Whenever I change my
mind and decide to try and start dating again, I am always always sorry. Not
because the other person is a bad date, but because my experiences end up
reminding me that I’m the one who is and Friday nights at home are really better than any night out.
That look (on polite women's faces it’s more a flicker) of disappointment as soon as we meet is disheartening, but the false promises of “I’ll call you” or patronizing declarations of "you're so sweet" are more cruel than actual cruelness would be.
“You don’t look like you sound on the phone” is the most brutal and direct it’s ever gotten and even that’s still mild. Better to be slapped with a hard truth than caressed with a soft lie, the saying goes...or somewhere along those lines.
I’m done. I say this to myself a lot when I get home from a bad date, especially a bad blind date. But this time I mean it. I had only tried again anyway because I am so desperate to forget someone I really do like, who besides being a totally inappropriate and unattainable person to feel this way about is so far outside my league she might as well live at the edge of the universe.
It’s funny. I’ve had
one-sided crushes before and been just fine. And I’ve had many bad dates before and been fine
afterwards, too. In the past, I could rationalize away the pain because we didn’t
have much in common (important things like values and philosophies regarding love and fidelity) anyway.
For the first time
in my life, though, books and music just aren’t enough to fill those little
holes inside that insist on getting bigger and won't be plugged up with my favorite novels and songs.
That visage of someone vague but
eventual I used to hope I’d meet someday, the one I’d cook and be there for and
snuggle with on the couch watching movies after a long day, is fading more and more each year. The hope you can have in your 20s of falling in love and growing old with someone shines a lot brighter than it does in your 40s.







