That transitional point in a new relationship when it’s a certain time of the month and you have nothing on you… and you ask him to please go pick up the essential missing item.
Yup. I think we’re out of the honeymoon period.
Pun intended.
That transitional point in a new relationship when it’s a certain time of the month and you have nothing on you… and you ask him to please go pick up the essential missing item.
Yup. I think we’re out of the honeymoon period.
Pun intended.
Sitting on the floor of my new bedroom this evening (sort of an oxymoron, it’s new for me but it’s a really old cottage) I was found sorting through many years worth of knickers. With a lack of furniture to utilise (it’s hard trying to make a small bedroom worth of stuff fill an entire unfurnished flat) I decided that if I’m forced for a little while to hide my undergarments in my divan bed drawers, I might as well do it properly.
There I sat, teacup to hand whilst I proceeded to fold my knickers and file away accordingly. In the end, I found myself with four piles of knickers. Well five if you include the ones bound for the bin.
The first pile contained knickers that I would willingly remove clothing for in order to be seen, i.e. when things are going well on a date. These are the fancy, sometimes frilly, sometimes not, knickers which usually belong to a matching bra somewhere.
The second lot consisted of stuff I wouldn’t mind being caught wearing if say, I was knocked over by a granny on her zimmer car and was rushed to hospital with a fractured pelvis. Thus the (hopefully!) cute doctor was then forced to remove my clothing to assess the damage.
You can see I’ve given this a lot of thought.
The third pile was home to knickers only suitable for that time of the month. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t purposely buy knickers just for that occasion, it’s just when my underwear become a little threadbare, or god-forbid –whispers- stained, they get relegated to pile three. It’s sort of like a hierarchy of pants.
One becomes two and two eventually becomes three. It’s just the order of things.
So what, must you be wondering, is in pile four?
Underwear that is too good to be used for that time of the month, but not good enough to show on a date or even to an unsuspecting doctor!
Do you see how complicated my life is? And this is only my underwear drawer.
Pile four contains, amongst other things, a Christmas themed pair of Miss Piggy and Kermit the frog knickers. The material is thick. They cover more skin than I’d like to admit to. Sometimes I wear them to bed under my equally hideous pyjamas.
I don’t like to wonder why I am single.
For the past month or so now, I’ve been trying on men the way most women, or so I’ve heard, try on shoes. I know they’re not really necessary, and yes, I’ve already owned a similar pair one time or another which have been relegated to the back of my closet for various reasons (they no longer fit, I’ve grown bored, they’re not in fashion anymore, they refuse to sit nicely on me feet etc) but I can’t help myself. With each date I go on I feel this might be the pair that finally fits, this might be the one that makes me feel as if they were made for me and me alone; my sole mate as it were.
The reality is much less glamorous than I’m making it out to be.
Sure it’s good to go out and date new people; good like chocolate starts out to be but after your third family size bar, all you end up feeling is sick.
And yet, once the sick feeling goes away, there I am reaching out for another slab of the good stuff.
It’s a vicious circle.
I have a tendency to share information with people thinking a) it’s relevant and b) it’ll help my cause in trying to pass myself off as a normal, functioning human being. In truth it seems that a) it’s not and b) nothing I ever say will help me attain this.
Part of my problem I believe is that I speak without due care and attention. If I were to drive like I talk, my license would have been revoked years ago.
Picture the scene, one post-coitus evening found me lying in bed with a man and more importantly, a bag of kettle chips. Deciding the polite thing to do would be to ask if I could perhaps have one, or three, but not caring what his response would actually be, I asked whilst delving my sleepy little hand into that kettle chip bag, and eventually found my fix. (more…)
If someone told me last week I’d be standing in a shady part of town on an estate at seven thirty on a Saturday morning, cold, hungry and extremely annoyed, I’d have, well, I’d have been surprised at the level of detail they went into.
But they would have been right.
Everything about the situation was wrong, from the loitering outside in the cold, to the frequent talking-to-yourself moments of: WHAT THE FUCK AM I DOING?
Yet something made me stay.
I believe that something was called fear.