Oct 29, 2012

Bangarang

Every online dating site promises to match you on some algorithm of compatibility, but compatibility is much more complicated than similar interests and personality types.

Opposites attract and build a life together blending their differences. People fall in love with childhood friends—before their personalities have fully developed. People experience love at first sight. And people lose the love of their lives in tragedy only to fall in love again.

What brings people together and what keeps them together is unique to each couple. Some couples grow apart and stay together to raise their children. Other couples are bonded through life challenges that make them stronger. Some share hobbies and activity interests, making them feel like two halves of a whole.
One thing I know predictably to be true is that no website and no matchmaker knows the secret to compatibility. Compatibility is a blend of personality types, life experience, cultural and religious backgrounds, interests, and compromise.

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In one 48-hour span of my life, I felt the full weight of both success and failure in online dating. I met my ex-boyfriend online dating roughly five years ago. We were together for two years, and he meant a great deal to me. Unfortunately, he didn’t love me “enough.” Last weekend, he got married in a glorious ceremony. He waited a long time for the love of his life, and, as much as it does hurt, I am still happy for them—he deserves to be fulfilled, and she loves a good man.

Less than 48 hours later, my ex-husband texted me pictures of his newborn twins with the woman he met online before our divorce was finalized. We had lost a pregnancy during the last year of our marriage, and every woman that’s been there knows that the raw pain of that loss never, ever goes away. Receiving pictures of his new babies? There’s not much to say about that.
On the up side, a 40-year-old friend of mine just got engaged to a man she met nine months ago online. She’s been through more than her share of horrible dates and been hounded by quite a few stalkers. While everyone else pressured her and called her “picky,” she knew in her heart of hearts that she needed and deserved someone special.

My friend Cat met her husband online, and they are happily married and have built a loving home, complete with a beautiful daughter and an adorable son. She paid her dues, and a warm breeze entered her soul when Tommy came into her life.
Most of us hate the concept of online dating, and the reality of it is even worse. Take a date I had toward the end of this summer. He was 41-years-old, divorced, no kids, and a professional print production salesperson. Reportedly, we were “compatible,” but I’m STILL trying to figure out how.

He wanted to take me to a Cubs game the week before, but after he texted me that I should bring my overnight bag, I declined. What’s with this “first-date sleepover thing?” I’ve been faced with it before. It’s like trying to skip every single step of dating—steal every base all at once.
Ever the idiot, I accepted a rescheduled date with this guy. It’s hard to really judge someone you haven’t actually met in person. As we were sitting at the restaurant Carnival in Chicago, he said, “So, you have a cat?”

I smiled and said I do, surprised he’d even ask me about that.
He continued, “You like a little pu**y?”

I almost died, but instead, my expression went stale, and I said, “Strike one. Don’t talk like that.”
He laughed and said he was just kidding, but of course, my strike wasn’t enough to call him out.

“Come on, you’ve never been with another woman?” he asked.

What was this about? I smothered the little psychology monster in my head. I couldn’t care less about anyone’s sexual orientation, but this guy was orienting himself toward a side of me he would not much care for.

I gave him my “I think you’re pathetic, and I’m bored” laugh and said I’m into men. I told him if I was into women, I wouldn’t be here with him, and he wouldn’t stand a chance. After all, who knows a woman better than another woman?
After dinner, we’d planned to see a movie. I honestly could have left and been fine with it. Alas, it was time for the movie.

“My condo is just upstairs. I have some new movies, or we can get one on-demand,” he said.
Inside voice: Mace? Check. He hasn’t been handsy. Pointy, high heels? Check. Friends know where I am? Check. Fine…but approach with caution.

In the elevator, he asked if I brought an overnight bag.
I laughed at his arrogance. “There’s no WAY I’m staying over.”

“Are you a prude or something?” he asked.
“Strike two,” I sighed.

“Come on, I’m kidding. Don’t be mad.”
Inside voice: Is he just trying too hard? Is he just nervous and saying stupid things? Maybe he doesn’t know how to make small talk? At the same time, I just really didn’t care…I knew I wasn’t going to see him again anyway. THIS was NOT my man.

When he offered alcohol, I had a soda. Not even if I were to see a rainbow shine out of a leprechaun’s butt would I have a drink and risk compromising my decision-making skills. He seemed to chill out. He hadn’t so much as tried to hold my hand. By now, I was feeling like a feral cat: paranoid, scrappy, and ready to run.
His condo really was fantastic. He collected art from all over the world, and I’m sure he paid an enormous amount of cash for his spectacular view of the city. But you know what? At the end of the day, he can’t buy himself manners…or ME.
He popped in the movie, and while he didn’t make a single shady move, I still felt suspicious, which made me think I was overreacting. Still, a woman’s gut instinct is a biological wonder. I wish my gut was tied directly to my feet though sometimes…or a fist.
Halfway through the movie as I was returning from the restroom, he stretched his arms over his head, spread them across the back of the couch in a power gesture and said (with a distant look on his face), “I can’t wait to bang you.”
STRIKE THREE.

I spun on my heel and nearly choked on the words I wanted to toss like bile all over the room.

With a cold, dead look on my face and my eyes fixed on my purse, I said flatly, “That’s NOT going to happen. What’s wrong with you? Don’t be THAT GUY. I’m done.”
He jumped from the couch and tried to convince me not to leave, but I was at the door. Frankly, I didn’t hear a damned thing that came out of his mouth after “bang you.”
He saw me push the elevator button before he was inside. Stupid door didn’t close quickly enough. I was trapped. He should have incinerated from the negative energy radiating off of me in the elevator.

“Can I walk you to your car?”
Inside voice: As if.

“No.”
His words jolted me over and over and over again like an annoying memory hiccup, despite Skrillex’s song “Bangarang” blasting through my car speakers. Befitting.

I eventually asked one of my male friends why a guy would say something like that to a woman. This man doesn’t NEED to act like that! He’s attractive, well-established, and he may have a lot to offer…no reason to act so desperately overt.
My friend told me that he has a friend that says things like that to women, and he asked him about it one time. His friend reasoned that if he propositions 10 women, at least one of these women will take him up on it.

I can’t really argue with that, but I certainly don’t echo his “take whatever I can get” philosophy.
Like my friend that just got engaged at 40, I’m not just looking for Any Man.
I’m not lonely.
I’m not desperate.
I don’t NEED a man.
 
I need a champion.
Until he comes around, I guess I’m stuck calling strikes...and trying to avoid wayward balls.