Monday, October 31, 2011

Mr not-too-bad...too bad for you.


Madeleine had just lost her sister to marriage and Greg the gorilla with his age old hunter gatherer qualities set his sights on Maddy as his playmate. He would court her for a while. She would resist. This would not be a Tarzan and Jane story but after much persistence from Greg, many beats of the chest and hairy advances, Madeleine finally succumbed to Greg the Gorilla. 

He was far from perfect but he was available. Madeleine would live to regret this decision for years into the future but for a while, when the future looked bleak, Greg, in the right light, seemed attractive. Madeleine learnt that she had a great capacity for love. She learnt that she was not as superficial as she thought and she learnt that she could love anyone if she was patient with them. Great lessons from a horrid experience.

George and Madeleine lasted a while. They were comfortable but not passionate about each other. Madeleine gave love as she wanted to be loved. Greg the Gorilla was content in his conquest. He got the girl and he was bananas over her for a while…till he was ready to play with the other animals in the wild. Madeleine felt used but accepted that maybe the downfall of her animal kingdom was her fault. She answered Greg’s mating call when she knew in the depths of her heart that he was not the one. She settled.

Plato said, ‘every heart sings a song, incomplete, until another heart whispers back,’ but I don’t think he meant completion came with any old whisper. It had to be the same tune, the same songbird chirping in reply – not a bear to a bird.  

Women in years to come would sing a song of the same melody that Madeleine once chirped. Then an IVF study would be released that would tell women to do exactly what Madeleine had sworn she’d never do again…settle for Mr-not-too-bad. 

An IVF specialist advised women the world over, this month to change their criteria for Mr Right in order to more speedily settle down and bear children rather than resort to freezing their eggs. Fertility clinics have begun targeting their services to women in their 20s and 30s, but the professor leading the study, Professor Kovacs warned women that the success rate from egg freezing was low and that women couldn't rely on it later in life.

This got me thinking about whether having children with a man you half loved was worth sacrificing the love you envisioned for yourself? I would much rather stick with a man I loved who I couldn’t have children with (God forbid that I can’t) than have children with a man who wasn’t everything I hoped for. The logic behind that is that I would have the chance to know and find the love of my life before I ever got to know my children so I’d rather keep something that I knew and loved rather than give it up for a child I didn’t know. 

For those wondering, I’m perfectly healthy and to my knowledge, able to have children, but this was worth the contemplation. 

Professor Kovacs of the IVF study stressed, “"maybe there is no Mr. Right and you have to settle for Mr. Not-Too-Bad. There is no such thing as a perfect person for anybody, and even if they're perfect now, they won't be perfect in five or 10 years time."

Professor Kovacs either settled for Mr-not-too-bad or was going through a bitter breakup and my assessment of her would read; broken-hearted and embittered, but I’d never call her accurate. 

I loathe the idea of settling. I detest the thought of being with someone who is less than what I hoped for and I’m sickened by the nightmare of spending the rest of my life with someone who is less than perfect for me. It’s not that my expectations are too high; it’s that whoever disagrees with me has expectations too low for themselves. 

There’s no reason to want less than perfection for yourself. It doesn’t matter if you’re the cleaner or the Queen, you’re a person, deserving of love and that love should come in the form you dreamed, not something you find in a discount bin with a  short shelf-life and an early used by date. 

Freeze your eggs if you must, but if you’re putting all of your eggs in one basket, then make sure with that investment, that the basket is strong enough to support you – that to me is the perfection most women seek and it’s out there. When you find it (because it’s only a matter of time), that love will be perfect in five and ten and even twenty years time. It won’t be a fairytale, it will be hard work but it will be real and that’s so much better than the imaginary. 

If you’re in it for life, be in it for love and leave Greg the Gorilla in the jungle where he belongs. Let Madeleine’s lesson be yours too; Mr-not-too-bad is also Mr-not-good-enough for you.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Walk like a man, Talk like a man

 I wrote a text to someone and got a response back. Was this because he was interested? Was it because he wasn’t interested so didn't feel compelled to game play? Is it because he's not a game player? Is it because he learnt his lesson from previous relationships not to keep a girl waiting lest he lose her interest.... either way for a change I'm not interested. I haven't sworn off men but I may slowly be becoming one.

I'm not about to have a sex change (I'm perfectly happy being female) but I am adopting some masculine qualities... not because they’re the better gender but because trial and error has taught me that some of their tricks work wonders in the trade of love. 

Sometimes the hardest decision in life is knowing which bridge to walk and which to burn? With men...the equation is simple; if he is stupid enough to walk away then you need to be smart enough to let him go.  This conclusion isn't an easy move to commit to. When you're anxiously waiting for a crush to notice you - the last thing you want to do is accept that he is just not that into you. However, accepting a closed door may be exactly what is needed to open a new one.

 I was chatting to a friend and her partner the other day on persons of interest to me at the moment. That’s not a typo, there are many. My friends partner was shocked and responded with a 'my goodness Miriam you move on pretty quickly don't you?!' the conversation quickly turned into a look at me as a man (if I was one) - we all agreed I'd be the charming womanizing male I constantly fall for because I loved words and loved women.  With crush a) - I wasn't sure he was interested so I exited the game, crush b) was more about reciprocating his interest because I appreciated his qualities and interest in me but he was very slow to act. Slow paced seduction was the game of crush c) as well and crush d)'s life and my own were gravitating towards each other but neither of us were forcing it to happen. Stay tuned on - e) all of the above.

Neither of us were sure of the others interest or our compatibility. All of these boys were wonderful people with admirable qualities. Some inside investigation revealed that the cream of the crop saw goodness in me too but admitted that it would be a long time before he did anything about his interest.

Enter my man brain. I tried to empathize with this guy to understand why if he was interested he would resist dating me and then I took a walk in his shoes. If I were a hot young male with many girls at my disposal, lots of travelling to do and lots of “single” fun to enjoy, would I commit to a girl that would be fabulous but limit that freedom or would I chance it and hope she was single when I felt older and ready for the responsibility?

The answer? I’d buzz around bachelor-hood and like a bee to honey would stick around that sweet life for as long as I could. Love, while ideally about romance and rescuing for us ladies, for men it’s about work, commitment and fatherhood (that’s daunting even for me) so for a change, I’m toe tapping in man-land and seeing it from their perspective.

While I’m thinking like a man, I’m acting like a lady and still waiting for the man to approach but in walking in his shoes, I’m more understanding about the wait and happier to fill my time with many over being miserable pining over just one. If he can wait, so can I – but not necessarily for him.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Under the Sea, darling it's better, down where it's wetter...

 
The little Mermaid taught us a valuable lesson in its theme song, “under the sea.” The lyrics read: 

Just look at the world around you
Right here on the ocean floor

Such wonderful things surround you

What more are you looking for

Under the sea, under the sea

Darlin’ it’s better
Down where it’s wetter,
Take it from me

Up on the shore they work all day

Out in the sun they slave away

While we devotin’

Full time to floatin’
Under the sea


I’ve never believed that the saying that there were plenty more fish in the sea was true. In the dating world, this was a response to some miserable newly single sod who couldn’t see beyond his grief but he continued crying because he knew better. He knew it would be a struggle to find, lock in and connect with a new person. 

Love is ridiculous and the risk of exposing yourself entirely to a stranger with hope of no judgment and security is petrifying and idiotic if you were to rationalize it but for the thrill of finding the person who’ll stay we risk embarrassment anyway. 

I had the search for a soul mate described to me through a Google Advanced Search analogy. He (for a change) said, if you go through the motions of doing a Google Advanced Search when researching then you run the risk of your search yielding no results. The longer your list, the narrower the results, the less likelihood you have of finding your ideal match. 

I didn’t like what he was suggesting because it would mean the end to specificity on my list. While we both agreed that everyone has a right to be fussy about their future, he decided he didn’t want love unless it was perfect while I considered the merit of making compromises on what is trivial or negotiable in order to find true love. 

I believe one of the greatest miracles in life is finding love because against all odds, one person finds you among billions sees all of your flaws and chooses to stay with you anyway. If there was a man willing to do that for me, I sure as hell was going to give him a chance….but not without my checklist (I still have standards). 

However, what I realized in days past’ is that when my checklist became less refined, I was swimming in a whole new ocean of eligible bachelors. 

For centuries men have argued the right to keep their options open, to play the field and as such have battled with the limitations of monogamy. Women began to embrace this mentality during the sexual revolution of the 1960’s but not without a sexual stigma. 

I haven’t cracked. This isn’t one of those posts. My polygamous thoughts have not been about being with many but about thinking of many… till one emerges as supreme. 

I do take issue with this free spirited thinking though even though it’s my own because the same treatment is being reciprocated to me and I don’t like it one bit!
It seems while I was diving to the depths of my ocean, other girls took a dip and we all ran into the same big fish that is currently testing the waters. Now my water is murky. Yuck!

He’s enjoying his leisurely paddle through paradise (it’s a pool full of women – of course he was) and so he should – he’s quite a catch and it’s been a while since he’s been allowed to enjoy this sort of attention.  With adoration from the starfish (me) the clownfish and the jellyfish (the others) naturally he’ll basque in the glory of his bachelorism and take his time to select a soul mate (me again). While he’s doing that, he’ll connect with the catch of the day (clownfish and jellyfish) with reasons unknown to me. 

However in case this big fish has saltwater in his eyes and fails to see how fabulous I am, I have a backup plan. There are some sharks bathing in Big Fish’s pool too and they’re worth noticing. 

None of them have swum into my net yet but they have brushed close by and indicated a bit of interest so they have my attention. While ordinarily I’d advise to keep your eye on the prize, for the first time I see that the ocean is in fact full of flirty fish and maybe there’s merit in meeting them too for a chance that they may be better suited to me.  

I’m not sleeping around, I’m swimming around and as a starfish, it’s my right to explore the ocean I’m in. Starfish before me have been doing it for centuries and we’re not extinct yet so the strategy must have worked.

The ocean is deep, the fish are many and the lessons are far from learnt. While I’m getting better at untangling myself from the seaweed and escaping the catfish’s bite, I’m not through meeting the other stars of the sea so if Big Fish is too busy to give me my deserved attention, I’ll happily busy myself too, and maybe even meet another starfish ….

Excuse me while I take a dive in the pool of deep, dark and very handsome, there may be bigger fish to fry.  

Under the sea, under the sea
Darlin’ it’s better
Down where it’s wetter,
Take it from me
....





Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Love triangles and less than terrific timing...

Jessica likes James but her friend Julie likes him too. Julie has banded with Jessica's frenemy who also secretly happens to like James. None of them have discussed it with each other for fear of open competition or acceptance of defeat. They will all continue to court and pursue till James takes his pick. Lucky James.

 James is a little popular and a lot confused. He flirts with all but chooses none. James' friend Jono is more astute in his search. He knows exactly what he wants and that is Jessica but Jessica can't decide if being with Jono is where her life has been headed towards or if she'd rather toss both and go for their friend Jack. Friendships will be tried, loyalties will be tested and hearts will inevitably be broken. For the sake of peace, should all step away and bow out of the battle gracefully or should they follow their hearts with the belief that there is nothing more valuable than finding love?

James was in love once but when it was over, he saw the ugly side of his ex. He shook hands with bitterness, rubbed shoulders with rage and flirted with fury, but he stomped all over regret and refused to let it toy with his mind. Even though the outcome of his breakup would have allowed it. She moved on far quicker than he would have expected.

 Affairs, betrayal and recycling of relationships are something experienced the world over so it was all too important to find the person that shared his ideals and would promise the same security that he promised in a relationship second time around.

Betrayal was the basest of human actions yet James having experienced it in his past relationship had peace. It seemed everyone he knew was dating someone who somebody else loved before and although he didn't like it, he accepted the loss and soldiered on. He would rather an old love have love than halt the love of a heart that could never truly be his. This was simultaneously noble and stupid.

Jessica  had other wonderful friends who had caught partners in the act of cheating. The cheater and the mistress would go on to live happily ever after, while the cheated would be left to contemplate the loss, experience extreme lows and for the first time know loneliness. Fortunately, Jessica's friend was surrounded by wonderful people to uplift her but she'd often question why the person at fault got to know joy first?

Jessica would often tell her that it was important to experience a period of loneliness to build one's character so that when love came knocking she'd be complete enough to answer the door and let love in. Without development of one's self, it would be a relationship of dependance not one in which she could give yourself wholly to her other half.

Enter unfortunate timing for James and Jessica.

James and Jessica were chatting the other day and he sweetly contemplated that experiences lived out without a loved one were empty, futile and incomplete to him. He pondered that until his plus one could share in the joys of his life, he wouldn’t know contentment. This was the most beautifully expressed quest for love that Jessica had heard in a long time. She would have fallen for him instantly if she wasn't aware of the call to be guarded while he was still healing. He wouldn't be ready to love her for a while and so she accepted his friendship and would happily help him heal.


The problem here for Jessica was that while James claimed he was ready to move on, he continued to tell Jessica how perfect his ex (Gretchen) was. He mused on all of Gretchen’s good qualities and feared that he would never find those qualities again. Jessica didn’t voice her issue with this but if she had that night over, she would have asked, why you would want a repeat of your last relationship, if that formula failed you? He was blinded by love and it would be a while before he could see past Gretchen's good qualities. This was testament to his great character, not necessarily hers.  Gretchen sounded awful to Jessica. She tried not to judge..
She was at a crossroads… would she wait for James to be ready? Would she pay greater attention to Jono or Jack? Would she show James what he could have if he chose to love her? She didn’t want to wait because she held firmly to the belief that the man that chose to be with her would be instantly sure that she was the woman he wanted to spend the rest of his life with.
If there was one lesson she’d always clung to from her youth it was that the right thing at the wrong time is still the wrong thing. This was true for James and Gretchen’s relationship and it was true for her situation now.

Jessica could have sat and pontificated on the things James was missing out on by dwelling on the past. She could have sat and tried to win James over. She could have even flirted with a different fate and seen where Jono or Jack could take her but she decided against all of those options because she’d been there, done that, been hurt and grown stronger.

Self worth was the greatest gift she could give herself. She’d let the other girls compete because for her, love was not a contest, it was a blessing, and if James didn’t want her, she didn’t want him either – not because he was bad, blind or a poor judge of character, but simply, because he wasn’t the one…and she would never accept anyone less for herself.

 

Monday, October 3, 2011

When times are tough you must play rough!!


My friend and I have fiercely been mapping out a game plan of how she can seduce and keep the man of her dreams. Why she has any male problems at all is a mystery to me; she's stunning, fit, thin, and intelligent and is so sweet but that goodness has so far only attracted the senseless and the steroid-induced.

The day we discussed her dating dilemmas was the day I overheard a separate set of females also plotting to win over the same man. The diva in me was about to tell these sisters to step aside, my friend after all was the only person good enough to be with this man. These women however, were all singing from the same hymn book and the lyrics sounded something like Irene Cara’s ‘holding out for a hero.’ 

The sisters after unreturned calls, agonizing nights waiting by the phone, drunken and dateless dusks out had decided to wear the pants - they weren’t waiting for men to take over they were doing it for themselves.

Lucky or unlucky men? I can't decide.

I pondered on whether it would be easier if we just did the asking but I didn’t like the ramifications of doing that. The end of men asking us out would shred chivalry to bits.

No more proposals, no more romance but on the plus side, since most women of our time are such control freaks it would also mean the end of our man-made insanity. If we no longer had to fret about who was asking who, what it meant if he did or didn’t text, what it meant if he took us to McDonald’s over Aria (apart from the calorie counting), what on earth would we women do with all of our time?

Men would be emasculated and lazy because of it and we’d never know if the person we were with was with us for us or just for convenience. In my idealistic mind, it’s much more interesting seeing the man work for your love, vying for your attention and pleased in his conquest. 

On the flip side, with the increase in demand for men and lack of supply, I wholeheartedly accept why women would rather chase and lose than never run the race and feel the rush that comes with winning.

I look at love like a crystal meth addict. It eats away at your brain, your looks fade with more of its use and it's damn costly to your lifestyle but the thrill is too intense a rush, the joy too deep, the addiction too unbearable that stopping it is deadly painful.

Sign me up we all used to say to the torture until these women took control but it seems while we're all addicted to the high, we're all buying from the same dealer and while he’ll flirt with many, he’ll only truly want to be with one. Game on? You betchya!

One of the women I know has to compete with five other women for one man's attention. She’s doing an ok job of sustaining his interest but it pains me to see the daily mental struggle involved with chasing. It means daily affirmations that you are good enough, it means allowing jealousy to overcome you (and that’s ugly), wondering if he is responsive out of courtesy, kindness or adoration. It's true what they say, it's rough out there in the dating world. 

She doesn’t just have women of the same age, good looks and intelligence to compete with – she also has the gay community questioning his sexuality and also competing for his heart. 

Then there are all of these ridiculous rules to follow. Like the stupid, don't call after the first date for three days? Don't kiss on the first date, don't be the one to text first... The list goes on and the migraine lingers.  
I’m not testifying to the Gospel according to “Dating 101” but as painful as the wait can be, distance gives clarity, courtship gives you something to look forward to and that call after a little bit of a waiting period is the crystal meth fix I was talking about; addictive, amazing and mind-altering. Amorousness follows. Neurosis ensues. Love grows. Hallelujah and amen to that!

I'm from the school of thought that if you like someone you should do something about it. Whatever is within your comfort zone is as far as you should go. Be noticed but don’t compromise your morality and  be kind to yourself if the object of your affection, objects to your advances. Play by the rules, or step dangerously outside of the lines, whatever you choose, know that finding love is worth the struggle. Here’s hoping my friend wins her man and that everyone feels free enough to follow and find love. 

Heartbreak can be devastating. Picking yourself up to search for love again can be the mightiest struggle you’ll have to endure but it’s worth the search, no matter how rough you might have to play.

In words better than I could articulate, “it’s better to have loved and lost, than never to have loved at all.”