Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Some Sherlock Holmes Shit

Earlier this week I was on the bus on the way to work. As they tend to do, people got on the bus and I glanced up from my phone long enough to ensure that no very old, very young, or otherwise challenged people were boarding. Not because I wanted to make fun of them (I rarely do that unless I'm in a very bad mood...) but because I wanted to be a mensch and give up my seat for someone who might need it more than I do.


A second advantage of doing the quick new passenger scan is that I have an opportunity to spot attractive women. (For some reason, as I typed that, I envisioned myself with my hands poised under a barbell as a hot chick lifts weights.)

Every woman, of course, is beautiful in her own way. They are all founts of strength and life-bringing awesomeness that have provided light and stability to every corner of the known universe.

Some women are more beautiful than other women, though, when it comes to me being interested when they get onto the bus.

My admiration of these women, when they magically appear from the sidewalk, doesn't go anywhere. I am loathe to talk to strangers generally, and I believe that the last thing a person wants on the bus is for me to be chatting her up. Maybe I'll smile at them but generally I just bury my nose back into my phone. I'm still marginally happier knowing that there is a cute girl in my vicinity, in any event.


As I was saying, earlier this week I was on the bus on the way to work. On the ride there was no cause for me to give up my seat (yes!) and an attractive woman sat next to me (yes!). After giving her a quick (but hopefully subtle) once-over, I looked back at my phone. Facebook occupied my time, and I noticed, especially, a pic of my friend GG in her new work outfit. As I tend to do, I dropped her a quick chat letting her know that she looked great and that I hope her new job was going well.

After a short time and a few stops, I glanced up from my phone and looked at her phone. I have good eyesight and am curious, and unless I did something stupid like get caught and/or blog about doing so, who would ever know how invasive I was being?

She was looking at Facebook, as well, my eyes spied. And as she scrolled down, what did I see? I saw the same pic of GG in her feed.


Part of me was really close to poking her on the shoulder and asking her how she knew GG. But the rest of me was chastising that dumbass part, because, "Hey! I was just visually eavesdropping on you and I noticed we have a friend in common!" is not the best first impression a guy can make... partly because "visually eavesdropping" is an awkward phrase, but also because, you know. It's weird.

So I didn't talk to her. I looked back at my phone and, after I departed the bus and was walking to work, GG chatted me back. She thanked me for my compliment and general well-wishings, and I told her about what had just happened.

What happened next was one of the most startling chats I've had in a while. Here it is, as it happened, with only the names changed:
GG: Hahahha, I wonder who is was.
GG: That's funny!!
Me: I wonder, too... she's hot!
Me: haha
Me: dark brown hair. Nice chest. Pretty eyes
Me: white
GG: Brunette? 
Me: that's not a lot to go off of, I know 
GG: Her name is [redacted]. 
Me: :)
Me: I guess it IS a lot to go off of! haha
She then sent me a picture. And it was the correct person. I still am not quite sure how she did it so quickly and accurately... it was some Sherlock Holmes shit.


Monday, October 9, 2017

Hard/Not Hard for Me to Say Sorry/Not Sorry

I often wonder if I apologize too much, too little, or just enough.

Maybe it's that I've been watching a ton of Curb Your Enthusiasm, where Larry David spends about a third of every episode apologizing, but "I'm sorry" has been on my mind a lot. It is a phrase, along with a few others ("I love you", "Can I get a pitcher of water?") that I spend a lot of time considering the meaning and impact of.

In the interests of getting this out of my head and of hopefully getting into the habit of writing more, I'm going to lay out some different semi-apologies that I have done, continue to do, and refuse to do.

The Faux Pas-logy

Towards the end of my previous life, as my marriage was ending, I relied on the most dreadful of all apologies.

"I'm sorry you feel that way."

I wasn't saying it to be hurtful, but while it was an accurate representation of how I felt, I think it hurt. Or at least irked. The things I was doing were not something that I felt I should apologize for, and it was (understandably) perceived by the recipient as dismissive of her feelings. I knew this as I was saying it, but I did it anyway. Why? I don't know why I did it then... maybe it was because I felt a placating apology would be insincere and it's that I was willing to offer (some modicum of) sympathy, but I was not accepting responsibility.

I also think that I was afraid of feeling less powerful or something... in any case, I don't say, or hint at, this phrase these days.

In the Line of Duty

Part of my job is to make people happy. I make them happiest when I deliver on-time and on-budget, but short of that I try to make expensive and/or late things less painful to deal with. And that, my friends (and/or enemies... whomever is reading this) involves a lot of apologies. I never want to blame a coworker or a boss or the client themselves, so I fall on the sword a fair bit: I wasn't clear, I overestimated, I underestimated, I let something fall through the cracks, I dropped the ball, I misinterpreted, I was confused... so many things that I did to prevent success. So many things that I could do--and will do!--better. So many things. I say these things entirely sincerely in order to diffuse situations and to get past the frustration of failure and lay out solutions and re-set expectations.

I've thought about why I do this so easily and (I think) effectively at work but I was unwilling or unable to do it at the end of my marriage. I've determined two things:

  1. It's just work. Nobody is gonna die. I have been fired. I have quit. I have loved clients and disliked them. I have overdelivered with no praise and been chastised for doing what was asked of me--and the opposites of both of those. I like my work and I want to do it well, but ... it's just work. I don't define myself by my occupation in the same way I think I did with my marriage back in the day.
  2. You always find something in the last place you look. "I'm sorry you feel that way" is not how I apologized to my ex when we first started dating. Or five years after we were together. Or even ten years after we were together. It was only towards the end, and I suspect it was a manifestation of my own unhappiness that I was being stubborn (and maybe of her unhappiness that she was expecting me to apologize for things she never had before?).
As it turns out, occupational apologies are good for business and don't hurt my soul. So I'll keep doing them, even as I work to reduce the number of times I have to do so.

In a Line

My only super power is my ability to be the weak link in a line of people... there can be ten or fifty people standing in a line, and if there is perpendicular foot traffic, folks will locate me and target me as the person who will stand aside as they break through.

On the bus, I am consistently (unintentionally, presumably) battered by dumbasses who have terrible spatial awareness vis-à-vis.

And on a dancefloor, when I am drunk enough to venture onto one, I usually spend more time dancing out of the way of being touched by other dancers than I do, you know, dancing. 

What do I say in all of these situations? "I'm sorry." I do it automatically... mechanically and without thought.

Why do I say it? Again, I have thought about it. I think there are two main reasons, and it's usually a mix of these two things rather than a singular explanation.
  1. I am genuinely sorry for causing you distress. I know you need to get where you're going. I know you need to pack half of your worldly possessions on your person when you're on the bus. I am quite sure you didn't appreciate feeling my crotch on your hip.
  2. I know my sense of space is different than yours, but please acknowledge me.
OK. Maybe those two things are closer to one thing, now that I look at it that way.

Inconclusion

I believe that I very rarely expect apologies from other people, and I can count on one hand the number of times in my life that I have refused an apology... but I have to use two hands to count the number of apologies (not counting the types in this blog earlier) I've sincerely given this month. I even apologize on the internet sometimes (I think I'm one of the three people that do that).

When I don't feel like giving a sincere apology, I feel justified in declining (of course... who doesn't?). When I hope for an apology, I feel it's uncommon enough to warrant consideration. When both of those things happen at the same time and the other person disagrees, shit hits the fan.

So, yeah. I often wonder if I apologize too much, too little, or just enough. Maybe I'll start worrying when I think I know the answer.

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Hanging Out on the Street

Occasionally, in spite of my socially toxic mix of shyness, aloofness, and oddness, I meet girls. Usually these meetings are in dark public places and alcohol is involved. I am lead to believe that sometimes people meet in other locations: grocery stores, libraries, and laundromats all seem to be places that folks smile, joke, and exchange stuff... like phone numbers and potentially, eventually, bodily fluids.

With rare exceptions (a chance laundry room meeting still reverberates in my life), that's not me. It's clubs and bars and such for me.

I think the perception of this is that one meets a certain type of person in places like this. I will admit that the perception has some grain of truth--a drunk or high woman is less likely to actually respond to me the next day, even if she seems very interested at the time we meet. With that being said, awesome people are everywhere... and meeting someone in the light of day does not guarantee sanity or responsibility.

So... you might guess what I'm going to type about.

The other day I was walking down the street in downtown Seattle. I was just off of work and walking to social engagement. The sun was shining and I was dressed in a rather dandy outfit, the crown jewel of which was a very pink blazer.

I was enjoying my walk, half-assedly playing Pokemon Go and making sure I didn't bump into anyone else.

At some point, the foot traffic had thinned and I noticed a woman talking to a guy. Even though I didn't slow down, I was able to admire her pleasant, uh, figure.(1) I don't think that I stared, but self-awareness is always a challenge for me.

Also a challenge for me? The sunglasses I was wearing. They were sort of retro and pink-tinted. And loose on my face.

I am lucky enough not to need glasses. My vision may not be 20/15 anymore, but it's still good enough to do stuff like half-assedly play Pokemon Go, not bump into other pedestrians, and not-stare at a woman's rack.

What I am not lucky enough to do is to deal with loose sunglasses without feeling self-conscious. I know it's ridiculous that I was walking down the street in a bright pink jacket and pink sunglasses but I was worried about how I looked when I pushed the glasses farther up the bridge of my nose.

As I walked, then, I glanced over at the building on my right to see my reflection--to see if the glasses looked silly enough for me to have to feel silly by nudging them up.

Much like the Fonz, I looked good ("Heyyyyy!"). Much like the Ed O of one minute before, I saw the aforementioned woman, and her well-filled-out tanktop caught my eye again. This time Tanktop was walking about six feet behind me and to my left, and I couldn't help but look at her in the glass.(2) It was a reflex in a reflection.

Unlike before, though, where she seemingly was unaware of me (and my roaming eyeballs), this time she said something.

"WHY THE FUCK ARE YOU STARING AT MY TITS?!?," was not what she said, fortunately.

It was something more along the lines of, "Ahh... checking yourself out, I see."(3)

Normally I don't talk to people on the street... but that's because the people on the street who talk to ME are drunk and/or drugged up. Which I suppose is not THAT different than the folks who want to talk to me in bars and clubs. Maybe it's a matter of how recently they've showered. I dunno.

In this case, I had little choice but to reply. Tanktop and I were walking rather closely together and there was no one else in our proximity.

I looked over my left shoulder, took especial care to maintain eye contact, and replied, "Of course. I definitely wasn't checking you out."

Which wasn't mean. Maybe it was a light neg, but I had a sparkle in my as I said it.

She laughed and said, "OK, good to know."

And then she sped up to catch up with me(4) and we walked some blocks, southward.

It was a fun little conversation. Highlights/lowlights included:

  • Tanktop was going somewhere (where? I didn't catch it and I didn't want to admit I didn't hear her, so I just nodded, knowingly) to get her phone. 
  • She mentioned her "guy".(5)
  • We talked about where we lived and that my view of the Space Needle used to be better. I made the logical "just the tip" joke. She laughed.(6) 
  • She said that I should put her number in my phone. I didn't do so because I thought she was joking. And that she has a guy.(7) 
  • She discussed a building we walked by, and that she used the back door once. I laughed. She stared at me for a second and then laughed, too.(8)
  • We approached her destination (whatever it was) and she said, again, that I should get her number. In spite of my general lack of wits, I decided to do so this time and she said we'd have to get a drink or something.(9)
  • I told her I'd text her and she said she'd get back to me when she got her hands on her phone.

OK. Cool. So I got to the social engagement and I got a drink and I was talking to a friend. I couldn't help but bring up that I'd talked to a real, live, human stranger in the middle of daylight. My friend admitted that it seemed unlikely but seemed to take me at my word.

She asked if I had texted the woman yet, and I said that I had (making a joke about how I was the guy in the pink jacket who'd been sexually harassing her on the street), but that she hadn't gotten back--so maybe it was the absent phone causing the delay, or maybe I had the number wrong, or maybe she otherwise changed her mind about responding. I wasn't too worried about it.

I did tell my friend, though, that perhaps the woman thought I was gay. I was, after all, wearing a pink jacket and pink-tinted sunglasses. She stared at me for a minute, pointed at my cheeks and their weak efforts at growing a beard (which, honestly, is simply lack of effort at shaving), and said, "She knows you're not gay. Look at your facial hair."

(Friends are awesome, huh?)

After thirty minutes or so, she txted back, "lol"-ing like a pro and saying it was unfortunate that she was not my type (see? I KNEW that was gonna happen!).(10) I responded with the question of who it was unfortunate for, and that with her sense of humor and the way she looked in her tanktop that she seemed my type.

(I'm obviously much bolder over texts.)

Our text convo went something like this:

  • She apologized and complimented me. 
  • I complimented her back. 
  • She complimented me again.(11)
  • I sent her a pic of the event I was at (which had a great rooftop view).
  • She said that she should have come with me.(12)
  • I told her that she was right, and that I obviously need to step up my "Talking to Random Cute Girls on the Street" game.

And this next part, loyal reader(s), is why I wrote this blog entry. I am going to reveal the actual text of the, uh, texts. Not because I want to be mean or to judge, but... well, because I want to.
Tanktop: Lol yeah i was on a just got out of jail high
Me: Ah... that explains the prison aroma I was picking up
T: Lol it wasn't anything all super crazy with accusations and it sounds worse than it really was I have a husband that's very jealous and very afraid of losing me and said that I ran him over with my car and I didn't 
Second time I've every been in jail first time was a DUI when I was 20 LOL
I just don't want you to think I'm some crazy weirdo(13)
I thought she was joking, which is why I said what I said (I wasn't close enough to smell her, for the record). But I get the sense she's not.

There's nothing wrong with a DUI, and going to jail/prison is not the end of the world. Having a jealous significant other is relatively common, I gather.

But all of those things together in a text from a person I'd met on the street a couple of hours earlier... it was enough to remind me that I don't need to go to a bar or a club to meet hot, potentially crazy women.

Epilogue

You might have noticed bolded numbers peppered throughout the main post. These are points during this experience where I wanted to document two things: (a) how interested I was in Tanktop, and (b) how I judged my changes for hanging out with her.


A few notes:

  • My interest over time seems to be a combination of (a) getting a better look at her, and (b) the interest she was exhibiting in me. Typical dude, I guess.
  • I probably should have said that my interest dropped at (5)... and I suppose it did, but not enough to move the needle. Typical dude.
  • (10) was a mixed bag. She got back to me, but she thought I was gay. Typical chick.
  • I intentionally left off (13). I asked two friends about the situation and one said, "I bet she's kinky... maybe she'll run you over with that ass" and the other said, "No. No. No. Leave her alone. Lol." I can see great wisdom in the position of each.

Sunday, June 4, 2017

Implants

"Implants" is a surprisingly sensitive word. Dental implants are a pretty safe topic of conversation, but two other types of implants are a conversational minefield.

The first one, which is less salacious than the second, and so will get short shrift in this space, is cochlear implants. A cochlear implant is "a surgically implanted electronic device that provides a sense of sound to a person who is profoundly deaf or severely hard of hearing in both ears." (Definition by Google.)

Why are cochlear implants a conversational minefield? Why did Time ask whether it was "A Cure or a Genocide?" Why were they deplored by many in the Deaf community, and considered by some to be child abuse?

To a person like me, who has excellent hearing (in spite of way too much time in karaoke bars and house clubs), cochlear implants seem amazing and a godsend and lots of other great phrases and adjectives. But I am not Deaf, I am not of that world and I have not been invested in the unique Deaf culture... so it didn't occur to me that there would be resistance to it (although, over time, that resistance is dying down).

If and when I have an opportunity to discuss cochlear implants (which I generally try to squeeze in on the second Wednesday of each month), I am no expert, and I don't even know what I don't know, but I know there is stuff that I don't know, so I know to tread lightly.

Another topic I know to be careful about is the other type of implants I wanna write about: breast implants. Breast augmentation. Boob jobs.

While I have next to no experience with cochlear implants, I have managed to accumulate some first-hand (haha) knowledge of breast implants. And, being the aspiringly enlightened man that I am, I make every effort not to discriminate against boobs on the basis of origin...

As long as they make the woman feel better about herself? Go for it. That it turns out that she looks better in a bikini or a dress (or out of either) is something that I appreciate. I know that it's not about what I think, but I still am gonna think what I'm gonna think, and if it's up to me then I'd like to think good things.

Even as I've typed the last few paragraphs, my inner perv has been wrestling for control of the narrative with the aspiringly enlightened me. I know that someone, somewhere might read this and I want to be respectful but honest, and fortunately I can keep the perv under wraps as I type away in my apartment.

It is markedly more difficult when I am discussing the topic with a female friend in a bar after I've had a few drinks. Difficult because (as with Deaf culture and cochlear implants) I can have an opinion and I can witness things from the outside, but any opinion or (heaven forbid!) advice I'd give on either type of implant would be hopelessly awkward.

For better or worse, though, I recently had a conversation with a friend about her chest and potential upcoming augmentation procedure. The rum was flowing in my system and I was REALLY trying to be a good, gentlemanly, supportive friend, but I had the perv devil on my shoulder and I could hear my alternate response every time I replied. It went something like this (this is dramatized for effect):
Her: So I went to see a doctor last week.
Gentlemanly Me (GM): Oh, yeah?
Pervert Me (PM): *yawn*
Her: I got a consultation on getting my boobs done...
GM: Oh, really?
PM: What? Really? Sweet...
Her: Yeah, since I've lost all this weight and started running more, I've lost my curves.
GM: Hmm... I guess so, but you look great!
PM: Your butt looks great!
Her: And I don't like that I am so flat now.
GM: It happens when you lose weight. You're so slim now.
PM: I've noticed. I miss the girls.
Her: I mean, I don't feel comfortable wearing a tank top, let alone a bikini.
GM: Really? I bet you look great. Not to tell you what to think, but...
PM: So are you really getting those boobs done?
Her: So I think I'm gonna get them bigger.
GM: I'm sure you've thought a lot about it.
PM: How much bigger?
Her: Yeah, I have. I am looking forward to it.
GM: Well, I think you look great now, but if it makes you more comfortable then I look forward to seeing the results.
PM: I am looking forward to the pics as soon as the bruises go away.
Please know that I was Gentlemanly Me throughout the conversation. Not because I didn't want to be flirty or naughty or funny or whatever, but because I understand enough to know that it was a sensitive thing for her ... and because I don't want to spoil the potential for checking out the goods when the dust clears.

Monday, April 24, 2017

Random Baseball Dream Leads to Random Blog Post

It's not very often that I dream, and even less often than I bother to write down what I remember. Last night, I had a dream, and today I am writing it down. What does it mean? Almost certainly nothing. Why am I writing it down? Maybe because I like to hear myself type. But here it is.


The scene took place at my high school baseball field. As an FYI, I played four years of varsity baseball in high school, and played something like 11 of 12 years I could play growing up. I wasn't ever amazing, but I was pretty good.

In the dream, we had guys on second and third base and I was at bat. A couple of specifics:

- I'm not sure who "we" were. My team, presumably, but I don't think I recognized anyone on my team outside of my brother.
- I was batting right-handed. I hit left-handed for almost my whole time playing baseball in spite of being right handed overall (throwing, writing, slappin' the ho).
- It was daylight, but the evening. Presumably about the time that we played baseball games after school.

As I was at bat, the umpire threw the ball back to the pitcher (as he might do in the case of a muddy or scuffed ball) but he made a bad throw. The throw bounded past the third baseman and both of my teammates came around to score. I remember telling the second one to slide (although he didn't).

For those non-baseball fans reading this: runners can't advance on a bad throw by the umpire... even one as spectacularly bad as in my dream.

After the errant umpire throw, I was still at bat but an extended discussion (about what? I don't know/remember) occurred in the field and I was standing there, bat in hand, as it became super-dark, super-fast. It was agreed that the game was over. I was upset that I didn't get to bat.

And... it ended. I have no idea why I remembered this dream, given that I almost never do.

(The only other recent dream I recall was more brief and more horrific; I was sitting in a small room, alone, and someone yelled something. I saw smoke coming through the keyhole of the only door of the room, which I could not open. I decided (why?!?) to look through the keyhole but the smoke kept coming. I couldn't breath. I felt myself weaken. And I awoke, panting heavily, very frightened.)



Because I severely doubt my clairvoyant capabilities, I don't look at the baseball dream as prophecy. Instead, I'll look at various things in my life that might have contributed to the la-la-land melange:

- I don't get to see my brother (and the rest of my family) as much as I'd like, but my siblings and I have been ironing out Christmas plans this year and I think we settled on the parameters of a vacation, which excites me.

- I haven't watched any baseball this year. None. I have played in a long-term fantasy baseball league dating back to college, but the league ... went away and I didn't sign up for another league. While I plan on seeing the Mariners after the weather gets better (it seems like a fun, if overpriced, way to trick girls into hanging out with me), now that I don't have my old-school AL-only roto league to cheer, I just haven't had the inclination to follow or watch baseball.

- I am reading a series of books that start with The Three Body Problem. The books are by a Chinese science fiction author and one of the motifs is rapid/chaotic sunlight/darkness changes, so maybe that was part of it. (I'm on the second book now, by the way; it's excellent.)


- I signed up for kickball and I am on a team, although my attendance has been terrible. The first game I played in (about a month ago) we only got to play three innings before it was too dark to continue. Summer kickball signups are occurring, but I decided that while I liked my teammates I am not going to sign up again because (a) work makes attendance tough, and (b) the fields are going to be farther away, and as a non-car owner that makes it more difficult. I still feel like I might be making a mistake by not playing again. I also have an aching shoulder (which I think might be from kickball a couple of weeks ago) and maybe I was sleeping on it wrong.

The good thing about dreams is that they don't matter unless you think they matter, and even then they probably don't matter. My brain

Monday, March 13, 2017

Looking back, looking forward

I've had friends that have "Web logged" (what the kids call "blogging") for some time now, but I've always considered it too... self-indulgent? intellectually masturbatory? (If you're a friend and you're reading this, I'm of course not talking about your stuff!)

An alternate explanation for my absence from the world of blogging is the (a) lack of content that anyone would ever want to read, and/or (b) anyone that would ever want to read anything that I would want to write.

But I bumped into some old friends this past weekend that are on MySpace and I can always zap this later if I come to my senses and realize that maybe the world was a better place before I tried to make a blog. We'll see how this works out...
That is from my first blog entry, dated May 16, 2006. I typed it into MySpace shortly before midnight (according to the timestamp on Blogger, which I think is accurate if I imported the entry into this system properly) in a little apartment that featured three cats and almost no windows. I had made my public karaoke debut eleven days prior, I was attending classes at night working on my MBA, and I was waiting for my divorce to finalize.

My world was different, but I suppose it would be odd if things had stayed the same.

My early blog was random and rarely read--ok, so maybe things have stayed the same--and it was on MySpace. I spent some time a couple of years ago exporting those entries and then bringing them into this platform, starting with the May 16, 2006 entry, but I lost interest at some point and most of 2007's (genius, I'm sure) posts aren't available to be read. I'm sorry/you're welcome. Maybe someday I will delve into my exported file and start to slug those back in. I'm sorry/you're welcome.

In the meantime, though, I want to start writing again. The process of creating has value in and of itself and I feel the need to do something deeper than Snapchat or Facebook statuses (although presumably I'll continue to do those, for better or worse).

I might think that (a) I lack content that anyone would ever want to read, and/or that (b) anyone would ever want to read anything that I would want to write, but I've written some pretty good stuff before and so it's time for me to give it another whirl.