off the train, I didnât just leave behind a couple in shambles.
I left behind a cautionary tale. A cautionary Metro epic.
METRO UNSPOKEN RULE #17
If you break up in public, you forfeit all rights to privacy. We are your jury now.
We will listen. We will judge. We will pick sides. And if necessary, we will turn your pain into breakfast conversation.
BONUS: HOW TO TELL IF A BREAKUP IS BREWING ON THE METRO
If you want to know youâre in the presence of a live relationship implosion, here are the telltale signs:
- Tense silence between two people sitting far too close together.
- Someone huffing dramatically every 30 seconds, looking around to make sure theyâre being noticed.
- One person aggressively texting while side-eyeing the other.
- Words like âalways,â ânever,â and âdisappointedâ being dropped with increasing volume.
- The death sentence phrase: âI donât want to do this here.â
That means they absolutely do want to do this here.
PARTING ADVICE FOR THE LOVELORN COMMUTER
If you’re thinking of breaking up with your significant other on the Metro:
- Don’t.
- Actually, do. But please give us advance notice and board the middle car, where the acoustics are better.
- Speak clearly. Project from the diaphragm. We want to hear both sides.
- And make sure we can follow the plot. If thereâs cheating involved, we want details.
- Bonus points for props or visual aids.
Until next time, dear readers: ride safe, love cautiously, and if you must detonate your relationshipâdo it during rush hour. Because Metro drama isnât just public…
Itâs public programming. đđ
Because nothing says âweâre overâ like yelling next to someone eating tuna salad at 0615.
If New York is the city that never sleeps, and Paris is the city of love, then DC is the city of loud, public, deeply personal arguments happening in confined public spaces at the most inconvenient hours. And nowhere is this more perfectly illustrated than in the DC Metro system, where romantic implosions occur with the frequency and theatricality of a long-running off-Broadway show.
We don’t have live musicians in our stations.
We don’t have charming street performers.
What we do have is raw, unfiltered relationship carnageâlive and underground.
And this morning? This morning was the Super Bowl of breakups.
Scene of the Crime: The Blue Line, 6:15am
It started like most tragic love stories: at Potomac Ave Station, between a man, a woman, and a car full of silent, judgmental witnesses.
They boarded in a visible huff. She was tight-lipped and vibrating with emotion, he was already rolling his eyes before the doors had closed. An aura of tension and pre-regret clung to them like an overly ambitious morning fragrance.
By Eastern Market Station, it was clearâwe were in for a show.
Letâs call them Dramatic Sigh and Exasperated Eye Roll.
But alas, the Metro gods had other plans.
Act I: âYou Donât Respect Meâ
âI just donât think you respect me,â said Dramatic Sigh, loud enough that even the trainâs squealing brakes couldnât drown her out.
It wasnât a new line. It was said with the practiced cadence of someone who had run this monologue past multiple group chats for refinement.
She had notes. She had pacing. She had eye contact with the reflection in the train window.
Eye Roll, meanwhile, looked around like he was desperately hoping a sinkhole would swallow himâor at the very least, that the train would go express to Vienna and leave her behind.
But no. This train was making all stops. Including emotional ones.
âYouâre so dramatic,â he muttered, sealing his fate.
âïžMETRO BREAKUP RULE #1: DO. NOT. ESCALATE.
The collective posture of the train shifted.
A man in a Nationals hoodie subtly paused his podcast.
A woman reading The Atlantic stopped mid-sentence, finger frozen on her Kindle.
Even the AirPods guy (who we all know was listening to NOTHING) tilted his head ever so slightly, signaling: âThis is the content I came for.â
ACT II: âCAN YOU BELIEVE THIS?â
Dramatic Sigh, sensing the moment, unleashed the gasp heard round the rail.
It wasnât just a gasp. It was a full-throated, chest-expanding âI am the victim in this narrativeâ Reality TV gasp.
âYou think IâM dramatic?!â she thundered, turning not to him but to usâthe crowd, the jury, the unfortunate passengers who did not pay extra for this drama but were now spiritually invested.
âCan you believe this?â
Maâam. Yes. Yes, we could. And we LOVED it.
You could feel the emotional oxygen being sucked out of the car.
One woman clutched her purse with the intensity of a person remembering their own breakup in 2016.
Another man silently mouthed âdamnâ.
I felt a visceral flutter of excitement and dreadâthe kind you only get from live train drama and unmuted Zoom meetings.
ACT III: THE FEDERAL CENTER SW ESCAPE PLAN
At Federal Center SW, the train paused longer than usual.
You could tell Eye Roll thought this was his moment.
He shifted. He made a break for it.
But Metro, being the petty, vengeful spirit it is, slammed those doors shut right as he reached them.
The sound?
A soft âwhooshâ with the emotional force of a trap snapping shut.
The entire car exhaled as one. A collective âoofâ echoed in the car.
Even the guy whoâd been pretending to sleep peeked through one eyelid, just to enjoy the pain.
Eye Roll sighedânot just any sigh, but the sigh of a man who had lost every major battle that day and had just realized this wasnât even the final boss.
ACT IV: EMOTIONAL COMBUSTION
âOkay, so I forgot your momâs birthday,â Eye Roll muttered, in what may be the most ill-advised attempt at justification in commuter history.
People on the train physically winced.
Even the train itself groaned. The brakes squealed louder.
The DC Metro was trying to drown out the drama, but we would not be denied.
âShe raised me,â Dramatic Sigh hissed. âAnd you forgot. But sure, Iâm the dramatic one.â Clearly, this showdown was more than a missed outlaw birthday…but the jury lives for these moments!
The woman next to me clutched her pearlsâliterally. I think they might have belonged to Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The guy with the Nationals hoodie whispered, âHeâs not making it to LâEnfant.â
And we all nodded solemnly.
Final Act: LâEnfant Plaza and the Emotional Fallout
By LâEnfant Plaza station, the mood had shifted.
Eye Roll had shrunk into his hoodie. Dramatic Sigh was staring out the window like she was in a movie montage where she finally leaves him to start a new life in Portland.
The vibe?
Post-explosion emotional ash cloud.
They didnât speak.
But everyone knew the relationship was over.
And somehow, it felt like we all helped end it.
As I stepped off the train, I didnât just leave behind a couple in shambles.
I left behind a cautionary tale. A cautionary Metro epic.
METRO UNSPOKEN RULE #17
If you break up in public, you forfeit all rights to privacy. We are your jury now.
We will listen. We will judge. We will pick sides. And if necessary, we will turn your pain into breakfast conversation.
BONUS: HOW TO TELL IF A BREAKUP IS BREWING ON THE METRO
If you want to know youâre in the presence of a live relationship implosion, here are the telltale signs:
That means they absolutely do want to do this here.
PARTING ADVICE FOR THE LOVELORN COMMUTER
If you’re thinking of breaking up with your significant other on the Metro:
Until next time, dear readers: ride safe, love cautiously, and if you must detonate your relationshipâdo it during rush hour. Because Metro drama isnât just public…
Itâs public programming. đđ
by: McCarthy Anum-Addo
The Committee on the Other Side: Who Decides When We DieâAnd Who Waits With Us
Read More »Theology of Wanting to Die
Read More »The Lattice of Dawn
Read More »The Archive of Unfinished Business
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