Romance


hugh grant

Hugh Grant

Do you think there really are people who can say, ‘Hi, babe. My name’s Charles. This is your lucky night’?

A mutual friend sent me this list of pickup lines along with the suggestion to use it on any “smokin’ hot girl” I might stumble upon.

Take for example, this particularly nasty one: “Your skin is so smooth, its definitely differentiable everywhere.

Or perhaps even more horrendous: “From combinatorics, it’s not N choose R, it’s I choose U, now let’s combine.”

Had enough? How about one more for our friends in Algebra: “You know group theory, right? Let’s add you to me and me to you and see if we’re closed under the ‘operation’.”

This does however bring back a particular exchange from the brilliant film of the 90s starring Hugh Grant and Andie MacDowell, Four Weddings and a Funeral.

Charles: Though, let’s say, for the sake of argument, one did take a fancy to someone at a wedding. Do you think there really are people who can say, ‘Hi, babe. My name’s Charles. This is your lucky night’?

Matthew: Well, if there are, they’re not English.

Charles: Quite.

And so while I can’t possibly imagine that there are people who are able to use one of these lines with great (or even mediocre) success, if there are, they’re not in Math.

Out there, in the big ol’ Internet, there’s a computer forum slanted towards, well, geeks.

I’ve been a member for about half a decade now, and it’s always amusing to see questions about dating pop up. The advice is really fantastic, as the community draws from (mostly) men of all ages 12-60 with varying levels of experience and success in their own love lives.

Here’s the most recent thread, along with the best suggestions.

Question

Your parents give you the ID of some cute girl they found on the side of the road and tell you it’s an opportunity.

Now the question is, I couldnt find the girl in the people pages, but of course she’s on Facebook.

What do I do?

Reply #1
Just explain to your parents you like men. They’ll understand.

Reply #2
“So here’s your ID, wanna go out?”

Sorry man but that screams creepy stalker to me.

Reply #3
Tell her it was destiny that brought you two together.

Then tell her it reminded you of a quest from World of Warcraft…

SCORE!

Reply #4
Just tell her you’re the king of coupons.

Course, there’s a moral to all this.

Go elsewhere for your women problems, stupid.

faith

How can you base your actions, your beliefs, your thoughts, your hopes, on something that is — for all intents and purposes — nonexistent?

I had someone tell me today that I just had to “have faith” that everything would turn out all right.

What the fuck is that, faith?

When things turn out well, people always say that’s just ol’ faith working. But what do they say when life fucks them over? Where is their faith now?

There’s a reason why I’m not a religious person. And that reason stems from the fact that there is absolutely no evidence that faith and God are in fact, tangible concepts. How can you base your actions, your beliefs, your thoughts, your hopes, on something that is — for all intents and purposes — nonexistent?

And if a God, or Gods do exist, I want to demand why the fuck my life is so completely shitty. Why are You so completely ignorant to my suffering? With Your majestic and mighty power, I’m sure You’d at least be able to end my suffering with a well placed bolt of lightning.

No.

There is no Higher Power. No God. No after-life. No heaven. No Hell.

I’m all my own. And that’s the way it should be.

I wrote this three years ago.

Ryan

I remember it pretty vividly. It was the summer after high school and I was a bit heartbroken. Spittin’ angry, too. It was on my old blog, which has long been archived and safely tucked away for future mocking. So don’t bother looking.

Why would you want to look, anyways?

It’s just the incoherent ramblings of an angry kid.

You get almost the same experience watching re-runs of The O.C.

Except during one of my intense brooding sessions, I never have mournful indie-pop music playing in the background.

That’s right, Ryan Atwood. You sissy.

second wind

Later in high school, he went through more women than I through textbooks.

And I assure you, that was no small feat.

There was this girl way, way back in Grade 8 that I fancied. Sort of.

But you know how trivial adolescent love is — it’s a truly turbulent time, what with swirling hormonal mood shifts, awkward hair, squeaky pubescent voices and bad, bad, bad posture.

She was cute. Short, brown eyes, shoulder length brown hair, itty bitty hands, and a button nose. Almost the very definition of sickly cuteness.

I’d often stop by her locker in the morning and sorta squeak out a measly excuse for a conversation.

“Sup,” I’d say.

“Not much,” she’d say.

Then we’d sort of grin at each other and go our separate ways.

No long deep conversations on abstract math, no lustful eye-gazing, not even a bit of innocent flirtation.

I was young. It was hard enough to walk without tripping over my own shoes.

So Christmas comes, and she surprises me with a small gift. Which was totally out of the blue because we were locker buddies in spirit. Certainy not the kind of friends to exchange gifts.

It was a really cute present: a packet of a few dozen pennies individually hand-wrapped in red Christmas paper. The story of why I had such a public obsession with pennies is so vague to me now that there’s no real point in trying to remember it all.

The point is I liked pennies.

Pennies

She gave me pennies. A lot of them. Individually wrapped.

And this, I reasoned to my young, naive self — could only mean one thing: She wanted to jump my eager little bones.

Obviously.

So school lets out and I deviously find her number. You know, through a friend of a friend of a friend. I’m not sure what outrageous lies I had to tell my friends to solicit her number without warranting suspicion, but I’m sure my hastily fictionalized excuses were entirely noble and pure at heart.

“Hi, is this Sally?”, I said.

“Sure is,” she said.

“It’s Phil,” I said.

“Hi Phil,” she said.

She was cheery. And the fact that she didn’t say, “How the fuck did you get my number, you perv?” pushed me onwards.

Iwuzondring…uh…if-yud liket’go… [muffled cough] movie w’me?”, I gasped in one entirely strangled breath.

Smooth, Phil. Real smooth.

Right. But this is where it all gets blurry. If you were preparing yourselves for some amusing climax, I’m afraid you’re going to be severely disapointed.

It was a bust.

From my vague recollection, she agreed, though somewhat unenthusiastically. We then carried out an unusually protracted game of dueling datebooks which consisted of me: serving possible days for our coveted event and her: clumsily returning sympathetic excuses.

Oh, but what a tumultuous phone call it was. Minutes later, I slumped, exhausted and sweaty into my chair, mopped my forehead, and pondered the final decision: we’d both agreed — well, it was more 70/30 — to wait a week or so until school started again, after which we’d find a more suitable date.

It never came.

But you knew that already, didn’t you?

Only a few days after school started, I found out that one of the schoolyard kids — an asshole, even at that age — had asked her out and they were now an exclusive couple, whatever that meant.

Which you know, kind of sucked.

I would have appreciated a bit of an advanced warning. I don’t think she spoke to me much after that whole fiasco.

It didn’t really matter, of course. They eventually parted ways a whole 3 weeks after and he was off oogling another girl before I had a chance for a second wind. Later in high school, he went through more women than I through textbooks.

And I assure you, that was no small feat.

I did hear about Sally from a friend a few years ago. Apparently, she’d put off plans for university after high school with the intent of moving in with her amourous partner.

And here I am. 7 years later.

I don’t think I’ve ever look at a penny the same way since the Christmas of 1999.

This is in reference to a recently deleted post.

Yes, the post has been taken down. Hot on the heels of my La Petite Anglaise article, I’ve been hesitant to post things that risk offending others and more importantly, risk my professional career.

The fact is, what I was referring to as a “momentary lapse in judgement” in the previous post, I really did mean momentary. Nothing major happened.

I mean it.

But it’s the case that I’ve received a whole host of e-mails regarding the late-night entry, ranging from the curiously fascinated to the downright insulted. It really is my fault, and I left too much to the imagination in writing that post.

The other night was an opportunity to have fun and enjoy myself. But instead, I found myself babysitting drunk people. Making sure intoxicated people had made it safe and sound into their hotel rooms, helping girls down flights of stairs when they were a little too wobbly to walk, and offering napkins to those who were a little too cavalier with their goblets.

And repeating to one very attractive, very drunk, and very beguiling lady that I was simply “not that kinda guy.”

But how I wish I was.

And other than the opportunities to dance with a few pretty girls, there was little rewarding about the whole kerfuffle. Except maybe one moment.

After I had gone down several floors to make sure one of my friends had made it into his hotel room safe and sound, his girlfriend ran out of the room and caught me before I entered the elevator.

“I just want to thank you for doing that,” she said sencerely.

I simply nodded.

“It’s hard to find guys like you.”

“It’s what I do,” I said before entering the lift.

Later in the evening, I was referred to by another girl as, “that hot guy who acts like a total gentleman”. It was a nice compliment, sure, but ultimately a glorified version of the truth. What she failed to mention was that guys like me are inconsequential in every way that counts.

The truth is I’m tired of being a walking, talking cliché. A posterboy for this so-called Gentleman’s Club.

Given my past history with women (or lack thereof), I think I deserve to have fun at least once every few years.

So take my advice, folks. Go out, get drunk, have fun, feel free to make out with strangers who think you’re the best thing to come along since prepackaged meats and sliced bread.

Otherwise, you’re going to realize one day that all you have are your goddamn ethics.

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