Tag Archives: first date

First Date Surprises (Not the Good Kind)

I’m out on a first date with a nice Jewish boy. Works at a bank, speaks fondly of his parents, and is dressed in the standard crisp long-sleeved-button-down jewniform, just like our ancestors in the land of Egypt envisioned. Clean shaven, polite, no red flags waving wildly in the wind.

About 10 minutes into the date, he asks me if I’m religious. I laugh and reply no. Yes, I am Jewish and yes I appreciate and respect the cultural and historical aspects of Judaism, but I do not consider myself to be a religious person at all.

“Ok, good,” he replies. And then he rolls up the cuff of the shirt his Bubbe clearly picked out for him to revel an entire wrist-to-shoulder tattoo sleeve. Not just a tattoo, guys. Not a sweet tiny tribute to his overbearing but well-meaning mom, deceased Holocaust-surviving Zayde, or beloved childhood pet. A tattoo sleeve.

This thing was HUGE. And intricate. And wildly colorful. I’m talking enormous, bright red koi fish. So many koi fish. There is no circumstance in which this many koi fish should ever share this small a space. It’s just too much. I prefer my koi fish to be sparse and unobtrusive– you know, where you really have to search and be patient if you want to catch them swimming by in that indoor mall fountain.

The design had not one gap. It was a thorough sleeve of glaring, bright ink. Like this (but, you know– ON AN ARM):

gty_koi_mi_130728_16x9_992

My eyes grew wide. I don’t have the best game face.

Me: “Umm…oh! That’s…oh.”
Him: “I thought you said you weren’t religious.”
Me: “Right…”
Him: “I knew it. You ARE religious.”
Me: “No no no…not religious.”

Judgmental.

Last Night’s Date: Male vs. Female Reviews

Interestingly, the general FEMALE reaction to Last Night’s Date has been two enthusiastic thumbs up (the words “marry him or I will give up on life entirely” have been used in a not-at-all dramatic fashion), while the general MALE reaction has been wholly unimpressed.

I went to dinner with my friends Gabi and Adam last night. Gabi was intiaitlly not sure, but then decided she was on Team Prankster….Adam was wholeheartedly anti.

Then this morning I received an email from a friend in California, saying that everyone in LA (and by everyone, she pretty much just meant herself) was rooting for him. I forwarded this to Gabi and Adam to prove that people are on totally on Team Prankster. Adam stood firm.

adamemail

Slow clap video referenced in email: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZHI88infeU

He TOTALLY Gets Me

IMG_2007

That moment on a first date when you think you’re totally connecting with him…

Him: “I can’t get any work or writing done in my apartment.”
Me: “Same here! Totally. I can’t concentrate at all in my apartment.”
Him: “Exactly. It’s impossible.”
Me (certain we are on the exact same wavelength): “Right? Because I’ll just look up and see something and be like ‘Oh, I need to clean that.’ Or ‘Yikes, I should mail that bill’ Or ‘Why do I have nothing in my fridge?'”
Him: “Oh. I don’t do THAT. I just get distracted by more fun or interesting things to do.”
Me: “Oh.”
Him: “That’s some serious masochistic behavior.”
Me: “Is it?”
Him: “Yeah. You’re really beating yourself up.”
Me: “Alright, it’s not that bad.”
Him: “It sounds like you have an anxiety disorder.”

He hasn’t called.

The Groupon Guy

“Excuse me,” he said to the waiter, “I have a Groupon— is there a separate menu for that?”

And thus began our second date. I was already unsure about this guy after our first date (a quick after-work beer), but, thanks to my mother’s strict Two-Date Rule, I was giving him a second chance. The Two-Date Rule states that if you had an even semi-decent time on the first date, you must give the guy a second chance when he asks you out again, as people are typically not their true selves upon first meeting. This rule was born from the experience my mom had when she met my dad— complete and utter underwhelmment (yeah, I know— not a word. But it should be. And next to the word in the dictionary should be a picture of my mom’s face when my dad declared, within minutes of knowing her, “I could marry someone like you,” and she felt not even remotely the same way. My dad denies this story, but my mom insists it’s true, and I can totally picture it happening so, there you go. FACT.). Despite my dad’s lukewarm first impression, my parents went on to become the coolest couple I know. So, I figure the Two-Date Rule must have some legs, and I’ve been steadfastly following it for my entire dating career.

That being said, this rule has never once brought me success. Ever.

But fine. This guy was just “eh” on the first date, but he was pretty cute and seemingly normal, keeping in mind that my threshold for normal in the NYC dating scene is “He probably won’t murder me. Right away, at least.” What was the harm in letting him take me to dinner?

Oh, doe-eyed, innocent me. Don’t you know there is always harm to be had?

“Yes,” the waiter replied. “Let me go grab the Groupon menu.” My date looked at me, satisfied with himself, as if being privy to this special menu meant he was some kind of in-the-know VIP, rather than a raging cheapskate.

Now, time-out for a second, Zack Morris style. Let me just clarify that I have no problem with people using Groupons. I use them all the time. New York City is expensive, and dating is costly for men. I get that. But, I don’t know— maybe don’t use the Groupon so SOON in the dating process? Perhaps save it for date 4 or 5, when you’ve already made a good impression, and I’ll be more likely to see your Groupon usage as responsible, rather than sad. Or if you simply HAVE to use the Groupon on our first dinner date, maybe don’t wear that shit like a badge of honor? Maybe don’t state, as you’re asking me out, “I’m going to take you to this sushi place in your neighborhood because I have a GREAT Groupon deal there.” Maybe just say, “Hey, I know this sushi place in your neighborhood, want to try it?” and then discreetly let the restaurant know that you’re using a Groupon. Don’t proudly announce it like you deserve points for being so darn thrifty. No one here is impressed. Including the waiter, who I swear walked away with his head in his hands.

Furthermore, if you are going the Groupon route, at least choose a semi-decent restaurant. To be clear, Asian Station does not fall into that category. It is a brightly-lit hole in the Upper East Side wall, specializing in a combo of Chinese and Japanese food.  No no, not asian fusion, that upscale trend of cool, inventive asian-inspired cuisine. This was one of those places that straight up had a Chinese food menu and a completely separate Japanese food menu, because “Hey, guys, one-stop-Asian-shop over here!”

While we’re riding this time-out wave, allow me to provide a bit more context and background.  As mentioned above, my date made it very clear that he was taking me to this place SPECIFICALLY because he had a Groupon.  Ok, fine. No big deal. Then he asked if I eat sushi. I do not. I don’t eat seafood at all. I told him this, but, not wanting to seem difficult, I offered that I can always find things to eat in a sushi restaurant, I just might not be the easiest person to share with.

“Cool,” he said, not pausing for even a second to consider reevaluating the plan. Alright, so we’re going to my least favorite kind of restaurant, my options will be limited, and he’s using a Groupon. Not exactly on the most direct route to Impressivetown, USA.  But I’m openminded.

One last factor here— I wasn’t feeling well. I probably should have just cancelled, but I decided to plug through. It turns out I would wake up the next morning with a horrible case of strep throat, but as of the beginning of the date, I was just feeling slightly off.

Ok, time-in. Still with me? Great.

We’re back in the offensively bright, white-walls-with-no-decor, Chinese/Japanese, more-bang-for-your-buck establishment. The waiter returns with the Groupon menu and smiles at me, the undertones of which said, “I’m sorry, and may god have mercy on your soul.”

I perused the menu. There was not one non-seafood item on it. NOT. ONE.

“Sooo, what looks good to you?” my date asked, eyeing the menu excitedly.

“Um, I hate to be a pain, but…literally everything on this menu is seafood.”

He looked at me and back at the menu. “Hmmm….you don’t think you can expand your horizons for one night?”

Alright. Fuck you, man. No need to leap to the conclusion that I am not a horizon-expander. I have tried my entire life to enjoy seafood— I have tasted every damn thing the sea has to offer. For whatever reason, I am averse to it. It makes me sick. I don’t like the smell, the taste, the texture, the idea of any of it. But not for lack of trying! Asshole.

“This isn’t a matter of not being adventurous,” I replied politely, resisting the urge to kick him in the face. “Seafood makes me physically ill.”

I hoped he’d say something along the lines of, “Ok, just order off the regular menu then. No big deal.”

He did not.

“I’ll see if they can make an exception to the Groupon options,” he said with an “I got this, girl” wink. He explained the situation to the waiter, who said he would speak with the manager. At this point, all I wanted was a glass of wine. Sore throat be damned, I was not surviving this date without a drink.

He said he was going to order himself some saki and asked if I wanted any. “Thanks, but saki isn’t really my thing. I’ll have wine,” I replied. He looked at me, then looked down at the menu quizzically.

Him: “That’s not included in the Groupon price.”
Me: “Oh…”
Him: “Can you just get saki?”
Me: “I can’t stomach saki. I really only drink wine and beer. Occasional cocktail, but not straight alcohol.”
Him: “Yeah, those are not options…”

I waited for him to say “but it’s totally cool, get whatever you want.”

Nope.

Me: “Ok, I guess I’ll just have water then.”
Him: “You sure?”

No I’m not sure, you cheap douche canoe. In this moment, I need wine more than I need oxygen.

Me: “Yeah. I’m sure.”

The waiter came back and said that the manager had agreed to add orange sesame chicken to the Groupon menu. And once again, he apologized with his eyes. I started to wonder if HE was single….

“Perfect!” said my date. “She eats chicken. Thanks!” and, without even asking, committed me to a meal of fried Chinese food while in the beginning phases of fever.

I wish I could explain how absurdly over-sized this chicken dish was, how difficult it was to swallow with my ballooning throat, and how stupid I felt eating it. Imagine ordering three pints of gooey, oil-dripping, orange fried chicken from some cheap Chinese place around the corner, and dumping it all into a heaping mountain on your plate. This is perfect for a Sunday night alone on the couch, nursing a lingering hangover. It is less than ideal for a first dinner date, chilled with fever.

I begrudgingly picked at the food while counting the seconds until I could leave. “They sure did give you a lot of chicken!” my date exclaimed with ignorant cheeriness as he popped sushi rolls and shots of saki into his clueless, inconsiderate pie hole.

The date ended with my having to awkwardly dodge the attempts of a kiss, explaining that I wasn’t feeling well. “Also, I hate you,” I added silently.

I then entered my apartment and promptly vomited all over the bathroom floor.

And to be honest, I couldn’t think of a more fitting way to end the night.

cheap-guy

 

The Guy Who LARPed

“Well,” he said casually, sipping his beer, “I’m a writer. But I’m doing an anthropological study on LARPing. So right now, I’m in the research phase. Pretty much just LARPing full time.”

I’m sorry. WHAT?

It was the weirdest response I had ever gotten to the dependably benign introductory first-date question: “What do you do for a living?”

So when my date, Jason, answered with the above statement, I stared at him, briefly stuck in that awkward space where you’re not sure if you’re an idiot for not knowing what someone is talking about, or if what they’re talking about is completely obscure. I decided to lay my cards on the table, because I pretty much always assume the former, and I couldn’t even make an educated guess as to the definition of “LARPing” to try to play it off. So I asked the question that I now understand was a completely normal one to ask:

“Um….what is LARPing?”

He laughed. I was clearly an uncultured simpleton. And by uncultured simpleton, I mean regular human who does regular human things.

“You know, Live Action Role Play,” he said casually, as if that explained everything.

“I do not, in fact, know. No.” I replied. He rolled his eyes. Clearly my ignorance was driving this sophisticated LARPing connoisseur to the point of exasperation.

I don’t remember his exact answer to this question, but in the interest of making sure that we’re all on the same page, here is how Wikipedia (source of all FACTS) defines LARPing:

A live action role-playing game (LARP) is a form of role-playing game where the participants physically act out their characters’ actions. The players pursue goals within a fictional setting represented by the real world while interacting with each other in character…Event arrangers called gamemasters decide the setting and rules to be used and facilitate play.

Sooooo, in other words, this:

larpimgLarping_poster_by_cubeecardbored

larping-blogging-lessons2

“So, like…you get dressed up and put on plays every day?” I asked, struggling to understand and wishing I had drugs.

“Oh my god, no.” He reassured me. “It’s not a play.”

Oh. That was actually the part I was sort of on board with.

“When you’re LARPing, you’re not performing for an audience. You’re playing a role — a consistent role— in a made-up society.” He went on to explain that he had seen some LARPers LARPin’ away in Central Park one day and became curious. He looked into the art of LARPing, and the concept fascinated him. So he decided to study the LARP culture first-hand and write a book about it.

“Little did I know,” he explained, with an air of sophistication that was completely uncalled for given the topic of conversation, “that I would become enthralled with the world of LARPing and want to pursue it full time. I LARP almost every day now.”

I had to admit— this was weird, but a) I like weird and b) I was kind of intrigued. I was genuinely curious how one goes from average layperson to LARP-junkie so quickly. There must be a cool story here— was he given a powerful role in the LARP world? One that allowed him to explore and discover a side of himself he didn’t know existed? Did he get to live out heroic fantasies that he always wished he could in real life? Was there some kind of latent therapeutic and psychological component to all this?

“So what’s your part? Are you a lord? A duke? A prince? A knight?” I asked, getting more and more excited with each impressive-sounding role I conjured up, temporarily forgetting that he wasn’t actually any of those things in real life.

“Monster,” he said, with a straighter face than anyone should ever have while saying the word monster.

Oh.

“Well…not, like, a main monster,” he said, reassuringly.

Oh, ok. Phew. (I think? I don’t really know WHAT is happening at this point.)

“A sideline monster.”

Christ.

“Should, for any reason, the main monsters not be able to fulfill their monster duty, I would sub in.”

“Wow, that sounds like a lot of pressure,” I stated, deadpan.

“I know, right?” he said, 100% earnest.

So you can guess how this story ends– he paid the check, we said goodnight, and I decided he was hands-down the most random weirdo I had encountered in NYC yet.

And then we went out again two days later.

Too Tan For This Date

When I go on vacation, I take my tan very seriously. I work hard to achieve that perfect healthy sun-kissed glow, ignoring the fact that “healthy sun-kissed” is in fact an oxymoron, particularly when melanoma runs in your family. As I’ve gotten older, I have, of course, become much more responsible about this practice, because I understand that a super-dark tan looks far less sexy on a 32-year-old than it does on a college student. I also understand that when I lay out for hours roasting in the sun, I am slowly poisoning myself. I’ve actually always understood this, but recently I’ve become less comfortable with the idea of a shorter life span in the name of temporary beauty. It’s called maturity, people.

All that being said, I fucked up in Mexico. I forgot that Mexican sun is 60 times stronger and more orange than normal sun (FACT), and I got too much of it. I’m too tan. I am WAY. TOO. TAN.

Unfortunately, I had scheduled a first date for the first night I was back in NYC (last night).  But I was feeling super self-conscious about my tan. I polled my friends and they all agreed that no, “too tan” is not an acceptable reason for a functioning human being in society to cancel a date. I begged to differ, so in a desperate attempt for back-up, I texted my friend Gabi, who had been in Mexico with me and knew exactly how too-tan I was. But even she agreed I had to still go:

unnamed-9

So it was settled. I sent a pre-emptive warning text that went as follows: “I feel it’s necessary to warn you, Kevin, that I have never been this tan in my life. I am too tan. No one should be this tan.” The following exchange then ensued:

unnamed-10

Ok. Phew. Settled. I felt much better that at least he knew I knew I was too tan. That was much better than him sitting there thinking, “I bet she thinks she looks great, but she is too old to be this tan. How sad for her. And society. And the world, really.”

I did what I could with makeup to calm the orangey glow but it was no use. I sighed, accepted my fate as the too-tan 30-something, and left for the date.

When I arrived at the bar, he took one long look at me and, genuinely confused and 100% serious said, “I don’t understand. You’re not even tan.”

Oh NO. HE. DIDN’T. 

“I’m Not a Rapist, I Just Play One On Stage and TOTALLY Get Him”

As I read Sarah Silverman’s autobiography on the beach, and digest the constant references to rape jokes that come with that endeavor, I am reminded of a story from my own life. Stay with me— this is not a story about getting raped OR a series of violent rape jokes (not really my jam, people). It’s just about a time I went on a date with a guy who is probably now a rapist. Wait, scratch that— probably STILL IS a rapist. (Covering all my bases for when this story gets fact-checked).

Years ago, my mother set me up on a date with the son of her friend’s friend’s friend’s friend. I know. This story should start and end with “My mother set me up,” because nobody, after that offer, should reply with anything other than, “Nope, no way, Mom. I love and respect you, but you’re 35 years my elder and, match-makingly speaking, have no fucking clue what you’re talking about.” But I didn’t, I said “Ok, sure” probably because I love a good story but also probably because I hate myself.

My first text exchange with this guy went as follows:

Me: “So, I hear you’re an actor.”

Him: “I am indeed. Are you in the arts as well?”

Me (a Kindergarten teacher at the time): “Yes, if cleaning up children’s play doh and their occasional loss of bladder control is ‘art.’ Which I feel like it is, because what ISN’T art these days, am I right?”

Him: (silence)

We weren’t off to a great start.

“Don’t meet this guy!” yelled the part of me that knows anything about anything, but…come on, that part of me is super boring and also kind of depressed.

So I went to Pete’s Tavern, a “classic New York institution” according to this NYC born-and-raised chap. Note: It’s a semi-decent burger place in Union Square full of old people. But points for being RIGHT off the 6 train (extra bonus: I fucking LOVE old people).

My first thought upon meeting this gentleman was “Meh, you’re not that cute.” But that was ok, because it was the dead of winter, so neither was I. (I’m only cute in May and September. Not May THROUGH September, May AND September. I have two solid months. Any other time, I’m either too pale or too sweaty. Thank you, Judaism.). So, reconciling that his so-so looks were quite appropriately matched with my own (you caught me off season, you lucky bastard), I sat down with him at the bar and we ordered a couple drinks.

“So, what’s it like being an actor?” I asked him, because I’m the most original person on the planet and he had certainly never been presented with such a thought-provoking query as this.

Him: “It’s great. I’m really enjoying this role I’m currently playing. I really connect to it.”

Me: “That’s great, what’s the role?” I asked, as if I would have heard of the role in this surely off-off-off-nope-take-one-more-turn-OFF-broadway play.

Him: “He’s a rapist.”

Oh.

Me: “So…you’re a method actor, then?” I said, trying to diffuse my own discomfort and perhaps get him to chill with the I-take-myself-very-seriously slash I-might-legit-be-a-rapist vibe he was giving off.

Him: “Yes, actually. You know your stuff!”

Oh ok. I might get raped tonight.

Me: “Ok, let’s start over. Hi, I’m Emily. Are you a rapist?”

He finally laughed. In a non-rapey way. Score!

Him: “I’m obviously not a rapist.”

I considered pointing out that he should be less cavalier with his use of the word “obviously,” but I decided not to roll the piss-him-off-and-you-might-get-raped dice.

Him: “I’m just really enjoying the role because it lets me explore a side of myself I didn’t know was there.”

Me: “Like, the rape side?”

Him: (unamused)

I chugged my drink.

Me: “Sorry, I’ll stop joking and let you actually talk, because I’m sure you have an explanation for being in touch with your rapist side that doesn’t actually involve you being a rapist. So, go on…”

Him: “I’m a really good guy. Just a nice jewish boy who always treats women with the utmost respect. And I do, I really respect women.”

“Cool,” I thought, as I cursed myself for not carrying pepper spray. Or a rifle.  Because I just wasn’t buying it. It was something about the creepy way he said “I respect women,” that made me think he respected them less in a I-would-never-harm-you way and more in a I’ll-eat-your-body-parts-AFTER-I-kill-you-rather-than-WHILE-I-kill-you kind of way.  Which, I’ll admit, has it’s own gentlemanly charm. It’s just not MY cup of tea.

He continued to explain.

Him: “So like, because of how I was raised, and because I am a moral person in general, it would never occur to me to ever harm a woman in any way, shape or form, much less RAPE one. But my character, he is, for all intents and purposes, a good guy— he just has this dark part inside of him that gets activated when he sees a young woman, alone and vulnerable, and he just can’t help himself. And ever since I started playing this character, now when I see a woman alone, like on a subway platform late at night, I think to myself ‘I would never rape this woman, but I totally SEE how someone could.’ Like, I can actually think the thoughts a rapist would be thinking in THIS moment, and I GET it, you know?”

I didn’t know. And I’m someone who knows some pretty fucked up shit. The words “Don’t worry— I don’t want to KILL myself, I just desperately want to be dead” have earnestly and sincerely come out of my mouth during a darker period of my life, so you have to be all sorts of fucked in the head to get a scare out of me.  Mission accomplished, weirdo.

I just kind of stared at him.

Him: “I feel like I’ve lost you. I thought you’d get it.”

“No no no, I TOTALLY get it,” I said, because I was in my mid-twenties and had a desperate need to be liked. Even by a rapist.

“Cool,” he said. And we continued to get more drinks and talk for another hour. What did we talk about, you ask? I have no idea. My concentration was fully focused on how many witnesses I had in the room at all times. If I felt like there were less than 10 reliable ones, I excused myself to go to the bathroom and didn’t come out until I was sure the place was more packed with people who would come to my rescue when this psycho tried to knife me.

The night ended anti-climactically.  He said he was going to do some traveling this month so he might be out of touch for a while, and I said no worries, which was code for “I wonder how many people you’ll rape while traveling.”

I’m not sure if there’s a lesson here (or a point, even). I’m not sure why I think there needs to be. Maybe I just don’t want you to feel like you’ve wasted your time? I hate when my time is wasted.

So, how bout, don’t date guys with a rapey vibe, especially the ones who admit to it? I feel like that’s a good, solid takeaway.

You’re welcome, moms everywhere.

53-confused-face