Do
you remember Amy in my first blog?
For those of you who missed it, a quick
recap; Amy is stunning, funny, cute and perfect. But there are two things Amy
doesn’t trust, men and herself when she’s around men.
So, same girl, different guy.
A couple of months ago, Amy bumped into an
old friend. Paul.
“He used to be friends with Chris. You
remember Chris, the guy I had an on-off fling with at Uni?” Amy explained.
It was both funny and relieving to hear that
Chris, Amy’s sole-obsession throughout her 3 years of study, had now been
casually demoted to an ‘on-off fling’.
“Paul was Chris’s flatmate” Amy chirped. “I
always had a sort of crush on him, but because of Chris I never let it go
anywhere. Well, it seemed like such a co-incidence
that Paul and I would bump into each other on the tube, after all these years,
naturally, it was only fair that we swapped numbers” Amy flirtatiously smiled
with pride.
Paul is excessively tall and excessively
funny. The latter being an IRRESISTABLE quality to most women, especially Amy.
A few text’s later and Paul suggested they
meet for a drink and a ‘catch up’. It had been awhile after all.
For the week leading up to the ‘catch-up’
Amy played the Great-Date-Debate in her head.
Was it a date? No, it couldn’t be. They were
just friends. Yes, friends that hadn’t seen each other in a long time. Just
going for a casual drink. Friends.
Amy spent 5 hours planning what to wear,
what to talk about, how to act, what flavour chewing gum to buy.
Because, it’s important to impress friends,
right?
It turned out to be a date.
They shared several cocktails and discussed
their favourite films, music, TV shows, what they were working on (he’s an IT
geek – very Seth Cohen).
They spent the entire evening laughing and
laughing and laughing.
In case you hadn’t clocked yet, laughter =
chemistry.
Lo and behold, Paul asked Amy out again.
In fact, Paul asked Amy out three more
times.
They ate out at some swanky restaurant. He
paid.
They went to the movies to watch War Horse.
Her choice.
All 6’2 of Paul was quickly becoming a
towering light at the end of Amy’s very long and dark tunnel of dating doom.
Until the 4th date.
“Everyone abides by the 4th date rule, right?” Amy questioned
“That’s what makes you marriage material, right? It’s the chase? And it
promotes respect.”
Clearly Amy had read far too many copies of
Cosmopolitan.
Up until the fourth date, Amy and Paul had
had some heavy petting sessions like teenagers and there was the occasional dry
humping (yes, I did just say dry-hump), but until this moment, Amy had managed
to keep her bra on, and her Victoria a secret.
On the forth date Paul invited Amy to his
house to watch a film.
She arrived with a bottle of wine in hand,
and butterflies in her belly.
Soon, the film took a backseat to
tonsil-tennis.
(Well, come on, if Amy’s going to abide by
the 4th date rule,
then I’m going to have to treat her like a teenager! I am calling it Tonsil
tennis!)
Paul led Amy to his bedroom, where, after
much anticipation, and having overcome the difficulty of removing skinny
jeggings , the inevitable happened.
For the record, Paul was very good at
sleeping with people.
In their post-coital bliss, Amy sighed with
contentment as she snuggled up to her latest crush.
She gazed up at him smiling, and asked a
question she’d been thinking about for a long time.
“Did you always fancy me? Even back in the
day?” she had romanticised the answer to this question in her head, but got a
somewhat different response than rehearsed.
“Well, I think you’re really pretty, but
honestly, I just wanted to fuck you.”
Amy was a little bit taken aback by Paul’s
honesty.
“And now?” she questioned, starting to doubt
herself. “What happens now?”
“Well, I like you, but I don’t want anything
serious. Let’s just keep it casual fun” Paul flippantly remarked as he jumped
up to go to the bathroom.
“Yes, casual fun. That’s what I was
thinking” Amy whispered as her butterflies faded into disappointment.
In the weeks that followed Paul gradually
pulled the slow-fade.
Flirty texts slowly became seedy drunken
booty calls.
Amy, unable to get his attention any other
way, naturally just went along with it. Turning up at his house at 3am. Going
out of her way to make sure they were in the same bar. Sending him accidental
texts just to get a response.
Secretly hoping he would make their
relationship official soon.
Until eventually, even the booty calls
stopped.
A few weeks after that, Paul’s status
changed to ‘in a relationship’ with some leggy blonde.
Amy was left very confused.
“He wined and dined me over the course of a
couple of weeks” Amy debated. “How did I not realise that he just wanted one
thing? Where did I misinterpret the signs? What am I doing wrong? What’s wrong
with ME?”
Amy was hurt, vulnerable, and felt tricked.
It’s a common story.
A guy gives off the impression “I’m really
into you” before pulling out the “I’m really into being in you” card.
And, the girl is left confused and hurt.
If they say that life is like a box of
chocolates, then dating is just like eating a packet of Revel’s.
Convinced you’ve got a chewy caramel, only
to be sickened by the coffee flavour. Urgh!
Whenever this happens to me, I feel sort of
tricked. It looked like caramel, but it wasn’t. Expecting something and
then getting something drastically different instead.
The truth is that dating is just like a
mixed bag of Revels.
Sometimes you know exactly what you’re
getting, like a Malteser always looks like a Malteser – maybe we should just
all settle for the fat round ones?
Other times, you unknowingly pick coffee,
leaving a bitter and gross aftertaste.
So, does this mean we have to go through
singledom constantly being on our guard?
Do we have to approach every date as though
it were coffee flavour?
No. It just means we need to accept
that things are not always black and white.
Just because a guy thinks you’re
attractive doesn’t necessarily mean he wants a relationship with you.
Just because he took you for dinner, drinks,
and invited you over for a film doesn’t mean he’s falling for you. It just means
he’s being “in the moment”.
Just because he’s having fun with you,
doesn’t mean he wants you to be his girlfriend. Just because he thinks you’re
sexy, doesn’t mean he wants your commitment. Just because you waited until the
4th date, doesn’t mean
you’re his idea of marriage material.
Every time you start thinking beyond ‘the
moment’ you set yourself up for heartbreak.
That’s why most of our dating dilemmas start
with “he sleeps with me, but…”, “he says he loves me, but…”, “we had an amazing
date, but…”
We need to stop overanalysing things, and
start living in the moment.
We need to stop blaming ourselves when we
let a man use us.
I know it’s not the best feeling in the
world. In fact, you’re left feeling pretty crap. But it is NOT your fault.
It’s just that you wanted separate things.
He was coffee and you were looking for
caramel.
I’m not justifying what Paul did – he is a
jerk and I’m glad Amy is rid of him, but, just for a minute, put yourself in
Paul’s shoes.
If he had approached the situation being 100%
honest, then he wouldn’t have got laid. I’m sure he did think you were
amazing, pretty, fun, and he did want to wine and dine you. But when he
did that he was simply just being in the moment.
It is NOT your fault that he turned out to
be coffee.
I’m pretty sure everyone has had a coffee
Revel at some point, and I’m sure everyone has had a taste of a Paul.
Unfortunately,
it’s just part and parcel of life.
We simply
need to start approaching dates like we’re
eating a bag of revels.
Stop trying to guess the flavours, and just
take the bad with the good.
Learn
to live in the moment, and stop beating yourself up when it doesn’t work out.
Besides, you can’t buy a whole bag of coffee
Revels, so you’re bound to get to the chewy caramel eventually
x