It All Started with the World’s Ugliest T-Shirt

IMAG0195_BURST004Last Tuesday as I got ready for work, I pulled on my new turquoise reading program tee and examined myself in the mirror. “This shirt is so fucking ugly,” I mumbled to myself.  We have a youth summer reading program this summer at all of the library branches and as part of the program we were given t-shirts with a squirrel reading a stack of books.  I suppose it is meant to inspire to children to read but I hate it.  It reminds me of a t-shirt a heavy older woman would wear. (Go ahead and give me shit about this. I don’t give a fuck.  The only adult women I see wearing shirts with cartoon characters on them are very heavy and/or old.) I would never voluntarily wear such a shirt.

When I entered the living room my nieces and best childhood friends had a grand old time teasing me about said shirt.  I was well aware of how stupid I looked but I had to wear the shirt at some point.  I went to my second day of work at my newest branch. It was business as usual aside from the fact that I kept remembering at random moments, mostly while talking to male patrons, that I was wearing that ugly t-shirt.

In the afternoon a cute guy came into the library dressed in a suit.  He was on his way to a job interview and was using the computer to send out another resume for a job.  He asked me for help and went over occasionally to answer a question for him.  He reminded me of a much taller version of Pretty Boy.  He had a nice smile and flirted with me every time he beckoned me over to help him.

When he was finished he came over to my desk and thanked me for helping him. We talked for a few minutes when he paused and asked, “Do you know how to tie a tie?” I glanced at his tie and realized he had it on backwards.  I laughed and told him it wasn’t in my job description.  I paused for a moment then asked him to come to me.  He untied his tie. I reached up and adjusted his tie, sliding the back of my hands down his chest as I did so.  He stared down at me and looked up at him. “Do you want a single or a double?” I asked. “Which ever you think looks best,” he said smiling.  I tied his tie then patted his chest. “All done,” I announced.

He looked down into my eyes and at that very moment I remembered I was still wearing that stupid fucking shirt. I met his gaze and he said, “You are really pretty.” I blushed looked down at my shirt and replied, “Yeah, with my sexy squirrel shirt.

I must have caught him off guard because as he started to laugh some spit shot out of his mouth and hit my face.  I looked down and wiped my face off.  He took a step back and so did I. He was embarrassed and I was embarrassed. He thanked me again and left.  It went from a bad porn plot to awkward in about one second.

Call me crazy but I think there should be a date before body fluids are exchanged.

Update: He did come back into the library.  He still seemed a little uncomfortable because of our last encounter but I still like looking at him.  Maybe we’ll have another moment.

Answering My Own Questions

I was tagged for this little game by a blogger friend last week.  The rules were that you had to answer eleven questions the person who tagged you asked and then create eleven questions of my own. One of my readers then inquired “I’m wondering if you got asked your eleven questions, what would be your answers?” I decided it would be easy enough to oblige him.

My Eleven Questions:

If you could have any super power what would it be? I always said if I could have one super power I would want the ability to make people disappear.  I wouldn’t want people to die.  I would just want them to go away and I would also have the ability to bring them back when I was less annoyed or sad or whatever reason I had for making them disappear in the first place. Now I think I would rather have the ability to understand what people really want from me.  I always see why I think they need me but that doesn’t always work very well for me.

Dogs or Cats? Cats and FUCK YOU!!!!!

What is the worst pick up line you’ve ever heard? When I was in Reno I had a drunk guy walk up to me and ask me if I washed my pants in Windex. I said no and he said, “That’s funny because I can see myself in them.”  A close second was at a bar in Washington.  Every time I went up to the bar to order a drink a dude sitting on a stool would say something like, “I wish you would cut it out” or “Please stop. You’re killing me.” After my fourth trip to the counter he put his hand on my arm and said “You just have to knock that off.” “What am I doing exactly?” I asked pretty agitated.  “Stop being so beautiful.” I rolled my eyes but thanked him and sent my ex to get our drinks for the rest of the night.

Beer or Wine? Beer

What is one thing that makes a person undateable? I dislike when people make definitive statements about anything.  I think everyone should be confident in their expression but don’t assume everyone agrees with you. If you can’t own your opinion then I find that very unattractive.

Bacon or Sausage? Bacon for eating.

What is the worst show on television? I think there are so many horrible shows on television.  I don’t watch much t.v. but my friend watches a ton of reality shows. I don’t like those shows at all. I feel like they are destroying the art of scripted television.

Challenger or Mustang? I would love to have a Challenger, new or old.

If you could become a member of the opposite sex for one day, would you? I absolutely would not.

Why? I love having a vagina.  I love having sex with men. I love their bodies.  I am glad I am a girl and that I get to enjoy men the way I do. I also love getting to wear pretty flowery things.

What would you do in your new body? If I had no choice and just woke up male.  I would stay in and jack off.  What their orgasm feels like would be the only thing I was interested in.

Look at You Living

well-look-at-you-living-an-f3359a80-sz320x320I have spent the better part of my forty years on this planet single.  I didn’t date until I was a senior in high school. I got pregnant and decided after a few years that dating and single parenting didn’t really work for me.   I had a child and no financial help.  Meeting the emotional and financial needs of my child left me pretty drained in every way imaginable.  I worked and spent time with my child and did little else.  For thirteen years I didn’t date and I didn’t have sex.

So for more than thirty years of my life I have been single. I’ve only dated three men for longer than a year. Two of them, in their respective spots on my timeline, I would have gladly let stay for much longer than they had.  I would have been more than content to let either of them stay indefinitely. Sadly I didn’t have much say in the matter. I really cared about one and truly loved the other in spite of the tiny indications that something wasn’t fitting together the way it should.

Those relationships, the ones we really want to work out, the ones we can feel slipping away before they actually fall apart have a way of making us want to fight for something that isn’t what it should be.  We choose to go on feeling the way we do about someone who is fading away.  We choose to battle against the inevitable.

When you fight so hard for something we often have harder time when it those relationships end. Expending so much energy leaves you weak and often ill prepared for the additional emotional anguish you experience from a partners absence.  Instead of accepting what has happened you tend to try to hold on a little longer.  You try to maintain a friendship or some sort of physical relationship in the hopes that you can retain some sense of a relationship with someone who doesn’t feel the two of you are meant to be together.

By clinging to an unhappy situation you are closing yourself off to the potential of something new and good but that is often what we do.  We hold on to our misery. It is the new emotion we associate with someone who, at some point, made us happy.  It destroys everything about that person that brought us joy.  We condition ourselves to fight for what we want and can’t seem to stop fighting for it even when it is no longer good for us.

When a relationship ends it is important to let that happen in its own time and not struggle with the pieces as they crumble.  We need to learn to stop fighting for things that won’t fulfill us.  When we do this we are really just holding on to our pain. We need to let go and move forward.  We need to allow ourselves distance from the pain.

Breakups can be devastating.  You just want to hide and wallow and overanalyze everything.  We want someone to blame and typically blame ourselves but the truth is it just didn’t work out the way we wanted it to and we probably saw it coming.  It’s okay to fight for a relationship you are in but once it’s ended you have to stop fighting.  You have to love yourself enough to know that once it’s over you just have an opportunity to find something better.

25 Things about Me: This is 40 Edition

In honor of my 40th birthday, which is today,  I decided to do an updated “Things about Me” post (ever evolving and growing as I am). So… I would like to briefly interrupt my continued posts, Sexting for Dummies (It’ll be back Monday) and share where my head is on this, my milestone birthday.Invite Cover

  1. I am completely cool and comfortable with the fact that I am now 40.
  2. My son assured me I wouldn’t be old until I was 45.
  3. My ex told me I wouldn’t be old until I was 50.
  4. I have always felt like I was 24.
  5. I rather be told I am funny or smart than I am pretty.  (I love being told I am pretty too, though).
  6. I still like younger men.
  7. I want a dog.
  8. Do 120+ crunches every day.
  9. I run three miles and walk at least three.
  10. I try to do yoga every day.
  11. I’ve started eating meat occasionally.
  12. If I stay here I may be single forever.
  13. I haven’t had sex in 10 months.
  14. I really miss Portland.
  15. I am looking for my own place.  A real place.
  16. I love my job but I need more hours.
  17. I would really like to start dating again but I haven’t met one viable candidate.
  18. I had pregnancy scare last September.
  19. I have no desire to have another child.
  20. A 73 year old patron at my work has a crush on me.
  21. That grosses me out.
  22. I’ve decided I really don’t like the last two guys I dated.
  23. I love making people laugh.
  24. I need a vacation.
  25. I haven’t peaked yet.

Bonus Fact!!!! I have guest post up over at Black Box Warnings today! You should go check it out, too.

No, Your Internet Boyfriend is not Your Boyfriend

fightI was sitting with a friend the other day while she was watching one of those horrible train wreck talk shows.  One of the “You are not the father!” variety.  I, personally, would rather set my face on fire than watch folks from the shallow end of the gene pool discuss their very private (and humiliating) problems publically. This of course will likely be the sole highlight of their lives and that I find exceedingly sad and pathetic but different strokes for different folks.  I was stuck watching a group of woman discussing prison dating sites and how wonderfully in love they were with the men they had met. They were all waiting or praying for the day when their thief/rapist/murder true love would be released from prison so they could be together at long last.

let meAs colossally stupid and naïve as I found these women it got me thinking about internet relationships in general.  It got me thinking about the men in the blogosphere who try to con women into committing to someone they have never met.  It got me thinking about “catfish.”  I am cynical about online dating anyway.  Although I am a pretty optimistic woman I don’t trust anyone who would try to woo a woman (or man) into an online relationship.  Dating via the internet is a strange enough idea to me but having an online boyfriend/girlfriend is just about the dumbest fucking thing I could ever fathom.

catfishI understand that online relationships are a great way for the socially awkward, devious and incredulous to exploit one another’s loneliness. It can be a pretty lucrative racket if you could look yourself in the mirror whilst being a complete douchebag.

The thing that gets me about it is that people will openly discuss these situations like they are real relationships.  If you meet someone online, someone you may never meet in real life and will never move forward with, you are not in a relationship.  This person is not your significant other.  Odds are they have about five hundred other “relationships” going at the same time.  Odds are they have a real life and a real boyfriend/girlfriend/husband/wife and are preying on your naiveté.  These situations are perfect opportunities for deceit.

I know women who have online relationships and discuss them as though they have a real boyfriend and an honest to goodness relationship with said individual.  Listening to these stories is embarrassing to me so I don’t understand how someone could convince themselves that this is totally real.

boyfriend-arm-pillowWhat it all boils down to is poor self-esteem and undervaluing what you deserve.  If this scenario were a real relationship them you would be together. No amount of self-delusion could justify the situation you are in. people who love each other and want to be together find a way to do so.  You are in no way shape or form in a relationship.  You are talking to someone online who has a use for you.  It may be ego. It may be financial. But it isn’t a relationship.

HappyBlogiversaryAnd don’t forget about my Annual Blogiversary Contest and your opportunity to win some really cool prizes.  You can find out all the details here.  I look forward to seeing what you come up with.  Good luck!

One Woman’s Theory

In a recent post I discussed dealing with your partners’ exes.  Although I don’t advocate engaging women who have issue with you just because you have a bed mate in common it did cause me to ponder why some women have such a hard time with their exes moving on.

buI can’t say that I have dealt with every breakup I have ever had very well.  I have to, varying degrees, suffered through some pretty painful splits.  The most painful are always the ones you didn’t see coming.  Like most people, when the decision to end a relationship rests in the hands of someone else I typically have a harder time dealing with it.  Those breakups are always the most painful.  The few months that follow tend to be pretty difficult.

bu1I have never, as an adult, never attacked the women who filled the vacancy my absence left in an exes’ life.  I have been hurt and sometimes lashed out against my former partner.  Typically this has more to do with my ego and personal disappointment than any real pain my former partner’s new relationship has caused me.  If I haven’t resolved my feelings I can be an asshole.  I try not to be but sometimes my emotions get the better of me.

What I have never done,(okay maybe I did once but that is for another post) is intentionally engage or antagonize anyone currently involved in any ex-lovers’ life.  Even if it did hurt me or I was curious I refuse to let anyone who isn’t relevant to my present or future, make me sweat (or show my ass).   Dwelling on any pain or anxiety you may feel is just counter-productive to actually moving forward.  I have never seen the benefit of prolonging my misery.

bu2That being said, I can understand how someone who has unresolved questions or feelings about relationship that didn’t end as a result of mutual agreement could want to lash out.  Those feelings of anger or hurt may seem to be more effective when directed at an ex’s new partner.  They may be more vulnerable to manipulation. Your partner clearly doesn’t care.  They ended the relationship, they have a wall up.  They may be perceived as immune to your pain or attempts to cause them misery.  They don’t care but that doesn’t mean you can’t hurt them or make things more difficult by attacking and potentially driving away someone else in their life.

bu3Although these irrational attacks on “the other woman” may seem to be born of pure jealousy maybe sometimes they are just a more desperate attempt to hurt their ex-lover by making their new relationship more difficult.  They are attempting to manipulate someone who may not be impervious to their attacks.  It is still stupid.  It is still ineffective to attack someone who has nothing to do with why you are unhappy and suffering. That seems like it may be the real reason many exes misdirect their unhappiness.

It is better to just work through the pain you are feeling so you can move forward.  It is difficult to understand why so many people in failed relationships fight so hard to hold on to their misery.  If someone doesn’t want to be in a relationship with you they are doing you a favor.  They knew something wasn’t right and they freed you to find something that was right.  If you take the time to see that, you can move forward with an understanding that you have an opportunity to find something better.  Be thankful they realized something you hadn’t or weren’t willing to acknowledge.

It is normal to feel the pain associated with having a void in your life.  Rather than focusing on that emptiness be grateful you were given an opportunity to find someone more suited to fill it.

Rubber Neckin’

This inspired me to share a story

tfln

A long, long time ago a man I was dating asked me to respond to a message from his ex on Facebook.  I had logged on to his Facebook account to change his profile picture while we sat on my couch.  While I was doing so his messenger popped up. It was his ex so he asked me to tell her he was unavailable.

His Ex: Hi!!!!

Me: This isn’t J***.  He can’t talk right now.

His Ex: Oh! Who is this?

Okay so clearly I had a choice at this point.  I could have just ignored her or closed messenger or I could do what I did, which was… be a complete asshole and tell her exactly who she was talking to.  This girl hated me. She hated me with a passion and in my opinion she had absolutely no reason to.  She had also been quite vocal about it to anyone who would listen for quite some time.

Me: This is Teri.

His Ex:  You stole my boyfriend you bitch.  Why would I want to talk to you?

Me: I was just letting you know, at J***’s request, that he isn’t able to talk right now.  I don’t want to be having this conversation anymore than you do.

His Ex: Fuck you! You stole my man.  You are such a whore!

A few short moments later the guy I was dating’s cell phone rang. I logged him off of my computer and asked if it was her.  He nodded as he hit the talk button.  “Tell your whore…” “…want to talk to that cunt,” I heard her screaming. He just hung up.  He apologized to me. “It doesn’t bother me,” I smiled and shrugged.  “Were you two dating when we met?” I asked. It wasn’t the first time it had come up. “Teri, we broke up two weeks before I met you.” he answered.  “I don’t really care. I just wondered,” I said. “She is crazy,” he added. “Clearly.”

I genuinely didn’t care.  I had met the man six months earlier, one night at a bar.  He approached me.  He flirted with me.  He was there with friends.  We sat and talked.  We wound up making out.  He called me the next day and wanted to do something again that weekend.  His relationship status never occurred to me.  I didn’t think anything would come of our night but six months later I was sitting on my couch with his arm around me watching movies.  I was fine with how we met and didn’t care about who had been in his arms before I was.

The ex was another story.  They had dated for three months and when they broke up she had a hard time letting go.  The night we met, she showed up at his friends’ bar hopping birthday celebration about half an hour before.  He told her to go home because he was just trying to have fun with his friends.  Thirty minutes later I was in the picture.  That weekend while I was at his place meeting some of his friends and having a few drinks, his ex texted him asking what he was doing.  He said he was hanging out with some friends and the girl he had just started dating.  Every cell phone in the group started vibrating.  She was texting everyone, trying to find out who I was and what I looked like.  I even posed for a picture so one of their mutual friends could send it to her.  While all this data was being thrown back and forth, two things happened.  Everyone decided that I was awesome and “the ex” decided she hated me.

She would tell anyone who listened that I stole her man.  I was a bitch.  I was a boyfriend stealer.  I was a whore.  The truth is none of that matters.  She was too busy blaming me for what happened to realize that even if they were together he didn’t have much respect for her. He was interested in me from the moment we met.  He was so engaged it never occurred to me that he may even have a girlfriend.  She hated me for taking something that didn’t belong to her.  He didn’t even belong to me.  People aren’t possessions.  He made a decision.  I made a decision.  Rather than be pissed at the person who was involved in her pain, she chose to hate me.  We never met but she will probably blame me for whatever pain she felt forever.

I can’t imagine holding on to that kind of animosity for six months after a relationship ended.  To me that is just nuts.  And if you are going to be pissed at someone maybe it should be the one you are emotionally tied to and not a complete stranger.  When it comes to jealousy and misplaced anger, I could not care less.

Exes shouldn’t really factor in to a new relationship. They were never part of your life and have no in your relationship with anyone.  Some relationships don’t work.  Women should spend more time focused on the future instead of constantly looking back.  That shit is just a pain in the neck.

My New Article

My newest Fact or Myth is up over at Kink E-Magazine.  I hope you will all take time to pop on over and read it.  Enjoy!

The Truth about Valentine’s Day

I sat in my seventh grade writing class waiting.  As the teacher discussed bias in writing I stole anxious glances through the tiny window in the center of the metal door that offered a restricted view of the main hall of my school. I took a quick glance at the clock then attempted to focus my attention back to my teacher.  As my last class wound down the big metal door creaked open and everyone’s attention turned to three perky eighth grade girls carrying a bundle of red, white and pink carnations and heart-shaped lollipops.  My heart began to race and I sank down into the wooden seat of my desk.

I don’t know why I was so excited. There was no way I would be getting a flower. I had few friends and no boys interested in me.  I was mostly a quiet bookworm who didn’t spend much time with anyone outside of school. All day I had waited for the last ten minutes of each class, hoping in vain that I might hear my name.

card 1The girls handed the flowers and candy to my teacher and retreated, giggling and indicated to various girls in the room that they had gifts in the bundle. No one sought me out to confirm I had a flower in the bunch.  The classroom began to buzz with excitement as the teacher started flipping open the tags on the flowers.  She smiled and shushed the class so she could handout the Valentine’s gifts.

I sank low into my desk, wringing my hands in my lap hoping against all odds that someone had thought of me.  As she began to read the names, boys and girls hurried to the front of the class to collect their gifts.  Many of the recipients were the same kids who had received flowers in many of my other classes.  About halfway through the pile my teacher looked at me and smiled.  I sank down further in my seat. “Teri,” she said. My heart began pounding as my brain searched for who might have sent me a flower. Bridget? Andrea? I slowly rose from my chair and walked to the front of the class.  I kept my head down, not wanting to see the baffled expressions on my peer’s faces.       I took the pink carnation from my teacher’s hand never lifting my eyes to meet hers. I quickly returned to my seat.  As I sat down, Felipe, a forward on my soccer team tapped me on the shoulder.  I turned to him.  He smiled and asked who had sent me the flower.  I shrugged and opened the tag. “Happy Valentine’s Day, Love Mom.”  I groaned and turned my back to my teammate.  Intrigued he tapped me on the shoulder. “What?” I growled without turning around.  “Who sent you a flower?” he asked. I could hear a mix of amusement and curiosity in his voice.  “My mom,” I mumbled. “Your mom?” he confirmed he had heard me correctly loud enough that a few kids around us looked at me and smirked.  “Shut up!” I hissed. “Okay, jeez.” He responded and sank back in his seat.

I don’t know why my mother would have gone to my school and purchase a flower from my student body fund raiser but she did and I wanted to die.  At least it was the last period of the day so I would head straight to her waiting car after the bell rang.  When class ended I rushed to the car and scrambled into the front seat. I thanked my mother for the flower automatically but she sensed I was embarrassed.  In the next five years I never received another Valentine’s Day flower at school.

For a very long time I just didn’t care about Valentine’s Day.  I had a boyfriend for most of my senior year but still didn’t think about the holiday.  We didn’t buy each other presents. I am not sure it ever occurred to me that we should.

When my son was younger, each year I would by him chocolate and a stuffed animal but as he became older I stopped.  I was acutely aware of the trauma Valentine’s gifts from mom would inflict on a boy of a certain age.  Valentine’s Day became just another day.

For the decade or so I ignored the day.  I didn’t date.  I was not interested in anyone romantically so the day meant little to me.  My first relationship after my long sabbatical from the world ended just a few short weeks before Valentine’s Day several years ago.  I casually dated for a while so another Valentine’s Day passed without a thought.  Little over a year ago, I had started dating “Pretty Boy” and it was the first time I thought about a Valentine’s Day with dinner and flowers.

card 2I hoped with some anxiety I might actually have a Valentine who wasn’t six and hopped up on sugar.  It just didn’t happen.  I received a “Happy Valentine’s Day” text from a bathtub across town occupied by the man I was dating and a bottle of wine. That was Valentine’s Day 2012.

I do love the idea of Valentine’s Day.  I think it is sweet. I wish I had someone to participate in the holiday with.  I just never have.  I don’t hate the day although the more single Valentine’s Days I see the more depressing the day becomes.  I don’t hate the day; I don’t love the day. I have never experienced it the way I imagined it should be.  I simply watch it come and go.

Relationship Writer Problems

coupleOne night while cuddling with my ex on the couch watching a movie, he leaned down and whispered, “Let’s have a threesome..” “No,” I responded without even glancing at him. He unwrapped his arms from around me and sat up. “Why not?” he whined. He sat and straightened myself.  I looked at him for a long moment trying to find a way to make him understand.  For one thing, though I adored him and very much enjoyed having sex with him, I didn’t think he had it in him to manage two women at once.  But the real reason I would never invite another woman into bed with us was simple. I had no intention of falling for the man I was now arguing with but my feelings for him had grown. “It would hurt me to watch you have sex with another woman,” I finally answered him.  “You’ve done it before,” he persisted.  “I wasn’t in a relationship and I couldn’t watch fuck someone else!” my voiced raised and became sterner.  “You like me’” he smiled at me and pulled me to him again.  It wasn’t the last time I’d have that conversation with him or other men I dated.

Since I have reentered the dating world, I have found dating to be somewhat challenging. I have learned to be cautious about how and who I date. As woman who writes about dating and sex, not only personally but professionally, it is difficult to find potential dates that don’t have some preconceived notion about who I am, what I want and how I date. I have had men approach me about dating simply because of my body of work. I have had men cancel dates because of my writing and some men have completely disregarded anything I have expressed in a relationship due to their perceived understanding of my experiences. All of this has resulted in some very interesting dating experiences that have benefited me greatly but often present some interesting stumbling blocks when I start wanting something more serious.

I have gone on dates solely for writing inspiration but typically that isn’t the reason I date. I love the stories and lessons that come from my experiences dating and in relationships but ultimately I date for the same reason everyone else does. I crave companionship though duration may vary. Ultimately I want something committed with some longevity.

skeletons closetHonesty is an important aspect of developing any relationship so I am fairly forth coming about what I do and what I write about. As anyone who has read my blog can tell you, I am pretty open anyway but I feel it is important to be honest and unapologetic about the events that have shaped who you are as a person. Early on I learned that it was better that I kept the information about my writing as simple as I could without being dishonest. If someone asked for details I’d provide them with as much information as was requested but dating with the bulk of my sexual history on the internet for everyone to read is challenging enough without my directing every man I date to my blog.

When I find myself dating someone whom I really like and who feels the same way they typically don’t read much of my work. I have also dated men who have read my blog or found some of my articles online. They will ask me about a certain experience or activity and attempt to pressure me into doing it again. I feel a bit like Alyssa Jones in Chasing Amy. My reputation precedes me and though I have done something, often for the sake of the experience, I have no intention of doing it again nor is it an activity I would participate in, in a relationship.

Dating is difficult. Because of some of my writing it makes dating more complicated. My past is my past and when dating someone I like I feel like I may be building a future. I want new experiences and new opportunities. I don’t want to reenact the past. I want something fresh to look forward to.

What are some of your experiences with assumptions and dating?

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