Sunday, July 8, 2012

A Line Like That


Somebody once said to me, "but you aren't falling for a line like that, are ya?" in regards to a comment I made in reference to being very happy for a couple who had just become engaged. Which led to a discussion about my cluelessness about people being interested in me and my hesitation about jumping into relationships too quickly. He wasn't quite as pleasant in his words, but I can't say he was nasty, either.

At the time, I didn't realize how, by asking him what he meant by his comment, the course of our friendship would so drastically change...which I suppose lends further proof to my cluelessness. He began pointing out time after time that he thought he was being pretty apparent about the fact that he had a thing for me, and each of those times—including offering to let me shower and get ready for work at his place because my water was out and offering to go out for a few drinks because I was having a bad day amongst other things—I honestly thought he was just being a nice person because those are things that I would do for my friends. On top of that, he was married. Had I realized he was hitting on me, I likely would have kicked him in the balls because this was happening during the hell I was going through in trying to get rid of my ex who had been maintaining an out of state marriage the entire time we were together. Yes, at that point, a married man hitting on me would have ended our friendship. Sure, he had mentioned divorce a few times, but I tend to figure it's bullshit if you haven't done it after a few months...man or woman. Given the state I was in at that point, I probably wouldn't have believed anyone who was telling me they were getting a divorce without the papers sitting there in front of me.

“But you aren't falling for a line like that.” I let my romantic life be criticized by a man who was hitting on me while he was still sleeping with his wife. Better still, the man thought it was okay to criticize me about my romantic life knowing that he had hit on me while he was still sleeping with his wife. Whether I knew it or not, he did. More than anything else, for me today, that's what defines the person he is, and is the reason we are no longer friends.

Since then, his words have come back to haunt me a number of times. I'm nearly certain he didn't realize they would be so powerful; knowing what I know now, I'm almost positive he was simply trying to make me feel like an asshole because I didn't go out with him. Never mind that he was married. (That makes me wonder how many dumdum women are out there that don't learn the first time...granted, I didn't know the man who turned me into a bad lifetime movie was married when we got involved, but, I did know eventually, and am smart enough to not do it again believe it or not.) Never mind that he was crawling into bed with her each night. I hurt his ego because I took for granted that he was a decent human being.

“But you aren't falling for a line like that.” Am I really that harsh in my opinions about men? Am I too quick to judge? Are my expectations too high or too low?

I tend to share the more bizarre of my experiences (some might call them dates, but I honestly don't think 'date' truly gives the proper credit to what these events were), but am pretty private about my relationships...even when people think I'm the bad guy in the end. There are very few people who are unlucky enough to get all of the gory details.

Am I harsh and quick to judge? Maybe. But I think I've earned that right. In almost all of my long term relationships, there has been a horrible something...a married guy making babies with other other women, a drunk living off of his mother, a gambler who thought it would be okay to take me to the casino for my birthday to get the free stuff they offer, someone who beat me, and someone who was probably on the verge. Yes, there were a couple of good guys in there, but don't tell them that now. Ha.

On the bizarre side, and what I've already shared with so many, I've encountered a man who snorted at me thinking it would turn me on, had Austin Powers quoted to me all night and was left while he called his ex, had my hand grabbed and wrapped around his man junk, had someone pee themselves, someone tell me they were stalking me, etc, etc. This could go on and on and on because so many of them were one date wonders. Did they deserve to be judged harshly? I think so.

There have been people who've scared me off before we even met. One guy who told me he and his ex (the mother of his child) split up because she caused a huge problem after he told her that if she wasn't home from her friends house in ten minutes he was taking their son and leaving. He threatened to kidnap their child and was mad at her because she called the police. He was mad at me when I told him I didn't want to get involved with a person who could do that. I'm nearly positive he would have kidnapped one of my dogs had he known where I lived. Another guy flipped out and called me every name in the book because I uploaded photos to facebook, from a bar, with a band, but didn't answer his phone calls. Any of the 24 calls. And we hadn't even met.

Then, just for shits 'n giggles, there's the small group of men who take me out and blow me off for weeks/months. This confuses me as much as anything because it has happened more than once. This has happened to me more than just being blown off completely by someone. One guy took me out for one of the best dates I'd ever been on, called me twice after then I didn't hear a peep from him for three weeks. When I did hear from him, it was by text, and there was no 'I'm sorry' or anything of the sort. I asked 'why?' and he told me he was thinking about me and just being nice. I didn't hear from him again after I responded that nice would have been not letting me hang for three weeks.

“But you aren't falling for a line like that.” I've seen so many people settle for less than they deserve. They settle for being second best, or an afterthought, or a punching bag, or a convenience, or being cheated on, lied to, manipulated, controlled, and played. I've seen people air every problem on Facebook and then wonder why no one likes their partner or why no one wants to be bothered with their tales of woe. I've seen relationship statuses change like most people change their underwear and the couple them wonder why no one cares anymore or wonders how they became a running joke. You are the people who fell for a line like that.

Please don't misunderstand me...I don't think a marriage proposal is a 'line', unless you fall into one of the categories in the above paragraph. So, maybe to be correct I should say that I don't think a marriage proposal should be a line. As to the friends engagement that triggered this conversation, they are still as happy as could be. But, the fact that he could consider a proposal a line, even if to be a jackass, makes me question the sincerity of anything that might cross his lips.

But you aren't falling for a line like that.” No. No, I'm not. And as long as what I'm being handed feels like a line, I won't. And I will be proud of that. I might go on a few hundred more first or second dates or I might not. I might find 3 or more dates with the same guy or I might find the guy who, six months down the line, will still makes my every nerve kick into gear like Kevin Bacon on the set of Footloose. One of those guys might be my guy. Or he might not. Though I have to say, if someone comes along and makes Footloose things happen with my body parts, he's my guy.

What I am sure of is this...between now and the end of time, I will be happy, sad, alone, and lonely. I will laugh, love, smile, cry and mourn. I will be surrounded by love. I will love. One of these days, that might include the man who's meant to come along and complete my circle...with any luck we'll both be smart enough to recognize it when it's there as has happened for so many already. Until then though, I'm ok with the fact that I might judge harshly. It just means that I've surrounded myself with the best of the best. Should he happen along, that surely means that he's going to be the best of the best for me. I can wait and I can laugh about the insanity. I can cry because I feel lonely some days. I can celebrate that I don't need a person or status to complete me on other days. Until he comes along, I won't tell everyone I found the man of my dreams because he made me feel good for a few hours. I won't be 'in a relationship' and 'single' a few dozen times, in fact, though I've always been faithful, as far as Facebook is concerned, I've never been anything but single...if I'm going to tell the world about my relationship it's going to be the one to end all. I won't waste my “I love you's” on jerks who don't deserve them. I won't need other people to tell me that it's good or that it's not. When it's right, I'll know. When it happens, it will matter. When it happens, two people will celebrate what we are.

But you won't fall for a line like that.” No. I won't. You shouldn't be surprised..

Friday, February 17, 2012

Too Soon


At some point, there seems to have been a strange rule of life that has settled over most of us regarding the life and death of a freak show. 

If I understand the whole dynamic, it's perfectly acceptable to make fun of someone when they're alive, then it becomes a mortal sin for approximately six weeks after their death, before once again becoming acceptable and even...expected? “Too soon” has become a definable expression to every one of us. On some level we should all be appalled by that.

When Michael Jackson died, it was suddenly mortifying to suggest he was a child molester, but slowly the stigma lifted.

When Francesco Schettino wrecked a ship, murdered a few passengers, and “tripped into a life boat”, the jokes were 'too soon' for only a couple of days.

When Ted Kennedy met his end, bringing up his drunken cover-ups and general piggery was too soon because he perished before realizing his dream of national health care.

Now we are saying goodbye to Whitney Houston, who hasn't been relevant to anyone outside of her rehab people, suppliers, family, and comedians for, what? Two decades?

Did she have talent? Mercy, yes!

Was she a laughing stock? Absolutely!

Was anyone horrified by the jokes while she was alive? Nope.

BUT, now it's too soon. Too Soon. I'm not suggesting jokes should be made. A life was lost. It could be argued that this particular life has been lost for years, nevertheless, a life was lost and it's nothing to joke about. But joke people will. What I am suggesting is that people drop the shocked offense and recognize their own hypocrisy because cracking a joke is truly no less distasteful because your idea of 'too soon' is a few minutes, days, or weeks sooner than someone else's.

Recently, someone posted a joke about Whitney on facebook. As terrible as anyone thinks it makes me, I thought it was funny, but I didn't add anything to it. But the attacks the person took for it were absolutely appalling. People jumped to defend her as if this person had attacked their mothers. I posted a question asking simply if these people would defend a crackhead found dead in a dark alley in the bad part of town as strongly as they defended the crackhead with the pretty voice. I didn't add to the joke, or pick anyone out in particular, I just posed a question. Some people agreed with me, others attacked me, but one guy specifically is the reason I wrote this post. His level of assholeism was just funny. He actually took the time to email me...we've never met, spoken, or had any type of exchange prior to this. I'm just going to let his email and my response speak for themselves.

Nen Kelson
  • Hey there bonehead...no ,"Defending the crackhead with teh pretty voice) (that statement alone shows how fucking stupid you actually are) rather saying that anyone that thought the remark about Whitney's passing was actually in any way ,"Funny" is essentially a tasteless, thoughtlessness bubblehead...I'm guessing your a Republican too? lmao
(Names have been changed to protect the identity of the stupid. HAHA)
My response to him:

  • I think I'm supposed to be insulted, but I'm assuming you suffer a mental deficiency because nothing about what you said makes any sense. Please don't reproduce.

That was it. I thought, given the gibberish that was his email, that it was a fair response.

Dumb-dumb though, he blocked me from being able to see him, which was fine by me, then took it one step further and reported me to the social networking police. They were nice enough to send me a message telling me I was a bad girl and shouldn't talk to strangers and blah, blah, blah.

Really?