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.
Date 7.1: Absence doesn’t make the heart grow fonder.
Editor's Note: I wrote a longer post, recapping the details of the date, earlier today. But then I realized I had already written about it, and I edited the post and the headline. Sorry for the mistake! (Also, now a couple of my date numbers don't match the URLs. Oh well.)
After O. and I went on our blind date, he gave me a ride home. (What a nice guy!) When he dropped me off, we talked about seeing each other again. It hadn't been a great date, but our mutual friend had warned me that he took time to warm up, and I was prepared to give it some time. Two or three weeks later, right before Thanksgiving, I got an email from him:
Date: 11/28/09
Subject: Greetings from HawaiiHi N.,
Just a quick note to say "Hi". Sorry for being out of touch. This trip has been crazy. The windsurfing conditions have been unreal - so good that we decided to extend the trip another week.
How have you been? Doing anything fun for the long weekend?
O.
Oh! He'd been out of town! He hadn't mentioned that. I sent him a friendly but short email the next day, asking if he had mahi-mahi and all the trimmings for Thanksgiving dinner. A week and a half later, he sent me a really nice email, in which I could start to see a glimpse of what my friend saw in him.
But nearly a month and a half had passed since our first date, and he was only available to meet up on weeknights during December. My weeknights were booked with Christmas parties and work. I could have--and probably should have--cleared my schedule one night to meet him. But I still felt burdened by the effort I was putting in, especially when his responses were so tepid.
I think, ultimately, that the blind-date setting was a bad way for us to meet. Maybe I'll run into him at one of our mutual friend's events. I hope so. I'd like to get to know him better, but dating just didn't feel like the way to do that.
Email 20, Date 8: A twist of fate
After one of my shows recently, a cute guy came up as I was taking down the mics to buy a CD. As I crouched down to give it to him, I noticed he had a really nice, genuine smile. He looked right into my eyes as we were talking and said he really enjoyed the show. I introduced myself. "I'm X.," he said, and walked away. "I like your glasses," I called, trying to extend the conversation. "I like your playing," he replied, over one shoulder, and walked away.
Another missed opportunity, I thought. Two days later, I found two emails waiting for me on OKCupid (in my profile, I say that I'm looking for a partner-in-crime and that I'm not averse to getting into a little trouble now and again):
Date: Feb. 22, 2010
Subject: trouble makerhey, so i'm down for a bit of trouble now and again. well, not robbing 7-11's or anything like that but at least so good natured fun. you seem fun and cute and love music- all awesome things.
i hope you're enjoying this gorgeous sunny day before the rain returns.
A great first email, right? Followed by:
Date: Feb. 23, 2010 – 11:31am
Subject: so n.I swear i am not stalking you! but i serendipitously happened to go out last night with some friends and there you were up on the stage! sounding awesome if i do say so.
we spoke briefly afterwards when i bought a cd and you commented on my glasses. I'm listening to it now as i sit inside watching the rain and debating a cup of coffee.
i don't believe in fate or predestination but it is quite odd that i emailed you yesterday out of the blue then ran into you last night. of course this town is pretty small also.
anyway, perhaps you aren't creeped out and will write me back. if not, alas.
I was so excited! A second chance! And from his profile, he'd done some really interesting things in his life: filmmaking, building a cabin. There were so many things I wanted to ask about. I broke one of my cardinal rules and took a minute or two at work to write back:
Date: Feb. 24
Subject: so n.This is kind of awesome.
I don't know that I believe in fate, but it is nice to think that (good) things happen for a (good) reason.
I'd ask you lots of questions about all the interesting things in your profile, but I feel like we've already gotten the first awkward conversation out of the way, so why not just meet up? Are you around this weekend? Maybe Saturday or Sunday afternoon?
He responded the next day, Thursday, suggesting that we wait until closer to the weekend to figure out when and where to meet up. I found that a little curious (how much closer to the weekend did we need to me?), but he did follow up with several great suggestions of places to meet: all small, interesting, and quirky.
We met up for pie on Sunday afternoon, about two hours before I had a dinner reservation with friends. I got there first, and settled down with a ginger lemonade and the New York Times. He came in, and we went up to get ourselves some pie. I noticed he was missing a tooth and wondered if it would be rude to ask how that happened.
He seemed a bit distracted, and I could detect a faint odor--like he'd been running around all day. Turns out he had. "I've been going since 6:30 a.m.," he said. He and his brother had become obsessed with soccer, and they watched a match at an Irish bar that morning.
"Oh, you're into soccer?" I said, excited to have something to contribute. I told him about this story I had been working on, in which we traced the geopolitical factors (type of government, former colonizing power, whether a country is a member of OPEC) that correlate with winning national soccer teams. It's one of my favorite stories that I've worked on. I was thrilled to find someone I could talk to about it.
My enthusiasm was met with a blank stare. He made a polite comment about the piece, then the conversation came to a halt. I asked him about something else in his profile. He answered the question, I commented on it, hoping to engage him in further conversation, and...nothing.
It was one of those maddening conversations between two genuinely interesting people that just doesn't go anywhere. We had zero chemistry. "Tant pis," I thought to myself as I walked to meet my friends for dinner. "Next!"
Postscript: X. texted me the next day to see if I'd like to hang out again. I said I had decided to take some time off from dating for a bit, and told him it was nice meeting him. Maybe I'll see him around. If I knew an earthier, artier girl, I would fix her up with him.
Editor's Note: Due to an accounting error, I goofed on the date number when I did the URL for this page.
Maybe I should move…
SF Weekly recently ran an article on how difficult it is for ladies in SF to find guys to date (spoiler alert: not even the pickup artists they hired could help). Among the other details I already knew, there was this shocking bit of math:
As of 2008, San Francisco had a total population of 808,976, including 93,820 single men and 83,840 single women aged 20 to 40.
Based on the best estimates by the Department of Public Health, there are around 65,000 gay men and about 27,000 lesbians living in San Francisco. Assuming that many of them are single (remember Proposition 8?), we calculated that 36 percent of single men in this city are gay and 18 percent of single women are lesbians.
After factoring in that information, there are 60,045 single heterosexual men and 68,749 single heterosexual women in the age range we examined.
There are roughly 8,700 more single straight women in San Francisco than single straight dudes. No wonder it's so hard to find guys to date.
Also, ladies, I hear Alaska and Colorado have a lot of guys. Maybe about 8,800 of you should move there, because I don't want to have to quit my band. Just an idea.
My foray into data-driven dating
Online dating hasn't been going so well for me. This is brought into dramatic relief when my friends sign up for the same sites I'm on and immediately get winks, messages, and the seemingly inevitable dates as my profile languishes in obscurity.
Initially, I decided to take my profile down out of frustration. I gave up on online dating. But then I read that I'm in the Zone of Greatness. And I thought, "OK, ONE more chance." But this time, I'm going to do it differently.
Ever since I heard of that book Marry Him by Lori Gottlieb, I've been troubled by one thing that she says: that things we think are quirky and endearing are actually really annoying to others. I think my online dating profile could be full of these potential landmine.
So this time, I'm going to try to make my profile not be a dating minefield. I'm not leaving it to chance or my instincts. I'm doing it by the numbers.
OK Trends, the number-crunching official blog of OK Cupid, has posted a wealth of data-driven dating advice. And I'm going to follow it as closely as I can.
- Successful profile photos. Smile, look sexy, and yeah, maybe show the cleavage.
- What to say in a first message. Starting it off with "How's it going" gets more responses than "hello."
- How long to make that first message. The data says that a 360-word or longer email will scare a dude off.
I'm going to try to track down more and put this all to the test. I'll let you know how it goes. First step: changing my username. My current username is boring and speaks to a hobby. My new username speaks to a trait and also implies that I am a happy person. I think this is a good move.
Also: Matt, from Online Dating Paradox, is doing a 300 emails in 30 days online dating challenge. If I can get my new profile up, I might join him. But even if I don't, I'll be cheering him on!
I’m too old for online dating, according to online dating sites
OKTrends, the fascinating official blog for OKCupid, recently did a post on dating preference and age. In large part, it confirmed my long-held suspicion: I joined online dating sites too late. Dudes rule me out because of my age (36). Although the male-female ratio for my age group should work in my favor, the "male fixation on youth" does not. Though I fit in a 32-year-old's allowable date range, men mostly contact women in the lower end of their allowable date range, but they also contact women much younger than that. Those 32-year-olds? They email women as young as 18 (say it with me: ew!).
The post continues to depress women in their mid-30s, until then, the author turns it all around to show why women my age are EXACTLY who younger guys should be dating. Yeah, I am squarely in the middle of the Zone of Greatness.
The post goes on to analyze factors guys should care about. Oddly enough, they're also things guys with younger girlfriends often complain about. Dump those girls! Date chicks in their 30s! We're self-confident! We're happy! We not squeamish about sex! We're OK with dating dudes if it won't lead to marriage (96% of 36-year-olds are OK with it vs. 62% of 18-year-olds)!
Also, we're just as hot as those frigid, fragile 20-somethings:
Many of you are probably scoffing at the idea that many 35 year-olds are as attractive as many 25 year-olds, but there are social factors at work that you might not consider as you go through life making judgments. Most importantly: nationwide, thirtysomethings are much more likely to be married and therefore much more likely to have stopped optimizing their attractiveness. So the typical 35 year-old woman you see out in the world isn't representative of the single 35 year-olds who are still dating and looking good.
I look good! My single friends look good! Y'all don't know what you're missing. Read the complete post. It's so interesting.
Dropping it like it’s hot, or how I learned to love my booty
My friend Sonia just blogged about Booty Pop. Apparently, no longer just a plotline on Laverne & Shirley, there really are butt enhancers (and underwear! All in one! Awesome!). I find it kind of horrifying that these tiny, twig-like girls are padding themselves back into more feminine body shapes with underwear, bras, and, if need be, silicone. Just rock the body you've got, ladies.
See, I have a booty. I have a booty despite the fact that I work out, I eat healthy, and yeah, I wear a size 0, 2, or 4 (depending on the store). My booty is there no matter how great or poor shape I'm in. I used to be self-conscious about it. I always thought of it like my little pooch of a belly, something I had had since puberty and, though I should try to lose it, I was never going to, short of spending eight hours a day for the rest of my life working out with Jillian Michaels. Slowly, I started to notice that guys I dated, um, appreciated it, but I didn't really think anything of it. Just because a guy likes a girl's body part doesn't mean it's a good one. It means it's there and available.
My life changed when my friend Mary taught me how to drop it like it's hot.
Dropping it like it's hot is an incredibly empowering move. Your booty is out there. You need to like it. You need to own it. You need to be proud of every curve--even those dimples of cellulite. You know why? Because after you drop it down low, you are going to pick it up slow, and you are going to be sticking it way the heck out. (Picking it up slow also helps you keep your balance.) When you come back up, you know that everyone is going to be looking at your ass, partially because you just slapped your hands against the ground to call attention to the move, and you need to own that moment. You need to want their eyes to go there. Make them linger.
Dropping it like it's hot about 500 times in one night made me realize: I have a pretty nice ass. (Also, dropping it like it's hot kills your quads. Stretch before you go to bed.) It was so empowering to realize that I had this hot-girl feature that I never realized I had. And it was right behind me the whole time.
The point is: Ladies, find what's sexy about the body you have, and then ROCK IT! Forget this padding stuff. Just get the rolly on your arm and drink Chandon.
You can learn it too! Here's a British dude offering a very good, though long-winded, explanation:
Note: I was going to try to find an uncensored version of the Snoop Dog video, but then I thought it was super funny to have the censored one.
Apologies to those of you who have commented
I'm supposed to get notified if you're a first-time commenter, so I can approve your comment. But for some reason, the notification isn't working. I'm looking into it.
For those of you who missed her comment in the delay, Naomi updated us on the awesome Craigslist sugar daddy dude. So great.
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.

