A missed opportunity
My time has not been my own lately. My job is unnecessarily demanding. I spend many evenings working late because of other people's mistakes or attending "required fun" events where I have to buy my own drinks. (I'm sorry, but if you're going to require your staff to attend a company chest-thumping event, the company should pick up the first round for employees.) Add to that that my band wants to record a CD, an enormously time- and labor-intensive process, so we've scheduled more practices in which we sit around talking about wanting to record a CD instead of practicing.
It's been excruciatingly frustrating. I haven't seen as much of my friends as I'd like, and I haven't had time to meet any boys. Or talk to the ones I have met, such as R., the cute surfer dude, who I called by the wrong name.
I actually ran into him at the bar one night more than a month ago. He seemed genuinely excited to see me. We chatted for a bit, and I said, "Hey, I wanted to apologize. I think I called you the wrong name the last time I saw you."
"Really?" he asked. "What did you call me?"
"I can't remember," I lied. "All I remember is that as soon as it came out of my mouth, I thought, 'I did not just say R.'"
He laughed. "I didn't even notice."
We hung out for a bit, some girl handed him her number, which felt weird, he went out for a smoke, and I suddenly became insanely tired. I walked outside, and said, "Hey, I think I'm heading home." We hugged goodbye, and I split, cursing myself for my chicken-shittedness.
Thus shamed, I finally figured out my line. I would stop by the bar randomly and say, "Hey, maybe we should intentionally meet up for a beer sometime." The only problem was "the stop by the bar" part. I haven't had a free Monday, the one night he is usually there, for weeks. When my plans this past Monday fell through, I finally got my chance!
I walked in, and he was at the bar, along with my band's current guitar player, A.. Perfect! I gave an enthusiastic hello, and R. greeted me a little awkwardly. There was an empty stool between him and A., but there was something about his body language that made me think he didn't want me there. I took the stool anyway and inched it closer to A. That felt a little less tense.
The bartender pushed his beer toward me. "Try this," he said. I did. It was a light-bodied porter-style beer. It was good. "R. made it," he told me. We all chatted for a minute about the beer.
Then sure enough, a few minutes after I arrived, a cute brunette showed up. R. immediately pulled out a bottle of his newly made beer. "This is for you," he said, handing it to her. They looked like they were on a date. Tant pis.
The great thing about happy hour at that bar is that everyone at the bar will join in on a conversation. We started talking about stinky colognes people wore in high school and everyone was laughing. R. laughed at a few of my jokes, and I saw the girl he was with unintentionally give me the evil eye. Oh well. I might be hilarious in barroom conversations, but she's got him. Good for them. He's a nice guy. He's probably better off with a girl his own age, anyway. And I need to act faster.
Mastering the art of self-sabotage
This month, I was looking forward to my band's regular gig even more than usual. See, last month, my bandmate, the hot surfer dude (who, it turns out, graduated college 10 years after I did), and I closed out the bar, which is always a fun thing to do on a Monday night. R., the surfer, is a regular there, so I was hoping I'd get to flirt with him again. I don't really think that we're a good fit, dating-wise, but ooh boy, I sure want to kiss him.
He was there, sitting at the bar with another surfer type. I saw him as I went to pour myself a beer, but he wasn't looking up. On my way back, I caught his eye. "Hey, N.," he said. "Hey, Matt," I replied, and walked backstage.
I talked to him for a second at the set break, but he was gone by the time we finished. "That was nice of R. to come. Did he leave already?" my bandmate asked.
"Oh no!!!" I said, doubling over from embarrassment. My friends asked what I was talking about. "R.!! I called him Matt!"
"You can fix that," the bartender said. "Just say Matt was your first boyfriend. He'll be bummed, though."
"Why?"
"He really enjoyed talking with you last month," he told me. "He really enjoyed talking with you."
I don't know if it's bad luck or karma or something in the universe wanting me to stay single, but during the occasional periods when I have good boy luck, it's immediately followed by some stupendous act of self-sabotage. You know, like calling a really nice guy who I genuinely enjoy hanging out with and definitely want to smooch by the wrong name.
Even worse, I did it again. My friend K. invited me to see her boyfriend, D., and a couple of other friends spin. She sent me the invitation, and I said, "Oh, I didn't know you knew B." It turns out she and D. were thinking about trying to fix me and B. up. It turns out I had a small crush on B. when I met him briefly about ten years ago. He, really, is exactly the kind of guy I should be dating.
The night of the show, my friend J. and I went out for rum drinks at a pirate-themed bar. After two exceedingly stiff drinks, I was feeling pretty good: buzzed enough to dance, sober enough to not make too much of a fool of myself. We went to the show, we ordered two more drinks, J. left early, and as I walked back in, wondering whether to stay or go, I passed B., who K. had introduced me to earlier.
"Hey," I said, touching his arm to get his attention, which I thought was a smooth move. "Have you seen K. and D.?"
"They're all the way up in the front," he said.
"Hmmm. My friend just left, and I'm trying to decide if I want to make my way all the way up there," I said. And then we started talking. It was one of those fun first conversations when there are no awkward pauses and you learn so much about each other in a short amount of time.
Maybe it wasn't such a short amount of time. At one point, D. came up and told B. that it was his turn to spin, but D. could do the set if he wanted. B. said sure.
It was loud. So loud that there was no chance of interrupting each other because when one of us would start speaking, we'd have to move our mouth to the other person's ear in that pleasantly forced-intimate way. We talked about country music and our shared admiration of the Nashville hit machine. There aren't many guys in San Francisco like that.
It ended when he had to go to the bathroom and I had to get water. After I found K. and the glow of the conversation wore off, I realized something. I had been cursing like a sailor the entire time. Eff! <=(This is how I usually curse.)
It feels like it's been so long since I've met guys who I like and who seem potentially interested in me. And it's so frustrating that I'm so woefully out of practice that I keep shooting myself in the foot instead of making a decent first impression. Argh.
Winning the quiz part of Quiz Dates and the guy who wanted to knife Seal
My friend Kate has been the real trailblazer in this latest adventure in gonzo dating. About the same time that we signed up for Crazy Blind Dates, she suggested that we sign up for Quiz Dates, which is basically a combination of pub trivia and speed dating.
The event was last week at a bar near where I work, in the Financial District. When I got there, they gave me a name tag, handed me a scorecard with all the guys' names on it, told me where my table was, and informed me of the "girl" drink special: pinot for $4. I had an IPA. The check-in table was chock-full of gum and mints, which I thought was a clever touch.
Kate was the next on my team to arrive, and then the third girl, L. Each table has six people: three guys (all on one team) and three girls (all on one team). You have one answer sheet per round, and both teams have to work together to answer the questions. After each round, the guys rotate to the next table and the girls stay.
Before the first round even started, we had to pick team names (mine was the Somali Pirettes), so we were able to chat with the first guys, St., N., and S., for a good amount of time. All three were really nice, friendly, smart guys. We aced the first round, with Scott unapologetically admitting that he knew all four Olympic gymnastics events that men, but not women, compete in. Well done.
After that, it went faster. Basically, with each round, the conversation went like this:
- Introductions, shaking of hands, dudes sit down
- Have you ever done this before? If yes, then ask when and where. If no, then move on to the next question.
- Have you ever done pub trivia before? If no, then conversation fizzles out and attention is directed towards someone who answered yes. If yes, then move on to the next question.
- What's your specialty? Variations on this question, such as "Are you good?" or "What are you good at?" are also acceptable.
- Awkward small talk until the round begins.
The room was loud, and so it was hard to really get to know anyone. One feature of Quiz Dates is that any guys who are overly competitive immediately reveal their true colors. I hate guys who are overly competitive. I love guys who are somewhat competitive. There's something deeply attractive about a guy who's willing to fight for you (plural, as in "the couple"). There's something deeply repulsive about a guy who's only willing to fight for himself.
My competitive side definitely came out. I INSISTED that the 1999 film about a prison based on a Stephen King story was "Shawshank Redemption," despite one guy's insistence that it was the "Green Mile." (His reasoning was faulty; he said that "Shawshank" was based on a true story.) I finally relented when Kate reminded meĀ that the theme was "Green." (And I said to the guy, "You're totally right; Shawshank came earlier" to acknowledge my stubbornness and his partial wrong-ness.)
There were some interesting characters. J. refused to tell us all the answer to a bonus question, even though we all knew it and the right answer only got you a chance in a raffle for a canvas bag. We were convinced that two guys who had known each other since they played Little League together in the midwest were actually a gay couple. N. pulled out his iPhone to check an answer, and I put down the pen, refusing to make the change (though allowing anyone else to). Cheaters never win.
P. worked in web marketing and specialized in SEO, so I started talking to him about that. Only he thought I didn't know anything about it (yo, I do), so he talked to me as if I was an idiot. He also dissed writers and editors who "just don't get SEO," and said that he was glad that he was a consultant now so that people had to listen to him. I, in turn, wrote "D-bag" next to his name on my scorecard.
L. even ran into a coworker who she wasn't expecting to see, which would have been awkward except that he seemed like a really nice guy. He helped us win the music round, and we pulled into first place (for the chicks) when I was perhaps the only one in the room who correctly identified "Your Momma Don't Dance and Your Daddy Don't Rock 'n' Roll" as being by Poison. You can take the girl out of New Jersey...
Kate and I could taste victory. L. was into winning, but I was just about foaming at the mouth at that point. I'm not ashamed to admit it. (Well, not now. I was a little embarrassed at the time.) I got a bit nervous seeing the guys who were at our table for the last round. R. and P. seemed really nice (P. was British, say no more), but their teammate...
Before he even sat down, C. said, "I was a theater arts major." "Oh really, I couldn't tell," I said, eying his white suit, black collared shirt, and white summer fedora. He immediately picked up the pen, with a theater arts flourish, and took charge of the scorecard. My palms started sweating. I did not want to lose, but I also did not want to be the chick who went crazy because she didn't want to lose at pub trivia.
We did OK on the answers. I wasn't feeling confident, so when the quizmasterbegan repeating the questions, I tried to listen intently. But C., noticing, perhaps, that the attention of the table was on something other than him, started telling a story that is basically this:
I was working as an usher at a concert venue. While walking backstage, I turned a corner and ran right into Seal, who I didn't recognize. [Note the potential gap in logic: He's working an event, but he doesn't have any idea what the performer looks like.] Seal is momentarily shocked, I antagonize him, he gets upset and says something like, "Who the hell are you?" I pull out my keys, unlock a door that he doesn't have access to, and say, "I'm the guy with the keys."
Fascinating, eh? Apparently he found out it was Seal (and who Seal was) the next week when he heard two security guards talking about it.
We all then said that we were surprised that Seal would act like a jerk, and also that we didn't believe Heidi Klum would marry a jerk because she seems like a nice person. C. insisted that he is well known for being a jerk. "EVERYBODY knows he's a jerk. EVERYONE hates him!" he said. "In fact, he was such a jerk, that if I saw him, I would totally have punched him."
"You wouldn't have punched him," Kate said.
"No, I would have," said C., getting more and more worked up. "In fact, if I had had a knife -- wait, I did have a knife. If I wasn't at work, if I was at a bar or something where I couldn't get fired, I totally would have knifed him."
We still won for the girls' team. And L. won the bag for the bonus question, no thanks to J. No love connections, though.
The wild, wild world of online dating
I recently handed in my dating site review article. I totally went down the rabbit hole researching this piece, trying to find sites that would work (the original assignment was online video dating) and spending way too much time. I'm going to post notes from some of my experiences soon, but as a teaser, here are all the sites I looked at with a couple of quick notes. It's a wild world out there.
One note, my editor asked me to rate the dates I went on, if possible. It wasn't. One thing I now know about myself: I am even more wildly unpopular with guys online than I am in person. Seriously. It's demoralizing.
Free Sites
- OKCupid: I liked this one!
- Plentyoffish: Looks like it was designed in the early 90s. I haven't dug too deeply into it.
- DowntoEarth: Match.com-lite with community policing of, well, everything.
- MakeFriendsOnline: I signed up for this, but didn't really spend much time on it.
- Canoodle: A profile aggregator. Most of the profiles I saw were from BeNaughty, so BeWarned.
- 2busy2date: I didn't sign up for this, but the main benefit is that the profile is allegedly shorter. One headline read "Tired of Being Along." Apparently, he was too busy to read his headline a second time.
- OmniDate: This is a virtual dating site, like SecondLife or something (I've never actually used SecondLife, I'm just guessing). You pick an avatar and go on a date with someone else's avatar, communicating through IMs that appear as speech bubbles. No one asked me out, so I couldn't check this out. (See previous note about being wildly unpopular.)
Video Speed Dating Sites
- WooMe: An assault on the senses, but fun
- SpeedDate: Cool idea, but after trying WooMe, it was tame to the point of boring
Other Video Dating Sites
- VDateOnline: Looks like it was designed in the mid-90s, but borrows the "video introduction" concept from the 80s. You remember that scene in Singles, right? Here's my video (I did it in one take, can you tell?).
- WebDate: This is where I made the mistake of joining a video chat room (basically an IM chat, but you can click to see different members users' web cams) at 11 pm. All I can say is, I don't know how that one guy managed to hold his webcam so steady -- and get such a closeup shot -- while clearly using his other hand for a more strenuous application.
- True: Just added video chat rooms, but I was too scarred from my WebDate experience to check it out. Plus, it's a paid site and they're getting sued by former customers for unethical business practices.
- DatingonDemand: A service from Comcast where you submit a video, they post it to Video on Demand, and when you find someone you like, you, well you look at other people's videos. There's no way to actually contact anyone. FAIL. [Added this after original post.]
Location-Based Dating Sites
- Skout: The social network for Skout employees, some people in the Philippines, and some people in Europe. I would consider using this if I could keep my location more private and if it attracted more users.
- MeetMoi: Neat service, but not executed as well as Skout. Plus, it's got that annoying earnestness of dating sites. (Come on, I've had such bad luck with dating that I'm going online. I want my sites to be my cheerleaders, or at least fun to use.)
Dating iPhone Apps
- Crush or Flush: Basically Hot or Not plus interaction. I joined a chat and posted something...AND IT POSTED MY PHONE NUMBER. I don't know if it posted my phone number to me but my username to everyone else, but I was so freaked out, I haven't opened it up again.
- Dating DNA: You can't really use the app until you answer the more than 300 questions on their website. The app tells you that before you log in, but if you try to login anyway, it kicks you out as if it had just crashed. Useless.
- Hot or Not: Basically Crush or Flush.
- WhosHere: Location-based dating app. The apps seem waaaaaaay more creepy than the websites, for some reason.
- Match2Blue: Location-based dating app. See previous note.
- BreakkUp: No, I don't understand why there are two k's either. I barely looked at this one.
NSFW: Or at least, that's what I discovered when I pulled up their home pages. Seriously, even the home pages are NSFW. I'm not making these live links because I don't want to attract spam.
- Fling.com
- OnlineBootyCall
- LavaLife (this homepage is safe for work)
DNA-Matching Sites
- GenePartner: Send them your spit, they'll tell you what HLA profiles you match best with. No, I don't know what that means, either. Wired ran a good piece on it -- I heart the geeky headline.
- ScientificMatch: This one had the not-gonna-leave-anything-to-chance trifecta: DNA matching, personal values matching, AND a background check. Their Valentine's special offered half off their $995 lifetime membership (maybe the matches aren't so perfect after all). The #1 benefit listed under "The 6 Benefits of Online Dating" on their site: "Chances are increased that you'll love the natural body fragrance of your matches." And #4: "Women have a much lower chance of cheating in their exclusive relationships." There was no mention of men's likelihood to cheat.
Niche Dating Sites
- TheAtlasphere: For Objectivists/Ayn Rand fans. New York magazine did an awesome story on this recently. I can't make it any funnier than they did.
- GreenFriends: Vegetarian dating site.
- DarwinDating: For BPs (beautiful people, doy) only. God forbid anyone mess up that gene pool with, oh I don't know, brains or personality.
- TrueAcceptance: For people with mental health issues.
- AgeMatch: For intergenerational dating. That is, cougars and men looking for trophy wives.
- Group dating: There are two sites, geared toward younger people who don't want the pressure of a one-on-one date. Ignighter (get it?) and Mixtt.
Start Your Own Dating Site
- SkaDate: Software + services.
- There are others, but I can't find them in my notes. I think I stopped writing them down when I realized this wouldn't make a good sidebar.
If any of these links are broken, shoot me an email or leave a comment and I'll fix 'em.
The Better You Look, the More Creepy Guys Hit on You
At the risk of sounding vain, when I look good, I often know I look good. Although sometimes, I am utterly clueless about it. I'm still not sure if it's a self-fulfilling prophecy -- that when someone knows they look good, they project self-confidence, which is attractive, making them come across as looking good -- or whether it's just being honest with oneself. Either way, it seems to work.
As I got ready for my friend KP's birthday bash last Friday night, I knew I was looking good. I finally figured out how to wear two cute things from my wardrobe (my jacket still had the tags on it from a year before). My hair was perfectly flippy. I felt confident.
So when I got to the bar and saw that there were a ton of unaccompanied guys, I was thrilled. I was there to hang out with my friends, don't get me wrong, but I do need practice talking to boys. This seemed like the perfect opportunity.
I forgot, however, about the perverse Murphy's Law of meeting people: when you look good, only creepy guys seem to notice. So, when a floppy-haired guy in a blazer (with pocket square!) and jeans crashed the party and started talking to KP and me, I really shouldn't have been surprised.
I couldn't tell if his slightly slurred speech was because he was drunk or because he was trying to come across as sauve, but KP kicked him to the curb when she said, "Who are you and what are you doing at my birthday party?" His half-hearted offers of buying us tequila shots retracted, he sheepishly went back to the main bar upstairs. Yet he still retained a slight swagger, the way only d-bags really can.
But of course, fueled by some more liquid courage, he returned later to chat up Sonia and me. The encounter doesn't really merit a play-by-play. It's more deserving of a bulleted list.
- He offers to buy us shots.
- We say we're not doing shots.
- He says we're missing out and that "we don't understand the art of doing shots." (Let the record show that he insulted us first.)
- He brings up that he's from Texas for the first time.
- He says we're all going to do tequila shots.
- I say that's an obvious choice.
- He suggests scotch.
- I say it's criminal to do shots of scotch. But I'll drink bourbon.
- After much back and forth, he buys us shots of Maker's, because he's from Texas and he grew up on bourbon.
- We all drink them. Sonia does her first-ever bourbon shot.
- He says he didn't think we'd actually do them in a way that I think is genuinely intended to convey respect for the fact we did do them but actually conveys a bit of derision because he still thinks we're the kind of girls who don't do shots. Which we're not, but come on, we're not in college anymore. Since when is it bad for girls to appreciate liquor?
- He says he's from Texas, but his family is from Scotland, so he wants to buy us scotch and sodas.
- We politely decline.
- He insists, saying that the bar has a scotch made by his family over in Scotland.
- Our friend D. tells us she can give us a ride home if we leave soon.
- We politely decline the scotch and sodas.
- He buys them anyway.
- We take two sips of them, nod in agreement when he points out the peaty flavor of the scotch, then apologize for not finishing them because our ride is leaving.
- We leave.
Why do I bother getting dolled up if these are the interactions I'm going to have?
