"It was the perfect date," she declared. "We had so much in common. We talked for hours. But, he came late, so I think that's gonna mean a 'no' from me."
Has anyone said that, ever? At least, has anyone sane ever said that?
I saw an article about a former older single who opines that her friends are just being so stupidly picky. Like, they won't see a guy again who was late or didn't open the door for her or took her for dinner and not coffee, or vice versa.
Look, if a woman is complaining that her date was late, chances are the rest of the evening was a dud as well. She's just starting from the beginning.
I happen to be a punctual sort of person. Like, ridiculously punctual. I'm usually early and spend my time twiddling my thumbs. And Han is . . . not. For example, for the majority of our dates I would get a text about a half hour before the meeting time with an apologetic delay. It got to a point that I would put on my makeup first, scrub the kitchen, and only get dressed if I knew for sure he was en route.
Do I find this quirk sometimes exasperating? Yes. But was it a deal breaker? Well, no, obviously, because everything else was great. But if a date was late, and he was a jerk, I might have mentioned his tardiness on the list of his other failures as a human being.
And what is up with once older singles chucking their compatriots under the bus? Hello, you weren't exactly 21 when you got married, lady, so why are you turning on your own former demographic?
OK, I can obviously understand their betrayal, it's not that hard. Hurt people hurt people; after years of abuse, it's nice to have the "upper hand," so to speak, to become one of the married masses and talk with that "I got married because I did such-and-such" voice.
I've fallen into that trap too many times before to get snookered in. I didn't meet the right person until I was old. That's it. There was no grand internal reckoning, there was no sage I consulted, there was no sacrificial goat on a mountaintop with thunder and lightning.
Ergo, I cannot claim it was something I said or did that got me married to the right person. I'm just thank the Big Matchmaker in the Sky, and try not to be obnoxious to other people.
2 comments:
100%
The reason she may give might be coming late or being forgetful or something seemingly trivial. But, if she really liked him and could feel the vibes be liked her, She isn't turning him down. Sometimes you just feel it in your gut that this isn't for you, even if you can't pin down why or properly verbalize it. So you hyperfocus on something small.
And you are right, too many former older singles are so eager to prove they have now made it to the other side. I think it was George Eliot who said the sharpest comments to a spinster comes from those who just barely escaped the same fate.
The wonderful Eliot said that??? That's an excellent quote!
Yes—it was usually my gut but no one cared what my gut had to say.
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