Honestly, if she hadn't been pretty, it would have been a pretty annoying way to strike up a conversation, but that's a rant for a different time.
Jess was a hipster. Or she dressed like a hipster. Or she had the haircut and glasses of a hipster. One way or another, she conveyed the sense that not only was she much more committed to her left wing ideals than I was to mine but that she was also intelligent enough to dance her way out of any political criticisms I might throw her way. This intrigued me. Also, despite being very pretty, she stood all of five-foot-two-inches and was hardly intimidating. As someone whose heart was reeling after recently ending a seven year relationship, Jess was exactly what I needed.
Also, she was right. We did know each other from somewhere.
It turned out that a few months prior, we had been in the same "artists constituency" workshop in Ottawa. I should say that her status as an "artist" was quite genuine in that she had been a professional ballet dancer for three years while my own claim was slightly less impressive: I had acted in all of two plays during my university career and in one of them I did so almost passably. I'll be honest and say that I was a little worried my lack of hipster street cred would quickly be exposed.
Instead, Jess took my hand, put it in hers, and gave me a tour of Vancouver that I will never forget.
Next: how I overcame this fear and a long goodbye that almost cost me my train ride home.