She minces no words.

Dont Mince Words


Archive for the ‘Dating’


EX Marks the Spot 1

Posted on January 05, 2004 by Marna

I’m going to be balls-out bold and state my usual Harry Met Sally position: Ex’s are ex’s for a reason. If I wanted to be your buddy, we’d probably still be dating. Yes, I’m great, get over it. Move on with your life. Send me a Christmas card and tell me all about it.

R___, this blog’s for you. Or I should say, you set me off New Year’s Day, and this is an open appeal to all men to stop waxing nostalgic about their past loves. R_____ emailed me New Year’s Day to inform me that when my name is Googled, Bunger School of Technology comes up. I consider this a lame excuse to instigate contact and kind of boarders on stalk-y, especially when he didn’t even say “happy new year.” When I replied to R___’s email and asked him if he Googled all his ex-girlfriends, his response was “Hey can I help if you are so unforgettable ala [sic] Nat King Cole.” Oh yeah? I bet your girlfriend of two years would like to know that. Stop calling. Stop emailing me numerous times a month. Please go love your girlfriend.

Last month I cut off my ex, the one that departed in May to join the circus. Until November, there were daily emails and/or IMs spattered with phone calls. This excessive contact was tolerable except 90 percent of the conversation was actually his monologue. I felt sorry for him—he was in the circus and lonely. But, surely there was a circus monkey that could listen to him talk about himself? This was more like a nuisance than a friendship. Please go enjoy the greatest show on earth.

Guys, the backdoor is locked and the light is off. Don’t come around. I’ve been too nice in the past, but I’ve just enacted a Zero Tolerance policy. Love the one you are with. Look forward, not backward. You’ve made your bed, and I’m no longer lying in it.

Deal with it.

Is she really going out with him? 0

Posted on November 26, 2003 by Marna

The first time I went to the bathroom to change my tampon, I noticed there was a window. I pulled back the curtain. The window was painted shut and there were security bars. Nope, there was no easy way of escaping this date. I’d have to hang-in there until closing time.

Chris found me online four days prior. His fascination with my writing and my red hair inspired him to inquire if I was still available. This led to a string of phone conversations and e-mails. “This one is different,” I told myself. He can communicate. He is compassionate. He knows what he wants. I was never so excited to meet someone for a first date. He had potential.

He suggested I come see his band perform on Saturday night at a bar in Monrovia, which is a community somewhere in the Valley near those mountains I can see for the smog. My red flag went up when he admitted he was a musician. Luckily, he doesn’t do it for-profit and has a day job as a sales person.

I accepted the invitation and made the trek to the inland empire. One hour, forty-five minutes and 30 miles later, I was parking at his apartment complex. When I walked up, the inside courtyard pool was a graveyard for leaves, almost filtering the backlighting. He stood in his door, smiling, and waited for me as I approached.

When I entered his apartment, I remembered all the questions I forgot to ask on the phone and in email. Questions I normally don’t have to ask the 28-33 year-olds I usually date.

“Welcome. Glad you made it. Here, let me give you the tour,” Chris said.

My five-second visual assessment had already delivered run-now-run results. From the multi-colored brown shag carpet to the brass and glass bookshelf adorned with trophies on the top shelf, I was not in the apartment of a successful, 43 year-old salesperson. Forgotten question: Do you own or rent?

It was a one-bedroom. Not much to see: galley kitchen, bathroom, bedroom with a down comforter. I sat down on the futon and he brought me a glass of water. I saw the ashtray on the coffee table. Forgotten question: Do you smoke?

“I had a great time at the birthday party today. My grandson was so excited,” Chris said.

“Grandson? I forgot to ask if you had been married before. Wow. How old is your son and where is your wife?” I asked.

“He’s 19 and my grandson just turned four. I never married the mother and didn’t know I had a son until they came to me for money. I only knew her for two weeks,” he answered.

I could almost forgive his living situation, but this was too much for me. I’d gone from dating boys who watch the Simpson’s and listen to Blink182 to dating NPR-listening grandpas with illegitimate children. Forgotten questions: Do you have children? Were the kids planned/do you use birth control? Were you married?

The first date now shifted to a “duty date.” This was like interviewing for a job I’d never take just to have the practice. I was there and I was going to make the most of it. I needed to shave my legs and color my hair…date or no date.

He insisted on driving to the bar. We got into his cracked-windshield pickup truck. The service engine soon light was on the whole time.

The bar was less than two miles from his apartment. It probably met Webster’s definition of dive: duck-taped naugahide bar stools, pool tables, electronic darts, and a neon chalkboard announcing that Sunday’s NASCAR special was $2.50, 20-ounce Budweiser. Music was not the primary function at this venue. I didn’t get the sense that musical tastes were very discriminating judging from the drunks at the bar. My nephew could play his Fisher-Price xylophone and deliver titillating entertainment to this audience.

But, as duty dates go, things could have been a lot worse. I had a seat at the groupie girlfriends table. I had a beer. I had musical entertainment. I had a lead singer date that didn’t actually have to interact with me. This permitted me to check my cell phone messages and write notes while the 40- and 50-something groupie girls went to the back to play darts.

Duty turned into agony when I realized I’d be on the barstool for five and one-half hours. I was being held hostage and force fed “Brown Eyed Girl” and a helping of “People are Strange” for good measure. I went to the bathroom every two hours to swap out tampons and to stretch my legs.

While I was on one of my final bathroom runs, the guys played a Joe Jackson-esque version of “Is she really going out with him.” I chuckled as I flushed and finished the song….’Cause if my eyes don’t deceive me, There’s something going wrong around here.’ When I came out, Chris was walking to the table. His Axl Rose bandana looked moist. He removed his prescription sunglasses and let them dangle from his neck on a leash.

“So, I have to ask. Is there a spark? Will we have a second date?” he said, panting like a pound puppy begging to be taken home.

I hate this part of dating. “I had a great time listening to you guys. You are such a talented singer. But, I’m not feeling it, I’m sorry.” He looked like he needed further explanation, so I added, “I have to be honest, I usually date much younger people. Your admission that you are a grandfather made me realize that I don’t think I’m ready for this,” I added. I know it was a lame excuse, but I had to pick something he couldn’t change or talk me out of.

I made the escape home in less than 30 minutes. The building alley cat came into my apartment and slept in between my legs. Until I can remember to ask the right questions for dates, I guess I’ll be the lady with the cat.

Stone age romeo 0

Posted on October 10, 2003 by Marna

He was bent over the pool table when I first noticed him…a nice ad for jeans. I turned and resumed drinking my beer with Anne. We had one mission that evening and that was to get her pickled before her redeye flight out of LAX to go back east. Anne was sticking to plan when a bar band began a string of recent-rock cover tunes. We giggled watching the 20-something band groupies in front whistle and ya-hoo while their buddies strummed along. You could tell they were minutes away from ordering shots. Anne and I rolled our eyes and giggled in an I-remember-those-days kind of way.

It was right about that time that I could tell the drunkest kid out of the bunch was going to dance. Ripe for white-boy mocking, I did the white man dance on my barstool. Thumbs up. Shoulders gyrating. Head bobbing. I was cracking myself up when Mr. Nice Ass/I mean Nice Jeans walked up to our table.

Oh fabulous.

He said something to us. Of course, I couldn’t hear because the Counting Crows’ “Mr. Jones” was too loud. When I got closer, I discovered his name was Don.

“I love redheads. If I could, I’d kiss every freckle on your body right now,” he said

All the blood rushed to my head and I took a big sip of my beer and sighed. Now I remember. I’ve been internet dating too long. No two week string of leading emails culminating in a Photoshop-ed picture of my e-paramour who has oh-so-delicately cropped out his ex-girlfriend. Nope, I was in real time now and I was freaking out.

When you are a 37-year old, divorced female, the Internet provides you with an efficient channel of dating possibilities that you can turn on or off in between running to Costco for economy packs of AA’s. I’m at that age where I’ve learned that you don’t meet men in church (name a couple you know that met in church). The courtesy dates your married friends arrange are wonderful Monday morning water cooler talk. I have never wanted to date anyone from the office. And the guys I’ve met volunteering have been gay. Because I’ve been tied to the web business since 1996, I’ve always felt it was perfectly normal to use the internet as a recruitment tool. And I’m old and lazy and know what it’s like out there.

I’ve had limited success with the internet. My most recent boyfriend answered a personal ad I placed on Craig’s list. Eight months later, he left me to join Ringling Brothers. Seriously. He left me to join the fucking circus. Needless to say, I’ve curbed my addiction to internet dating since then.

Tonight I’m reminded that meeting guys the old-fashioned way, in a bar, is kind of refreshing. I’m giggling and flipping my hair. There’s no keyboard in the way. I’m smiling and they know it.

Anne slid off her barstool and staggered to the bar to grab the tab. I grabbed Don’s ass, gave it a squeeze, and I kissed him on his cheek while passing him my card.

“Email me sometime,” I told him.

Some habits are hard to break.

  • About Marna

    Marna’s writing career started as a Pentagon intern. Early exposure to $500 toilet seat press releases made her appreciate creative nonfiction. Now she has more than 25 years of senior-level marketing and communications success working with Fortune 100 companies, government, nonprofits, small businesses, startups, and agencies.

    Stats: 378 Posts, 132 Comments

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