Calling Cards For Dating
By Juli Hiatt Caldwell,
married and happy, and Erin Ann McBride, single and looking
for a best friend
It only takes one misunderstood
“almost relationship” to come to the conclusion that Hallmark
is seriously lacking in the "what I want from this relationship"
card department. Dating has become so complicated that it is
impossible to really know what the other person is looking for.
Because dating is all about games and hiding your true intentions,
because, heaven forbid, you put yourself out there and sort
of pretty much kinda let your feelings be known, and then getting
your heart shoved right back down your own throat. And nobody
really wants that, so we play games instead.
Dating has become a gigantic life
long game of Monopoly, where we roll the dice, move forward,
pay the rent, and occasionally get stuck in dating jail, unable
to do anything to fix our situation except keep on rolling dice.
Everyone is looking for something
different and no one ever really knows what that is. Getting
asked out on a date no longer means that you are both looking
for an eternal commitment. Some people are just looking for
a free dinner. Some are looking for a movie partner. Some
people are just looking for a “friend with benefits.” And some
people have no idea what they are looking for.
Sometimes you meet someone, you
think they are fun, you enjoy a few conversations, and it all
seems so easy at that point. But no, that is where the fun and
easy ends. You roll the dice, land on “North Carolina Avenue,”
fall for the cute homeowner, but then on the next roll, where
you are hoping to buy the house next door on “Pennsylvania Avenue”
you overthrow the dice, land on Chance, and have to sit out
the next three rounds.
For the past year we have politely described to you what you
want to think dating is like, mixed in with what dating is really
like. Today we bring you 100% honesty. If you are offended
by how honest we are, we aren’t going to apologize. We’ve told
you the truth and it isn’t our job to make married people think
happy things about dating. Our job is to let singles know that
they aren’t alone. So today we bring you the absolute truth
about dating and set it in terms the singles will completely
understand, right down to “friends with benefits,” “I did it
for the discount,” and “NCMO’s.” Some things just have to be
said.
First, if you are going to date
someone, you have to meet someone just to have all of these
problems. Good luck with that. For some people it is as easy
as walking into the chapel on Sunday. For others it takes years
of nothingness to finally meet someone half decent to pay for
dinner. And for others, it happens a few times a year, and
they never can figure out when or why it happens. “Were my pheromones
actually working? Why did that guy actually take the bait?
What was different today??” After you meet them, and shockingly
enough a date is asked for, there is the complete agony of the
goodnight kiss, and whether or not to go for it. And during
the doorstep scene there is the complete mystery of “Do they
like me?” “Am I boring?” “Did I eat too many jalapenos with
my burrito??”
So let’s say you survive the first
date, and we all know that sometimes you wonder if you really
will. Because, who are we kidding, most first dates really
are painful most of the time. Right up until you have gone
on the first date there is a lot of vague, "what if?"
But the truth is, it gets worse after the first date. If you
call too soon, email, IM, text, etc, it can come off as way
too eager. And even if you do really like the person, you don't
want to send an overzealous message and scare them off. But
then you don't want to wait too long either and send the message
that you have little interest. It’s awful, and it is the same
for both parties. No one can ever tell you what to do. (Although
we all know you’ll ask a dozen people in the meantime.)
And then there is the second date. Suddenly there is pressure
to really show your true colors, be yourself. Test the waters;
see if the person likes you. And then there is still the kissing
dilemma. Kissing is no longer taboo on the first date, let
alone on the second date. So do you? Don't you? Who knows? Too
soon? Too eager? No one will ever know but the two of you.
Sorry, we can’t really help you there either. But if it helps,
we have all felt your pain.
And then the third date comes along. A third date usually means,
"I like you." Because really, why would you ask someone
out for a third time if you don’t like them? But again you
have this big awful scary rejection choice. If you have made
it to date 3, you both hopefully have some degree of interest
in the other. You must want to get to know the other person
better. There is never another reason to go on the third date,
except for those instances when you did go for the kiss or more
on the second date, and you just feel obligated to go on the
third, even if you have lost interest already. That is where
the real confusion begins.
Enter the Dating Calling Card
That is where the "dating
calling card" comes in. Dating would be so much easier
if everyone could just come with labels on them. For instance,
labels that read, "Only looking for a make-out buddy."
"Only interested in dinner and conversation." "Serious
issues with commitment." "Looking to get married ASAP."
"I only want to be friends." “May actually be normal
enough to just want to go on a few dates and get to know you.”
"Only going out with you to get a discount on my car repairs.”
And last but not least, “I’ll buy you dinner, but what I really
want is a NCMO.”
How much easier would dating be
if you just knew from the get-go what they were looking for?
Maybe labels are a bit much. But we could start having required
mandated conversations at the beginning of a date and at the
end of the date. "I'm Annie and I'm looking for a boyfriend,"
at the beginning of the date. And then at the end of the date,
"You are fun and cuter than I expected. But not quite what
I'm looking for. I’m over thirty and it has been six years since
my last relationship. I need some action, so I'm offering you
"friends with benefits" status. What do you think?"
And his part of the conversation would go something like this
at first, "I'm a guy, therefore I'm only interested in
a physical relationship." And then later, "Hey, a
no-strings attached relationship with options on the weekends
works for me."
I am sure by this point we have
offended several people. But that won’t change the fact that
this is what dating is really like now. It is no longer sitting
in a sewing room with a chaperone leading a dull conversation.
When you are more likely to meet your next date dancing in a
dark room, followed by some close slow dancing, chances are
slim that your first date is going to be spent drinking hot
chocolate while discussing your favorite scriptures. The dating
games have gone so far that instead we spend all of our time
hiding what it is we really want and not anywhere near enough
getting to what we want, regardless of what that is.
So what are we offering? Nothing. We’re just telling it like
it is. We’re telling you that yes, we know that on the next
roll of the dice you will probably land on that “Community Chest”
spot (that you have never really understood because you’ve never
seen a community that has a chest, but that isn’t really the
point right now, is it?) and get sent to jail for the rest of
your life.
And at times you feel like every
date you have ever gone on is the equivalent of buying the “Baltic-”
whatever, and feeling completely useless. And that there are
days where your entire single life can be summed up with the
words, “Short Line.” Will you ever be cool enough to buy Boardwalk?
Will the toss of the dice ever get you to Park Place?
But we all know that somewhere
in your memory there is that one guilty pleasure date, the equivalent
of buying “Marvin Gardens,” that you can’t forget. That one
date that got you nowhere, but just the little tiny inside thrill
of having gone on that date, and buying that property, even
though you only did it so no one else could, brings a little
smirk to your face.
Here’s to some fun dating in 2006
and lots of great smirks. So break out your Sharpie pen, and
write what you are looking for proudly on your label. Put on
your dating calling card and where it with pride. Down with
board games! Up with labels!