Saturday 30 May 2020

100 dates - 1 -11


   


When I speak to my mum this week, she tells me that she admires me for continuing with on-line dating. She is not the first person to say this to me. Friends say, ‘I couldn’t do it,’ and ‘if I broke up with my husband, I don’t think I’d bother dating again,’ 


Whenever I have felt like giving up, (which has been many, many times) I go back to a promise that I made myself. I would go on one hundred dates, and if after those one hundred dates I still had not met someone I wanted to keep going on dates with, and they felt the same way about me, I would call off the search and admit that there just might not be someone out there for me. 

Every few months since I started OLD back in 2017,  I’d decide to write about my experiences, abut then I’d start to worry that it was unethical, what people would think of me, that my family, boss or   that past dates would read it and recognise themselves, and I’d stop and not write about something else.


People want to hear the details of dates, how was it, what did you do, where did you go, did you like him? The truth is that most first on-line dates are actually pretty mundane, text chemistry rarely translates into something tangible, and really, if you think about it, it’s kind of a weird way to meet someone.


These are the 100 dates rules:

·         An actual date has to happen – it can be in the real life or a virtual date
·         Second and third dates with the same person are included in the account
·         Dates that happen as a result of an in the actual real word meeting count
·         Personal details are changed – this of course includes all names
            What happens on some dates, stays on the date 

Dates may not be in exact the exact time order, because as I am sure any other experienced on-line dater will tell you, it can be difficult keeping track when you are spinning multiple plates at once. Using WhatsApp messages, I have pieced together the following timeline as accurately as I can.
Let’s share this pain. 

1. The Builder

I made plans for later in the evening with two friends in case this didn’t go well. The Builder was actually very good company, so he ended up staying out for dinner with me and my friends. He had a complicated home life, (living with his ex- partner and their children) and worked ridiculously long hours. Trying to set up a second date was a massive headache due his work and kids schedule, and he kept cancelling plans at the last minute. I always had the suspicion in the back of my mind that he was very much still with his ‘ex’ and his long working hours were a good cover for sneaking off on dates.
Eventually I gave up on trying to set up a second date. He asked if we could be friends. I declined.

2.  Lord George Byron (Summer 2017)

He had recently moved recently London to work as a teacher. Much better looking in the flesh than in his photos (which of course you’d never say to someone’s face because it’s insulting), he had beautiful browny-green eyes and very white teeth. He was obsessed with Byron, but spent the whole date showing me screenshots of bad Tinder profiles and messages he had received from terrible women. Byron never responded after I sent him the episode of Drunk Histories which begins with the legendary words, ‘Lord George Byron fucked his sister.’

My other abiding memory of the date is that while I sat in the courtyard of the British Library waiting for Byron to show, there was a man sitting at a table eating a catering sized pot of strawberry yoghurt. When he caught me watching him, he curled his arm protectively around the pot as if I might rush him and steal it. 

3. Billy Gorilly (Autumn 2017)

In one of his photos he was wearing a gorilla costume. We met for a coffee. When I got there, he already had an empty cup in front of him. I asked if he wanted something else, and he declined. He had a grease spot from lunch on his blue shirt.  He was super awkward. He couldn’t look me in the eye. He lived with his mum and she did all his cooking and cleaning for him. It was a profoundly depressing, uncomfortable date and I left feeling like I wanted to cry. He mistook my friendliness for interest and asked for a second one then and there. I said yes, feeling terrible, but I didn’t want to crush him in public. I had to Dear John him later and it felt like kicking a puppy down the stairs. I am sorry, Billy. 

4.     X-Factor (Autumn 2017)

He had very weird hair and I couldn’t stop looking at it. He liked going on game and talent shows. The date lasted an excruciatingly long 45 minutes.

He talked about moving out of his mums in the next few years but he was too comfortable at home where she did his cooking and cleaning (what is it with these man children?) when I said that he would need to learn to cook, he looked at me as if I said, ‘you will have to murder your mother with her own kitchen knives and then shit on her corpse,’

On the walk back to the car, he hinted at meeting again the following week. I blurted out, ‘I don’t want to go on a second date with you!’ there followed a few seconds of wounded silence, after which he stuck his hand out and said graciously, ‘it was nice to meet you’

5.  Zoom (Summer 2018)

A real-life meeting! I meet Zoom on a night out in London. He was very sweet and perky, we swapped numbers and texted back and forth for a few weeks. He would text me 3 times a day to ask me what I was having for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

We arranged a date and he was almost 3 hours late. To his credit I got a running commentary on his journey and ETA. We went for a walk, drinks and some food before I dropped him back at the station.

I had realised pretty much straightaway that I wasn’t attracted to him and dodged out of the way of a kiss.

I messaged him later saying I had a lovely time, but I wanted to leave it there and not carry on messaging him because I didn’t want him to think it meant something.

He texted me a year later after finding my number in his phone. He referred to himself in the third person. He last texted me as we went into lockdown, and I am ashamed to say that I have not responded. 

 

6.    Mr Cheese (Summer 2018)

This is the date I plead the Fifth on. Let’s just say I was in my Questionable Decisions stage of dating and leave it there.


7.   BOB (Christmas 2018)

This was an actual, real-life meeting and not an on-line match. I include it here because we went on a date. Kind of. By date I mean there was one night I went and met him and his mates down the pub and two occasions where he came round to my place to ‘watch a film’.

We met at Christmas, and by Easter he had blocked me from all social media accounts, un-liking all previously liked posts. That didn’t stop him texting me late one night in July to ask if I’d called him.

Yes, BOB, I did. In March. I never replied to his last text, and he has never contacted me again.

8.    Frogman (Spring 2019)

My friend Lulu says that I fell in love with Frogman, and I probably did. He looked like Billy Idol with his bleach blonde hair, white t-shirt and skinny black jeans. He was covered in weird tattoos. We talked the whole night and ended the evening with a lovely hug.

There’s a Maya Angelou quote that goes ‘when someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time,’. Here was my clue: Frogman said to me, ‘it’s easy to be interesting when you just make stuff up,’

We bounced messages back and forth for a few days after the date, then I got the slow fade before he disappeared for good.

That’s the last time I go on a date with living, breathing version of Common People by Pulp.

 9.    Milky Tea (Summer 2019)

‘Milky Tea’ is a semi-affectionate but mostly insulting name Lulu has for bland dates. There’s nothing terribly wrong with them, but there’s nothing all that special either.  Milky Tea was scared of wasps and spent the entire evening flailing his arms around and ducking. I took him for Thai because I’d left my purse at home and he bought all the drinks (I went home to get my bank card).

 After the date, we exchanged a few more texts, and talked about maybe going for ramen sometime. He replied to my last text months later, to wish me a Merry Christmas.

10 & 11   Joe (Summer 2019)

Double-dates, arranged by Lulu.  Joe was funny and friendly, but had a complicated relationship with his ex, who he had been with since…since forever. There was something about his face that reminded me of an ex-boyfriend and I couldn’t shake that off. Lulu had marginally more success and dated Joe’s friend for a couple of months, but it didn’t work out.

Aside from Joe’s unsettling resemblance to my ex, I couldn’t get on board with his habit of deliberately winding people up and we had a few needlessly heated arguments. Yes, on first and second dates. He popped up out of the blue recently with a random text that he later said wasn’t for me, but with another girl with the same name.

Join me next time, for more mildly disappointing dates.