Thursday 29 September 2011

On the Pull OR The Second Date, When Your Real Self Shines On Through

The famed First Second Date (FSD) with the Keen Irish Bean was, as you can imagine, much anticipated.

However. However! I'll admit it.

I wasn't on top form that Thursday night.

I'd been out for birthday drinks with work friends the night before (for my birthday the following day, so completely justifiable to my mind), and the ravages of my night out, plus getting up at 5am, 5.30am all week, to miss the commuter squish into London, meant I was exhausted by the time I was due to meet KIB at Waterloo under the clock. (His suggestion.)

via here
He had oodles of energy, though (maybe too much at times, even for me the caffeine fiend), so I made the effort, and I was pleased when he suggested we check out the Glamour of the Gods exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. Hey, I like films. I like photography. Big ticks all round.

First we stopped off in a bar near the Festival Hall for a drink (a lemon-lime fizzy soft drink for me, a cola for him – yeaaaah, no product placement here, people!) and chips, which this time I managed to keep in a strong, drop-free trajectory between the bowl and my mouth.

He was, very enthusiastically, telling me about the Radio 4 show he'd been to see recorded, and I was very actively listening. Then he was, also very enthusiastically, telling me about the GoodwoodRevivalProhibitionPartiesambitiontohaveapartyonHMSBelfast... and I was still actively listening.

Mostly.

Because I'd been up since 5.30am and was secretly hoping the sugar in the lemon-lime fizzy drink would wake me up enough to keep up with his very enthusiastic patter. And general puppy-like enthusiasm.

And I'd not even finished my drink when he said, "Shall we go?" I rattled my still-brimming glass meaningfully, and kept drinking. Nothing less alluring than a date with hiccups (and other refinements) and I wasn't about to rush! We got slightly lost on the way to the Gallery but made it eventually! He paid for the tickets, which was very kind... and we went in.

And the Narrating Began. 

Now. Intelligence-wise, on a scale between these two girls:

The Big Bang Theory's Penny, in case you're wondering
via here
and

TBBT's Amy, also in case you're wondering – and yes, she was 'Blossom'.
And the young Bette Midler character in Beaches. But I digress.
via here
I sit closer to the Penny end of the spectrum.

But. I read. I can read. I've made a career out of it.

So I can only imagine it was some sort of nervous habit or maybe a throwback to the arts volunteer days that KIB insisted on narrating on almost every single photo in the exhibition.

You know, just in case my eyes had at that moment failed me and I couldn't quite corroborate that, yes, that was Rock Hudson. Or yes, that was a very young Joan Blondell.

There I was, wandering about the exhibit with KIB, quite happy to observe in tandem but in comfortable silence and I'd stop, agog, in front of a quite frankly striking photograph of Katharine Hepburn set in front of a venetian blind so one saw the contrast of Hepburn's freckles and hair versus the stripes of light thrown by the sun through the window... and I'd hear this voice (the voice of KIB, by the way, not the voice of the Ghost of Galleries Past or indeed Katharine Hepburn, in case you wondered):

Ah, that's Katharine Hepburn.

She was great, wasn't she?

She was. I liked her in Little Women. I was never convinced by Winona Ryder as Jo March...

...The light's great, eh?

Yes. Yes, it is. It's such a striking photo.

(Stand. Admire. Then move on to a shot of a young Judy Garland.)

Ah, Judy Garland.

(Yeees. I get that. I read the label. I've also seen The Wizard of Oz more times than I've had Nudges on QuirkersAnonymous.)

She was great, wasn't she?

Mmm.

(Yes, yes she was. Tragic. But great. I know. Everyone knows.)

And… move on to a shot of Marilyn Monroe.

Ah, Marilyn Monroe.



(Yes. Yes, I know. I didn't even need a label for that.)

She was great, wasn't she?

Mmm. Yes!

(And move on. Ooh, a photo of a young Marlon Brando looking swarthy and brooding.)

Ah, Marlon Brando.

(I'm one step ahead of you there, fella-me-lad.)

...

He was great, wasn't he?

(Yes, yes, he was, though I can't say I've ever seen Last Tango so I'm not 100% familiar with his works but he was very convincing, swarthy and brooding in Streetcar. Now, please hush and let me absorb the fabulousness of the exhibit, without added subtitles, whilst obviously also basking in your presence. Please?!?)

…I know. I know.

I'm a terrible, intolerant person.

But I'm also a comparatively quiet person (except maybe under the influence of the previous night's glasses of red wine), and I'm also a person who can read.

KIB had also promoted himself as a Quiet Person in his profile (OK, actually, he wrote 'quite person' but I got his drift). Not so much.

Admittedly, after we left the gallery I decided to chill, and put the extensive Narration down to Second-Date nerves. He was still ridiculously peppy, so my exhaustion and tendency to Walk Away to Enjoy a Photo in Peace for Five Minutes obviously didn't faze him.

As the night progressed I got the feeling he may have been oblivious to some other blatant social cues.

But I'm getting ahead of myself.

It was shortly before 9pm by this point, and I was tired and hungry. (Did I mention I'd been up since 5.30am? Did I? Yep, come join my pity party...) and it took us roughly half an hour to find somewhere that wasn't crowded, or closing, or extortionate, to sit for a quick coffee and a cake. We finally settled in Leicester Square, and ordered coffee and a slice of Black Forest Gateau.

His suggestion, to which, again, I was amenable.

Ooh. Gateau. Nom! via here.
PS This is not the one I ate.
 After about two bites, several pokes at the cake with a fork and his slightly disdainful declaration that, "it's very sweet" I think I ended up eating most of it. (It was just sweet enough. And I like cake.)

If two things bring out the terse intolerant in me it's hunger and tiredness (but then as The Pretenders once famously sang, I'm only human on the insiiiiiiiiiide), so by the time I'd assuaged these by the Healing Powers of Coffee and Cake I was feeling much better and more open-minded, and we were able to chat properly for a while and recover the vibe of the Successful First Date.

Time, like the clock dangling over commuters at Waterloo Station, ticked on. It got late. Ish. We started to plan our journeys (note: plural) home.

We found ourselves at Westminster tube where we could both find the trains we needed.

We said goodbye with a generally polite kissonthecheek.

Next thing I knew – SNOGGAGE.

Yes. It wasn't broad daylight or owt so I wasn't compromising any of the morals with which I'd been raised but yes. SNOGGAGE. And... it was...

Meh.

Yes. Meh.

I wasn't expecting a symphony and fireworks.

I also wasn't expecting to feel so... Meh about someone with whom I'd originally sparked.

But when he suggested we have a quick walk down to the river, I did my usual overanalysis, decided against it in my head, then told myself off severely for being Queen Prissy of Prissingham (or, basically, my usual buttoned-up self) and thought, oh, why not? Let's just see how this pans out.

And then I thought, what if he's actually a psychopath and pushes me into the Thames? I know I said earlier this very year that I could die happy having finally seen Richard Marx live (a noble ambition I'll defend to the death) but hey, I'm not even 33 yet.

And then I thought, oh, stop being irrational. It was a SNOG. People SNOG. They do that. Nothing strange nor startling. Granted it wasn't earth-shattering and granted he'll probably go in for another try and you can always just picture a silent Hugh Jackman or something but... just go with it. So I went with it. And him.


On the way over the bridge, I vaguely remember asking KIB how he found the whole Dating Scene and specifically why he was on it i.e. why was he still single? I expected he'd say he was quite (or quiet) shy... What he did actually say was, he'd met up with people but they always ended up going back to their exes.

OK. Well, given my case history that wasn't likely.

We walked down the steps to the embankment facing the Houses of Parliament. It was a warm night but I was tired so I was chilly. I was also hoping that with a shove of his elbow KIB wouldn't end me in the Thames. Thankfully he didn't.

What he did do was try to find us a free bench. When he finally spotted one it was several yards along the embankment. He sprinted on ahead, peppy-puppy style (and don't make me remind you that I'dbeenupsince5.30andwasabsolutelycrackered) to secure it. A few minutes later I plonked down next to him, smiled gamely, then stared out at the Houses of Parliament which were rather splendidly lit, I did notice...

Not long afterwards came the voice again. You're very quiet. What are you thinking about?

Nothing really. I'm just very very tired.

(And I like to Be Quiet sometimes. Yes. Some People Like Quiet Sometimes.)

After a moment an arm appeared on my shoulder (his, by the way) and I braced myself for more SNOGGAGE. It had to be an improvement... hadn't it?

Nup.

I tried to get into it, I really did, but I actually at one point thought, you're eating my face. Literally.

Now, I'm not saying I'm an expert in the field of snogging. Not a lot to compare it to and I'm sure I could hone my technique considerably... But what was happening felt more like, well, being chewed at than anything remotely passionate.

I retreated if only to recover my breath, which was being sucked from me. And not in a romantic breathless way.

But here came the first misinterpretation of the social cues. He possibly thought this was good. "I got lucky with you," he said, before moving in for another serving of my face. Uhm. OK... Oh dear. That doesn't bode well.

I should mention that in the process of the Snoggage, while one hand was probably around my back or somewhere, his right hand was in my hair.

OK, fine. I have quite thick locks. Easy for a hand to get lost in there. But as the Snoggage continued I became aware that there was some tension and release going on there as he tugged rather earnestly at my tresses. And less earnestly, more fervently. Was I imagining it?

No.

The next thing he said was,

Do you like having your hair pulled?



...

Wait.

WHAT?!??!?!?

Rewind.

Do you like having your hair pulled?



What I should have said was, quite bluntly, "no". Followed by, "YOU'RE A MENTALIST!".


But so taken aback was I that KIB the peppy puppy with the slightly annoying propensity for over-narrating was asking me, on this, our Second Date, essentially if what he was doing was in some way, erm, exciting to me, I think I said something like, "I don't know. I hadn't really thought about it," in what I hoped was my curtest, most taken-aback voice.

Moments later, my instincts, which I should have followed since the Meh kiss outside Westminster tube, kicked in good and proper. I needed to get the chuff out of there. I made my excuses, and he offered to walk me back to the tube.

Once underground, we said a more reserved goodbye -- he went one way, I went another.

But I could not get those words out of my head.

Who does that?! Who asks that on a Second Date?!

And moreover, why on earth would he think that I was the type of girl to do that to and ask that of?!?! Did he mistranslate my fatigue, hunger and annoyance as some sort of... well, fetishistic come-on?!

I was officially freaked out.

And I made the resolution never to indulge in Snoggage again on the Second Date.

Needless to say, KIB (or, the newly dubbed Irish Hair-Puller, IHP) was given a very, very wide berth for quite some time.

Saturday 24 September 2011

Breathe and Reboot

You know when you're at the start of a Dating Site Downer when...
  • You list a non-smoker in your criteria and the site recommends you... a smoker
  • You list men between 31 and 40 as your criteria and a 45-year-old gets in touch
  • You're a prim little missy in need of an emotional connection, so when a matching service claims that "hornydevil82 seems really right for you" you begin to mistrust their judgment. BIG TIME
Needless to say I gave the whole dating malarkey a miss for a few months.
But in May, I opened the Metro to find an article about a new "alternative" dating site which we'll call "QuirkersAnonymous", for, erm, anonymity's sake, where folk meet up and do something they'd both like to do, such as feed pigs on a farm, go ice-skating, drink cocktails, visit a gallery, dress up as clowns and try juggling. That sort o' thing. I was intrigued. I tore out said article and stashed it in a pile of articles labelled, "hmm, may do something about this if the mood strikes me". And sat on it. But didn't stop thinking about it.

Then, in June, I spent the weekend with a friend who made me rethink my whole perspective on dating. This friend, whom I'll call J, is something of a dating aficionado now, and has very recently got herself engaged to a man she met online. Evidence if ever there was any that there is that Hope to be Had.

J had some brilliant stories to share about her experiences in dating, and something a few things she said to me struck a chord and made me think, I'm going about this all wrong.

At the time I think there may have been an aura of desperation and resentment about me, and I was taking entirely the wrong attitude. I wasn't enjoying the Game at all, I was doing it because I felt it was my Last Resort and if I didn't try it, well... this was my future:

via here

But J, while confirming the frog-kissing adage, also reminded me that dating could be fun, I could throw myself Out There, meet some new people, and even if no Big Romance came of it then maybe I'd make some new friends.

A fog lifted for me at that point, I think, and I decided that I could have some fun with the whole Dating Game if I didn't place too much pressure on it.

So I signed up to the new site I'd seen advertised in the Metro. And I used a Very Serious Picture of myself as my profile shot, thus breaking my own rule no. 5 of Dislikes by using a seemingly Overthought Profile Shot. To which not one blighter responded unsurprisingly.

Only when I replaced said Serious Shot with a more Quirky, more Natural Shot (taken by J) did my fortune start to change, especially when I hinted that I might like to see this Toulouse-Lautrec exhibit.

Shortly thereafter I got an email on the site from an Irish Chap, which went along these lines:

Hello QUIRKY_BRUNETTE. I hope your enjoying the weekend.
So. Ive checked out the exhibition youd like to see and it looks good.
Fancy some company attending the event sometime?
Any plans for this weekend?

Now, as you can imagine if you know me at all (!), it was a War of Wills to overlook the grammar and punctuation errors in this message.

But I reasoned that a) this guy (we'll call him Keen Irish Bean, or KIB for now) was the first to contact me on the website and b) he had three photos on his profile so seemed genuine and quite cute to boot and c) actually sounded like a fun person to meet.

After I'd replied to his email, we exchanged details and after discovering to our annoyance that the Courtauld Gallery never seemed to be open after 5pm, decided to visit the Titanic exhibition at the O2 instead as our first date. His suggestion.

And I was -- wait for it -- actually quite excited.

I think I changed my dating fortunes by changing my dating attire for this occasion -- I tipped up in the blue, daisy-print dress I'd been wearing in my profile photo (in case KIB couldn't distinguish me in a crowd otherwise...), waited outside the tube station at North Greenwich and true to his assertion in his profile that he valued punctuality (as do I) he turned up well on time, armed with tickets to the event. Big tick. He also turned up in a colour I'm particularly fond of. See my reference to (over)attentiveness to detail in my last post under no. 9.

We were early, so we grabbed a coffee and had a conflab over caffeine. He was a caretaker by day, an arts volunteer by, er, weekend day and was about to learn BSL. All sounded pretty good (I've always wanted to learn more BSL and, well, I like the arts). He was passionate about motor racing and vintage cars and he mentioned the Goodwood Revival and other retro events like the Prohibition Parties, which in the flush of Good First Date Euphoria did sound like good fun at the time (I'm quite into my 1920s style these days). It was one of those conversations that actually worked -- we seemed to click.

I got hopeful.

The exhibition itself was astounding and would have been enjoyable in its own right if I hadn't been there on a date. We even had our photo taken in front of a green screen as we went in, and received copies at the end of us as if in front of the wreck of the Titanic. It was sort of cute if not a little premature...

As it happened, KIB was very knowledgeable about the Titanic and its sister ship, both of which were built in Belfast, and his knowledge added a dimension to the experience, which was, yay, a good thing. (Though, me being me, and not being quite able to disassociate any real-life experience from a film experience, I couldn't quite shake this song from my head the whole way round...)


Afterwards we had a quick drink and a bowl of chips at the venue. Now, this was a square bowl, full to the brim of chips, and quite frankly I had issues keeping the ruddy things in the bowl. Cue un-date-like behaviour of dropping chips into my lap, onto the leather seating, onto the floor. Cue apologies for my lack of decorum. If this was a Guardian Blind Date he'd be marking me down for table manners by now. But oddly he didn't seem put off.

We parted soon after the last chip was down (my gullet), and I headed home, with that odd sort of positivity that, chip-fail aside, actually this had gone pretty naffing well. I actually liked this person. And he seemed to like me.

For the next couple of weeks, we messaged. OK, he was a little over-keen with the messaging at times but at least he was messaging, and we even spoke on the phone -- yes, Spoke, on the Phone! -- at one point when he was extolling the virtues of obtaining tickets for Radio 4 comedy show recordings, and trying to send me links to the Prohibition Party website. Keen Bean he certainly was, and when he talked about meeting up again I was just as eager.

via here
And we made Plans for Date Two.

Yes, Dear Readers, I had me a First Second Date.

Things seemed to be on the Up.

Thursday 22 September 2011

Top 10 Internet Dating Dislikes



(Because Dating Cynicism isn't born of nowt, you know.)

  

(Best buckle up and crank up the road-trip tunes -- we're in for another long haul, my lovelies.)

1. The whole contrived set-up 

If you're anything like me, then you may have found, over the years, that the pool from which you can fish your Lobsters shrinks in inverse proportion to the aging process. So, unless you got lucky in junior school, and unless you work in an industry that doesn't operate on a ratio of 80:20 females:males, then, where on earth will you find this lobster to which you're rightfully entitled?!
  • We've covered hobbies. Hobbies are out.
  • We've glossed blithely over blind dates. Blind dates are out.
  • We've complained about the poorly thought-through scheduling of decent adult education classes...
  • And our grandmothers' means of meeting Eligible Bachelors, such as civilised Tea Dances, went out with, well, grandma (unless you're into that whole undercover retro scene…)
via here
So. What options do you have left?

You could denounce Coupledom entirely, decide that actually One is More Fun and become a proper actual Spinster:
via here
 Or... you could...

Try Internet Dating!!!

Yes! 

Rather than strike up a dalliance with a Man who fits neatly into your life as it currently is, you must force a dalliance to happen by following these rigid, time-honoured steps:
  • Sign up to a service/site promoting a free weekend/free trial period as my goodness you do not want to be the Girl Who Pays to Find Her Lobster. (Yes, there's still a stigma. Yes, I'm perpetuating it. What of it?!)
  • Post up the one flattering photo of yourself taken since your early twenties where you don't have a volcanic eruption on your nose/jawline/expanse of forehead, Bad Hair, or a bit too much gum showing in that dazzling smile of yours.
  • Spend the next week trying to pick the perfect 200 characters to encapsulate the Youness of You
  • Click a few boxes that then categorise you as, and match you with, the sort of person who would either live in the city, or in the country or in a ski chalet, who likes jazz, classical or pop music. No other options. Sorry, was there no box for "beach house", or for "yes, all of that, plus, folk rock in the style of the sublime Thea Gilmore"? No? Harrumph.
  • Wait and see if you tickle anyone's fancy, or anyone tickles yours.
I should mention, though, that it took me many years of ignoring and defying my friends' coercion before I grudgingly came to the conclusion by myself that my best option at the time was, yep, internet dating. I'm not sure it is my best option: not sure I'm the Internet Dating Kinda Girl at all but hey. I'm as out there as I'll ever be.
Doubter Overload.
Screenshots from Sex and the City, Series 5, Ep2, Unoriginal Sin
 2. The need to self-promote

Because we all want to show the best side/s of ourselves in favour of the more mundane reality. As a very nebulous example:

Compare: I'm quite laid-back with
I don't wash up, clean up, tidy up, or even get up unless Doctor Who is on.

But there is always the risk that while most 'normal' folk have to self-promote a little in order to garner the attentions of other folk, some may take it to extremes (and this is something of a composite...):


"I'm fun-loving, easy to get on with, work hard, have a great job, party hard, love socialising with my huge group of friends, love good wine and good conversation with intelligent people, love spending time at the gym, work out at least three times a week, love sport, love any kind of music, love trying new things esp food and new recipes, love to travel... would love to be on top of Kili right now... or back on a beach in Kho Samui..."

OK, now you're just trying to cover all bases. Seriously, if you're so staggeringly astounding and open to so much, why are you still single?!

And then there's…

3. The inability to self-promote

I like to think that it's a truth universally acknowledged that Dating Can Be Difficult. It's a game of emotional ten-pin bowling. You get knocked down. Then propped up again. Then knocked down. Once in a while you'll get a strike (and yes, this is a poor, poor analogy). But let's be honest, you're helping no one by including any or all of the following statements in your profile:

"back on here again -- better luck this time"
"been hurt in the past, looking for something real"
"don't know why any of this would be interesting to anyone"

Here's the dealio! We're all hoping for luck this time. We've all been hurt and are looking for something real. And if you don't know why any of this would be interesting to anyone, then no blighter else will either.
 
Time to impart some tough love as well as some more advice given to me by my very good and wise friend N--- (whose advice, I know, I may not always have followed but that doesn't mean I didn't keep it all in mind) which goes along the lines of, in order to get anyone to love you you need to love yourself first. It's not the easiest thing to do but it'd be a good start at least to project enough self-belief to snag the attentions of someone who will realise that yes, you are shy, you have been hurt, but hey, you're ready to Go Prospecting with the rest of us.

4.  The need to edit yourself into the kind of person People Will Want to Meet

Because in the Dating Game you will need to do a little self-editing. Don't reveal all in the first instance. Maintain your mystique. Then once you've met your date, then you can confess that you know all the words to Total Eclipse of the Heart. With power-ballad-fist-pumping actions to match. But in the first throes of Internet Dating, I'm afraid "Yourself" doesn't cut it in Dating Town, buddy.

5. Overthought profile shots
Say. No. More. via here
6. Ill-considered profile shots

You know.
  • The one you rapidly took on a webcam the night you signed up to CatchInfinity.
  • The one someone took on a phone last night that you can't remember having been taken but you're having THE BEST TIME EVER and you haven't yet spilled your drink or defiled your outfit.
  • The one where your ex has been torn out prior to scanning, though her hand still rests oh-so-casually on your shoulder. Like Thing from The Addams Family.
  • The one where your ex hasn't been torn out prior to scanning.*
*I recently spotted a shot on one site whereby a man's photo also featured a young lady. Was it a C-list celebrity he'd met? Was it his daughter? His ex? His current? No explanation was given. What assumption would you make?!


7. Great Expectations

Best to have none, then you'll never be disappointed. Hands up who's a big cynic? Me! Me!


But for all the cynicism, there is always a significant element of Hope involved in the Dating Game – hope that for all this cynicism you may be proven wrong. That if your sister's housemate's cousin's neighbour found her lobster online after x years of Prospecting, then so might you!


So you start overlooking crucial flaws in your Dating Prospects that would normally have been Dating Dealbreakers (poor spelling, misuse of 'you're/your', that sort of thing) in case you're being picky and ruling out your lobster on the basis of what you consider borderline illiteracy.


You meet every Date with that ever-so-hopeful, winsome, open little grin with the possibility lodged deep in the back of your mind that this may be The Fabled "One".


But the flipside of Great Expectations is of course Great Disappointment, and after a couple of rounds in the ring you are more likely to be Disappointed than Pleasantly Surprised. That's when the frog-snogging analogy really takes on new resonance. And you start all over again. Sigh.


8. Those who don't make any effort

ODNU. Nuff said.
 
9. Those who make too much effort

They Google you beforehand. They read every single word of your profile and try to glean the essence of your very soul from within those 200 excruciatingly-chosen characters. They notice that you said you like the colour green. And they turn up to your first date bedecked in green. (Admittedly it can be quite sweet on the first date as it means they're paying attention and they read your profile, at least.)

You meet up, you discuss general likes and dislikes. You liberally drop into the conversation that the retro shindigs he's into sound fun (because they do and also because you're being polite, not that you want to go to one immediately. We're Prospecting, remember?).

Next thing you know you're being sent links and suggestions on an all-too-regular basis for Tea Dances, ghost-hunts in old hotels, battle re-enactments... SLOW DOWN.

I should interject here that I'm painfully aware that I'm picky. You betcha. But hey. Isn't that the point of this whole malarkey anyway -- to pick someone to click with?

And finally...

10. The post-date post-mortem
 
...Sometimes you'll know straight away that the Date erred on the side of Disaster. The Date that spawned this whole blog was a little like that. Not a catastrophe but -- something of a Fail.

Other times, you just won't know until three days have passed and he still hasn't messaged or rung you. There is the temptation to go a little Lichtenstein over it:

M-Maybe // Roy Lichtenstein, via here
But eventually you may have to concede the obvious:

Screenshot from Sex and the City, Series 5, Ep4, Pick-a-Little, Talk-a-Little
Your rational mind thinks, OK, onto the next.
 Your realistic, irrational mind thinks, well, that was a big fat waste o' my time.

(But on the bright side that's one less frog to kiss, eh?)

Monday 19 September 2011

Date Deux

Hello dear readers, and thank you for returning to this little puddle of self-indulgence!

I believe I may have made reference to my propensity to simu-date to keep my options open. And maybe the Menfolk can pick up on this, or maybe they're oblivious (Menfolk, can you tell if a girl is simu-dating, and moreover do you mind?)... but while I was emailing ODNU over that cold, November (free) weekend on CatchInfinity I was also emailing DD (Date Deux).

He seemed, well, nice. Normal. Used to be a primary school teacher, now working at a university not too far away.

We arranged a date (after the noncommunicative nonevent that was of course ODNU) and he agreed to roll on down to Surrey, and break some naan bread with me. I did the civilised thing of booking a table in my favourite curry establishment (which he was most amenable to).

I had a whole evening in which to beautify (which to me is picking out the pink dress again and maybe hauling the straighteners through my hair...).

Then I made the fatal mistake of trying to pep myself up with a film. I chose Must Love Dogs -- divorced Diane Lane is set up on dates with a) her father, Christopher Plummer, by accident, then b) fellow dog-lover John Cusack whilst also c) romancing single dad and general dish Dermot Mulroney.

via IMDB
Word to the wise: before a date, don't be tempted to watch "inspirational dating success story" films in which unfeasibly witty and attractive (though slightly more mature) women are faced with the "dilemma" of whether to pick charming boat-builder John Cusack over charismatic divorced dad Dermot Mulroney. Oh boo. Normal chicas like me don't have those sorts of choices and it'll just feed into our insecurities and thwart our expectations even more. D'oh!



...But I would not be thrown off my stride (that much).

So I trundled around to the curry house. I waited a while, read a book (can't remember which, now, but something hugely intellectual, I'm sure... ahem). He turned up. Very tall, very chatty, very charming. We talked (and by we I mean, well, he, and I, in turns, in the manner of Actual Conversation). It was reassuring. We both agreed on the comedy value and quality of that cinematic pinnacle known as Kindergarten Cop. Which is a bonus. We shared dinner (we had to check beforehand that there were no peanuts involved as DD was allergic).


We went on to a pub afterwards, chatted a bit more about his time as a ski instructor. It was all very encouraging. Finally, he went to catch the last train. And he messaged on his way home to say thanks and to reassure me that he had caught the last train. I wrote back to congratulate him on this, and to thank him, too, for a nice evening.

I was very, very encouraged. I thought we'd sparked. We texted a little after that, mostly perfunctories...

...but then...

Radio Silence (from his end, not mine).

Nothing.
Nada.
Nowt.
Zilcharoo.

That was it.

End of. (And I wasn't about to start text-stalking. I don't want to be That Girl Who Won't Go Away, or have the words bunny boiler aligned with my reputation. Perish the thought.)

And I guess so often it just happens like that. I'll never understand why and I could overanalyse it to death but I just thought, OK, stop, breathe, reboot... stay single. Step away from the dating sites. They are no good. No good, I tell thee. And start liking cats because you are fated to end up a mad cat lady.


And so I stepped away from the sites, for quite a few months.

Then came a visit from a friend.


And that Metro article...

Sunday 18 September 2011

Follow Me, Follow, Down to the Hollow...

Well hello there!

Just a quick instructional post for now -- people have been asking (no, really, they have! I'm not making this up, honest!) how to Follow this here blog. And since you asked so nicely I shall tell thee:

1. If you have a Googlemail/Gmail account, sign in using your normal login details after clicking on Sign in the top right corner, like so:



2. Then, after you're all signed in and your Googlemail/Gmail address is now showing where the words Create Blog used to be, click on the word Follow in the top left corner, comme ci:


3. Blogger will then ask you if you want to Follow Dater Overload publicly or anonymously (I'm guessing if you follow me anonymously I won't know so I may have scores of followers... I just don't know who they are. Gnarf.).

Where it says "Start following" the name of this blog will follow; as will the web address after http://, and unless you have a Gmail profile photo, a default profile photo will appear under "Your picture".
Select either of these options then click the orange Follow option.

4. You'll get a helpful notification that you are now following Dater Overload. If you're a regular blogger please add me to your blogroll if that's your bag, babies.

And... welcome! 

I should have set up the blog so you don't have to be signed in on Googlemail to comment but if you have any problems I'll look into it. And if you don't have a Gmail/Googlemail account, please just bookmark me and pop in every now and then and prepare to be stunned by my remarkable wit or insight. Or to laugh at my inadequacies, safe in the knowledge that your grasp on social mores, or in fact reality, is that much tighter than mine. :-)

Thanks ever so!

Friday 16 September 2011

The Ex-Replica

Well, hello, kind readers!

You join me as I prepare to divulge the deets on Date Numero Uno.

Though I have to warn you at this juncture that you may want to a) grab a comfy chair and b) read this in two parts. It's a long'un and no mistake. 

...OK, technically Date Numero Uno wasn't the first date I'd ever been on. (I'm not that green!)

The first one took place (whoooosh, mists of time, etc etc) in June 1999 (just in case you thought I was really late to this dating game -- nuhuh) with the man (or, manchild as it later transpired -- he was very immature) after whom I had lusted, vocally, for the whole of my last year of university.

Aaaaanyway, said manchild was apparently immune to what the rest of us called Cold Weather, and wore shorts almost all year round. Which actually... was not necessarily a bad thing. He had some good pins on him. And magnificent eyes.

He was also (at the time, to my naive 20-year-old self) rather charming. And tall. And smiley. And wore shorts almost all year round. ...Ah. Mentioned that already. It is pivotal to the story, however, so do bear with me.

We went for an odd little date that kicked off in a well-frequented university bar. I had some weird end-of-term-lurg-thing that meant I was a) as good as mute, and whispering/coughing sweet nothings all night and b) knocking back the throat sweets, so smelling alluringly of blackcurrant.

Foxy.

To his credit he was, well, charming. And smiley. And he may have been wearing shorts. But then it was June. There were very casual trousers involved, I know that. I dressed up, of course. This was the lust of my life at the time!

There may have been some very innocent kissing involved. And that was that. (I knew he was heading off for the States to work as a summer camp counsellor imminently, and I was heading back home-for-good shortly and, again, what kind of girl do you take me for?) But I still hoped he'd ring me before he left. He didn't. And yet I still pined after him for the next few months. Glutton for punishment? Almost certainly. But I learned. Oh, I learned good.

I came back up to my university to visit a friend a few months later, was an appalling friend to be with (I'm so sorry, A-----, I was rubbish) as all I wanted to do was find Mr Shorts (who was either on a new course, or repeating a year, or something -- old age/selective memory has robbed me of the specifics)... I gleaned his email address a couple of months even later, got in touch... and nabbed myself a boyfriend for about a year (again the specifics are hazy, though for some worrying reason I've never forgotten when his birthday was. The blighter probably never remembered mine).

But in the end, fantasy and reality did not compute, and we had a weird, largely long-distance relationship (SouthEast vs Westcountry) that involved the following negative events:

1. Me being bitten at his house... by bedbugs. (He was living with his parents. He was 31. They all smoked like chimneys.)
2. Him bringing bedbugs to my house. A world of Eew.

via here
3. Him returning to the States without telling me he was leaving. This involved the humiliation of me ringing his mobile and getting his brother-in-law on the other end, laughingly telling me that Mr Shorts had already flown out.
4. Him subsequently cheating on me in the States.
5. Me in a fit of childish insanity still agreeing to see him after that.
6. Him promising to visit me when I had my own little flat for a while that year as he was going to stop off on his way back from the States. Me waiting all night for him to turn up and worrying when he didn't. Me ringing his house.

This involved the humiliation (part II) of getting his mother on the other end, telling me that Mr Shorts had come straight back to the Westcountry, and was now off visiting his sister who lived nearby. A rather curt, "Oh. OK then." from me was then followed by crying passionately into my denim futon mattress for the remainder of the evening and deciding that All Men Were Almost Definitely Not Worth It etc on the basis of one man(child).

Then, the tipping point:

7. Me realising that every time I rang him, he was laughing at something on Channel 5 and wasn't listening to a word I was saying, not even when I was saying something of devastating importance. OK, I was by then 22, had little life-experience, and probably never did say anything of interest... but still. It's the principle.

via here
So I broke up with him. He dun me wrong and I weren't having it.

Plus my parents had to replace a mattress that had succumbed to an infestation of bedbugs.

...You still awake in the back there? You are? I owe you.

"But what does all this malarkey have to do with anything?" I hear you ponder into your [  ] insert beverage of choice here.

Well, good reader, I shall tell you!

...But not before I've dropped into the mix that in the years between Mr Shorts and let's call him Official Date Numero Uno, or ODNU for short, I was set up on two blind dates, one by a friend, one by a workmate, which taught me one thing: I don't do blind dates. Nuff said.

I also went on a day-date with a chap from a certain site on which your friends recommend you (you know the one). From his photo (note: singular photo) he looked like a blonde Declan Donnelly:

Yep, this poppet! via here
and in reality... didn't so much. Though, he did buy me a DVD of Pan's Labyrinth (which I'm yet to watch all the way through). And yes, I will address, in a later post, the fact I may be a bit shallow, amongst other significant flaws... Sigh. But I never saw him again, largely because we ran out of things to talk about halfway through the afternoon.

So! This brings me up to the now. Or, the Now that is November 2010 when I went for a hot chocolate with Fellow Single Friend S--- (have added some dashes just in case I cite multiple Friends whose Names begin with S and I get confused), who gave me the famous Nugget of Advice I Have Actually Followed (mostly).

That Nugget was, when Prospecting on dating sites, only click on/respond to those men who have more than one photo.

Makes a world of sense. Just means that the two photos corroborate each other and the subject is more likely to be who they claim to be on all levels.

In the same conversation I declared that next time any of the dating sites were promoting a free weekend, I'd subscribe. And lo and behold, a site we'll refer to as "CatchInfinity" promoted a free weekend that very weekend. I was on it like Sonic. I decided this was it, this was my New Approach.

I am woman, watch me date

And ODNU was the first victim date after that epiphany.

When ODNU messaged me, I noted his multiple photos, and responded. We chatted. I discovered he sang in numerous choirs. Which is always good, I like a singer. And he worked in IT. Which is also good. I like a geek.

We exchanged phone numbers. Before the free weekend was up ODNU said, pseudo-boldly, "I think we should meet up soon, see if anything comes of this", or words to that effect. I agreed I'd phone him to discuss times, dates, etc. So I did.

Alarm bells should have rung on the Ex-Replica front when he slipped into the conversation that, despite this being November, he rarely felt the cold... and wore shorts almost all year round.

via here
...I decided not to dismiss him out of hand without meeting him though.

The night of the date was ill-fated. Dire weather (sleet and wind) and subsequent issues on the motorways meant heinous traffic for him; train traumas meant lateness and no time to spruce up for me. I may have reapplied some lipgloss in the taxi on the way to the pub. But I needn't have bothered. He turned up in, basically, jogging bottoms. I know. CASUAL TROUSERS. The cheek of it... And he was tall. But not smiley.

I bought him a drink [thus emasculating him...], and we talked.

Correction.

In the spirit of Showing an Interest and Making Conversation, I asked him questions, he responded. He made a couple of lame jokes.

Awkward silence.

I asked more questions. He responded.

Awkward silence.

I asked more questions. He responded.

Awkward silence.

...Had he not got the memo on Etiquettes of Conversation? That if someone asks you questions you ask them questions back out of politeness if not out of interest? No?

Nope.

A bit like Mr Shorts not clocking on to the fact that I was racking up a phone bill to talk to him, and he was guffawing at Jeremy Clarkson (or someone) instead of listening to whatever I had to say, it was just too much like hard work!

At about 8.45pm, ODNU looked at the clock on the pub wall, stated that it was, indeed, 8.45pm, and he had to drive home. So, that was that. Game over.

I booked a taxi. I left in the taxi.

I had no idea what to make of the evening. My suspicion was, we had no chemistry. But even if he thought I was the most ebullient sparkler and conversationalist he'd ever met, well, he just reminded me too much of Mr Shorts. To which I'd have to have said, no, no, no.

But I was spared that particular awkwardness.

Three days or so later, I got a text from him along the lines of, "Hi Quirky. It was nice to meet you but I don't think we have any chemistry. But you're a nice girl and I wish you luck." Which was admittedly politer than I'd given him credit for.

And, dare I say, a relief to receive.

Onto the next.

PS I am having issues with formatting. Sorry for the annoying inconsistency of type size and colour.
PPS The issues with formatting probably only bother me. :-)

Wednesday 14 September 2011

Hobbies and Horses

Imagine if you will: Summer 2010, when I was a jaded young thing of... 32. Ish.

Whooooooosh <<< that's the sound of Time Passing 

I won't go into the details, but one morning, after being in a Situation for quite some time whereby I was emotionally bound to one individual with whom nothing could feasibly happen, I woke up feeling like this:


And It. Was. Liberating! After years of investing my emotions in one very unavailable person, at the expense of maybe a few available persons on the periphery, I snapped out of it.

Which left me a) readily available (but not in an "easy" way, you understand... what kinda girl do you take me for??) and b) not quite sure where to direct my affections, though I managed to find a crush or two to see me through the summer/autumn.

But I do have a tendency to crush on safe men and by safe I mean gay. Ergo more futile channelling of affections.

Ergo the need to focus myself on straight, single men -- and enter the murky Dating Pool. Which to my mind can look a bit like this:

WARNING: This video may give you the wiggins. 
Especially if you grew up in the 70s and 80s.

One of the nuggets of advice people always give you when you're looking to Date is to Join Clubs! Join Groups! Meet Like-Minded People. Find a new Hobby!

via here
Good advice in theory.

My interests and hobbies are not the sort of interests held by Prospective Dates.

To give you some context, when I was 22 and just out of university I took a series of line-dancing classes for fun. AND I ENJOYED IT.

via here
 ...But that's just me...

I'd already decided to join a rock choir with the vain hope that Eligible Single Men Under Forty would also feel compelled to join... Hmm. One year on, I'm yet to meet my lobster among the Tenors and Basses but rock choir is my hobby axis. Love it. Made some gorgeous friends.

I'd also started Nordic Walking the year before, but sadly no Eligible Single Men Under Forty In My Local Area seem to feel compelled to up sticks (literally) and get Nordy with the Quirkster. They're all across the field undergoing British Military Fitness training.Which, oddly, does not appeal.

via here

And then there's photography. Sigh.

One day maybe I might rock up to a DSLR course but until my local adult education centre opens itself up to the possibility that People Who Work Full-Time Might Also Want to Take a Course So Please Stop Scheduling the Good'uns at 10am, that might have to wait. Which is a shame because I heard an unsubstantiated rumour that Straight Single Men Under Forty Take Photos too. Can anyone corroborate?

So... I conceded, of my own volition (excuse my abuse of the English language) to Start Dating. I got on that horse (having never really been on it in the first place in order to fall off it, proverbially speaking, I can't exactly use the "get right back on that horse" analogy but you catch my drift).

And here we are. 

OK, we're not quite Here yet, we're somewhere in November 2010. But this post is already overlong and you're probably working this look:

via here
so I'll lock it down until next time, when I might cover off Date Numero Uno: The Ex-Replica, and share some dating advice from the friend I'll call S -- and this is advice that I actually heeded.  

Yup.

And Why Not?

So. Hi.

If you found this blog there's a very good chance I begged asked you to follow it. And if you're following it there's a good chance you know me and have already been subjected to one of my anecdotes. Sorry – you get them all over again here. Hence why I've monikered this little hub of self-indulgence Dater Overload. Clever, huh? Punny.

So, why the blog? What's with all the blogging already? 

It occurred to me last Wednesday, as I sat on a train home at about 9pm at night, after a "date" that had kicked off at 7.40pm(ish), and had clearly bypassed success in favour of AWKWARD (I'll explain why in a later post; when it comes to dating, awkward is my default setting.) ...that cometh the hour, cometh the blogging opportunity.


In the last few months since taking a new approach to dating – that is, actually dating rather than complaining about my other default setting: perpetually single I've accumulated a few anecdotes that I felt needed to be shared, and through the medium of blogging. 

And since I haven't kept a diary for longer than five months since about 1998, well, writing to an invisible audience should spur me on, right?


I have to admit, I'm not a serial dater. I'm a simu-dater*, yes, though I like to term my approach prospecting; at best, keeping my options open, or as my friends would so prosaically put it, KISSING A LOT OF FROGS.


via here
...I should state for the record that it helps none that I look nothing like this girl.

Nor am I "kooky" like this girl (just quirky, and that's not the same as kooky, OK?):





…Oh wait. Maybe that's where I'm going wrong. Instead of rocking up to dates in this (minus fairy lights):



I should channel this little fashionista:

via here
Though I'm not sure attire is necessarily the issue.


I digress.


So, I have been Dating (cap. D) on and off since about November, December 2010, with varied results, though the fact I'm still single is testament to (deep breath) how flawed the whole set-up is, how certain sites feed into your insecurities by encouraging, nay, forcing you to create this whole, attractive persona that will drop away the moment you make human contact with that individual who happened to Nudge you... or the affinity tests don't ask the right questions, or the sites play host to people who, let's be honest here, would be better placed defending their honour to 55p women's magazines that shall remain nameless. (And nothing at all to do with my extreme pickiness and exacting standards.)


...Yeah, I think we've hit on the real issue here. I suffer from DATING-RELATED CYNICISM. 

But the moment that I get over the hurdle of believing that I won't meet my lobster through a dating site, that may well be when dating really starts to work for me. 

But only I can come to that conclusion. You can tell me until you're blue in the face that your sister's housemate's cousin's neighbour met her soulmate online but I'll just counter that I'm not your sister's housemate's cousin's neighbour, it hasn't worked for me thus far – and I need to be proven wrong, clearly.


So as I recount my anecdates** I'll also be trying to change my mindset and channel some positive energy into my endeavours.

Wish me luck.


(Please?)

* "Simu-date" -- see Sex and the City, Series 6, Ep1, To Market, To Market when Carrie offsets the pressure of dating Berger for the first time by meeting a different date.

Screengrab from DVD
** Anecdates = anecdotes + dates... See? ...That was my blog name of choice, except someone got there first, blogged for three months then abandoned it. Who would do that? (Um... See my earlier statement on keeping a diary... :-) )

PS Not sure why but my line breaks vary from standard to colossal. One day I'll understand HTML …