Don’t I wish!
I admit it. I was excited to go out with a doctor. He was obviously
intelligent. He had a good job. Hell, he had A job. (Don’t even get me started
about the unemployed garbage collector a friend set me up with. OK, fine.
I’ll tell you later.)
He appeared
attractive from his picture, albeit stoic, because he wasn’t smiling. It struck
me as odd that you would use a picture of yourself where you looked so serious.
Oh dear. Maybe he has no sense of humor. I hate people with no sense of humor.
How do they survive in this mad, mad world without humor? But, I digress.
He wasn’t
too much older than me (a few years). From talking to him, I knew that he
liked to cook, had children from a previous relationship who didn’t live with
him and had some of the same interests that I did.
I was
sticking with my rules this time. Meet in a (crowded) public place and don’t
exchange anything more than first names until you feel comfortable.
We agreed
to meet at a coffee shop. I didn’t recognize him when he first walked up
because his hair was almost entirely gray. It was black in the picture that he
sent me. Reminded me of the C&C Music Factory song, “Things that make you
go hmmmmm.” I was almost positive at this point that he had lied about his age
(40), but it would be rude to ask.
In these
situations, I always try to get to a meeting location first so that I can scope
out the location and choose the best place to sit. This also allows me to get
my beverage of choice and get settled. I have no problem with a man buying me a
cup of coffee, but until I am reasonably sure there will be a second date, I
think that I should pay my own way.
When he
greets me, he smiles. Now I understand why his picture is stoic. His two front
teeth are broken. Badly broken. Surely he must have dental insurance as a
doctor. Why wouldn’t he get his teeth fixed? I choose to ignore this for the
moment.
The first
thing he tells me is that he appreciates my honesty in my profile. “You look just
like your picture.” Well, I should hope so. It was only taken a few months ago.
“So many women put up pictures of themselves that are like 10-years old or 50
pounds ago.” Hello? Pot? It’s the kettle calling to tell you... Still, cursed
good manners prevents me from saying, “And your actual age is ...?”
He also
told me that he appreciated my “honesty about my figure.” I put curvy. This is
a hard question for me. I’m not slender. I am average in that I wear a size 12
and the average American woman wears a size 12-14. However, I’m 5’10 and the
average American woman is 5’5. “A few extra pounds,” my male friends tell me,
translates to HUGE and I’m not huge. So, I went with curvy.
In this
phase of my Dating Farce, I still told people that I performed with a
professional belly dance troupe as a hobby. I learned through painful
experience that this is often the wrong thing to do. Though belly dance, in my
mind, is no different from any other form of performance dance in that it
involves a costume and certain movements, it is perceived in a very different
way. Many men that found out I was a belly dancer seemed to think that I was
either A) a stripper, B) easy or C) both.
He was “kind” enough to mention how “hot” he found belly dancing and how
I had the perfect body for it. He was so into belly dancers, in fact, that his
buddies hired one for his 50th birthday a few years ago. Hello? Did
you or did you not put 40 on your online profile? It would be
ill-mannered to point out this little fallacy, but WOW it was tempting to tell
Pinocchio’s that his nose was growing.
Ok. So he
lied about his age. I wonder what else he lied about? I started fishing for
more details. “How many children do you have?” Two, he tells me. One that just
graduated from college and another who’s 29 and has children (!!!?). No WONDER
his children don’t live with him. They’re too old to live with him. And a
grandfather? You want me to go out with a grandfather? I’m still hoping to have
children of my own some day and I’m not that much older than his elder child.
In the
middle of our conversation, he interrupts me and says, “Did I tell you that big
boobs make me horny? And, you’ve got a great set.”
Oh! Would
you look at the time? I have GOT to go floss the cat.
“So, where
do you see this going?” he asks me. Seriously? Seriously? Did you even READ my
profile or did you get stuck on my “assets”? In my description, I specifically
said that I really like children and I’m hoping to settle down and have some of
my own one day. Hey! Truth in advertising. If you’re looking for a fling, I’m
not your gal . . . I mean, unless you look like John Cusack or Oded Fehr. Then,
all bets are off and I’ll have to introduce you to my “throw-down” list.
My Guardian
Etiquette Maven won’t allow me to utter the words screaming through my brain
(which start something like, “Listen you
repulsive little troll. Though you only seem to have a nodding acquaintance with
the truth ....”). Instead, I say, “I’m sorry. I just don’t see this
going anywhere. We’re just at different stages in our lives. You’ve had your
children and are just looking for a companion to have fun with and I’m looking
for a serious relationship that will eventually lead to marriage and
children.”
“So,” he
says, “we can’t just have some fun together?”
“I’m
sorry,” I reply, “I’m not into flings.”
“Oh, I’m
not into flings either,” he tells me with a straight face. “I just thought that
we could, you know, hang out, have some dinner, release our mutual sexual
tensions.” RIGHT. OK. Apparently he’s a bit slow on the uptake AND illiterate.
I would tell him where to look UP the definition of fling, but I fear he
wouldn’t be able to read it. Neanderthal! Is he really a doctor? I’m beginning
to wonder.
Mercifully,
I had told him up front that I was meeting my family at a certain time. This
left me the perfect excuse to leave. I feared the Dreadful Cop-A-Feel Goodbye,
but at least this horrible date was almost over. A patient of his gave me the
ideal out, however. Bless Betty and Little Johnny. (Maybe he really was a
doctor?) As I was standing up to leave, she came over to him. “Dr. ___________,
I just had to tell you the Johnny is doing so much better . . . “ And away I
ran.
He e-mailed
me after the date and told me that he was disappointed that I ran off and he
didn’t get to “tell me goodbye properly” but maybe we could get together and .
. . . Yeah, OK. That’s not going to happen. I just e-mailed him back and told
him that it was a pleasure meeting him and wished him luck in his search. (And
I referred to him as a liar? I actually told him that it was “a pleasure”
meeting him. Now whose nose is growing? I'd
better watch my fibbing. Because, trust me, my nose does NOT need to be any
bigger.)
Epilogue:
He contacted me a few months later via e-mail and asked me if I had changed my
position on casual relationships. Not so much. I again wished him luck on his continued search.