Monday, November 21, 2011

Slow Dating

I have experience. Life experience. Work experience. Dating experience. Yet, I hadn’t tried – nor was I prepared for – speed dating. In theory, it’s genius. But, in reality – like most other genius ideas – it didn’t quite live up to its tag line. I’ve done the bar thing, the online dating thing, the “no, but seriously, this time this guy is GREAT”-friends-with-good-intentions-amateur-matchmaking thing. Some have lasted longer than others. But, this speed dating novelty really seemed like it could work. 15 guys, 15 girls, five minute mini-dates. Genius.



Let’s be honest. We all know within five minutes whether or not we want to continue talking to someone. This is why the bar thing has been as popular as it has for so long. Let’s review: you walk up to a bar, order a drink, turn to Random Dude #1 on your right and make a visual assessment: cute; hell no; married (why do they let them outside?!); too short; tall enough; bad shoes; nice jeans; dad? Guys can fall into more than one of these categories. But after that 5-10 second assessment, you’re ready to a: flirt or b: walk away. And either option flies.


When you go on a blind date, you’re stuck for at least the length of time it takes to drink one cocktail and wait for your waitress to bring the bill. (Side note: why is it that when you’re on a terrible date, the waitress is never anywhere to be found? Ever. There should be a special pager that waitresses wear, where pager code 9-1-1 stands for “get me the hell out of here.”)


Okay, where were we? Right. Speed dating. Genius idea because you cut out the unnecessary full-length date with Mr. Not-gonna-happen. So, I was psyched.


I brought with me two friends whose proclaimed intention was not to participate, but to sit at the bar nearby and hold up cards w/ a rating system: 10 for “lock it down” to 1 for “get up and run.” I vetoed that particular plan but was happy to have them there as my moral support squad. When we showed up to the venue, it was a cross between a really ghetto airport bar (appropriately populated with middle-aged men pounding beers until the last possible moment before they had to depart for their flight) and a sad corporate cafeteria. The name of the place was French…but the décor and atmosphere were much more Franglish. This was bad sign #1.


Bad sign #2: The looks on the faces of the women ranged from complacent to trepidatious to desperate. The guys looked like the junior class of Northwestern’s chemistry department.


Bad sign #3: There were 14 women and ten men. Let me back up a bit. A few days before the speed dating event, the registration for women closed because it was full. Lucky (unlucky) for me, I made it in under the wire. Curiously, I looked at future speed dating events set up for the next month. ALL of the spots for women were full. So, are we desperate or are we desperate? That’s the real question.


I sat down and as the men filed in, I took a bigger swig from my pint of Matilda, and I made direct and determined eye contact with the waitress that telepathically translated, “I’m gonna need another one…like now.” She understood. The first broseph to sit at my table looked like he was really looking for the National Junior Honor Society Convention. I ventured a mental guess that he was around 17 (although I knew that the minimum age of this shindig was 21). He was 24. Not too far off. We made some extremely awkward and forced introductions, which included a mild disagreement about what road the McCormick Convention Center was actually located on. With all his gesticulating, I noticed a gold band on his left ring finger. “Say what?” was my first thought. “Are you married?” is what I actually asked the NJHS rep.


“No!” he exclaimed – either offended or flattered…I couldn’t tell which one. “This is a promise ring.” Yep, I nodded to myself. Of course it was.


“And who did you make the promise to? Your mother or your father?”


He looked me square in the eyes, slowly clasped his hands together on the table, leaned slightly forward and with conviction and reverence replied, “To God.”


Well alrighty then – it was gonna be hard to compete with that.


His next line of questioning centered around my preferred radio stations. I informed him that I don’t have any…because I don’t have a car…and I have iTunes and Spotfiy. All of those words were lost on him. We sat in silence for 20 seconds, both looked out the window and said in unison, “Look! It’s raining!”


The next three or four men struggled with the English language. To their credit, they had only moved to the United States three or four years ago. I helped one of them learn the difference between “their” and “they’re.” And let’s be honest, that grammatical anomaly trips up even the most seasoned English-speaking vet. The rest were a handful of Midwestern boys of average height, average looks and average personalities. And by my highly scientific mathematical calculations, that averaged out to nada.


I did, however, meet three other lovely ladies who also came up with the same answer to the aforementioned mathematical equation. We exchanged cards and tried keep our voices down as we exclaimed, “I mean, REALLY? [Insert half cry, half laugh.] REALLY?”


I returned to my moral support squad, deep into their third and fourth cocktails. They showed me the photos they took of me chatting with #4 and #6. They gave me the old, “you never know until you try” speech so we could justify my 30 dollar spend on ten bad dates instead of three awesome cocktails. They pointed out the trash can where I then, immediately, deposited my speed date selection sheet.


In conclusion, speed dating – like most other genius ideas – did not in fact live up to its tag line. So, will I ever do it again? My unwavering answer: only if two drinks are included.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Zero to Awkward

It had been awhile since I'd been on the dating scene, so I was pretty excited for what I thought would be a promising date. We did the email dance for a bit. "Where'd you go to school? You like Baskin Robbins Winter White Chocolate too?!" You know the drill. So, when he suggested dinner for our first date, I had a pang of anxiety and a jolt of excitement. Excitement for the fact that this dude was willing to commit to a full meal before actually meeting me (could this mean that he would maybe commit to me for life as well?). And anxiety because a full, lengthy meal with a blind date who you know five minutes into meeting will not be making it to date #2 can be torture. But in the spirit of positivity and all that other crap, I was in. So, it was set: 7:30, Wednesday, Quartino. But, to tell you what happened next, I need to give you a little back story.

K, as we will refer to him, is an Illini. He's 31, lives in Lakeview, has a dog AND he's tall. Truly, perfect on paper. His spelling and grammar in emails were impeccable. (A sick turn on for me.) He wanted to have a bet between us for the Michigan/Illinois game. (Competition AND collegiate sports all wrapped into one? Sign me up.) So, based on our previous Baskin Robbins Winter White Chocolate conversation, we settled on ice cream as the prize for the game winner. Sort of third grade; sort of endearing. I went with it.

Flash forward to Tuesday (day before the date). K sent the obligatory (although largely forgotten gesture by most men/boys) text, "Looking forward to tomorrow." All systems seemed to be GO.

And then Wednesday came.

At 5:04 p.m. (that's 2 1/2 hrs until date time), I received the following text:

"Hey, what do you think about getting ice cream? I had to push back my dentist appointment, and didn't eat before the cleaning, so I just had a bite to eat. Maybe we can do Quartino next time..."

Go ahead, folks. Go back and read that again a few times. I know I did.

And here were the thoughts that went through my mind:
  1. If you knew you were eating at 7:30, why did you mow down on whatever you did at 5 and not, instead, have a snack to tide you over?
  2. You're a dude, right? You really can't muster up some hunger again three hours after eating?
  3. I don't do sans-imbibing dates when I'm meeting someone for the first time. It's a cardinal rule.
  4. It's freezing. I don't want ice cream.
  5. WHY ARE YOU TELLING ME ANY OF THIS?
Shouldn't he have just sucked it up, shut up and met me at 7:30? I'm sure he could have eaten enough for me to not accuse him of being anos (anorexic). I literally sat stunned for a bit, because I wasn't sure how to respond. I was less disappointed and more pissed. I wore heels to work, damnit! So, I responded with this:

"I need to eat dinner so I guess we could meet at 8. And I'd rather get a drink."

Simple, to the point. Or so I thought. His response:

"I'm trying to cut back on the boozing...And I'm having a shitty day. Would you rather just reschedule?"

Let's go through the numbered-points exercise again, shall we?
  1. Aren't we all trying to cut back on the boozing in one way or another? Don't tell me that. Just show up, have one drink instead of five and give yourself a pat on the back that you didn't black out on a Wednesday when you get home.
  2. It's November. This is when I ramp up my boozing...all the way into the new year when I go to the gym on Jan 1 and feel as though I've accomplished something great...not only for myself or my country, but the world.
  3. We're not dating and yet, I'm already bearing the brunt of your "shitty day"? Sign me up for more of that!
  4. Would I rather reschedule? Well, you're a combo of Sober Sally and Debbie Downer tonight, so I'm thinking, yeah.
  5. Did you just use "shitty" in a text message before we've even met?
So, at that point, I came to the decision that all was lost. But, because I didn't want him to head straight for the Ben & Jerry's in his freezer and drown his sorrows in a pint while watching "Someone Like You," I responded: "Sure" I did not use punctuation to show him just how pissed I was.

So, that was that. What I was really most upset about though was the fact that I was getting a haircut at 6:45 and now would not have a date to showcase my freshly snipped ends and professionally blown out hair. That was the real tragedy.

Until 6:30.

6:30 is the time when I received my second to last text message from K. As it turns out, he was deep into his Heath Bar Crunch pint and had just witnessed Ashley Judd crying over her breakup with Greg Kinnear.

"Sorry about tonight. Was looking forward to meeting you. Hopefully it's not too awkward now :o)"

The only thing that makes a situation awkward is saying that it may or may not be awkward. The only thing that makes that more awkward is sending a follow-up text calling the awkward text mentioning the awkwardness awkward."

7:25 p.m.

"It's too awkward now, isn't it? Wish you the best."

And that my friends, is how you go from zero to awkward in under two hours flat.

I will leave you with a lolcat translation of the last two text messages from K. And let's be honest. They don't sound that much different from the originals:

SRY BOUT TONITE. WUZ LOOKIN FWD 2 MEETIN U. HOPEFULLY IZ NOT 2 AWKWARD NAO :O)

IZ 2 AWKWARD NAO, ISNT IT? WISH U TEH BEST.