Preface
This past spring, as the snow was melting and the squirrels were fucking (do squirrels fuck in springtime?), Truthful Ted (from my previous story) and I somehow began texting again. After the requisite "how've you been the past two years?", I shared my latest lament about men -- the boring accountant (he's not even getting a name) I'd been on half a dozen dates with had recently decided to introduce me to the world of being ghosted, and I was royally pissed. Not because I was particularly upset about never seeing him again (we'd kind of exhausted the possibility for interesting conversation about our short list of shared interests), but because I believe in being a decent human being.
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:::start rant::: After a first date, go ahead and never talk to someone again. It's still kind of shitty to ignore them if they reach out, but you've spent 2-3 hours together max; you owe them nothing. Once you've hit the 3 date mark you no longer have an excuse -- in my opinion -- for not sending a quick text. "Sorry, this isn't what I'm looking for," is short and sweet and puts responsibility on neither party. Any of you ghosters out there -- feliz cumple-fucking-años, I've written your goodbye line for you so that you can start using your words like an adult. Take a second and put that in your iPhone Notes app and all you have to do is copy/paste for the rest of time. You're welcome.
And if someone you've said that to comes back with a litany of questions (wait what happened?, did I do something wrong?, I thought our date went well why don't you like me [yes that's legit been said to me]?) then you have my permission to not respond. You don't owe anybody you're not actually committed to a long explanation, and you don't have to pat their hands and soothe any insecurities they have over your "rejection." But you do owe them one line that acknowledges their existence -- which, thanks to the invent of texting, you can literally send while you're on the toilet and unable to do anything else fun or exciting. :::end rant:::
tl;dr -- don't be a cunt, send a quick text.
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Ted agrees that ghosting is rude and shares his own lament: he wants to have a foursome but doesn't want to round up the girls.
Well, I think, good to know Ted hasn't changed. I pull my eyes out from the back of my head (they got stuck from rolling them so. damn. hard.) and give my sympathies, as his situation does sound exceedingly traumatizing :::drip drip drip goes the sarcasm:::. Ted offers to give me tips on how to get men to stick around in the beginning of a relationship if I'll help find three women he can romp with. I text "Ok" while physically shaking my head no. I'd love to help, but I just don't think I have the appropriate friend network for the kind of assistance he's requesting. He reveals the first three (of seven total) rules:
First rule: no private dates (i.e. be out in public) for the first three dates. It sets the precedent that you're in a public relationship and not a booty call.
Second rule: make physical contact and kiss him goodnight on the first date. It shows you are interested and puts the idea of a physical relationship in his head.
Third rule: make plans for the second date at the end of the first date.
Say what I will about Ted's head being full of arrogance, it also contains some wisdom, because I read those and thought, huh, yeah those all makes sense.
Flash forward a month or so and I'm getting ready to go out with Jerry, applying mascara while mentally searching the attic of my mind for helpful first date do's and don'ts (they're packed away between trunks labeled "interview do's and don'ts" and "other times when we should do our best not to look like a nervous weirdo") when I stumble over Ted's three rules.
Rule number two can be hard for me, so I make it my goal if the evening goes well. I'm one of those people who is comfortable being my genuine, uncensored self any time any place, with one stipulation--I'm either in a familiar situation or in a new situation with at least one familiar face. When alone in unfamiliar territory, my natural inclination is to become a 6' tall mute capable of smiling. Through practice, I'm much better than I used to be, but initial confidence/comfort is still very much a learned habit, not a natural skill. Unsurprisingly, when fully engaged in fighting off shy mode, "when can I touch them/kiss them" is not the leading thought in one's brain.
As I'm on the subway en route date destination, I occupy myself by playing a rousing game of pros and cons surrounding the question "will this date go well?"