since I was 15. I've been dating the
whole time, but nothing has ever materialized into promoting
me to boyfriend status. Twice I was called in for an evaluation
interview, but turns out they decided to hire another
applicant.
My pattern is simple: I meet a girl, we
like each other, I leave town, she likes someone else.
I've gotten the "I'm seeing someone" call so
often I can tell before she even says anything. And most
of the time, I don't even get that call - I'm left to
figure it out on my own. Once was able to call a girl
and say "the least you could do is tell me you have
a boyfriend," before she said anything. I'm kidding.
I was able to do that twice.
I know I'm in a unique situation in that
I travel often, but there are many commonalities of being
single we can all relate to, and we have all experienced
being single. When you are single, you alternate between
loving your freedom and wishing you had less of it. And
no one is immune. Even the girls that seem born with boyfriends
have had a few days of "will I ever find someone?"
syndrome.
There are good days - days when we're
positive about our prospects. Days when we clean up our
apartment in case anyone comes over. Days when our hair
falls perfectly where it's supposed to, and the style
happens to go with what we're wearing. Days when we wear
the nice underwear. (Yes, guys do that, too). Those usually
turn out to be terrible nights, but the anticipation is
awesome. Ironically, the nights that work out are typically
those when you're apartment is a mess, your hair has that
one patch that keeps sticking up, and you desperately
need to do laundry. That Murphy guy makes fun laws.
There are also bad days - days when it
looks like you have no prospects at all. Days when your
date cancels inexplicably five minutes after you finished
getting ready. Days when you get three wedding announcements
and every song you hear is about someone being happier
than you. Days when your roommate brings home a moaner.
Those are the tough days - the days that make you wish
you hadn't taken your ex's number out of your phone.
Some of you are reading this and are glad
it doesn't currently apply to you. But it might. Roughly
half of all marriages end in divorce. And the VAST majority
of all relationships end with a group of friends splitting
a carton of Rocky Road or a six pack of Coors. But this
one is THE one, you say. You might be right, and congratulations
if you are. But you're probably wrong. And if you are
wrong, when you look back at this column after the one
turns out to be the wrong one, this paragraph will be
particularly hysterical.
Living in LA, I have met a cadre of terrible
women. Women who like me for my car or my job or who don't
like me because my car isn't nice enough or they wished
I had a better job. In the same respect, I live amongst
a cadre of terrible men who use their cars and jobs to
get these terrible women.
But I have a feeling if I lived anywhere,
I'd run into something similar. My problems are not unique
to southern California. Life is a quest to pair off with
someone as equally wonderful and terrible as you are.
And that's why dating is so difficult. Very few people
know where they stand on those two supply and demand curves,
let alone the status of anyone else.
While I spend my twenty-something years
trying to find myself, I might accidentally find someone
else at the same time. But for now, I'll continue to periodically
clean my apartment, hope my hair comes out right, and
wear the good underwear (which, for guys, is much less
complicated to do than for girls). And when my dates cancel,
my friends get married, and my roommate brings home a
moaner, it might be a rough night. But I'll laugh about
it the next morning. And hope that the next girl I end
up with is even louder.
Steve Hofstetter is the author of the
Student Body Shots books, which are available at SteveHofstetter.com.
E-mail him at steve@stevehofstetter.com.
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