This is my version of, "February Sucks", I enjoyed the original and the other versions. It is my first submission in a few years and I welcome constructive comments other comments just go into the shitter where they belong.
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February Sucks (Alternative)
My name is Jim and, in my youth, I was very wild and in trouble, with the police, a lot. I was always in a fight or petty crime then I got into cage fighting and that took the anger and aggression out of me. I stopped fighting went to college and met the woman who was the love of my life. Graduated got a great job and married Linda received many promotions so we were well off. Then the wheels fell off.
Many years ago, I was out of town at a conference. About 20 of us, half men and half women, almost all married, went out to a watering hole one evening to decompress. The local fauna was hitting pretty heavily on the women at our table. We guys were wincing at the crudity of the locals' attempts, while the women laughed and rejected them. One particularly bad approach drew the comment, "He's lucky I like this beer, otherwise he'd be wearing it."
"So, what if it had been [famous football player: call him Jocko] saying that to you? Would he have scored?" another woman asked with a flirty little smirk in her voice.
"Hell, yes!" "Absolutely!" It was clearly unanimous.
"What if it meant, you know..."
"Especially if it meant that!" The women's laughter was genuine; the guys was a little forced.
Understand, these women weren't dogs who couldn't get a date: they ranged from pretty to downright hot. They were in their late twenties and early thirties, and dressed for a night out.
"Um, what would you tell your husband?" one of the guys asked hesitantly.
"Um, why would I tell my husband?" The reply was instantaneous, and greeted with laughter and head-nodding from the women.
"What if your husband was here?" the guy persisted. We could all hear the anxiety in his voice.
One of the women leaned forward with her elbows on the table and looked him dead in the eye. I remembered her from lunch; she'd been showing off pictures of her husband and their perfectly adorable five-year-old girl. "I would tell him that he knows how much I love him, and he knows I'll always come back to him, but I'm not going to pass up this opportunity, and I'll see him sometime tomorrow." She spoke calmly and kindly but with determination. None of us could doubt that she meant exactly what she said.
Several guys' jaws dropped considerably; I know mine was one.
"No, you wouldn't," the guy next to me muttered. The woman looked at him pityingly.
"Yes, I would, and I think every woman here would do the same."
"You might leave with him tonight, but if I was your husband, you sure as hell wouldn't see me tomorrow." He was as serious as she was.
Another woman tried to fix things. "Listen, I love my husband, I wouldn't trade him for anything. Jocko doesn't mean anything to me and never will, and he probably wouldn't even remember my name the next morning. But spending a night with him, just one night out of our whole marriage, would be something I could remember for the rest of my life. An event, you know, with a capital E? It would have nothing to do with the way I feel about my husband. Afterward, I would go home to the man I love, and everything would be like it was before."
A tense silence fell on the table. "Well, that shows us married guys where we stand, doesn't it?" one guy muttered.
"Come on, guys, don't be that way. It's not that big a deal."
The party broke up pretty quickly after that, as people left by ones and twos to wander quietly back to the conference hotel. I have no idea whether the women at that table were typical. I meant to ask my wife about it when I got home, but didn't get up the nerve. I still haven't. I'm not sure I want to know the answer, anyway.
GA.
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"Some person in authority, I don't know who, very likely the Astronomer Royal,
Has decided that, although for such a beastly month as February,
Twenty-eight days as a rule are plenty,
One year in every four his days shall be reckoned as nine and twenty."
- W. S. Gilbert, "The Pirates of Penzance."
"He flies through the air with the greatest of ease,
The daring young man on the flying trapeze.
His movements are graceful, the girls he does please,