Wednesday, 24 February 2010

No, I won't be yours.

That time of year had come again and this time, there was no escape. It was everywhere. Couples were kissing in front of me in the queue at Starbucks whilst I waited for my quadruple shot latte, disgusting teddy bears holding “I love you” hearts were replacing my beloved chocolate raisins in the confectionery aisle at the supermarket, flower stools were springing up on every corner.. There was no escaping Valentine’s Day.

Now don’t get me wrong; I’m not one of those Valentine’s haters, I’m just merely someone going through a crazy i-hate-love/couples/relationships stage and so obviously, am not enamored with all the commercial bullshit that goes with it. Having said that, I still checked my mail in case there was a cheeky card waiting for me from a secret admirer – there wasn’t. Instead, there was a card addressed to my 50 plus, married mother, which I obviously opened. It wasn’t even one of those grotesque sexual cards, with tacky slogans such “let’s do the naked tango” or “I love all the bones in your body, especially mine” splashed across the front that I had seen polluting the aisles of Paperchase. Nope, it was an anonymous card, with a flower on the front and a hershey’s kiss inside. Unbelievable.

I did, however, have a date that evening. Feeling like a traitor to my firm relationships-are-the-anti-christ beliefs, it was short and sweet, flowerless and of course, sexless.

The Wednesday before was the setting for a much funnier event. The date had been very planned – this guy was super posh, not a hair out of place, the kind who wears a shirt skiing. We were supposed to go for shisha, then a bar, then finally onto a club. The fact that he was clearly a Nazi when it came to organising dates significantly put me off. So we met for shisha, had some silly banter about the correct way to pour tea and whether having backlava with shisha should be outlawed, then moved on to a pub, then to a club nearby.

All was going fine, except for the minor blip when a man shouted abuse at me for wearing a fur coat – I think “animal killer” were his exact words. 1am, my phone rings. It was a phone call from a friend who was staying with me, and who was standing outside my front door. It was -5 degrees, she had open toe shoes, it would have been criminal to keep her waiting, right? I inform my date of the problem, and strangely, he starts getting angry. How strange, I mean fair enough if he was pissed off that he clearly wasn’t getting a goodbye kiss let along a shag, but how pathetic to display emotion so blatantly. I probed him about why he was being quiet, and he tells me I was using “the classic girl excuse” to get out of our every-second-planned soiree. He walked me home but I was still outraged. This goes against all rules of dating etiquette.

The next day I received a text from him and feeling quite guilty, I replied, short and sweet.
Me : “Thanks for last night! Hope you’re well x x”
Him : “I’m very well thank you. Are you well?”

I am pretty sure I don’t need to explain myself any further. There will be no future dates. Next!

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Where it all went wrong.

Thinking back, the cataclysm that would be my sex life had been predicted long ago. My first sexual experience – boy on top, two thrusts, ejaculation, him crying, me walking out – should have sent alarm bells ringing in my head. Somehow, I was an idiot and slept with him again.
A line from Sex & the City rings very true here, and rather encapsulates how I felt then about the experience: “Fuck me badly once, shame on you. Fuck me badly twice, shame on me.” I should have listened to Samantha Jones. After such a disaster, things could only get better, right?

Wrong. This tragic event was followed by another year of abstinence, only briefly punctuated by a brief flirtation with a boy who not only had a penis so small it made me feel like I was molesting a child, but who was so concious of his tiny willy that he once said to me, “If you don’t touch my bollocks, I will feel like they are too small.” Obviously, that was it and it was over there and then.

I then met a guy that I, as a young, silly girl, was convinced was my soulmate. Our first date was in a piano bar, and to this day is still the only time I remember kissing someone and being so wrapped up in it that I was oblivious to everything else around me. We kissed for hours, and danced in the middle of this tiny, dark, basement piano bar even though no once followed our lead. I thought I had finally found my prince charming (albeit a bit early as I wasn’t even close to being out of my teenage years); that’d we’d get married in a huge castle in Scotland with a marquee , a bagpipe band manned with men in kilts and sporrans, go travelling around the world reading beatnik prose.. but no.

He turned out to be a complete bastard. He had had another girlfriend the entire time.

Heartbreak ensued, but I didn’t even have time to look for a new man who wouldn't be a cheating arsehole on match.com/at the gym, as my rebound turned out to be the guy I would be with for the best part of four years. It wasn’t love at first sight; in fact, after meeting him, I remember telling my best friend that if I were forced to be in a room alone with him, I would kill him, then kill myself. So, as you can see, not the best first impression. I found him boring, pompous and too serious for me; but he found a way to change my mind and I discovered that he was a truly great person.

We had good run, but after a few years it became obvious it couldn’t work anymore – we had lived in different cities for the past year and would theoretically have to do so for another 3, and realise that long-distance just wasn’t for us.

At this point, an intelligent decision would have been to pick any of the 300 horny teenage boys who lived in the same university halls of residency as me, which would have, quite frankly, helped me get over myself. Instead, I made the catastrophic decision of entertaining the possibility of going for my male best friend. Classic mistake.

And this is when the shitshow started.

It wasn't meant to be like this.

Let’s make it clear; I never intended to be practically re-virginised at the age of twenty.

Things seemed to be going well – I have fantastic friends, a gorgeous house in London, a wardrobe full of clothes.. but a distinct lack of a sex life. Of course, it hasn’t always been like this – I did have a boyfriend of 3 years but after we called it quits last february – nothing. Weeks turned into months, and after I could no longer pass off my embarassingly asexual existence as a pretend vow of giving up sex for lent, I decided to see if I could a whole year. I never thought of myself as a nymphomaniac, but I certainly never imagine that 12 months would pass and not one opportunity would even present itself.

I’m sure the general assumption will be that I’m some sort of repulsive troll with back hair and no teeth, but I’m actually alright looking. I just seem to attract very unusual people. I guess it must have something to do with my penchant for ‘quirky’ looking geeks. I have actually been seeing someone for the best part of six months, but so far, its been the most dysfunctional relationship known to man – the most fitting word to describe it, although crass, would definitely be “shitshow”.

Of course, I recognise that I’m not perfect – I’m just a little bit dramatic, quite traditional (although others would just describe me as a prude, I stand by that intimacy with a stranger freaks me out) and very indecisive. I have made catastrophic dating mistakes over the past year, but need to change my ways, rise from my ashes as in six months time I will be moving to the middle east – if I can’t get laid in London, I have no hope of doing so in Arabia.

I will blog my dating horrors over the past year and obviously, tell you of any that should arise in the near future. I’m confident that there will be many, my life seems to be punctuated by excruciatingly embarrassing moments.