Sex and Relationships

151 posts

Fake Girlfriends for Social Networks Are Now a Reality

Do you wish you had a girlfriend to impress all your “friends” on those social networking sites, but all those online dating horror stories have driven you from finding a real girlfriend?  Well, now you can have the online girlfriend experience without all the trouble of dating and interacting with humans.  CloudGirlfriend.com will pretend to be your significant other on social networking sites for a small, but as yet undetermined fee.

The people behind the site claim your fake girlfriend will not be an automated love-bot but will be a real person.  Who knows, it might even be a girl.  She will write on your Facebook wall, tweet you sweet nothings and proclaim her love for you from the highest Tumblr.

I know what you’re thinking, wouldn’t your friends in real life wonder who this mystery woman is?  Yes, and you’ll have to lie to them.  But girls you barely know in your online social circle will think you have a girlfriend and then they’ll want to be your girlfriend too.  The science behind this is solid and you shouldn’t question it.

Source and image CNet.

Five Lessons I Learned from OKCupid

It’s that time again.  Another day, another fizzled out semi-relationship with a guy who smelled delightfully of cigars and sweetly came up with clever nicknames for me.  And so I reactivated my OKCupid profile last week.  This got me to thinking about my previous forays into online dating, and I have provided a few select ones here so that you might laugh at me from the comfort of your strong, enduring marriages and partnerships or your basement apartments filled with cats.

I have been on many terrible dates.  Punishing dates.  But every bad one is an opportunity to learn and do better next time, no?  For the Marrieds and Coupled Ups here and various others who have managed to avoid the Seventh Circle of Hell known as match.com, I have provided a list of things that should make you feel infinitely better about yourselves.  And for the rest of you who suffer through endless OKCupid emails about your Quiver Matches (isn’t that some kind of Christian superbaby cult?) and messages from people who were never taught about the sanctity of the shift key, I want to give you some pointers and let you to know that you are not alone.  Except–wait, you are!  Otherwise you would not be online dating.

In any case, here is what I learned from a year of perpetual bad dates:

1.  A sex shop is not an acceptable venue for a first date.  This gentleman seemed quite promising!  He charmed me with his jokes and his South Side Irish strawberry-blond hair.  We could have ginger babies! This is my mother’s fondest wish—that I someday produce spawn that will be inevitably haunted by comments from evil 7th grade girls about how oh my God I can’t believe you don’t tan! and drunken twentysomething dudes desperate to know if the curtains match the drapes.

We got along swimmingly.  In any case, the subject turned to online dating.  If there is one thing I have learned from online dating, it is that men love to talk about the other men that women meet through online dating.  I cannot explain this, but virtually every man I have been on a date with has desperately wanted to know what other men who do online dating are like.  In any case, I mentioned that one of the first messages I received when I signed up was from a guy who described his love for his Fleshlight in his profile.  And this South Side Irish man claimed to have no knowledge of what this “Fleshlight” thing could be, so, being the teacher that I am, I kindly explained it to him.  Somehow this explanation led to the mention of a nearby sex toy emporium, which led to joking about visiting this sinful haven of carnal pleasure, which, two very large beers later, turned into an actual trip.  Shockingly, this relationship did not work out.  If there is one thing that Cosmo didn’t warn me about, it’s that dates that begin in a sex shop rarely end in a meaningful, satisfying relationship.

2.  Do not date men who think it is sexy to tell you that they would like to tie you up and rape you in front of your family.  It took me far longer than it should have to figure out that this fellow was an unmedicated psychopath.  Luckily, after the family-rape comment, I told him that he should perhaps never speak to me again or ever try to contact me or I would report his freaky ass to the police, and he listened.  This is also true: he had a tally next to his bed.  You know, a tally. On the wall.  In Sharpie.  He also drank all of the alcohol I had in my apartment–including the mysterious bottle that a friend brought back from China that no one else would touch.  Looking back, there were a lot of red flags with this one.

3.  Do not judge unless this person totally merits judgment.  Get out your gavels, because you are all going to judge me for this.  (I am also listening to Coldplay right now.  Judge away!)  This fellow and I did not speak on the phone before our date, but we exchanged many flirtatious emails.  He seemed so nice!  Worked in education!  We met for a drink, which became two drinks when I realized that he was unable to finish a sentence because of his severe stutter.  It seemed terribly unfair to judge someone because of a speech impediment, so I tried my best to ignore it and just focus on what he was saying.  This is where this story could take a heartwarming turn, where I learned that it was what was on the inside that counted, not the speech impediment!  But this was no after school special.  I soon realized that he worked in a part-time job, lived with his parents, and spoke with an inexplicable Jersey accent.  And not in a funny/ironic way.  In a bad way.  A very bad way.

4.  Do not be fooled by sexy accents.  This sexy British guy had such a sexy British accent!  He insisted on adding me as a Facebook friend after a couple of dates, which seemed weird at the time but, hello!  Sexy accents cover a multitude of sins!  And we discovered that we had the same birthday.  It was fate!  Except that he was screwing some other girl the whole time he was seeing me.  I discovered this when he posted photos from a trip they took together on Facebook.  Some people think that a British accent makes you sound smarter.  But do not be mistaken: a British accent does not actually make you any smarter. Especially when it comes to things like hiding your ladyfriends from one another on Facebook.  In a moment of near-instant karma, a couple of days later, his other girlfriend went snooping through his phone, found text messages from me and dumped his cheating ass.

5.  Last but not least, do not meet a man at his apartment on the second date.  This guy did improv and (because I was trying very hard not to judge– not all improv actors are self-important and insufferable!) seemed nice at first.  We had ice cream.  It was okay!  He was not too creepy, though his bug eyes did sort of weird me out.  I agreed to a second date, and I met him at his place.  He answered the door in nothing but a towel.  I could not get out of there fast enough.

I have learned a lot of lessons through online dating.  Don’t be blinded by accents or the promise of ginger babies!  Avoid improv actors at all costs!  Don’t go to sex shops on the first date!  Wait until at least the third date for that.

I’m sure I missed a few things here.  What lessons have you learned from online dating?

Meditations on a Breakup

Rejection is a bitch.  A big one.  She’s one of those friends you try to keep at arm’s distance because you know she can’t be trusted.  But she still has access to all the hot parties and coolest people, so you allow yourself to go along for the ride.  Sometimes, you let your guard down and convince yourself she’s “not so bad.”  But she’ll always betray you in the end.

Rejection is a drama queen.  If things aren’t about her, she’ll make them about her.  And when she’s not getting the attention she thinks she deserves, boy does she let you have it.  And when Rejection lashes out at you, duck for cover!  She’ll always go for the jugular and ensure that you are made to feel as shitty as she wants you to feel.

You are always a little uneasy about the information you share with Rejection.  From petty embarrassments to deeper insecurities, you never know when the information you provide will be thrown back in your face.  She swears that your secrets are safe with her, but you’ve heard her talk about other people so many times that you are always on edge.  Somehow she manages to get the goods anyway.  She’s great at prying for information.

Rejection has one hell of a jealous streak.  She’s that friend who, when you come home from summer camp, always wants to know everything about the people you met and connected with there.  She’ll trash them so thoroughly and repeatedly that you’ll start to believe her.  That really cool kid that you had a great time with, but who lives on the other side of the country?  When rejection is done messing with your head, you’ll be convinced he was a bully and user who only hung out with you because of the copious amounts of Pop Rocks in all of your care packages.

Rejection lies.  A lot!  She’ll tell you that someone said you were fat, unattractive, not successful enough, super annoying and that you smell like cheese.  Even if the other person simply said they thought the jeggings you wore on Friday made your ass look lumpy.

Unfortunately, Rejections is also a family friend that you grew up with and have known your whole life.  You may successfully avoid her for years.  But the threat of running into her at a family party or seeing a Facebook update is always present.  When she does reenter your life, it’s always like a hurricane.  Only someone who knows you as well as she does can get under your skin like that.

In other words, Rejection is an inevitable presence in your life.  As such, she’s sort of useful.  Sure, you may want to bash your head against a wall for weeks after running into her.  But once you’ve calmed down and put things in context, some of Rejection’s lessons can be useful.

It’s useless to stay mad at her.  That’s sort of what the ol’ drama queen wants anyway.  The best way to handle it is to take a breath, think it through and then move on.  After all…

 

The (Accidentally On-Purpose) Other Woman

Salome Valentine:

In the wake of thatgirl’s reading my post here entitled “In Praise Of Older Men,” she and I got into a lengthy discussion regarding the dynamic of our mutual attraction to men significantly older than ourselves.  Our conversation soon came around to the topic of having affairs or relationships with involved or married men.  We decided to co-author this somewhat revealing first-person piece based on each of our own experiences.

While I have always said to myself that I would never get involved with a married man (and I never have), my now long-term boyfriend was involved with another woman when we met.  He and I both managed to assiduously avoid our undeniable attraction for each other for four months.  But it was certainly a “resistance is futile” situation of tremendous mutual lust for both of us, and his relationship with his girlfriend ended very soon after he and I got together. (I was single when he and I met.)

I have heard it said many times that it’s “not as bad” to have a sexual liaison with a man who is merely involved and not married, because marriage is a deliberate, lifetime commitment, and there are often also children caught in the emotional crossfire.  I understand this rationale, but honestly, I think there’s a fundamental breach of personal integrity involved regardless. Granted, it’s of a comparatively different degree, but I felt guilty for what I had done nonetheless.  Many years later, it’s now a moot point.

I’ll never forget meeting my boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend for the first time, soon after they separated.  He had gone by to pick up a few things he’d left at her place, and I’d gone along for the ride, as we had plans together later on in that general direction.  Naively, I had assumed that if I stayed in the car, there would be no drama.  As my boyfriend exited the car and walked towards her house,  I saw his ex leaving her house, walking as if to meet him halfway.  As she handed him the last of the toiletries he’d left at her place, she took a long hard look at me sitting in the car and admonished him, “How could you?  She’s young enough to be your daughter.”  (It sounds like something out of a Lifetime movie script, but it really happened.  I felt about two feet tall at the time.)

As someone who has been cheated on before, I can say that I should have known better than to pursue someone who was involved with someone else. Certainly, I would make better choices now than I did when I was in my twenties.  But, I have no lasting regret, because my relationship has been very enduring, enjoyable and worthwhile.  Both my boyfriend and I have lived and learned from our past mistakes.  What I wonder is why we – people in general, not just women – are so drawn to others who are seemingly unattainable.  I’m sure there are mental health professionals all over the world who are still pondering that moral, ethical and highly individual enigma.

thatgirl:

I don’t think most people set out to form liaisons with unattainable/ unavailable people—at least not consciously. There’s more than one kind of unavailable, as well. The married or otherwise committed sort of unavailable is fairly easy to spot. They’re the guys who list “discreet” as their status via online dating sites; they’re the ones you meet over cocktails, and describe their marriages as “unhappy”, or they’ll insist that the divorce is all done but for the signatures on papers.

The other kind of unavailable was touched upon by MissLinda last week in her “IRL” dating post: people who are either emotionally incapable of an adult relationship, or those who, unknowingly, give off the “Not interested” vibe. This story is about the former kind.

A late spring in Rome saw me fall for a man 30 years my senior. Giovanni was world-wise and patient—a hand holder and door opener, which was so unlike the guys I was used to meeting in my early 20s. He had time for four-hour dinner dates, second bottles of wine, and bedtime phone calls from wherever he was traveling, in whatever time zone. It was an immediately enveloping and fiery liaison. Flowers and air tickets would appear at my building, and I’d drop everything, including my work to meet him, anywhere.

Months of excitement gave way to exhaustion, and the reality that I couldn’t keep up a developing career, and a love affair of international intrigue. I longed for a consistent sleep, more than a week or so in the same time zone, and time with friends. With Giovanni’s assurance that his business required the globetrotting, I ended it. Not one to take “no” for an answer, his invitations continued, unabated, until my overflowing voicemail box told him not to expect a response.

A business meeting months later brought us back together, if only for one more torturous afternoon of him begging me to come back. He almost tempted me, but I was resolute that I’d have my life on my terms. A flight awaited that would take me to a trade show, where a new love interest said he’d meet me over the weekend. I was walking down the jetway when an unfamiliar number came up on my phone. I answered it, only to meet my ex-lover’s wife. Who knew he had one stashed far away, on the North Shore of Chicago?

She scolded me for getting involved with someone so much older, telling me that I had my whole life in front of me. And besides, she added, he was a notorious philanderer, and would only wind up cheating on me. “Perhaps he is,” I replied, “but he’s your problem now!” and I promptly hung up. Giovanni spent the next 48 hours filling my voicemail box, begging me to return…and to never again talk to his wife.

This was a bit before we started Googleing people or otherwise checking the background of potential paramours. Considering all the time I’d spent with him, Giovanni’s intact marriage did come as a surprise. I did feel for his wife, who’d clearly been down this road with him prior. I chalked it up to my youth, and being drunk on the adventure, but I made it a point to avoid obligated men going forward—to the degree that anyone could.

Now I’m trying to help a girlfriend wean herself off the allure of her married lover. Part of me feels that her self-esteem prevents her from seeking something that’s better for everyone in the equation. Unfortunately, lover-man is happy to hang on, as long as she’s willing. She’s smart, funny, and over 40.  I’m refraining from comparing her to Carrie Bradshaw… but perhaps that’s her story to tell.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“The Other Woman” – Ray Parker, Jr.

Tell Me Sweet Little Lies

 

When I casually spoke the short sentence, it felt true to me. But even though it was “merely” a lie of omission, I still sensed that I was walking on a very fine tightrope.  Before this, I’d always felt certain of my unassailable honesty.

 

“He slept in that bed”, I replied, pointing to the twin futon in my large studio apartment. My response was to my current lover’s query as to where my overnight guest had lain his head the previous evening and night.

 

While it was wholly true that he had slept in that bed, almost immediately prior to that, he and I had had sex on this bed: mine. The fact that he was my most-enduring friend, my first lover, and someone whom I’d only slept with a dozen times over seven years didn’t matter at all to my current beau. Nor did it matter to him that his obvious judgment of me was steeped in unconscious hypocrisy: after all, he was sleeping with someone else as well. Yet somehow to him, I became the betrayer.

 

Sex with my ex had been a clear display of my own immaturity and insecurity. The sex had also been far less mind-blowing than that which I already shared with my current lover. But earlier the previous evening, when I had called my beau, his other lover answered the phone. So I took that as a sign that my twice-yearly reunion with my ex should definitely take a sexual turn. Spite-fucking is rarely pleasurable, but sometimes it feels more satisfying than doing nothing at all.

 

At last, I felt the scales had been balanced, and all was right in my universe. I disagree with the adage ” revenge is a dish best served cold.” I think that sometimes, justice is a dish best served erotically sweltering. I knew that my beau loved me, as I loved him, but until that point, my entreaties for him to be monogamous with me had fallen on deaf ears. Unsurprisingly, not long after my conjugal visit with my ex, my current lover told his girlfriend about me, and they separated soon after. My actions weren’t deliberately devious, but they clearly served a purpose in the grand scheme.

 

“Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies…” – Fleetwood Mac

Little Lies

 

Bah, lovebug!

If you’re one of those jerks or jerkettes who awoke this morning to a blissful, dizzying euphoria, good for you.  If you want to read happy Valentine’s Day stories, Betty Crocker has put together two absolutely adorable posts on his ridiculously healthy and happy relationship with Cap’n Crocker.

For the rest of us, today’s just another Monday.  Except on most Mondays, I don’t call FTD and ask them to bring me long-stemmed roses from an anonymous secret admirer.

“Ooh!” I don’t say on most Mondays, “I wonder who these are from!”  “Haha,” I don’t continue on most Mondays, “guess it’s just my lucky day!”  “Don’t be sad, it’s just a silly greeting card holiday,” is something I don’t say to my coworkers on most Mondays.

So whatchall doin’ this Valentine’s Day?  If your answer includes…

  • dinner with a significant other
  • a date you’re excited about
  • the reasonable expectation of good sex

…then please head on over to Betty’s posts.  We’re not tryna hear that over here.

Happy Anna Howard Shaw Day to all of you lonely hearts out there.  Leave your suggestions on how to spend Valentine’s Day on your own and be totally fine with it, okay?

Grape Expectations: Wine and Monogamy

Have you ever blamed being over-served as an excuse to cheat on your lady love?  Sorry guys, that excuse doesn’t hold water (or wine) anymore.

Two wine economists (who knew those existed?) noticed that societies which embraced multiple wives, polygyny, do not consume alcohol.  Two notable examples of this in today’s world are parts of the Muslim world and parts of the Mormon church.

Pondering over a glass or two of wine, these economists  pondered two questions:  “is this ad hoc observation representative of a true phenomenon? Does a real (positive) correlation between monogamy and alcohol consumption exist?”   I recommend you read this study, “Women or Wine? Monogamy and Alcohol” as it is fascinating. The bottom line is summed up nicely by Mara Squicciarini, one of the co-authors:  “We were surprised to find that there is a trade-off between alcohol consumption and the number of sex partners that men tended to keep at any one time.”

Notable points in this paper:

  • Apparently there is a ton of data on “frequency of drunkeness” – data that goes back centuries.
  • Greek and Roman Empires were the only societies who consumed alcohol in that point in history.  They were also the only societies who embraced ‘formal monogamy.’
  • Alcohol consumption did not alter the number of sexual partners a woman had.  Slut shaming strikes again!
  • The Catholic Church may have its issues, but the Church was critical at spreading viticulture around Europe.  They were also helpful at spreading breweries around the world too.  Servicey!
  • The Industrial Revolution appears to be the tipping point for both alcohol consumption and monogamy.
  • Lord Krishna was said to have 16,108 wives and King Solomon had 700 wives and about 300 concubines — all without any social networking or Gawkerdating.

So when you open up that bottle of bubbly with your loved one this evening, you may want to ponder: do we drink because we are monogamous, or are we monogamous because we drink?

Dating horror stories

I never posted my horror story in the dating threads on Gawker because it was too long.  Even though the date happened in the 80’s, the horror is still fresh today.

Gather round, kids, and let me tell you about the worst date in the history of the world.  Grab a drink and maybe a snack.  Maybe a pillow for biting if you’re reading this late at night and don’t want to wake up the people you live with.

The year is 1988.  It’s my favorite time of year, early November.  I had moved into boystown in Chicago early that year, in hopes of finding friends, a man, and a new life.  In fact, I was really following my suburban friends into the city.  They all had groovy studio or one bedroom apartments and I wanted me one of them too.  They didn’t live with their parents any more and they were independent.  I wanted this for myself as well.  I am 22 and about as savvy as Sarah Palin.

Since it’s 1988, the Chicago gay bars have finally broken free of mafia ownership, but have not improved their decor or sanitation.  Being used to frou-frou suburban establishments, I am less than impressed by walls, ceiling, floor painted matte black with a 19-inch magnavox in one corner showing some porn loop or maybe a paula abdul video.  I don’t feel comfortable in the bars like I did when I was a teenager, maybe because I am a little older and now have zero self-confidence.

So, week after week of not fitting in at any of the bars in the neighborhood wears down.  I’m not meeting anyone at the grocery store, the flower shop, friends’ parties, the post office, the coffee shop, the book stores, the bicycle stores, the video rental place, the various local restaurants I visit.  Just… no luck.  Nothing.

So, I look in The Reader at the personals ads.  Most of them are very specific as to what’s desired and what’s expected and I am either not interested or frightened, depending on the ad.

Then I find an ad from a “normal Joe, except my name is Larry”.  The guy sounds normal and not psychotic.  Sweet, even.  This is before the Internets were invented so I write him a letter and he writes me back.  I send a picture and he sends a picture.  His letter with his picture is very enthusiastic.  His picture shows someone who’s not ugly but definitely not a “looker”.  He’s kinda short, but I like short guys.  Why isn’t Larry the man I saw on Broadway a week before wearing the gray cotton lycra tights that showed his beautiful muscular legs and ass?  Ah well, we go with what’s in front of us.

In our next round of letters, Larry and I exchange phone numbers.  We talk a few times, and we each decide that the other is not a lunatic.  We learn that we work not far from each other downtown, so we plan an after work cocktail.  All very safe and sensible for this early AIDS era get-together.  He looks just like his picture, which is not bad but he’s not winning Miss Junior Come And Get It Boys, that’s for sure.  We decide to ride the bus home together and Larry is very flirtatious.  Very.  Like scaring the straight people very.  I ask him to tone it down because hello you don’t know me like that and so he does.  Satisfied he’s not like some of the crazies I’ve met in the past few years, I decide we can see each other again.

In the next week, Larry sends me letters.  Every day.  With pictures.  Explicit pictures of Larry.  Again, not bad, but it seems a little … like we’re rushing things here.  We do live on opposite sides of the same neighborhood, for gossakes, already.

We talk on the phone and decide to do dinner and dancing.  I will come to his place to pick him up and meet his room mates, and then we will go over to my dyke friend’s place and the three of us will hit the town.

I arrive at his building and go up to his apartment.  Cue the ominous music.  He lets me in his apartment and his two male room mates are entangled on the couch, not completely undressed but mostly undressed, and obviously in the way of getting busy.  Look away, Dixieland.  They ask if I want to join them.  I declare, then I decline.  Seems rude to do this in front of Larry, no?  They are muy bonito, but no, I’m a good boy, so let’s bundle Larry up and get moving.  While he’s getting ready, the boys on the couch ask me when Larry is moving in with me.  Turn up the ominous music a few notches, will you?

Walking over to my friend’s building, Larry tells me he has a surprise for me.  I tell him I’ve already had my surprise quota for the night, thanks.  He laughs and says, “you’ll see…”  Note that this is pre-“Silence of the Lambs” so I did not think he was thinking about making a skin suit or anything.

We get to my friend’s place, and go upstairs for a drink and to give her the required eight million hours that lipstick lesbians require to prepare when leaving their apartments.  She immediately does not like Larry.  This is not a good sign.  Ominous music gets louder.

We go to dinner at a Chinese place I’ve never tried because it’s outside the neighborhood.  The food is good and Chinesey.  Ominous music gets quieter here, what with the pre-dinner drink and food calming jittery nerves.

After dinner, we head over to a for gosh sakes real live discotheque.  You know, the kind where you have to pay at the door and then go up about 40 stairs and then there’s a coat check and then you’re allowed entry into the actual space?  Yeah, that kind.

Oh my.  Disco balls and a huge dance floor and varilights or whatever they had back then and smoke and So. Many. People.  We get drinks at the bar and survey the room.  We can’t talk because the music is being propulsed out of speakers the size of my 1976 Chevy Vega.  So far the songs are early 80’s dance music fare, a little New Order, a little Jody Watley, that new Rick Astley song, and some unknowable Madonna twelve-inch remix that no one could move to.  Oh, I hate it when DJ’s get all esoteric with their songs.

And then —

PUMP UP THE VOLUME, PUMP UP THE VOLUME, PUMP UP THE VOLUME, DANCE DANCE hits us as if a wall of well-cemented bricks moved sideways across the floor.  Larry seems super-excited to hear this song.  I was not a fan.  At all.  Something about this song just didn’t sound right, and I never got into it.  But mister Larry, oh my, this was his raison de etre, yes indeedy.  He flung his drink on the bar and ran to the dancefloor.  My lesbian ladyfriend and I exchanged glances.

Larry began doing a jig on the floor.  An Irish jig.  On the dance floor.  My heart bottomed out like a 73 Impala going over a speedbump.  He had a huge grin on his elfin face as he segued into some sort of hoedown jiggery pokery knee-slapping hee-haw chassée which caused the dance floor to become ghost town.  No one wanted to be on the dance floor at the same time as this spectacle of Elaine Marie Benes dance supremacy.

By now we’re at the point where PUT THE NEEDLE ON THE RECORD AND THE DRUM BEAT GOES LIKE THIS hits us and some random singer’s glossolalia wails out of the compact car speakers and attempts to shatter the barware.

Larry is now combining the jig and the hee-haw square dance moves with absolutely no regard to the rhythm of the song.  I begin to suspect he is experiencing an epileptic seizure and wonder if everyone saw me walk in the door with him.  They did.  They’re looking and pointing at him and then they’re looking at me and my sapphic ladyfriend.  I realize the jig is up (literally) when the song ends.  I go on the dance floor, collect him, and we leave.  Much to his bemusement.

My tribadic friend ditches us at the door and goes to her gurls-only bar.  I walk Larry home.  Ominous music is deafening at this point.

On the way home — on a busy main thoroughfare full of cars and people — at 11 pm on a Saturday in Boystown — Larry drops to one knee and opens a small red velvet box.  Inside I see two gold stud earrings.  Managing to contain my horror, I tell him I cannot accept his gift, because I don’t wear gold (true).  He says he wants me to keep the earrings anyway.  I tell him I cannot.  He wants me to come back to his place for nookie.  I tell him I cannot.  He offers his room mates to me (“ooh they really thought you were hot”) and he will watch from the sidelines.

I have finally had enough.  Using all the powers of invective at my disposal, and trust me they are many and legion, I tell Larry in no uncertain terms that his performance this evening, and the performance of his room mates, has convinced me that I would like to never see him again ever, and that would be too soon.

Larry doesn’t believe me.  He thinks I am playing hard to get.  I inform him that it’s not hard to get, it’s impossible to get, so forget we ever met and just move along.

Before this becomes street theater (more than it already has) I bid him good night and walk quickly away.  Larry is left on his knees, crying.  End scene.

They’re all gonna laugh at me

Earlier this week, I wrote about my somewhat random decision to reactivate one of my dating profiles.

Am I currently one of the featured profiles on the site? Yes.

Am I receiving so many responses that I haven’t had time to reply to them all? No.

Have the messages/flirts I’ve sent been responded to with hot n’ heavy promises of a good time? No.

Thus, my results are pretty much mirroring the experiences I’ve encountered previously. That made me sad, but then thanks to the fabulous Miss Anita Manbadly, I shrugged off the negative feelings and decided to have fun.

What came out of that? Why, this funtastic video that I’ve added to my profile!

Who is Planteater?!? from Random Citizen on Vimeo.

Also, I now laugh at profiles. Not in a bitter way, but more in a “Wow, you really think you’re better than me?” sort of way. Here I am contacting you to chat you up, but I’m not good enough? Fool, you’re on a dating site!

My favorites are the ones by older guys who are on a site where most of the females are a good decade or two younger. Oh yeah, Daddy, you go ahead and ignore someone who’s actually interested in older men for those 20-somethings who don’t want to deal with your saggy balls.

So, I may not have boys beating down my door anytime soon, I’m choosing to see this as another learning experience instead of feeling completely sorry for myself.

I’ll still scowl at those fucking lucky trolls in love, though.

Pirates and Bad Break-Ups

As Valentine’s Day looms, I thought a post sharing bad break-up stories was in order. Please feel free to reply with your own horror stories, though, I’m fresh out of lamps to giveaway. Here is my story:

A few years ago, I dated a British gal who attended a local culinary school. We were introduced through a mutual friend and sparks were flew within a matter of minutes as we bantered and flirted. I could tell she was a hot commodity in the scene as during our conversation multiple girls interrupted us and shot me dirty looks (the lesbian community is small around here, so everyone knows each other and knows who’s fresh meat).

After a few weeks of dates, I noticed she was the kind of girl who liked to be chased and play games. I am not the type to do either. Furthermore, I had recently broken up with someone whom I loved dearly, so my attention was split – this did not please the Brit. She began to test me, which I never respond well too; actually, I usually don’t respond at all. This is when things took a turn for the worse.

To understand “the break up,” you should know we had an inside joke about Peter Pan –  one day, she asked me to draw her a picture, so I drew her as Peter Pan as that was her favourite book as a child.

Now for the good stuff: One night we were joking around (or so I thought) via text messaging…

Cookies: How’s Peter Pan doing today? 🙂

Brit: Just hanging out with the lost boys [her friends].

Cookies: If you and your friends are the lost boys, what does that make me?

Brit: A pirate with no soul!

Cookies: Argh! What if this pirate were to become an ex-pat and join the lost boys? I want my soul back!

Brit: The lost boys don’t feel good about us hanging out. They think you have a lot to make up for and don’t think pirates can change.

Cookies: Um, are you being serious?

Brit: Yes.

Cookies: So, you’re telling me we shouldn’t hang out anymore?

Brit: I think it’s for the best. Pirates with no souls and Lost Boys don’t mix.

Oh, and that’s not all, we had swapped ipods to listen to each other’s music and when I got mine back she had completely wiped it clean. Then she slept with 3 of my friends.

Need I remind you that we were both 24 at the time? Or, at least, I was.

Now’s your turn to share a break-up story! Don’t make this pirate suffer alone.