Putting Myself Out There

I rarely and only vaguely have written about my dating life for a multitude of reasons. My experience has been that if I so much as breathe the word dating, everyone feels the need to weigh in and tell me they would never ever ever date anyone if their husband died, or suggest a fling with a twenty year old, or to shake their head in disgust and say, “You’re not on one of those dating apps are you?” I have learned to button all of that up nice and tight because the less people know the less they can tell me how to manage this part of my life which for the record is very confusing.

Because I was raised with three older brothers and then lived day-in-day-out with Mark for 35 years, men have always been a big part of my daily life. When Mark died nearly all of those friends of his that we both knew slowly left, and while I love the many supportive women in my life, I miss the perspective of a guy. Mark was often a sounding board when I was wringing my hands over something, and when I’d ask him what I should do he’d say, “You just need to napalm that bridge and move on.” It was blunt but he was always in motion and had no time for inconsequential things in his life that were fixable by walking away.

Without the Mark guardrail in my life and being out of practice for four decades, I’m like a newborn LadyBaby when it comes to dating. I’m out in the world flailing on my own (which should be illegal) and wondering if I’m seeing what’s really there or what I hope is there. Is this guy attractive or have I lowered my standards? Is he funny funny or obnoxious funny? Is he one of those guys who thinks he knows everything or is amused and curious about life? I don’t even know anymore, and because I have over analyzed every single thing since Mark’s death, my current style is to jump in the deep end with my concrete shoes which is how I found myself happily agreeing to a Sunday afternoon lunch date. Prior to this meet up, I had many back and forths with this potential suitor via texting and talking. He was a landscaper which I swooned over. We could go to the garden center together!! He probably gets a discount!! He could fix the spot in my backyard where the grass died!! I bet he has a truck! He used to be a cook. A cook?? He could make dinner every night!! He lived on a farm. A farm?? I make my own granola and salad dressing like an old fashioned Midwestern pioneer lady!!! However, in one of our conversations he said something that caused my Brain Elf to wake from his nap, hook a red flag to the pole, and hand-over-hand start raising it, and I was like WILL YOU SIT BACK DOWN?? That’s not a RED flag you dope. That’s a CIRCUS flag which means fun fun fun. Why I bet he even has a pet monkey that rides a bicycle.

McDreamy lived forty minutes away and I offered to meet him in the town where he lived because I needed a little highway drive to think about how charming I was going to be. It was brutally hot that day and the sun was blazing in the driver’s side window. I realized that I had forgotten to put sunscreen on my neck so I popped the collar on my shirt to shield my delicate, Irish skin and my charm time got sidelined while I fretted over having to have another mole removed. What if that happened and I had another Frankenstein scar on my neck? Would it scare McDreamy away or would we be married by then and he would hold me captive on his farm until the public was ready to see me?

I got to the restaurant, did a quick gaze, and didn’t see him. I went to the hostess desk and said I was looking for someone and she immediately said, “Are you Kathleen?” McDreamy had told the hostess I was coming in and might ask his whereabouts. Oh my gosh! Farmers are so considerate!! She took me to his table which was in another room, I sat down, and we chatted over beer as he had ordered a couple of samplers. A few minutes later he said to me, “Do you mind if I fix your collar? It’s sticking up.” I must have given him some kind of look (the kind where my daughter says, “Mom, your face”) because he then said, “Or you can leave it up.” I explained that I had recently had a mole removed that left a big scar and yada, yada, yada about the sunscreen and flipped my collar back down.

After more of the getting to know you chatting and more beer tasting he said, “I love your hair. It’s very sexy,” and Brain Elf got up off of his recliner and snapped that red flag so hard I flinched. I laughed and said, “Oh my hair. People have lots of things to say about my hair.” And then he said, “I can’t wait to lay next to you and run my fingers through it.”

I gagged on my beer and it wasn’t a delicate *cough cough* lady gag, but the kind that had me bent under the table because it felt like it was going to come shooting out my nose. “Are you okay,” he asked and I was like FUCK NO I’M NOT OKAY!! I’VE KNOWN YOU TWENTY MINUTES. WHY WOULD YOU SAY SOMETHING LIKE THAT??? Later when I told a friend about it, after we discussed at length what would make a grown man pull out the kind of line a seventeen year old might say because he’d heard it in a movie once, she said, “Did he actually look at your hair? Like really look at it? Because it’s not exactly the kind that anyone could run their fingers through.” Which is true because I once had a fly get stuck in my hair and when I couldn’t unknot an exit ramp for it to get off I said, “Welp, I hope you’re happy now because this is where you live.” Then I had to wait for Mark to get home and fish it out which couldn’t come fast enough because that frantic fly buzzing made me think I was having a stroke.

McDreamy was just getting started. He told me how he acquired his farm (an inheritance when his mother died) and that she left him pretty financially secure. Then he asked, “How about you? You get some life insurance when your husband died?” By this time Brain Elf was screaming ABORT ABORT ABORT but I was like CALM DOWN I’VE GOT THIS. I slowly pulled the knife out of my heart, slammed the rest of my drink down, and asked why his last relationship ended. He said it was mostly due to sex. Ohhh for the love of god. He liked it and wanted it and his partner didn’t. My first inclination was to say, “That you ever got any sex is a goddamn miracle,” but I didn’t cuz what do I know about any of his baggage except I was a solid for Team Ex. “Those things can happen in long-term relationships,” I said. He helped himself to some fries off my plate and asked, “How about you and your husband? Were you still doing it at the end?” Small question. HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF FOREPLAY? Maybe you should start with the conversational kind and work your way from there. I leaned across the table and said, “My husband and I were very passionate people. We fought hard and we loved hard. I’m sure you can fill in the blanks.” His eyes got big and he said, “I want you to come see my farm as soon as we’re done.” I told him it was way too hot to be traipsing around a farm. “Oh not the farm but my house,” he said, “it’s air conditioned.”

So hopeful. So not going to happen. Ever.

We left the restaurant. I said I was going to check out the bookstore and he told me it had moved and offered to show me where it was now located. We walked inside and it had that wonderful bookstore smell, and I thought SO HELP ME, dude, if you say one word while we’re here and ruin this bookstore for me I will strangle you. We wandered in different directions. I bought two books. We left and he walked me back to my car. “I have the exact same car,” he said, and every man I don’t want to date drives a Honda Fit. He then asked me if I could drive him to where his car was parked. This was not some bustling city with a bunch of parking garages. This was a small college town so I knew he couldn’t be that far away.

I drove him hmmmm……half a block where he told me how much he couldn’t wait to see me again. Then he moved in for a kiss and I backed up so far that I’m pretty sure the door handle of my car is permanently indented in my back. He got out. Did a hi-ho cheerio wave. I smiled like I do when my doctor tells me it’s time for another colonoscopy.

That night I talked to my daughter and told her how bad this date was, how it shot to #1 on the Bad Date Chart. Then I told her one of the books I bought was about a group of nuns who get sent to live at a halfway house for recovering addicts. “It’s research,” I said, “because after today I’ve decided that I’m going to be a nun.” Maggie said, “Oh my god, Mom, you would make the worst nun,” which is mostly true. I drop ef bombs on the regular, I like trashy tv, I only serve people if I get some kind of discount in return, and they’d have to take my lipstick from my cold, dead hands. But like a lot of places that are hard up for help, I’m thinking the nuns have drastically lowered their standards and somebody like me doesn’t look so bad now. As we were ending our conversation Maggie said, “Well, Mom, you put yourself out there and that counts for a lot.” “While I appreciate that,” I said, “and there are many times I deserve an atta girl, this is not one of those times.”

The next day I had therapy where I told my therapist every offensive thing he said. I said I was going to text him and school him on appropriate first date protocol BECAUSE I WOULD BE DOING A PUBLIC SERVICE FOR EVERY UNATTACHED WOMAN OUT THERE. As my therapist tends to do, she said slow your roll there, girl, you don’t want to have this converation with him. I didn’t want to hear this. I wanted someone to have my back while I smashed the partiarchy one man at a time. Two different things, she said, and I KNEW THAT but I was on my high horse and she wasn’t hitching hers to my wagon which pissed me off.

That afternoon I begrudgingly took her advice, texted McDreamy, and said that I thought I was ready for dating but it turns out I’m just a sad, old, widow lady destined to be alone forever and that I wished him well. He texted back, “Okay.” Okay??? What do you mean okay? That’s it? You’re not going to plead your case or tell me how disappointed you are to know I wouldn’t be your Farmer Wife? What about the granola and salad dressing? Let me tell YOU something, Farmer in the Dell, I am worth far more than some generic, lame okay. Brain Elf, who’d had enough of my shenanigans, turned off the football game, set his beer down, wearily got up from his Man Cave, pointed his finger at me, and said STAY.

LadyBaby got put in the Dating Detention Center until she lawyers up. Send stationary, stamps, and ciggies. I think I’m going to be here awhile.

I’m the short reverent one.

.

,”

Spread the love

16 thoughts on “Putting Myself Out There”

  1. Oh honey, this is good. Sorry you had to live through it, but I had your back the whole way. What a moron. Initially, you made my heart skip several beats, but my heart sank along with you. Sometimes therapists might be right, but other times we just got to get things OUT THERE. Major hugs.

  2. Where in the ( cuss word) has common decency gone? I am glad you got out of that horrible situation okay. Also, trying to “”school” grown ass men on how to behave is a waste of your precious time. If they don’t know by now how to behave they never will. That guy was an insensitive flaming disgusting a hole. You on the other hand are brave.

  3. Oh man, this is awesome! What an ass. By the way, you write comedy as well as you write precious thoughts. Y

  4. Having a hard time to give a response to this one.
    I just finished watching a Lifetime Movie , so I was imagining all sorts of things that
    COULD have happened to you. You handled it well, but I am in shock over how crass
    And vulgar he was with his personal questions. I am happy you got 2 books out of your adventure. And the way you write is so funny that you make what you went through almost laughable. What a jerk he was !
    I think the fact that Mark has the Bar raised so high in every category, it will take a
    Very special person to even come close to any kind of good company.
    XO Judy & Tom

  5. This is so well written, and funny, and sad. I had a few similar experiences. On first dates, one guy wanted to tie me up Shibari style, another guy wanted to have a threesome with me, and another guy sat down next to me in a classy restaurant, and started massaging my knees. When I said, what are you doing, he said I’m a very touchy-feely person.
    And there were about 25 other extremely boring first dates with nothing in common, no physical, chemistry, and the men couldn’t afford me.
    Needless to say, I’ve decided to just keep on being this old, sad widow, who continues to long for my Prince charming husband and our wonderful 35 year marriage.

  6. Kath, I laughed my ass off while reading this. The irony of your humor’s origin being the tragedy of the circumstances is a pricey but outstanding feature of your writing. Despite the sadness you’ve been carrying over these five years, your satiric and imaginative expression in writing has soared to the highest. I don’t usually compare writing styles, but you’re darn close to David Sedaris-level humor. His is the only other “sensitively humorous” writing I can go through, tissues always at hand. And I have to add, of course, that Mark would find it hilarious that you could include the description of the date in the same piece with the fly caught in your witchy hair! Girl.

  7. THIS IS SO GOOD! What a dick! Agree with Ellen wholeheartedly…Sedaris-level humor! And the fly…..brilliant! Love, Nonie

  8. OMG. You hooked me at “newborn LadyBaby”, and I’m still laugh/crying! Thanks for taking one for the team!

  9. Kathy, welcome to my world! It’s brutal out there, isn’t it? My friends have told me for years I need to write a book about my dating experiences, because they can’t believe the 💩that’s happened to me! I’m sorry to say this is a lot of what’s out there, but the romantic in me is still looking for the one. Oh, and I was told NOT to think of becoming a nun back in high school so I have no backup plan. Hang in there and if you ever need to feel better about your dating life reach out and I’ll be happy to share my stories.
    Mary

  10. Kathy,

    I agree wholeheartedly with what Ellen wrote!
    The kaleidoscope of ways your love for Mark shines through the black hole of his absence is beautiful. I admire the ways you write raw, vulnerable, brilliant, and often hilarious hi jinx stories.Unfortunately there is a disproportionate ratio of idiots, jerks, and delusional crass a-holes but hang in there. You’re an authentic gem worthy of the dreamboat Mark is likely collaborating to send your way. ❤️‍🩹

  11. Yes to all of this!!! My sister, who is also happily single but would also love to have a well matched partner, sent your article to me and I’m reading from Italy while on a high school graduation gift trip for my 18 year old daughter. (Traveling with a child, even an adult child, is a trip…. not a vacation. Ha!)
    The advice column that is shared by others about dating is indeed awkward to listen to. Ranging from how high my standards are to where am I looking to would I be into this or that to you just need to blah blah or for me I found my person this way. None of it is asked for or needed, unless it is but usually not, and I’d rather talk about my dog or gardening or books I’m listening to or crafts I’m making or my budget or house project tools and strategies or anything that is currently existing in my life and bringing me joy.

    It’s also a bummer that often when someone single in my group of friends pairs up with a guy, that new guy is all the others want to talk or ask about. We are always more interesting than the relationship we’re in. Maybe I’m just a troll. Lol.

    Thank you for this refreshing read. It connects to my heart and my dating experiences over the last happily divorced eight years.

    P.S. Why is there not an APB out to men on how unwelcome and unacceptable the surprise attack kiss is?! Not cool. I’m a human with a brain. ASK ME.

  12. This one is hilarious and heartfelt. You are an excellent writer, Kathy. I think you are helping a lot of people.

Comments are closed.