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Match.com Misfire: Date # 5, It’s Not Unusual, Part 7

08.02.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

I walk out onto the street. My friend and I are texting back and forth. She wants to know:

“Any other interesting matches?”

“No. Match is a bastion of the unemployed.”

I give up texting and call her. I storm up the street, venting my frustrations loudly, and then laughing. I bring her up to date on my first ex – who just brought a child support modification against me that resulted in him having to pay more money. I bring her up to speed on The Departed, and how having him  out of my life feels like storm clouds have passed over. We chat and chuckle. Then she has to go.

Where are you? I ask.

At a bar mitzvah, she says. Thanks for entertaining me. This is the most entertainment I’ve had all day.

At least you’re well fed, I say.

Speaking of which, I’m hungry. I wander up the street to the little French cafe where I was supposed to meet Mr. Unusual, take a seat at the bar, and order a baguette and a cup of coffee.

It tastes just like Paris.

The last time I was in Paris, I was with The Departed, and his two children, and their resentment, and in my longing for happiness, all I really wanted to do was  eat a baguette in peace.

And here I am, doing just that, not 15 minutes from my home in current traffic conditions.

Not only that, this place has wicked good pear jam.

I leave, and call my friends – the ones I’m supposed to meet in the afternoon. It’s 9:15, and I have some serious time to kill while The Child takes her exam, and I didn’t bring any entertainment because I didn’t think I needed to.

He did what? they say. Where are you? We’re on our way.

This morning isn’t turning out so badly after all.

Categories // Matchless Tags // dating, match.com

Match.com Misfire: Date # 5, It’s Not Unusual, Part 6

07.31.2012 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

The day of my meeting with Mr. Unusual arrives. It’s also the day my daughter takes her middle school entrance exams. The exam she’s been tutored to take for six months. The exam on which, just one year ago, she could not answer a single math question, so great was her test phobia.

No stress.

I slept just fine, for at least an hour.

But I’m up in time and looking good and she’s up and fed and seems reasonably calm, even though she didn’t sleep much either. We drive to the school and arrive 40 minutes early, because of all the nonexistent traffic I made allowances for in my planning.

Parking presents a bit of a challenge: The Seattle side of the bridge is not as SUV-friendly as my side of the bridge. I attempt to parallel park – and fail. Space too small. I find another, seemingly larger space. It’s not large enough either.

I drive around the block twice and on the third orbit, discover the school has a parking lot.

We check The Child in for her exam with 20 minutes to spare, and take seats to wait in the school library. I text my friend:

Nervous.”

The child and I take in the library. We talk iPhone games with the family next to us. We talk in whispers as though some school librarian is going to walk by and shush us at any moment.

My phone pings with a reply.

You are hilarious and interesting to talk to! It will be fine.”

And then, immediately, another text:

Ugh

Woke up sick

Need to reschedule. Very Sorry.”

Liar.

One of the things I am trying very hard to do is listen to my gut. I could have avoided two lousy marriages if I’d just listened to my immediate reaction to  people and their actions – and responded with my actual feelings, instead reacting with the nice, polite response I offered up in reaction to what I hoped, rather than knew, to be the case.

This is a test. The Child and I both have important tests today.

I reply to my friend first:

“He just bailed. Said he was sick. Bite me.”

She replied:

“Did he reschedule?

He could get sick you know. It happens.”

Well, he said he would reschedule. Actually, he said he needed to reschedule, not that he would, and I’ve got a long list of things I need to do and may or may not get to anytime soon.

I’m trying really hard to listen to my gut, and my gut is telling me that this guy was in fact lining up match.com options, penciling them all in and then choosing the best of those options.

In short: I think his date last night went well, and he couldn’t get away for coffee this morning.

None of which is my problem. My problem is I’ve got three hours to kill in Seattle and now, because of him, no way to kill them.

Also, I’m completely sleep deprived.

Not to mention, I’m afraid to drive anymore because I’m not sure what will happen if I try to park again.

I reply to his text:

“Right. Feel better.”

It’s as close as I can get to what I’m actually thinking, while allowing for the infinitesimally small probability that he does actually have food poisoning or incipient flesh-eating bacteria and will actually reschedule if he should recover and his iPhone isn’t stolen while he’s unconscious in the emergency room.

The Child goes off to take her test and I am overwhelmed with guilt and fear and anger. She should have had my undivided attention this morning. Undivided!

Instead I was trying to look nice for someone who has so far had “a laptop disaster” and some undefined illness keeping him from keeping plans that he himself initiated.

I am enraged, and mostly at myself.

 

Categories // Matchless Tags // dating, match.com

Match.com Misfire: Date # 5, It’s Not Unusual, Part 5

07.30.2012 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

Two days before I’m supposed to meet Mr. Unusual, and I have still not heard from him with a specific time and place. I had mentioned a general area in Seattle that I would be in, along with a general time that I would be there, as The Child was taking her middle school entrance exams.

I’m okay, to a point, with last-minute plans, but in this case, I’m a bit annoyed, because it’s rare that I have such a large chunk of free time, and on the Seattle side of the bridge – and if I don’t have plans with him, I’d just as soon have plans with someone else. Specifically, a long-time friend is in town, visiting her mom, another long-time friend.

And I’m waiting like a high-school girl for someone who pencils things in to decide whether or not I’m ink-worthy.

I don’t think so.

I send an email.

“Hi, I have you down on my calendar for Saturday but no specific time or place. Please confirm details, I am just now coordinating my day, thanks.”

That sounds like something a Vice President would say. I am, actually, a Vice President but don’t feel like one at just this moment. More like someone masquerading as one: It’s what I want to be when I grow up.

He replies within fifteen minutes.

“Yep, I meant to send you a note last night and ended up dealing with a laptop disaster.

 I think you said you are dropping your daughter off at (school).”
I’m impressed with his recall of details of my day – he remembers which school I am dropping my daughter off at – yet didn’t manage to confirm plans until the day before?
He suggests a couple of places, one of which
” is across the street from the police station, sadly there isn’t an interesting story about why I know that’s where the police station is).  The bagels are very good there, though bagel shops at 9AM on a Saturday can be zoo like.
I look forward to meeting you.  Sorry for not being more chit-chatty, work has been zany.  I hate all of the accounting work involved with closing the books on a year.  The good news it was a great year.”
Personable, yes. But for someone who doesn’t like to toot his own horn, he sure likes to drop hints that he has a horn worth tooting.
I confirm for one of the places and state a time. He does not reply.
I make plans with my friends for the afternoon, after The Child has taken her exams and I’ve had coffee and a bagel with Mr. Unusual.

Categories // Matchless Tags // dating, match.com

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