Archive for the ‘Receiving Rejection’ Category

Dreams Of BT

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Dear   [BT],

I dreamt of you this morning; the first time in a while.  Yet over the years, you’ve appeared here and there in my slumber, and left me smiling upon waking every time; for days afterward sometimes.  It’s the same feeling I get when I see you for real, and it’s the same feeling I miss when you’re not where I’d hoped you’d be. 

I dreamt this morning of guiding you to a free seat in the   main dining room at WPSBC,   fetching food for you, and helping you find someone you were looking for after the meal was done.  Seeing you is one reason I so look forward to our alumni activities.  But I’ve missed seeing you at the last two events and was thus disappointed to learn that I would not be able to serve you at them.  I enjoy doing things for you; I always have.  The thrill when I make you laugh, seems almost boundless because when you smile, I melt.

Though I’m sure you know of my special feelings since we first met over thirty-five years ago, until now I never felt confident enough to directly mention, much less discuss them with you.  I never defined them to you, nor have I ever asked you for what I really want.  True, I’ve occasionally beat around the bush; once through an awkward letter, that I, not knowing how to write braille myself, got another person to braille, so you could read it; a letter which, as I recall, you didn’t like; a letter that compelled you to warn me never to use someone else’s hands to address you again; a letter that you said did not persuade you to go out with me.  You didn’t want to rock the cradle, you said.  I was fifteen then.  You were seventeen.  So your heart appeared, for the most part to be hardened toward me.  I, as a squeaky-voiced, obnoxious boy, was too immature for you, and it was perhaps that very immaturity, that kept me from seeing that. 

So, as your high school graduation approached, I kept after you; agitating you on your father’s bus each Friday; I’d tug your long, dark brown hair that was so soft and exquisite.  I’d offend you with corny jokes; jokes whose punchlines made them not worth the time required to listen to.  No wonder you didn’t like them.  I get it today.  I don’t like them either.  But back then, any attention from you, even negative attention, was positive, and I cherrished it.  So I kept the bad jokes coming until the end of my nineth grade year; the year you left the school for the last time as a student.  It may have seemed like I relished getting under your skin.  But not really.  I just wanted you to pay me some mind, and making you mad seemed easier to do than winning your love.  But the truth is,   [BT],   that   I teased you so because I loved you so.

I’d heard once that you went to your after-lunch classes a little early.  So I made it my business to know your schedule, so that I could be there to meet you.  Then we’d have ten minutes or so to talk before fifth period began.  We did talk too, at least twice each week on Tuesdays and Thursdays.  Remember?  You in twelfth grade, me three years behind.  You had a health class or some such on the first floor of the instruction building, and I so savored those conversations. Thanks for never shooing me away though on many occasions, your teachers had to ask me to leave.  Though perhaps you found me elementary, I found you utterly enthralling, and treasured all the minutes you spared for me, and I thank you for them.

Maybe my wishful, idealistic, teenage thinking colored my intuition.  But I thought you liked my crush at least a little, even though you permitted nothing more between us than frequent, yet painfully short conversations.  I say that because I asled you for your picture, a week or two before you graduated.  Your response confused me; especially after your comment about rocking the cradle.  For a moment, you appeared surprised, flattered, and humbled that I would want one.  You smiled a little, yet said nothing, turning away as though you’d not heard my request.  But then, a few days later when I saw you waiting for the bus home and came over to greet you, you took a black and white photo from your coat pocket, found my hand with your other hand, turned it palm up, and placed the wallet-sized senior picture you’d brought, over top of my eager fingers.  Again you said nothing before turning away, and it was clear that you wished not to discuss the picture, or anything else with me then.  I didn’t care, for I was overjoyed at your portrait gift.  In fact, I think I still have it in an album someplace.

That experience really jolted me, for in those couple seconds that your hand grasped mine, I felt a resonance, a connection, and a delicious albeit temporary convergence of yours and my destinies.  You seemed to be saying that though in the real world we’d never be together, that you might nonetheless consider a romance with me somewhere else; say, in an ideal world.  So I wonder to this day   [BT],  if underneath all those schoolgirl aspirations to meet a Prince Charming, if you, in some small way found me charming.  Or, did you find me undesirable and so, unworthy of your attention?  If you thought me a pain, were you just being polite during all those pre-class talks?  Or did you actually feel a nice connection too, but had to fight the feeling because I wasn’t the type of fellow that you’d normally date?  I heard you say that guys you’d date had to drive a car and make lots of money.  But these descriptions, neither back then nor today in fact, describe me accurately.  I’m still poor, and I still do not drive, although our three year age difference wouldn’t matter nearly as much today as it did in 1976. 

Yet there still was that private picture moment and a few others like it that made me wonder just what your true feelings were.  It seemed that publicly at least, you treated me no more kindly than any other guy in our school.  But when no one else was around, you said some (perhaps) innocent, yet emotionally provocative and kind things.  Once you commented that you liked how I answered extension 52 just outside your 2nd floor Spanish class in the instruction building.  You made my day with that quip, and you should know that I used to sneak out of my class in the weeks that followed, just to answer that phone, when I thought you’d be nearby to hear. 

Then, you’d get all giggly at my complimenting your dimples and cute pony tail as you served students supper in the   main dining room.  Once, when I teased you and then tried to run away, you got hold of me near the steam table and wrestled me to the floor.  Then you held me down while you laughed, for a longer-than-normal yet way too short a time.  Of course, I did not fight you, and I remember looking up into the floodlights as I lay there on my back with you to my right, both your hands pressing against my chest like you were giving me CPR.  Your straight long hair shown in the light, and it was long enough to reach down to my face and tickle my nose.  As it did, I smelled a delightful combination of your perfume and shampoo.  Your many bracelets jingled as you moved a hand from my chest to my shoulder as you released me.  We both got up then and ended the fun with a quick hug, and feeling you hug me back made my week.  But you know, I’d have layed there all day like that if you would have stayed there too.  :-)  

Now   [BT],  I’ve probably read too much into these memories.  But on the off-chance that I haven’t, let me say that you’ve always been a princess; in reality as well as in my dreams.  In fact, when last I saw you at the 2007 alumni social day, you were at 48, as captivating as you were at 17.  Your beauty it would seem then, is timeless, because you haven’t aged a bit in my aging eyes.  You’ve always been, and I suspect will always be, supremely gorgeous, no matter how the coming years ravage either of us. No matter how old we get, you’ll still look seventeen to me, and I’ve got thirty-five years of good feelings to prove it!  :-)

This morning’s dream brought you, our memories, and my feelings front and foremost once more, as dreams like it have done several times since the seventies.  This time though, it inspired me to write.  Why?  I don’t know your current situation or even if you’re in a position to respond; perhaps by now, you’re married again or engaged or something.  So I hope not to intrude.  Indeed, if you’re in a happy relationship, then I so wish you well.  But I’m not getting any younger.  So I didn’t want to let any more time pass without coming clean with you, about the complete extent of my feelings.  Though we’ve only seen each other a handful of times since high school, I’d still love to spend some romantic hours with you, just as I fantasized back then. 

These dreams show that my feelings still run deep for you, and I want you to know that if ever you become available to explore them with me, then by all means tell me.  Then, I’ll make sure that I’m available too, and you and I will do the exploring together.  I don’t care if you get to be 60, 70, or 80 and beyond, because I’ll always be excited to hear from you; even when my own ears begin to fail.  If you reject me now, then at least I’ll have the peace of mind knowing that you did so based on complete information, and not just bits and pieces.  I have, for the first time since knowing you, said it all here, without shyness to muzzle me.  So, if you still say no, then there’s nothing more I can say to change your mind, and thus I’ll not try again.  But should you ever seriously consider coming to me, just keep in mind that as long as I’m single, I’ll always jump at the chance to know your loving side better.  Okay?

Take care, with love.

Tom Hesley

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Dear Terra

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Dear [Terra],

Hey, thanks for speaking to my friends on My Telespace at the VIP foot party the other night. You sounded really cute when I listened to your message later, and they enjoyed hearing you describe our session. Perhaps we can do that again at another party.

Glad you made it in July. Wasn’t sure if you’d return, since you missed the June party. But you came back, and that was nice.

Also, thanks for taking a peak at my blogs. Being an English major, I bet you’d have some thoughtful and thought-provoking comments to make. But if you don’t feel like saying anything profound, just say hi. I’d welcome any comments, no matter how short.

You know, you’re the first lady I did sessions with at my first foot party. You helped get all this started for me. Thanks for showing me how these parties work, and for making sure that [Jack] gets his food and drink. He really appreciates you helping him out. You know?

Do send along some of your “dark fiction” as you describe it. I’d love to read it and give you my amateur comments. :-)

I liked your advice on how to view the foot parties; as recreation and not so much as hunting grounds. Perhaps that will help in the future to slow my falling for those remarkably beautiful women like [Linda]. Still though, love at first sight (LAFS), when it comes, is quite a powerful thing. So I fear, regardless of how I view these parties that should another [Linda] come along, that I’d probably fall just as quickly. We’ll see.

The thing is though: I like falling quickly because the quicker I fall, the longer those love feelings are likely to last. Click here for a discussion on that.  Since I want lasting love, then as I see it, falling quickly is not the problem. In fact, it’s what I most want to do, even though it often results in painful and premature breakups. 

The real problem is finding someone who falls for me just as quickly, and as deeply. It sure would be nice to be in sync with my partners for a change, when it comes to love. But until that happens, I’ll just keep trying.  :-)  

I sense that when one searches for love in earnest, that he cannot avoid the hurt of rejection. The more he wants a true love, the more vulnerable to true love he is, and thus, the more pain he’s likely to encounter as the folks he most desires turn him down.  Indeed, the love quest is all about laying your heart on the table and being willing to risk intense pain for the rewards of intense pleasure.  As far as I can tell, people who take too many steps to avoid pain are also reducing the pleasure they might enjoy if they were less guarded and stand-offish. In short: When you avoid the pain, you also avoid the pleasure. 

Pain and pleasure go together, and so it’s hard to have one without the other.  So while our histories of past hurts may compel us to steer away from those for whom we feel the most vulnerable, we should resist this compulsion.  Why?  Because the more jaded we become, the more closed off we are to true love.  Instead, the more vulnerable we feel ironically, the closer we ought to allow ourselves to get.  We should seek out (rather than avoid) those who could hurt us the most, because these people are also the most likely to give us the greatest joy.  The signs of potential pain are also the signs of potential pleasure. 

Now I’m not saying that we should seek out the pain per se.  But I do suggest that we should embrace (rather than avoid) those souls that make us feel the most vulnerable.  True.  They could hurt us.  But they could also make us happier than we’ve ever been before.  So no, this is not masochism.  We’re not seeking out the pain for the pain itself.  Rather, we’re seeking the pleasure while realizing that the pain goes along with it and that we must be most vulnerable to be the most pleased.  So this is just a way of maximizing our potential satisfaction in love. There’s no such thing as a “safe path” in the love quest.  You can’t win this quest while seeking refuge from its pains. So with all that said, I’m not sure how to apply your advice at the parties to greatest advantage.  The fact is: My dearest dream is to find true love, and I can’t turn that off, no matter the venue.  I’m always looking for true love, even when I tell myself that I shouldn’t be.  It’s my nature.  Further thoughts from you on this would be welcome.

Yes. I agree with you.  [Miss Independent]   is very cute. She could be as alluring as [Linda]. But I’m a bit gun shy at this point, and so I’m afraid to acknowledge the extent of my attraction. But you’re right. [Miss Independent]   is quite beautiful and charming. and I do hope to see her again.  I’ve invited her to come here to my blogs and contact me if she desires.  Hopefully, she will.

Anyway, have a great summer. [Jack] and I are planning to attend the September VIP party. So if you’re there, we’ll see you then.

Take care.

Tom Hesley

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Getting Past Jilt

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

Dear [Emmy],

Getting over someone leaving you can be quite the painful experience. I’ve been through this pain several times over the years, and found the following books most helpful:

How to Survive the Loss of a Love,   by Peter McWilliams, Harold M. Bloomfield, and Melba Colgrove. This book offers thoughts, procedures, techniques, and diet tips to help ease the pain of jilt.  You’ll find lots of snappy and insightful quotes that should lift your spirits. 

You Can’t Afford the Luxury of a Negative Thought,  by Peter McWilliams. This work argues that you can reduce anxieties of all sorts by not thinking overly about the negative sides of issues. I found it a bit Pollyannaish. But when you’re hurting, it’s a great pick-me-up.

A Guide to Rational Living,   by Albert Ellis. Illustrates how irrational thinking about the self and love can intensify the pain of loss. Thinking rationally about jilt takes you a long way toward reducing the pain of it.

How to Control Your Anger Before it Controls You,   by Albert Ellis. Written in much the same style as the previous book. It offers suggestions and the rationale behind them, to help you avoid anger, and to get at the underlying feelings of hurt and frustration.

Inner Joy,   by Harold M. Bloomfield. Shows you the good things to focus on in relationships and offers ways to resolve the bad thoughts; it does not suggest simply to ignore the negative thoughts. But it takes the most common of these, and makes good arguments of why you should not entertain them.

Motivation and Personality,  by Abraham H. Maslow. Sometimes, people deal with the pain of jilt and the resulting loneliness, by denying their love needs. This can actually intensify their anxieties over their failed relationship because they’re denouncing the biologically based love need. Before you try that, read this book. It shows that as a general rule, we humans   must   exchange love to realize our highest potential.  You can’t just talk yourself out of this need. So you’ll not want to deny it as a way of ridding yourself of the pain.  Indeed, doing this would be denying your very nature.  [Mentat] and I talked extensively about Maslow’s work in this area.  Click here to see those and other related posts. 

Positive Imaging,   by Norman Vincent Peale. This is one of those feel-good-about-yourself books that I read back in 1989, that emphasizes how seeing the glass as half full rather than half empty can help you feel better.

I hope these books help you, [Emmy].  They’ve sure helped me over the years.

Tom Hesley

But It Won’t Last, They Say

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Dear [Jack],

How are you, my dear companion? We go back a long way, don’t we? We’ve known each other almost 37 years and in those decades we sometimes lived close enough to dine together on the weekends. Remember those Saturday and Sunday evening dinners at Tiffany’s on the boulevard eight years ago? How about all those wacky meals at the Broadway and the Ritz diners back in the late 90s. I remember some of those incidents and still chuckle today. Your humor has made a life-long and memorable impression on me to be sure.

At other times, like now, we live farther apart so that we can’t meet but a few times a year. Yet no matter how close or distant we find ourselves, I treasure our visits. Talking and sharing with you never gets old and I sense quite clearly, that you really do care. You’re a great friend and I’m privileged to have you.

This most recent visit of ours was no exception; I enjoyed myself immensely. In fact, I’m still catching my breath as I swim nose deep, in this terrific pond of joy that I fell into last Saturday night at the foot party. My mind still reels from the experience, and I’m yet a bit disoriented, like someone just snapped a really bright camera at close range. I’m savoring the new memories while anticipating the future and hoping to create more. So yes, I know that I said that I would not come back until August. But I lied; I must come sooner.  I must make next month’s VIP party if that’s all right with you. So if you see [Linda], tell her that I’ll be attending and that I hope she can be there too. I’d like her and I to spend the whole evening together in one, big three-hour session, and so I wouldn’t want to miss her.

Finding [Linda] made the whole night last weekend very special. Indeed, I’ve written to her already (see here for that letter), telling her that she’s a remarkably beautiful woman, and that I’m looking forward to another long session as soon as we can arrange it. I can’t wait to see her again because I still miss her. Surprising, isn’t it? I thought that this longing would have subsided by now. It has a little, because I’m staying busy blogging, to keep from feeling sad that I can’t call her and chat. But man! I guess I miss her so because she stole my heart; just took it right out of my chest.

As best I could tell, she’s my dream girl in the flesh. She seems, at this early time, to have everything I’ve been seeking in a lady, in just the right proportions. I was a shopper looking to buy precisely 5 grapes, 14 oranges, 10 apples, and 4 pounds of beef, 2.5 cans of pop, 3 rings, and 7 gallons of gas. She was the merchant and just happened to have exactly 5 grapes, 14 oranges, 10 apples, 4 pounds of beef, 2.5 cans of pop, 3 rings, and 7 gallons of gas to give me. She offered it all, exactly as I wanted. So I can’t help but to really like her [Jack], and I’m eager to see how this story unfolds. So I’ll be back at that next foot party, where we can write the next few pages.

But my erotic attraction to her won’t last, people say. Heck, I’ve even said it. She’s great right now. But we can’t have such joyful feelings forever now, can we? Why not? I wonder because I’ve known many enduring pleasures myself that feel as good the hundredth time I indulged as they did the first time; munching Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, eating Lucky Charms with you, writing software, solving electrical problems, wrapping up in a fuzzy, warm blanket in a chilly bedroom, walking along the river out back when it’s warm, and listening to a golden oldie on the radio for the five hundredth time. My point is that not all pleasures die. Indeed many like these, do return again and again. So why can’t eroticism remain?

You know my history, [Jack], almost as well as I know it myself. And as you know, I’ve dated many women who started out as princesses, but all too quickly became toads. It happened so often that since 2005, I’ve felt that a lady just won’t stay beautiful for very long once we get down into dating. After a few weeks, so it’s been, her allure ceases to pull me toward her anymore. All the things that made her so special in the beginning stop impressing eventually. This seems to happen to many couples. Indeed, [Linda] herself said that she’s known this disappointment in some of her relationships. But must it be always so? Must every relationship that starts out with an abundance of erotic bliss, end up with none of it?

I hope not. I trust that I can find a relationship, where the good sex does not completely disappear after the first roll in the hay. Is that so much to ask? I understand that as people get to know each other, the newness of it all fades, and the hardships of merged lives often quell the libido. Lack of sleep and too much stress can do it too, along with a host of other gotchas.

But I’ve read many accounts from people who in spite of all that, insist that they fell in love the instant they met, and some forty years later, feel exactly the same.  I believe therefore, that that in-love feeling can indeed survive given the right conditions, because it has for many. I hope this is true, because I must be in love to stay motivated to press on in a relationship. I ultimately want a long-term relationship with a dream girl.  But if I fall out of love for very long, the relationship must eventually end, as it finally did between [Emmy] and I yesterday.

So given that, with so many of my past relationships fizzling like this, where the pleasant feelings of togetherness went as quickly as a candle going dark when doused, my love quest has become frustrating and disheartening. I mean, I’ve spent so much money and time chasing that enigmatic passion through rejection after countless rejection, and I’ve pondered long the question of why the attraction fades so quickly, so often.

I just can’t accept the notion that the only time I can ever have great sex is during the first encounter or two, and then it’s all downhill from there. No way.  Like I said, many couples describe a very different coexistence. While they admit that they’re not always lusting for each other, they do say that they never go very long without the love feelings coming back. They describe their love patterns as ebbing and flowing, which would be fine with me, since I’m not expecting to have eroticism constantly; I just want it more than merely at the very beginning. I’m so tired of all ebb and no flow! I only want what they have; I’ll take the downs so long as I get some ups in there too.

Most of my relationships so far have had too few ups; it’s as though the woman becomes a man after a little while in that I feel the same attraction for her as I do for a man, which is none whatsoever. I know now a big reason why this has happened to me so much, thanks to the foot party experience. Let me explain.

I am a very, VERY visual person initially. Ironic, isn’t it that someone who is vision impaired like me, would be so sight-oriented. Nonetheless, that’s how I am. I’m a perfectionist, with very detailed and numerous ideals that a woman must meet to qualify as a dream girl of mine. These standards span the entire gambit from how she looks to the shape, size, and feel of her feet, to how clean she is, to the things she says and how she says them, to her most deeply cherished values and goals. For me, all of these traits must be apparent in the right degrees so that a truly marvelous love connection can form, and endure.  I’m not just about the physical; but the physical is where it all starts.   If that’s not there, or it ebbs for too long a period, then nothing else matters, and I’ve got to end the relationship and move on.  But when the erotic attraction is there, everything else DOES matter, and I’ll stick around to learn more.

Now, here’s the first part of my problem: I’ve done the online and telephone dating now for fifteen years. Throughout that time, I’ve found people to be deceptive and misleading about what they look like and who they are. Some advertise themselves with doctored photos or pictures not their own, while others claim to be taller, younger, and lighter than they actually are. They over-utilize makeup and pose in unnatural ways, all in an effort to put that best foot forward, while dragging their bad foot behind them in the shadows so that men don’t see it. They skillfully create illusions of themselves that do not (in fact, cannot) survive our first encounter.

I don’t mind telling you [Jack] that I’ve been played for a fool many times in this very way. I thought early on that some of these ladies were my dream girls, because they presented themselves such that they seemed to have all the qualities I’m seeking. But in the end, they didn’t, and my libido knew better; my loss of sexual interest had the final say. Once I learn that someone has fibbed like this, my desire for them shuts down; usually never to return. This is as it should be.  So there’s nothing wrong with me. I simply wish not to date liars, and if someone repeatedly lies to manipulate my feelings, then it’s proper to grow less attracted to them over time; over a very short time in most cases; the shorter, the better. I think this phenomenon explains why I lost the itch in some of my dud relationships. But there are other reasons as well. So bear with me.

Even if the woman does not conceal her true shape intentionally, traditional ways of checking out new dates often result in latent disappointment due to built-in cover ups in our culture. You can’t tell exactly what you’re getting right away even when everyone is being above board. Why not? Well, it’s commonplace for women to dress up and hide their bodies underneath clothes, makeup, wigs, bras, toilet paper, fancy shoes, and such. True, there may be no manipulative purpose for this; people typically get dressed when they go out so that they stay warm, look nice, fit into specific social groups, and such. But the practice makes it impossible for a fellow to know if she’d please him once the clothes finally come off, because he simply can’t see enough of her to be sure.

In my own love quest, I’ve met women who appeared attractive when fully clothed but were actually much less so when they, after months sometimes, at last took it all off. Oftentimes, I’ve waited these months for them to finally show themselves in their entirety, only to find that they had been hiding a dirty secret, which was that they weren’t what I wanted. Plus, now that so much time has been invested in the relationship, chances are that some emotional bonds have formed, and this complicates getting away. Sadly, a lot of females bank on this bondage to keep the guy from leaving once he knows the whole truth. I mean, it really pulls at the heart strings to say to someone, “Yes, we’ve had a wonderful relationship these past n months. But I’m leaving now because I learned the other night when we hit the bed for the first time, that you’re just not what I want physically.” Try that a couple times. Believe me; you’ll end up crying over it more than once.

Since I’m so initially visual, the ideal scenario for me, where I could avoid the pitfalls described above, would be to meet new ladies in the nude; where nothing is hidden or exaggerated. I’d see the whole them, as they are, and they’d see all of me as I am, and we’d know right away if physically at least, we could be a match. There would be none of this screwing around for months before finding out. However, beyond a nudist colony, finding such a venue where people could meet in the buff would be difficult.

But here is where the foot parties really shine. While the ladies aren’t quite naked, they show enough that I can glean all the initial data I need to tell immediately if we’d be physically compatible. Plus, I can get close to and touch them almost immediately, just for the asking.  Can’t do that in a bar.  Further, they enjoy receiving foot attention as much as you and I like giving it, ‘eh [Jack]? These parties eliminate much of the guesswork and humiliation of searching for ladies who won’t reject us. Further, we have a much better idea whether or not they will excite us, just because, again, we see more of them because they’re dressed less, and we get to touch them as well. I’m hopeful therefore, that meeting women in this way will end the way-too-long streak I’ve been in, of short-lived erotic desire. If I can make better-informed decisions about who to date early on, I might avoid the traps of getting involved with “the wrong women,” and then winding up with no libido to boot.

True, I’ve talked a lot about the physical attraction here. But I’m also interested in the higher levels of compatibility as well; I want a caring and honest lady to love and who has a great capacity of compassion. I’d expect her to be kind, generous and loving, just as I would be to her. I hope she would come running if I got sick. But for me, those higher level concerns don’t mean much without frequent and lasting eroticism. The physical comes first in my happiest relationships and at the foot parties, I can get physical first without all of the unnecessary traditional preamble.

Since I’ve only been to one foot party so far, I don’t know yet if things will pan out as I expect. So stay tuned, and I’ll tell you. You will know, [Jack], because you and I will walk this road together; you’ll be my buddy and after each party, we can stay up till four in the morning exchanging war stories, like we did this past Sunday. I’m grateful to you for connecting me up with such an interesting group of people and I’m eager to return and do it all again.

So take care, my friend. Stay healthy and save your money, because I’ll be back in June.

Tom Hesley

No Foot Massage

Monday, April 20th, 2009

[A lady rejected my first contact. So I said...]

Oh, okay. I guess you’re gonna let a couple thousand miles keep you from having a wonderful foot massage. Heck, I’d even come to you. Man, some of you are just so persnickety. :-)

Well, at any rate, check out my site if you like at tomslovequest dot com. You may find the stuff there insightful and amusing.

It sure would have been fun though, to count your toes over and over again as you lay for an entire afternoon in a bed of your choosing, while running my index fingers around and between them. Oh, and did I mention the sole-kissing?

Tom Hesley

Foot-Worshiping Party

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

I took the plunge today and signed up to attend my first foot party in early May. From what the host described, this could be exactly what I’ve sought to either indulge in or get past my fantasies of worshiping the feet and legs of beautiful women. He says that they carefully screen the ladies, who are no older than 25, and who are thin. That’s a real relief, since the tall and thin type that I prefer are so hard to find at large these days.

No cameras, drugs, alcohol, or tobacco products allowed. No exchange of bodily fluids or any action whatsoever above the knees either. Cleanliness is the operative word here; the women wash their lower bodies between each session, so there’ll be no odors to ruin the erotic mood.

They’ll offer a few VIP suites, where one may worship in private if desired, and they provide food and beverage as well in between the sessions.

The building adheres to all fire and safety codes since it is a public facility, and is located in a nice area in southeast PA.

The party is billed as   private.    So you can only attend by invitation in order that they can assure their customers that only up-standing people will be there. They maintain tight security, and they’re a bona fide business as well; it’s not just some guy having a house party in his cramped apartment. Safety and privacy therefore, shouldn’t be issues.

Such establishments eliminate all the painful screening that I’ve endured through the years, without much success I’d add. The women at these gatherings know that the guys are into foot worship. In fact, they enjoy it themselves, which is why they’re there in the first place. Thus the risk of rejection when approaching one of these beautiful strangers approaches zero; a nice change from the near one hundred percent rejection rates I’ve gotten throughout the past score.

Foot parties like this should save money too; I won’t have to “wine and dine” women anymore just to find out if they’ll remove their shoes and stockings for me. Plus, the need for long courtships is nonexistent. No more wasting money on women who end up never baring their legs anyway. No more waiting for years sometimes for them to do so. No more milking my wallet as much as they can by putting me off for a long time. This setup really does embody   instant   gratification.

There’s no pretense either; no need to hide one’s true desires behind propriety and silly, outdated mating conventions. There are no complicated and hit-but-usually-miss protocols to follow, and I won’t have to waste my brain power learning about her “insides” before she’ll let me love her outsides. A good thing too, because if I have to play therapist to one more lady, I think I’ll go crazy myself. Here, unlike more traditional methods of pursuing women, I can indeed enjoy the milk for one night without having to buy the whole cow forever.

Could it be for the first time since my longing for women began, that I finally have a reliable source of beautiful ladies who will help me bring my childhood fantasies into reality without asking the world of me in return? I hope so. Whether it is or isn’t, I must find out.

Now I am concerned that this will hurt [Emmy], because I do love her and so, I wish to minimize her pain as much as I can. Our therapist and I are putting many hours into helping her understand. But the bottom line is that she’s just going to have to accept my need to play until I get it out of my system, just as I had to do when ladies like [Emeebee],   [First Love],  and others asked it of me. I know from experience that it’s painful. See my 1994 Love Quest Archives to read about the extensive and long-lasting pain I felt. I grew a lot from that pain however, and [Emmy] will too, I hope.  Regardless, I must come first. If that makes me a nasty, selfish person, then I’ll embrace that judgment if it means that I can finally get what I want.

Tom Hesley

But I Must Play A Little

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Dear [Emmy],

So, you know from   my last letter   that I love you.  My will is to actively love you, to take care of you, and to make sure that you’re always okay and provided for. I love your personality, your smile, your playful side, and how often you laugh. But as you know, I’ve felt no eroticism for several years now. We’ve been trying to figure out what’s wrong. We’ve been to group and individual therapies. We’ve read books. We’ve created our own experiments in the bedroom. But none of that has rekindled those wonderful fires of passion that I felt that first session we spent together at camp back in 2003. Nothing.

I don’t like this anymore than you. I’m tired of searching for bedroom pleasure because I have to search so much to get so little. I’m tired of spending months getting to know each new lady, only to have them become strangers again after a few years. I’m tired of the build-ups, followed by the let-downs. I’m tired of the humiliation of rejection, and of women looking at me like I’m some sort of crazy pervert, just because I’ve expressed a natural sexual interest in them. I’m tired of excitedly removing her clothes only to find that she’s not what I’d hoped. I’m tired of all the trickery and lies people use to attract others in the mating game. I’m tired of analyzing myself looking for problems to fix, and finding nothing that’s fixable. I’m tired of bringing new women to my family, only to discover after a short while that I’ve lost those feelings of love. And then, all must be told that it’s over. I’m tired of jilting ladies. I’m tired of repeatedly going through the same motions and winding up with the same results. I’m tired of feeling deprived so much of the time.  In short, I’m tired of this whole love quest.  I want to end it once and for all.

It’s not just me either. After reading numerous books about why relationships fail and watching the TV talk shows that focus on repairing broken relationships, it appears that many others suffer this fading libido too.  Most (if not all) couples reach this point eventually; something I avoided believing as a young adult. Back then I was convinced that I would eventually find an all-enthralling person to fall in love with; one that I could  stay  in love with. But today, after questing for her for four decades and coming up empty time after time, I believe now that this forever-pleasing woman simply does not exist and that pleasures in the bedroom, by nature, just don’t last with just one woman. So this is not a problem specific to me; it’s just the fleeting nature of erotic love.

In my experience, good sex is temporary, no matter who it’s with; whether that be the ugliest woman around or the most beautiful one. Eventually the plain as well as the pretty come to have the same effect on my libido; they come to have no sexual appeal whatsoever. The unattractive one may have started out as plain to me. But after a short time, the pretty one becomes plain too. The looks of the pretty one only serve her during the early months. Then she no longer has any sexual advantage over her average-looking competitor. Contrary to my childhood beliefs, I feel today that there’s no such thing as a goddess who can keep me excited forever.

You and I have seen this in our romance, just as I have with several others. At first, I couldn’t keep my hands off of you. You were beautiful in every way. You’re still beautiful in every way.  Yet I don’t have the same reaction to your beauty as when we first met. Beauty impresses me but only for a short time.  After that, it becomes just another fact about the woman that I note without getting terribly excited about; like the fact that she has five fingers on each hand or that she likes rhubarb pie. Her beauty does not disappear. It just assumes less prominance in our relationship over time. It’s still there, yes.  But I don’t regard it the same way as in the beginning. This demise of desire seems to be inevitable with any woman, since it’s happened every time to me, and I’ve dated several of the prettiest girls in school too.  So even the sexiest are not immune.

So with that said, I’m not looking to replace you, because the same thing would happen after a short time with any new woman I might find. There is nothing wrong with you, and I’m not proposing to leave you so I can look for someone prettier to start over with. I don’t think I have the stomach or the patience for that these days. As I said in the last letter, I love what we have. I love your smile and the way you talk and hum. Your concern for me is boundless and your generosity undeniable. I am to this day amazed at all you do for me; those long massages, your dinner treats, all those long train trips you often make just to be with me, the way you grew your hair down to the middle of your back at my request, and how you check up on me whenever I’m sick. I love our shared memories which after six years together, have grown into a sizeable collection.  In terms of true love, there is no purer love than yours. No woman could make me feel more appreciated, respected, doted over, and loved than you. You are a gem and I so much want to keep you in my life.

I’m perfectly satisfied with all of our relationship except for the sex. While our kisses hold a great deal of emotional value, they have today no sexual value I’m afraid.  Everything we did that first summer at camp that got me so horny does nothing now. But I miss that part a lot. I wish to be horny again and I’m angry that nature has short-changed me because it drained the passion from us so quickly.  Sometimes I cry over it even.

I desperately want to get that love lust back with you, but don’t know how. As you know, we’ve tried numerous exercises without success, and this was under the direction of our licensed sex therapist to boot. Had I secured more experience with sex earlier in my love quest, I might understand now that fiery sexual encounters mean little next to the sort of loving emotional bonds that we share. I might have learned to value the latter way more than the former. But sadly, that’s not what happened. I have actually enjoyed few encounters throughout my quest. So though I’m nearly fifty years old, I have yet to grow past the novelty and wonder of fantastic sex. Perhaps what we have, even without the sex, should be good enough. But it isn’t for me, at least not right now.

Now do understand that I truly need what you and I have and wish not to give it up. But I also need some good sex once in a while too. I need to feel that thrill that results when desire meets gratification. But since we’ve been unable to restore this lost joy to “us”, I feel I must go looking for it outside of us. I need to get it from other women.

I know this pains you, as perhaps it should, and I’m very sorry for that. It pains me too, to see you hurting. But please know that I’m not looking to replace you; I only want to supplement you. I’ll still keep seeing you and having you visit me. You’ll always be welcome in my home and bed. We can watch I Dream of Jeannie or Star Trek like in times past. I’ll still help you do your grocery shopping and buy you gifts for your apartment. I’ll continue finding the best seats in the train for you and I’ll pour you a cup of stevia-sweetened green tea anytime you want it. I’ll still come running if anything happens to you because we are family now, and so I will never cast you aside. You simply mean too much to me for that. In short, you’ll be my buddy forever and I’ll always love you.

I would just like to find that missing piece, to have an occasional fling a few times a year in places where I can again feel that thrill that I’ve missed for so long. Our therapist suggested that I visit   polyamorous   parties, where guys swap girl friends and wives, and where no-strings-attached sex is the norm. People share their mates with others in arrangements like this, and I think this could be what I need to light the fire in my loins once more, and to finally make all those fantasies I’ve harbored since childhood come true. I’m eager to attend some foot parties and do a little swinging now and then. Since I would presumably be seeing lots of new women, I hope that the novelty of sex would never be exhausted, and that sex would therefore remain consistently pleasing. If it is in fact novelty and newness that turns me on about a woman, then polyamory could supply all of those I need.

This doesn’t mean that I love you less because these other ladies I wish not to know. I don’t want to be their therapist or provider, or get involved in their lives beyond the occasional encounter. No bringing them into my family, no shopping for their groceries, and no telling them my deepest secrets. In fact the less I know them, the better. Believe me, I know how long and how difficult it was to build the loving relationship we have. [Emmy], I’m not looking to build anything like that again with anyone else, because except for the sex, our relationship couldn’t be better. No other woman could love me more than you, and I’ll not be fooled into leaving you just because another warms my middle for a time. I realize that no matter how great that feeling is, that no single woman can keep it alive forever. If I get to know a beautiful woman too well, then her beauty will become meaningless. So no woman’s beauty will ever be grounds for me to end our association.

But I understand if you want to date others while I do this. Just watch out for the jerks, and let me meet them before you go off alone with them.

I can’t say if this endeavor will work. In fact, I fear that it won’t. I may find that sexual experience is not the trumped up, fantastic occurrence that I’ve dreamt it would be in my childhood and young adult years. I hope that’s not the case. But it’s possible that I have for all these years, overestimated how pleasurable real-life sex is. If that turns out to be true, then my heart will be truly broken, and I’ll need you to help me put it back together again. Is this selfish? Perhaps. But I think it shows how much I feel for you. Nonetheless, the deep love for you I feel notwithstanding, I need these erotic experiences with others for a while to know for sure the true pleasure limits of sex. So I hope you’ll bear with me through this exploration, and that you’ll be there waiting for me when I finish.

I love you.

Tom

My Commitment Jitters

Monday, March 30th, 2009

My current objections to complete physical and emotional commitment to one person follow. I didn’t always feel this way, and I may not always feel like this. But currently, this is where my head and heart are.

In fact, these points really started resonating when I reached the age of 43. Before then though, I was all about monogamy; convinced that there was but one dream girl who could meet all my physical and emotional needs forever. But alas, I’ve been unable to find such a goddess and after contacting well over 14,000 women as I quested for the perfect lover, I’m convinced that such an all-encompassing person does not exist. So I seek no longer to find Her entirely in one person.

However, She is out there. But She resides in several women; not just one. Some women are great friends. Some are great lovers. Others are good house keepers and cooks, and some I could watch all day as they parade about in frilly bikinis. I’ve found that no one woman has it all; one reason why I’m leery of committing all of my self to a single lady. The heart is quite the empty place that takes more than one person to completely fill up.

Commitment can be a hard and costly arrangement to break if you learn later that you don’t like it. You must jilt your lover to remove yourself, and the pain of jilt is horrible for both the perpetrator and the victim. It weakens and sickens for long periods too. I know, because I’ve been jilted many a time and jilted lovers many times myself. Believe me. Neither scenario is very pleasant. Really, I don’t know which role is less enviable; doing the leaving, or being left.

I’ve never been very good at ending foiled relationships. In fact, several times, I’ve had to seek a therapists’ help to do it. The deeper the commitment, the more painful is the beloved’s rejection, and the more difficult it is to leave if you decide that you must. So these days, I’d just as soon avoid all that and keep things light and free, with no strings beyond the next few dates.

Further, to me variety really is the spice of life, and I love it. Without it, life is bland and lacks excitement and adventure. So I fear limiting my variety by committing to one woman who would meet my every physical as well as emotional need. This scares me because for among other reasons, it would keep me from exploring females of different backgrounds, races, religions, ways of life, temperaments, and values. I savor the novelty of firsts; the first black woman ever dated, the first model, the first doctor, the first ballerina, the first bisexual, the first woman young enough to be my daughter or old enough to be my grandmother, the first cowgirl, the first foot whore, the first stripper, the first lady with 41-inch legs, and so on. You get the idea. It’s nearly impossible for me to ignore a “first lady” even with a girlfriend on my arm that I love. The intrigue overwhelms me, so that I just have to check out the first. If I can’t, then I feel trapped and soon resent my “jailer.”

Yes, firsts are great. But “lasts” usually bore me as in the last black woman I dated, the last stripper, the last model, and so on. When a first becomes a last, as it must once its explored fully, her freshness fades away along with the eroticism that goes with it. When the first is not a first anymore, curiosity has been satisfied. So there’s less intrigue and less sexual interest. To keep my passions alive, I must keep a steady stream of first ladies flowing past me; something I cannot do if I’m committed fully to one woman.

I’ve also observed that pushing for commitment made most of my beloveds bolt; quite the painful situation to be sure. I loved my time with each of them, and so I keenly felt the loss when they left. It hurt intensely, and this emptiness could take many months to get past. Read my stories of [Emeebee] in 1993 through 2001, and you’ll see what I mean.

Needless to say because of all that, I have strong associations between wanting commitment and getting hurt. The two seem to go hand-in-hand because they’re almost always found together. That is: Where there’s a desire for exclusivity, there too is the pain of not getting it. Indeed, I ruined many more relationships than I helped by espousing monogamy. To quote a popular oldie, “You lose your love when you say the word MINE!” That’s certainly, and quite painfully, been true for me.

I know women say they want commitment all the time. But my experience is that the ones I really desired did not want it; at least, not from me. They accused me of assaulting their rights to be independent when I asked them to date only me, and they left my bed when I spoke of marriage, never to return. In my experience, promoting commitment does more harm than good to an otherwise healthy, more casual relationship. Ironically, I’ve learned that I get more when I seek less. So why seek more? Why seek commitment? If it’s good the way it is, then why push for more?

Since I love lustful relationships, and since historically lust doesn’t last beyond the first few months, I avoid long-term physical commitments because when the commitment outlasts the lust as it usually does, I’ll eventually be stuck where I no longer wish to be quite probably forever, and I won’t do that. Unfortunately, commitment guarantees not, a forever supply of fun sex. In fact, it may discourage it. Total commitment to one can be a death kiss in the bedroom. So again, this is another reason why I’m skeptical that commitment is the happiness panacea that its supporters claim it to be.

Finally, life-long commitment today means a lot more than it did say, two-thousand years ago. Back then, couples were lucky if they survived past the age of 30. Now, they live to 80 and beyond. So the length of a life-long promise of fidelity has more than doubled in modern times, and this reason alone gives me pause when considering whether this is something I really want to get into.

Then there’s the idea that the longer a commitment runs, the more likely it is that one of the partners will decide to end it. This can occur not only because there’s more time for unhappiness to grow. But nowadays, people are exposed to many more opportunities to heighten their happiness; opportunities outside monogamous relationships. They’re tempted more because they’re exposed to more people. Obviously, with this comes the risk that they’ll meet someone more intriguing than their current mate. It happens all the time. With people traveling around so much for jobs as well as pleasure, they’re constantly exposed to a steady stream of new and beautiful strangers; any one of which could easily spell the end of their current commitment. Long-term commitments these days are just too risky therefore. They’re not natural and the sense of security they create is just an illusion. So I don’t need it.

People often seek commitment, wrongly believing that the marriage license will guarantee their beloveds loyalty. But it just doesn’t work out that way too often. If a person wants to cheat without being officially committed, then he’ll surely want to do it when he is. Whether or not he promises fidelity with hundreds of witnesses watching, if sleeping around is in his blood, the wedding won’t rid him of that. So it’s irrational to think that repeatedly campaigning for someone to commit will actually make them want to commit. You might get them to agree to it just to shut you up. But would they really want it? These days, I wish not to take the chance that they won’t.

Commitment, even one without a marriage to substantiate it, can put people at great financial risk. I’m sure we’ve all heard the many stories of folks literally losing their shirts to a jilted partner. Commitment might be a good thing for the young, where there are few separate resources to worry about. But us middle-aged folks should be careful, especially if we’ve accumulated any sort of fortune; money or otherwise. We could lose half of it or more if we fully commit ourselves in public to the wrong person.

Besides, commitments very often don’t account for the changeable nature of the participating humans. People change, more so today than ever before because, through computers and the Internet, they have more knowledge at the ready than they did in, say, the tenth century, before the word telecommunication was even invented. With more knowledge comes greater enlightenment, and with greater enlightenment, comes more extensive and rapid change. So presumably, we change more in a given year nowadays than ever before, because we receive more enlightenment, which happens due to our ever-increasing ease of access to pertinent and valuable information.

But the requirements of traditional commitments such as marriage do not change as quickly. Marriage means marriage basically, whether you’re one, five, or fifty years into it. This traditional institution does not bend easily to accommodate open relationships for example, should a couple’s libido go away. Society feels that they should remain monogamous even when neither partner is fulfilled sexually. It encourages couples to take harmful drugs to artificially amplify the sex drive rather than to just find a more desirable partner who could elevate the libido in more healthful ways. This is wrong. We shouldn’t be binding people so with this outdated practice of marriage. Nor should we provide these noxious potions to get people to fit into the marriage framework for which they simply were not designed.

Also consider that the ideal of long-term commitment makes people overly critical and judgmental of each other. This encourages inequality and bitterness in society, and we certainly have enough of those already.

But think about it though. Let’s say that you’re interviewing for two jobs. For the first, you want someone to cut your grass, one time only because you’re going on a business trip, and you won’t be back in time to cut it yourself before it gets too long. For the second, you want to find someone to help you take care of your ailing mother, on an on-going basis. Obviously, you’d use much greater care in choosing for the second position than you would the first. You would ask more questions, check more references, be more sensitive to cleanliness and attention to details, and generally you’d apply a much higher quality standard to the second person than the first. So it would be harder for someone to be hired for the second job.

The process of finding suitable lovers works the same way. We’re way choosier when seeking a life partner than when hunting a one night stand or other casual relationship. This sounds reasonable. But the problem is that with so many believing that marriage is the ideal and that anything less is worth nothing, we tend to be ultra critical of our suitors, perhaps to our own detriment. We rule people out too soon, refusing to have future interactions with them because we deem them ineligible long-term, futuristic mating stock. As a man who’s received over 14,000 rejections throughout his love quest, I can tell you that it doesn’t feel very good when a lady says to me, “Nope. I won’t hold your hand tonight because you’re not someone I’d want to spend the rest of my life with.” “Well, so what?” I say. “Would you hold my hand if I was someone you’d like to spend just the next few hours with?”

The point is this: Perhaps if we stopped expecting so much of people, we might be less judgmental. If we ceased squeezing suitors into our molds of the distant future (which we can’t really predict anyway), we might be slower to think them beneath us. In fact, we might not even care that they’re beneath us, if all we seek is a few weeks of fun as opposed to a lifetime of commitment. We might find real enjoyment in the moment, delight that is not predicated on our estimation of the future someone could provide us. So we could find true love where we never thought we would.

In my view, religion and other traditional institutions have oversold the virtues of commitment, offering it up as THE way to live. But they’re wrong. When I see all the unhappiness that one person being tied to another causes, especially when the other does not want it, I’m even more convinced that a long-term monogamous commitment is certainly not how I want to spend the remainder of my life.  Now, if I met a right woman?   Who knows?

Tom Hesley
http://tomhesley.com/

Outer Vs. Inner Beauty

Friday, March 27th, 2009

Dear [Ballerina],

Hi. How are you? I hope you’re well and that you remember me, because it’s been five years since we last spoke. You remember that summer of 2004 when I winked at you on the web. I wanted you from the first time I glimpsed the pictures you put up there. I figured that you wouldn’t respond because women who look like you most often do not respond to me. Your face reminded me of Helen of Troy because, in another time, just like hers did, yours would have launched a thousand ships as well. So I was not surprised that you didn’t respond right away. In fact when you did, a month and a half later, I’d all but forgotten who you were, but was pleased that you wrote nonetheless. Right away, we began emailing and swapping pictures, and talking on the phone a couple weeks later. I tell you that you made September of 2004 one of the most romantic months of my life, for I’ve never felt the passion for a woman more strongly, than I did for you back then. Your memory to this day in 2009 fills my heart with joy as well as my eyes with tears.

Yours is a great memory. But it’s a sad one too. I never got over how things so abruptly ended, and what’s more, I never understood it. I never had closure. You just stopped communicating one day without any explanation, and that was that. Our relationship was suddenly through, though in my view, we were just getting started on the most wonderful journey of my life.

I still wonder what drove you away, and since I never had anything from you afterwards to go on, I can only guess at what it was. I suspect that was several factors. But I’ll only talk about one in this letter.

You remember in early October I came to Pittsburgh to see you? You’d just visited me a week earlier and you spent one night here. I remember that you sure liked TV, as you watched mine all night long. We had such a good time then, that we decided that I’d visit you this time. So I came out and you picked me up at the train station, and drove us to your apartment in South Hills. I met your son and daughter then, and your son and I helped your daughter with her math homework. That was so much fun.

Well, during the second afternoon of my visit, I walked into your kitchen to find you cooking our supper. I stood in the doorway watching you for what could have been an hour, but what only felt like a few seconds. Your hair was just the right length. Your skin was fair and healthy. Your east European accent was so cute as you called out orders to your kids to help with the meal. Your legs were strong yet long and intensely sexy, and nowhere on your person was there even one extra ounce of fat. You were the healthy woman I’d been seeking for decades, and with more people in the US obese today than not, believe me I considered you quite the find. In old Europe, you could have been a queen, and I’d have gladly worshipped you too because everything about you, and I mean everything, was perfect. The way you walked, the way you talked, the way you smiled and watched me as I spoke; it was all so wonderful. The way you cooked, the way you cared, the way you wanted to serve was so very charming and disarming.

I fell in love with you then, standing in that doorway, and I didn’t just suspect that I’d fallen. I knew it in no uncertain terms. These indescribably sweet feelings of pleasure and peace swirled in my mind and brought me close to fainting. The sense that my decades-long search for my dream girl was finally over flooded my entire being, and if I was a believer in God, I might describe this moment as Him, making a miracle. With one loud snap of his fingers, he drove any doubts I had about you and how quickly things were moving between us, away from my heart. In that instant, I would have married you. I would have thrown all caution to the wind and had no misgivings about doing so either. What I was feeling then, was precisely opposite to the pains of loneliness and missing fulfillment that I’d come to know so well in my life. But all that had changed this weekend as I watched you cooking that meal. Every last painful emotion from past relationships disappeared. Not one voice in my head said that you might be wrong for me. In fact, they all argued profusely that you were so, so right.

I was certain that our sex had been, and would continue to be phenomenal. This was important to me because I’d always wanted good sex but never found it consistently; at least, not until you. So this was another reason I valued you so much. I’d been looking for someone like you for so long and was desperate to end the search, and here you were, the embodiment of my salvation. You were the first woman in 25 years who could make me hard with but a single look or one kiss, or a brief but tender caress with your beautiful index finger. Unlike with all my other women prior, with you I didn’t have to fantasize or concentrate in order to warm my loins. With you, it happened automatically and naturally, without any forcing whatsoever. It was as though my body had been waiting for you to unlock its deep vaults of sexual and romantic passion, that had been filling up for years. By the time I met you for the first time, I was convinced that I had none of this to offer any woman and was also frustrated that I couldn’t find someone who could please me this way. But oh my, you sure proved me wrong. My body responded to you like a thirsty cactus does to water. It drank you in, loving the sensations, but never quite getting enough. I was convinced that there would always be more pleasure to be had and to give to you.

I don’t know exactly what it was about you that revved up my romantic interest so. But I do know that that lust resulted from the confluence of many factors that both you and I brought to the table. It was much more than just “your body,” and it wasn’t just me. It was you too, though not just you. It was the circumstance of our lives at that time; how each of us was raised, the values with which we’ve been instilled, our particular experiences, and so on. It was not a desire I chose to have. Never did I decide on the sorts of women who excite me. Those ladies, whoever they are, just do, perhaps due to natural selection or some other big forces that dwarf my puny will. As I see it, we don’t voluntarily decide when and where or for whom our bells of lust ring. Put simply: We don’t control who turns us on. That’s determined by many forces beyond our control at very young ages; probably before we’re born or even conceived in fact.

You caught me looking then, and threw back a big smile for a few seconds, then returned to the meal without a word. I wanted to kiss you and to thank you for being my dream girl. I wanted to compliment you too on your charms, and I figured that some of this feeling, but not all of it mind you, came from how physically fit and trim you were. I was glad that keeping yourself healthy was very important to you and I admired your ability to do that well. In our phone talks, you revealed that you spent many hours each day exercising and dancing, and as I saw it, that work paid off for you. Though in your mid-forties and now an ex-ballerina, you still looked great; just as good as you did a decade earlier in those pictures you’d shown me the previous night, of you twirling and dancing joyfully around the stages of the most exclusive theaters in Pittsburgh. I revered your discipline that allowed you to stay as thin at 47 as you were when you were 17. So as you cooked on, I walked over to and stood at your back, putting my hands under your arms and around your waist to cup your flat stomach. Then I said, “You’ll never know how glad I am that you’re thin.”

You grew angry. This one statement of mine would put up a wall between us that never came down again. “What do you mean?” you snapped, clasping each of my wrists in your hands and throwing them away from your ribs. “You know,” you argued, “I used to be just like you. I hated fat people, and always avoided them. But I’ve learned! I’ve learned that they can’t help the way they are, and that it’s wrong for people like us to hold their weight against them. But you don’t care that they’re human beings. It seems like all you care about is a woman’s body, and if she happens to be too fat, then you ignore the person inside and just throw her away. But they have feelings too. Don’t their minds and hearts mean anything to you? How can you be so cruel? That’s mean and crazy, and you really ought to grow up!”

I was so shocked and dismayed at the abruptness and degree of your hostility that I said nothing back. I just walked into the living room without another word, and we didn’t speak of this again for the remaining two days of my visit. But oh, how cold and distant we became. You stopped sleeping with me that very night, instead choosing to stay on the couch in the living room. You gave short, yes-no answers whenever I’d ask you anything. The morning you drove me to the train, you were cordial but I know that once we said good-bye and you kissed me on the cheek, that I’d never hear from you again. And I haven’t. Not even to this day in 2009.

When I got home that afternoon, I called you only to get your voice mail. I left several messages during the following week, inviting you to call me back. But you never did. I sent you email too, but to no avail. You totally ignored me and I had no way to discuss it with you.

I was crushed. For months afterward, I frequently awoke in tears. What we had seemed so right. So how could it have turned out so wrong. It profoundly saddened me. What’s more, you allowed me no say, preventing any way to explain what I meant when I said that I was so thankful that you were so thin. But I want you to know. So I’ll write it here and maybe someday you’ll find it. Maybe someday, you’ll understand. Maybe someday you’ll call me again. Maybe someday we could be friends. Maybe, maybe, maybe,… Maybe not. But I hope you’ll at least read the rest of this, even if you do nothing more.

First off, I do not hate fat people. I maintain good friendships with lots of them, and I’ve worked productively with many more. I enjoy their company, value their opinions, and respect their judgments. I also empathize with their difficulties in losing weight because I’ve struggled myself to stay thin. So I get that trimming down and keeping the pounds off is hard. It’s a never-ending battle, to be sure. But I believe nonetheless, that it can be done. In fact, it has been done by millions. So I disagree with your passionate claim that the heavy cannot help that they’re heavy. While a small percentage of them do have medical problems that prevent them from losing, this is not true for the vast majority; as proved by the masses who lose weight all the time.

I do care about these humans. Perhaps you didn’t know that before you came along, I dated mostly the heavy. So you don’t have to convince me that there are some heavy, yet very wonderful people out there who’d give everything to make their lovers happy. I dated several such women and those relationships lasted the longest of all, at least until I met my current girlfriend. These women were very caring, understanding, and thoughtful. I could not leave them for months sometimes, because I couldn’t bare the thought of jilting them. Believe me, I cared about them.

I knew that losing weight was a life challenge for them and felt mighty sorry for them because of it. But I also realized that I couldn’t be the superman who would save them; who would carry them away from a life of solitude, brought on because others avoided them for being so big. I wanted to be the hero though. I wanted to be the bigger man, and I cried for many an hour, once I understood that I couldn’t. Why couldn’t I? Because my strongest, most profound desire beyond good food, clothing, and a warm and quiet place to live, has always been to enjoy lots of erotic quality time with beautiful women. It’s a thirst that only women like you can quench. For whatever reason, I just don’t feel erotic when lying with heavy women. Before you, I struggled to reshape what I wanted in women many times; but never succeeded. Indeed, I wanted to love the fat ladies. After all, there were so many more of those types around than the skinny ones, and usually whenever I managed to attract someone, she was big. So changing for whom my heart beats seemed like a good pursuit since I was way more likely to attract a fat lady than a thin one. I longed to somehow learn to get off on the weighty. I prayed to God to make me lust after them. I spent hundreds of hours meditating; trying to convince myself that I physically enjoyed the big and beautiful just as much as the petite and trim. I dated heavy women lots of times and took them to bed often as well, though, truth be told, I found the encounters unfulfilling. In the worst cases, they disgusted me. So after five or six failed attempts at dating the heavy and close to two years in therapy, I realized that I can’t help that I want certain things in certain ways. I can’t help who I desire, and I desired you in a big way. So please don’t blame me for wanting you but avoiding them. I am a good man, and my aversion to fat ladies comes not from prejudice or shallow thinking or an unwillingness to get to know them, but rather from years of failed efforts to see them more favorably. I can’t help that I found you irresistible but not them, and found it strange that you would hold this biological nature of mine against me. Well, I hope you understand me better now and that you realize that my desire for you was a valuable thing that you discarded without taking the time to understand it.

So how would you have me handle this? Should I have continued dating the heavy while passing up chances to spend time with the thin that I so dreamed of? I couldn’t do that. If that makes me an uncaring person in your eyes, then I’ll just have to live with that judgment, because I cannot change. I can no longer lay with the Rubenesque while my heart longs for the slender.

Sure. I care that they’re human beings. I care about them a lot, as human beings. But I’m not willing to forego my dreams by staying with them, while they fulfill theirs by being with me. Yes, it’s a sad thing that so many guys pass by the pleasantly plump and that as a result, these women are often left alone. But that’s not my problem, for I cannot solve it unless I deny my own needs. Now honestly: Do you really think that a man should give up his dreams in order to make a woman happy that he does not desire? I do not.

Besides, even if I withhold from them what they want, others will love them. Lots of guys adore frumpy females, and I’d be doing a disservice to those fellows by clinging to one despite my true feelings against that. I’d be keeping a lady that I really don’t desire anyway, from men who do want her. That seems wrong to me. Just because I reject her doesn’t mean that she’s doomed to a life a rejections from all other men. So don’t blame me for the loneliness often felt by the heavy.

To me, the only way a person can ever achieve complete happiness is to know and accept his set of preferences for women unconditionally, and then spend his time seeking to fulfill them, as they are. He’s merely spinning his wheels if he wastes valuable time trying to change what he wants. My experience shows that such efforts are doomed to fail, and result in lower self esteem and much frustration. Why? Because instead of going after what we really want, we second-guess our desires when we believe that they can be changed, and then we never get around to actually fulfilling them. We question whether they are morally straight or unselfish enough to pursue. So the result is that we end up going without what we want because we think it lame or immoral. Thus, we’re left perpetually unsure of ourselves and sadly, unfulfilled to boot. So it makes little sense to think of me as shallow or selfish, for I am what I am, and I desire what I desire. I can’t change that, and if you thought about this at any length, you’d probably discover that you can’t change your desires either.

When we met, I knew what I wanted, and accepted that as unchangeable as my fingerprints. Whatever made you the goddess I saw working the stove that day, though I didn’t fully understand it, I cherished it. I was so thankful to have stumbled across our situation, where everything aligned perfectly. I was thankful for you. For the first time ever, I had this strong sense that I’d found a relationship that was as good as they get; I felt that I would never find another one better than ours. Even if ours would have gotten tough at times (which it didn’t), I would have stayed with it because I had this strong idea that no relationship would ever be better. Now I understand why people hold on to what, to the outside word, looks like a doomed love affair. Perhaps they feel about their lovers as I felt about you; that no other person could make them feel as wonderful. The good times, if they’re really good, make it possible to weather the bad times. We had good times like those, and if you hadn’t so completely cut me off, I would to this day, still be loving you.

You mentioned their minds. You seemed to be saying that while we might not be able to pleasure ourselves from a person’s outsides, then we should be able to do so with what’s on the inside. But I wonder: Does it really make sense to split humans apart in this way? Mind Vs. body, physical appearance Vs. personality, Inner beauty Vs. outer beauty, and body Vs. soul. I don’t think so.

When judging a person, people often place more value on his mental attractiveness than his physical. Their reasons are varied and go something like the following:
1. Beauty fades over time but personality is more permanent.
2. People who are attracted to bodies don’t care about what’s in the mind.
3. A man who is physically unattractive will probably have a much more attractive mind; so we should learn to ignore his outsides and focus more on his insides.
4. A person’s mind (personality) is more under his control than is the state of his body. In this vein, his character should mean more to others than his physical health.
5. People who reject another because of his appearance all have the same beauty standards, meaning that the rejected ones, by one, will also be the rejected ones,   by all.
6. Judging and scrutinizing based on looks is a bad thing because it ignores that better part of a whole person – his personality.
7. There’s an expectation that people should be able to love someone regardless of how pretty or ugly.
8. People can choose who they desire, and so can be blamed if they don’t happen to like someone who is unattractive to them.

Well, I’m not convinced that someone’s mental powers are any less susceptible to the effects of aging than their physical powers of attraction. The brain (mind) I would argue is subject to the same forces of aging that the rest of the body is. Why would it not be? It draws energy from the same blood supply that other body parts normally associated with physical beauty do. The brain grows tired when pushed too hard just as do the legs. The brain functions erratically, or stops functioning altogether when deprived of oxygen, calories, and nutrients; just as do breasts, arms, and feet. Aside from being the place where a person’s higher mental functions are carried out, the brain is no different than the rest of the body in terms of what can happen to it over time. Damage to the brain such as found in head injuries, may do more harm to a person’s mental being than say, a blow to a leg would. The brain therefore, is perhaps the most fragile organ in the body because it does so much, and can thus be damaged very easily. The body may grow old. But the brain can grow skeptical too. It can become too rigid in its thinking and can be irreversibly altered by traumatic experiences; experiences that leave the rest of the body unharmed so long as there’s no direct physical trauma applied. Does the brain’s susceptibility to more catastrophic injuries make it less of a good measure of a man? Certainly not. But nor does this make the body less of a measure. A person’s rationale may escape him eventually through the use of alcohol or from his chronically poor choices of foods. Perhaps dumb is forever but smartness is certainly not. One may be smart in her twenties but quite dumb in her sixties just as one may be thin in his thirties but quite obese in his seventies. People once considered very intelligent often lose their mental faculties over time; they lose their memories and cognitive abilities as diseases like atherosclerosis and Alzheimer’s run their courses. The brain is no less a part of the aging body than any other part, and so the qualities that it supplies about the person, can be just as temporary as that sexy set of six-pack abs or those wonderfully proportioned curves. Exercise the body and it thrives and looks nice. Exercise the brain, and it too thrives and produces an attractive personality. But allow either of these to go limp for too long and both will wither. Thus in my view, the brain is no more impervious to the ravages of living than is the rest of the body. So why would the personality, which emanates from the brain, be any greater a measure of a person’s attractiveness than any other physical part? In the end, every part of a person dies, including the brain. There’s nothing about the brain that makes it any more permanent than any other part of the body. So I don’t get why people judge fellows for liking other body parts. I’m sorry that my interest in your thinness bothered you so. It was not intended as an insult; but rather, it was a compliment, an expression of my admiration of you and how healthy you’d managed to keep your mind as well as your body through the years.

Perhaps you were upset because you thought I was placing too much value on your body and not enough on your mind. This idea is wrong because it’s not true that people who express interest in a person’s physical attributes have no regard for the person’s mind. I say that they can’t help but regard the mind since it’s the mind that animates an otherwise lifeless body. A body can’t very well be sexy without a mind controlling it in sexy ways. The mind and the body are fused into one in such extensive and broad-sweeping ways that it’s impossible to tell where the body ends and the mind begins when discussing sexual attraction. The ways in which the mind controls the body, along with the body’s shape work together to make the body sexy. You can’t have sexy without both of these working in harmony. So even when someone says that they like your sexy legs, they’re in fact saying so much more. Not only are they complimenting you on the shape of your legs, but they’re also admiring how you move them when you walk, or cross them when you sit down, and so on. They’re admiring your mind as well, just as I was admiring yours when I complimented you on your thinness. Again, I’m sorry you didn’t see my point of view more clearly. I would have gladly explained it to you if you hadn’t severed communications with me so abruptly and so completely.

The mind is certainly not always the better part of the person. Some out there have some pretty simplistic or ugly minds; whether they’re physically beautiful or ugly. There are some women whose minds are such that, rather than getting into deep conversations with them, I’d just as soon have sex and not talk at all. I appreciate a good mind when there’s one around. But if it’s not there, it’s not fair for you to expect me to relish it. Your mind however, was there and I enjoyed your stories of how you escaped from behind the iron curtain to come here to America. They demonstrated how smart and savvy you are, and showed how much you’ve mastered the art of self control. Again it was this part of you that I was complimenting as well as your shape.

If your anger at me stemmed from your pity for the heavy, then I think you underestimate how attractive some guys find them. Not everyone thinks them ugly. What about you? Do you think they’re ugly? Do you think you need to defend them because you seem them as ugly? Is this why you rose to their defense with such intensity and sharpness when I commented on how thankful I was that you were thin? If so, then perhaps you’re shallower than I. You did say that you were like me once. Perhaps you still are. The fact is that people’s tastes are not universal. Though admittedly, many prefer a healthy and thin mate, many choose the chubby. Some enjoy the pleasantly plump, and they worry about crushing someone who has too little meat on her bones. There are lots of married heavy folks. So they do a better job at mating than you give them credit for. Perhaps?

In light of the above, why do people expect others to love with a blind eye toward a person’s physical attributes? Do you expect this? Is this why you snapped at me, because I do not love with this blind eye? You know, it’s been said that you can tell a great deal about a person just from one drop of his blood. So if that’s true, then would not his appearance tell us so much more? After all, there’s much more of it than that drop of blood. At a glance we can deduce his general health and make some pretty good guesses about his life style and preferences. By listening to his cough, we’d know if he smokes or not, or has some lung disease that perhaps we should avoid. By smelling his scent over time, we can tell if he values cleanliness or if he is taking some medicines that alter his scent. A foul odor generally means poor health or at least, poor health practices on his part. By listening to his speech, we can learn much about his education level and the culture in which he was raised. By observing how heavy he is, we can figure out how much he likes to eat and what sorts of food. From his weight, we can also predict how healthy he’ll likely be in the future and how much he values good health besides. You’d agree I think, that a relationship with someone who does not value good health as we do would be difficult. So I say that with all this data, we can make wiser choices about whether this person would be a good mate. By paying attention to this data, we can avoid lots of wasted time by steering clear of relationships that would not be (could not be) what we want. Sometimes, you don’t need to actually get into a relationship with some to know that it would be bad if you did. I’ve learned over the years that relationships with the heavy don’t make me happy. So I hope you’ll forgive me when I turn away from them these days, without even giving them a try.

We don’t control who turns us on. Do you think I do, and because of this, do you think I can decide to be attracted to the heavy? Let me assure you. I don’t, and I can’t. Since I can’t control this, you’re wrong to judge me harshly for it. It was wrong of you to end our relationship without as little a single discussion. The reality is: What turns us on is a complex convergence of hundreds or thousands of variables that involve ourselves, our lovers, the genetics and upbringings of each, and the circumstances surrounding them. Perhaps a small number of these variables we control. But most we do not. Further, it’s usually not just one of these variables that makes us desire or not. This is why desire is so hard to manipulate. You’ve either got it by default or you don’t, and not all the makeup, hair color, fancy clothes, or perfume in the world will change that.

You had it with me and you didn’t have to try at all.

You know if I thought about you enough right now, I could bring a tear to my eye. Your sudden departure five years ago left a wound in my psyche that has not yet healed. Oh I don’t think of you very often. But when I do, there are still some strong emotions there and I always wish that things had worked out better. But I don’t regret complimenting you on your thinness; I’d do it over the exact same way. What I’d do differently though, would be to talk more to you before you sent me home. I’m sorry that I didn’t have the wherewithal back then to say what I’ve said in this letter. Let me ask you: Would this have made any difference? It seemed like you had made up your mind and that no amount of talking would have changed it.

Does it change anything now? I shouldn’t ask that because if you showed up in my life again tomorrow, I’m not in a position to respond to you. I have a wonderful girlfriend. [Emmy] never bolted on me and she always takes the time to listen to me. You didn’t do that. You handled the situation poorly and because you were so reckless with my heart, I don’t think I could ever fall in love with you again. Still though, when I look at the pictures you gave me, I wonder at what could have been, and regret that we didn’t get further than we did.

Well, thanks for listening. I needed to get this out. I hope that you’re doing well and that you’re not given to the sorts of too-quick reactions these days that drove us apart back then. I’ll just have faith that the experience grew you as well as it did me. Do take care and perhaps in the next life, we can try it again.

With love,
Tom Hesley

PS: For other posts that make similar arguments, see the following:

Tom’s Love Quest Summary

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Hello.

It’s Tom here again with some background about me to help put this whole love quest thing into context.

Let’s see. I’m a 48 year old single white male. I never married, never had children, nor do I want to. I’m 5’ 8’’ tall at 179 pounds. Currently, I live where I grew up, in central, PA. However, in my working life of nearly 20 years, I’ve lived in Dayton, OH, Pittsburgh, PA, and Philadelphia, PA.

I began my education in public school. At that time, I lived at home with my parents and sisters, like most kids. But in third grade, I switched to a special needs school in Pittsburgh due to weak eyesight, which affected me since birth.

Well, if I had it my whole life you may ask, then why didn’t I switch schools sooner? Because the low vision did not lower my grades in the early years, and I liked being close to my family. The teachers in kindergarten through second grade accommodated me lovingly. They liked me and were eager to help. So my grades stayed very good, my self-confidence kept pretty high, and I got along well with the other kids.

But it got harder to keep up as the lessons grew more complicated, as they had in third grade. Kids teased me then about my thick glasses, threw rocks at me, and beat me up in the school yard at recess. I grew frustrated since I could no longer follow the training, and teachers grew impatient as I got angrier. I missed more and more of the lessons, as teachers taught more with chalk boards, overheads, and copies of their handwritten notes; which I could not read well without getting very close. If I was going to have any chance at a good education, I needed a different school; one equipped to handle low-vision kids like me. So, in February, 1970, I left the school across the street for, hopefully, a more positive learning experience in Pittsburgh.

Of course, this meant living much of the school year away from home since each way to Pittsburgh took more than two hours. So with the new school over a hundred miles away, I stayed there overnight during the week. The only times I saw my family were the weekends and on summer breaks. Initially, this adjustment hurt all of the family, and my Mom agonized for years over whether she should have sent me away. In the end though, we all agree that she chose wisely, and I’m grateful to her for sticking to it though she missed me and cried over it often. I cried too, especially on Sunday nights, for the first couple years. But I’m glad we all stuck with the new school, as it did what we’d hoped it would by giving me a second, much better chance at a decent education.

Though my vision is low, it’s always been stable, thank goodness. I have enough to be productive in many “sighted” activities. I read large print, take buses, and watch TV. I know what colors are. My favorite is a deep yet vibrant blue. I maintain the house, doing most repairs and enhancements myself. I fix computers, mow the lawn, do light construction, perform plumbing and electrical repairs, and I paint. I know how to use power tools like drills, saws, sanders, and heat guns. That great school in Pittsburgh taught me well how to better apply the vision I had to maximize my independence and productivity.

However, the biggest drawback of my reduced sight is that I cannot drive. This fact has complicated my love quest greatly since good old sweet sixteen. In fact, many women who’ve rejected me confirmed this. “I can’t date you,” they’d say with a tone that challenged my audacity to ask them out in the first place. “You don’t drive,” as though I should have known better than to seek their affections. Nonetheless, finding sustained pleasure in love remains my top priority. Though my eyes are weak, everything else is strong; including a desire to enjoy fulfilling erotic relationships.

The search has been hard for different reasons at different times. During high school, I struggled because there weren’t many girls there that I wanted. Why? The high school was small, with less than 150 boys and girls combined, and of all the girls, only four to six interested me romantically. Of these, three were too old. Plus, the remaining three were quite popular with the other boys. Thus, competition was fierce, leaving the pickings quite slim. So I had few dates in high school, and no one ever asked me out first.

I was also quite shy. The prettiest girls scared me most. The more I wanted them, the more I feared approaching them. This meant that the girls I desired most were the least likely to know that I wanted them. I never quenched my teenage thirst for great sex. Not until well after finishing high school (which, in retrospect, was probably a good thing), did I ever score. Looking back on that time from here in 2009, I’m glad I didn’t have sex and am thankful that I never got anyone pregnant. But in the 70s, I hated this abstinence forced on me as it was by the circumstances at the school, by what some described as my average looks, and my own fears.

My fear seemed my worst enemy. So, I spent the first decade or two of my love quest, trying to rid myself of it; striving first to understand it, then learning how to beat it, and finally, once I realized that I couldn’t beat it, learning to happily live with it. I’ll share how this came about in upcoming episodes.

Fear turned out to be quite the foe. I could neither silence it with alcohol, nor marijuana, nor a hundred self-help books, nor direct confrontation, and not with years of psychotherapy. Fear has been such an encompassing and basic part of my conscience that eliminating it completely proved impossible. So I’ve not destroyed it. However, I do go after what I want, even though the fear accompanies me everywhere. I negotiate with it and sometimes, it allows me to speak.

I’ve made peace with fear, and learned to tell my desires to women, not so much in spite of it, but rather through working with it. What do I mean by that? Well nowadays, I see fear as a protective parent or older brother, watching over and guiding me, using its strong but gentle hand to steer me away from situations likely to be fruitless. But I didn’t discover until well into adulthood that fear almost never the bad guy, and there are times when it does not restrain me, even around the tallest, thinnest, most attractive women. Sometimes, it allows me to approach. And those situations were the most likely to turn into full-blown, happy relationships; more so than when I chose to ignore it and press on without considering its counsel. Few (if any) times where I defied my fear ever turned out good. In retrospect, I should have listened to it more that I did. It has wisdom and so it knows when the women like me and when they don’t, and it permits me to approach those that do and pushes me away from those who’d rather I fly a kite. I’ve come to understand how that works and I hope you’ll check out future episodes for more details.

Though in my teens, fear kept me away from almost every pretty girl, at times I rose above it and made my interest known. However, usually the very thing happened that I feared: They rejected me and threw in some distain and jeers for good measure. My fear knew what it was talking about when it said, “Stay clear of this one.” Nonetheless, I enjoyed some potent romantic times. A few girls said yes. A few girls, my fear permitted me to seek out.

One case was our tenth grade prom. That date turned out to be perhaps the best romantic date I ever had before or since. I asked this female employee if she’d go with me. When she agreed, I almost fainted with thrill. The date turned out well and even today, I remember most every minute of it. But because I was a minor (sixteen at the time), she wouldn’t go out with me again. And by the time I came of age, she had left the school and I, in this pre-Internet era, could not locate her though I tried.

Besides the prom date, I had a “first love” and it was in eleventh grade that my passion for her really ignited. But for various reasons, anxiety tainted that association because her first love was someone other than me, and, I knew it. Plus, she and I had very different values. I was too young to understand that intellectually, although my conscience got it loud and clear. And so, at least during high school, we never connected romantically; although I daydreamed about her often during class, as I watched her much more than I paid attention to the teacher. She was just so beautiful, and I’m certain I failed a few exams due to focusing too much on her.

She and I had a few encounters. But she’d never come as my date to school activities. True, we’d dance sometimes and she’d let me hold her hand once every several blue moons, though she never squeezed back. She’d allow me to nuzzle her shoulder during a slow dance. But her arms only rested on my shoulders; never drawing me closer. Not in high school anyhow. Once in a while, she’d even come out with me for pizza or movie, at my prompting of course. But she never invited me to go with her anywhere. Any activity where we’d be announced as a couple, she rejected. In fact, I had asked her to our tenth, eleventh, and twelfth grade proms as well as numerous dances and field trips. But she always said no, though she said yes to others. This hurt, and the pains of her repeated rejections followed me though many of the early years of my love quest. Let’s just call her   [First Love].   She really was that and to me, because   [First Love]   always came first. I would have taken her to the tenth grade prom. But I took the employee instead, since   [First Love]   rejected me. Nowadays, I don’t see the employee lady as second best even though she was not my first choice, because I ended up falling in love with her afterwards, once I realized just how memorable that prom date was. Still though, my feelings for   [First Love]   never wavered and I would continue chasing her for many years; long after the employee departed, and long after high school ended.

Of course I did more than just quest for a girlfriend as a student. I enjoyed repairing electronic devices and dabbling in amateur radio; I loved anything electronic. Additionally, I worked several little jobs as a teen, which included a kitchen helper, a telephone switchboard operator, and receptionist. I sold Christmas trees each December to raise funds for the school, and I played music at our dances. I also managed the school radio station and interned at KDKA radio in 12th grade. These jobs made me feel important and confident, and this I thought, gave me a leg up on the competition for girls. Though I loved the fun of this work, I did it to attract more girls as well. The jobs paid money and as I saw it, girls liked money and guys who had it. So anything I could do to make more of it, I did.

Electronics, specifically radio, fascinated me. This was a good thing too because aside from a few friendships, it was the only pursuit that distracted me from feeling sad for not having a girlfriend. I cried often after seeing girls I wanted hanging out with men I deemed beneath me. Yet those girls avoided me like I was beneath them! They seemed to view me as badly as I did their loser boyfriends. They saw me as the loser, and those losers as winners. Go figure. I didn’t get it. How they could want those cads and not me? I thought this was because I appeared ugly to them. Indeed, some of them said this to me. But over all, I didn’t believe them. So, I kept pressing for a good date. True, I got frustrated often for not finding good ones. But never did I consider my looks a curse, nor did I obsess over them.

I rarely used cologne or dressed up, and did little to enhance my appearance beyond the daily bathing, shaving, nail cutting, hair grooming, teeth brushing, and wearing clean clothes and deodorant. I was secure about my looks even though some said I was plain and unappealing. I never wore designer clothes, gold necklaces, or name brand shoes because I was fine and whole without them. Indeed, as I looked in the mirror to straighten my hair, I liked the guy looking back. He was reasonably handsome with much going for him, and he should be able to attract the girls he liked. Yet in high school, no girl ever desired him back. They laughed as he passed or scurried away on the street as they walked arm-in-arm with their thuggish boyfriends; those guys with the rap sheets that terrorized us civilized folk. The girls preferred these “bad boys” to him. To me: me who never had a police record; me, who got drunk only seven times in high school; me, who never beat up anyone; me, who had better grades; and me who had the promise of a good career in electronics. All these good things that I had, those losers did not. So what did they have that drove the girls wild? With all the jobs and good performing I was doing, I thought I should have been more attractive than the losers. But the girls disagreed. The fact that I wasn’t confounded and confused me, and I’d spend many an hour pondering why this was so through the rest of my love quest.

My powerlessness to answer led me through years of depression, which stretched way beyond high school, and sometimes, affects me to this very day. But as I entered adulthood, electronics kept me sane and made all this bearable. It gave me something besides dating to focus on. While studying, I could forget the nasty looks and words from pretty girls. So, I continued studying radio and TV repair into the mid 80s.

In fact, upon my 1979 graduation, I attended trade school for two years. There as well as at the school for blind children, I only saw a few ladies at Connelley that I liked, but more than in high school. There weren’t many female students in the electronics classes, although the school taught other subjects that drew more just down the hall. Still, I was too scared to approach any ladies. I liked one woman in my advanced electronics class. As usual though, I was too afraid to tell her. But she figured it out after catching me watching her a few times. Flattered she was, but not interested in dating me. So while I did well in trade school scholastically, I had still made no love connections. No matter though because two months after graduation in 1981, I was onto my next adventure; my first full-time job.

In August, I got a temporary job as an electronics technician, also in Pittsburgh. The first few months were hectic because I had no direct supervisor to teach me about the equipment I’d be repairing. There was no senior technician because that fellow had taken ill some months earlier. With him gone, his office soon filed up with hundreds of broken audio visual devices. So once that pile got real big, they felt compelled to bring in someone temporary to repair some it. So they hired me.

I was all alone with this mountain of malfunctioning projectors, TV monitors, and video cassette recorders. My mission: To fix it all. It was nice though, because no one pressured me. They understood that I, fresh from trade school and the only technician there, was in way over my head. Soon however, I could repair three to six items per day once I learned how things worked and how to order parts. Fortunately, most projects were simple — such as frayed power cords, broken belts, missing knobs, and burned out lights. Yet, there was much to do, simple though it was.

As in trade school, again I feared failing and so, spent many extra hours at the office and took home manuals to read over the weekends. I so wanted not to screw it up. Thus until the senior technician returned, I didn’t have time to think about women. I was all about the job at that point.

But ten weeks after I started, the boss man returned. I thought that I’d be laid off. However, the directors liked my work so much that they voted to keep me on to assist, until we finished fixing that massive pile of equipment. With two guys working, it soon disappeared. Then, they asked me to stay for over a year more, and I soon realized that I didn’t have to work so hard to please them. So I had time to resume my love quest, and resume it I did.

Four ladies at work caught my eye. I was still too afraid to say to ladies that I liked them directly. So I’d let them know by just hanging around them until they got it. Then, either they’d pull me aside and say that they knew I was interested and that they’d love to go out (which never happened at that job). Or they’d say sadly that they already had boyfriends and that, while they’d love to go out, they couldn’t. This always happened. I wrung out all four ladies this way, and you guessed it. None were available. So, with no one there left to pursue, that familiar ache of loneliness soon came back again. The excitement of the new job along with the hope of meeting a special lady there was gone.

To cope, I sought religion. Perhaps while following this story, you’ve wondered about my religious background. So let me say that I am neither religious nor spiritual these days. Though raised Catholic, as I matured, believing in things through sheer faith became impossible; especially once my beloved and devout grandmother passed away in 1980. I’ve always been a terrible follower, and so believed in nothing in my early twenties, simply because another said I should. I’m a concrete guy, and so, must sense it for myself to believe it with conviction. However, all of that notwithstanding, as a young adult I attended church often. In 1982, church was good. The people welcomed me and that felt nice. But it was just a distraction, for it left my heart still empty once the services were over. I enjoyed that temporary respite though, because anything (even church) was better than sitting at home on a pretty Sunday morning, alone, with nothing to do. With each passing year, I grew less and less spiritual. But it would be fourteen more years until I completely dismissed the church as a useful means to feel less lonely for having no lovers.

My interest in church came in spits and spurts. So after several months, church lost its appeal as this particular spurt came to an end. I knew that I’d probably not meet my lady there because all of them seemed to believe more strongly than I in God. The whole speaking-in-tongues thing and the faith-healing was just plain crazy to me, and so I could not respect women who believed so strongly without proof. Blind Faith and I never got along, and so I felt guilty attending. Parishioners questioned me about why I was going and suggested I stop until I “saw the light.” So I did stop going regularly in late 1982 once I realized that love questing in church would probably be a fruitless endeavor.

Currently, I’m agnostic – neither believing nor disbelieving in God. He may be out there. He may not. I can’t prove it either way; nor can anyone else for that matter. That’s good enough for me, but not so for women at large who generally believe in a greater entity that regulates their lives and helps them succeed when they follow his rules. They call me a humanist and one even said that I was a son of the devil and kept her children away from me, fearing that I’d corrupt their views about heaven and hell and how God wants us to serve him. I fear not the possibility of no life after death as they do. I’m fully prepared to embrace this if it turns out that way. But without strong faith and hope in a life hereafter, the love quest got harder; not because God was thwarting me, but because the women I encountered looked down on me for questioning. Staying true to my beliefs has cost me dearly in my love quest.

Long ago, I stopped arguing religion. Nonetheless, when I was a stronger believer in the 70s and early 80s, I spent hours a week praying to God, asking him to brighten my dark heart, and bring the woman of my dreams to me. Well, he never did, even after two decades of praying. Indeed I’ve done better in my search by myself, once I stopped believing that he’d do it for me. God was not going to win my love quest for me. No, if this would ever happen, I’d have to do it myself.

But I digress. So let me get back to my job.

Eighteen months into the job, in the spring of 1983, I realized that I could not earn the money I wanted fixing home entertainment devices. Nor had I found a true love at Pitt. It didn’t look like I would either, for I had quickly run through all the women in mine and surrounding departments. Like I said, none would date me. Though I made my own money, aloneness still followed me everywhere. Thus far, the women weren’t impressed with my achievements, hard to achieve as they were, and successful as I was at achieving them.

So when that tech position ended, I went in a new direction; to college for computer programming, a career that promised a higher wage, and would bring more desirable ladies to me, which it eventually did. But during the first two years, I made only three new friends because I was a bookworm. As usual, I was terribly afraid of failing, and since I’d been out of high school for nearly five years, rusty in my reading and writing skills too. So, besides the usual college level work, I also had to relearn many of those forgotten skills. This left little time for socializing between 1984 and 1986, as I spent most every hour outside of class studying. Even the summers were full in those days, as I took my Calculus courses during the first two summers, computer classes in 1986, and a writing class in 1987. Actually, I’m glad I didn’t meet a lady then, because I’d have surely flunked out. There wouldn’t have been time for managing both an education and a relationship although occasional sex without strings was nice.

I longed for my dream girl just the same. So much so, that I visited my first psychotherapist in the fall of 1986. For nine months, we met each week, and though I couldn’t put my finger on any particular insights I got, I did start feeling better about being alone, and less afraid to talk to college women. At times in therapy, I just wanted to get rid of the desire for women rather than satisfy it. No doubt you’re wondering, “How could you want something, and then wish that you didn’t?” Well, at this time the rewards in my love quest were so few, and the disappointment so great, that the longing had become painful, leading me into many humiliating situations and leaving me feeling ashamed. Often women reacted so negatively when I showed them interest that I began feeling that my desires were wrong. At 25 years of age, I believed that though the world was full of beautiful women, none would ever think me beautiful.

Now a few women agreed to date me. So I could attract some, but not those I really desired. I was so disenchanted with the love quest by then, that I’d have been relieved to find that why hadn’t yet found Her was simply because no such person existed. At least that way, my aloneness could not be my fault. That would have been easier to swallow than the idea that there might be some correctable thing wrong with me that was keeping them away.

The therapist listened patiently, offering a consoling voice. I liked discussing the love quest with someone who understood my pains of loneliness and the dilemmas of how to satisfy it. But he refused to assure me that She was just a figment of my imagination. He also assured me profusely that I was not defective in any way, even with my low vision. He thought that She was out there and that I just had to find her. He thought I was fine and that if I was going to ever find Her, I’d have to search harder and smarter. I’ll tell you how I did these things in upcoming episodes.

Therapy encouraged me to intensify my love quest efforts, though I left it with more questions than I had going in. I don’t know how. But even with those questions unanswered, I was, while not cured, markedly better. Maybe it was the therapist’s cheering me on or his unwavering confidence in me. I’m not sure. But I felt more confident asking ladies out. I had achieved the objective of that therapy, which was to get more women into my life. That therapy gave me a big push that got me very far along the journey of my love quest.

Meanwhile back at college, I also improved at the coursework, which meant that I could study less. So in the fall of 1986, I joined a computer users group of sixty students. We sent email back and fourth, and met each other for meals between classes. At night we partied, and so I drank back then, quite a bit. I was known for carrying this round black bottle that had the words “Get Bombed” printed in white letters on the side. I’d fill it with a quart of Jim Beam whiskey and take to many a gathering. In fact, this flask looked like a bomb and the girls seemed charmed by my tipsy displays as I held onto it. I did make a couple close female friends from all that. Yet this life style was not quite what I was after. I wanted them to like me for the sober me; not the intoxicated version. But thinking that I’d have to sacrifice my values a little to get what I wanted, I went along with the drinking for a good while. I attended all sorts of college parties, visited bars, dances, festivals, and hung around the student union, looking for ladies who would come to my bed and please me.

But, with my collegiate education nearly complete, I thought I might have to leave Pittsburgh for a job. So, I avoided serious relationships, though I ached for one. I knew that if I found it, that it would only be temporary. But I didn’t care. Anything would be better than nothing, even a one-night stand. Also, the ladies I met, while very nice, either did not attract me or vice versa. Yes, that same problem once more. I always seemed to interest the ones I didn’t care about. Nonetheless, I made lots of lady friends; a real change from life before college. So while college didn’t drop a dream girl in my lap, it, along with therapy, moved me closer to Her, for I had more female friends and was asking more of them out than ever before. The odds of finding Her thus, had improved much.

While I asked more for dates than ever before in a given year, I also got more rejections. In a way, this was also rewarding. Rejections were better than nothing at all, as they proved that I had begun to master my fear of approaching ladies. The more rejections I got I reasoned the less afraid of ladies I must be. So the rejections themselves became a measure of success in my love quest. At least now, I was hunting, trying different approaches, and acquiring the emotional scars to show it. So at last, in college, I finally managed to break out of my shell.

I finished school in 1988, with a Bachelors degree in Computer Science along with a minor in mathematics from the University of Pittsburgh; the same place I’d worked some five years earlier. From there, I went on to spend fifteen years, working as a software engineer for a fortune 500 company.

My hope that the computer field would bring more women into my life came true. Indeed, during my first two years, I met hundreds of women; more than in my entire adult life prior. Now that I had more money than ever, I could afford to try dating services, attend weekend-getaways, and go to dances and meetings with singles groups. I signed up for my first dating service immediately after cashing my first big paycheck. I then applied for a second one a year later.

Then in 1992, I bought a nice home after a few sweet raises. This, I thought, would surely impress the ladies and I was certain that only a little more time stood between me and my dream girl, who would, at any moment, waltz right in and complete my life. In fact, I bought an extra-large refrigerator, reserved space for her things in my bedroom alongside my king sized waterbed, and saved a spot in the garage for her car.

One day in 1994, a neighbor called as I was sealing my back deck, and invited me to his church. Eager to bond with my new neighbors, I forgot about why I had abandoned church in 1982, and I went with him, just to check it out. To my surprise, I found lots of eligible women. But soon, just as had happened some twelve years earlier, II quickly grew bored with it. I was no more a believer in 1994 than I had been in 1982. The truth was, I wasn’t there to worship. Instead, I went to meet women. That was it, and they knew it quickly. Once again, none would go out with me. Another strategy tried in the love quest, and another one failed.

Meanwhile, at work, I asked over a hundred ladies for dates, hoping that now that I was in my own home, they’d surely say yes. I invited them for lunch and hosted a couple team-building sessions and parties, so that all would see how well I was doing and appreciate how good a provider I could be. They came, they complimented me, and some stayed a couple hours. They liked my house and how well I kept it. But in the end, like my latest church stint, the big house and good salary never won any hearts. So no one ever parked her car in my garage. No one ever put her underwear in those empty drawers in my bedroom. No one ever brought any food to keep in my refrigerator for her next visit. I had instead, this cold draft that I felt against my face every night I ascended the steps to the second-floor master bedroom; a daily reminder that no one was up there waiting for me, and that no one I’d met so far wanted to be up there. So, after four years, with my dressers, garage, refrigerator, and heart still empty, I came to the conclusion that once again, a big change would be necessary to move me ahead in my love quest. I could not turn that great house into a wonderful home full of love thought I put every spare hour I had into the quest. I began feeling tethered to that house and soon, came to hate it there.

So in 1996, in that final year in the house, I came to look forward to Mondays and dread Fridays while my coworkers felt the opposite. They couldn’t wait for Fridays but hated Mondays. Why was I so different? Because I knew that come Friday, I’d likely spend the entire weekend alone, and that come Monday, I’d at least have people around me again when the new work week began. The loneliness burned in my heart. Career-wise I’d come so far. But socially, I ached as much as ever for sustained eroticism, and love.

As fate had it, I discovered Philadelphia, a city with way more single women. Some friends from there invited me to visit. So in December, 1996 I went, and loved it from the minute I arrived. Pretty ladies adorned every city block downtown. Plus, with the extensive public transportation, I could get to the social spots much easier than where I was currently living in Ohio. So, it didn’t take long to decide to sell my house and move there.

The Philly move turned out to be another big step forward in the love quest. For the first time, I could access thousands of women easily, without transportation worries. So I made friends, went to bars, boat trips, restaurants, skating parties, a trip to New York City, and any event I could to place myself among potential mates. One day even, I had two dates; one in the afternoon, and one that night. Each weekend, I’d pick a spot in the city, and then learn how to get there on the bus or train, and then go there, striking up conversations with beautiful strangers along the way. The thrill of learning a new city kept me from feeling too lonely, for the first year at least.

But after three plus years there, and only a few delightful but short-lived relationships (Cathy, Violet, Carol, Joyce, Karen, [Vee],   [Lynn],   [Tina],   Joanna), I was still alone. Now I did meet more women per year in Philly than in any other place prior, and I did have a few wonderful erotic encounters. During my last year there in 2001, I asked at least a thousand women to dance, and also launched numerous campaigns on the online and telephone dating services, where I contacted thousands more. I approached more women than ever that year. However, all but ten rejected me flat. And of those that agreed to meet me, only four wanted a second date. And of those romances, none lasted longer than a few months and all but one fizzled after just a few weeks. So while the move to Philly provided the target-rich environments I sought to move further in my quest, I left there in December of 2001 empty-handed, unfulfilled, and extremely disappointed. I was fresh out of ideas of what to try next and didn’t even want to try anymore.

This love quest had by this time cost me lots of money too! There was the move from Ohio, the loss of money when I sold the house, and all the household stuff I had to just about give away so I could downsize from that four-bedroom, two-story house with a double garage, to a two-bedroom apartment in a high rise building. Also in Philadelphia, the quest cost the most as I paid for most all my dates as well as my own drinks and transportation to the various hot spots around town. My desire for companionship was strong as ever, but after three decades, I still had no idea how to get it. I felt I had to do something radical but wasn’t sure what. But then, fate laid another clue in my path.

During my last year in Philly, I started having problems at work. The job was getting harder, I received no raises my last two years there. To add insult to injury, I still had not found my dream girl after thirteen years of building that career and the wealth that went with it. That’s when I surmised that corporate life was not for me anymore. All the hard work and extra hours to build a happy, successful life had not paid off though I had done everything a fellow was supposed to do to succeed. I got educated, held a good job for a long time, and set up several great living quarters. Unfortunately, ladies never lingered, if they even came at all.

I grew weary of the increasing pressures to step up my work performance. While I liked the raises and promotions which were more plentiful during the 90s, I found the rewards emptier and harder to get, the higher in the company I got. Working harder just didn’t make sense eventually, since all I had when I turned off the computer was an empty, cold dwelling. My place.

So the question occurred: Why fight so for a career whenever only cold rooms, a quiet kitchen, and an empty bed were my reward each night? I couldn’t answer this except to say that I shouldn’t. I understood that I couldn’t fix whatever was keeping her away, while working myself to death as a senior software engineer. I also knew that finding her was more important than anything, including making lots of money as a corporate big shot. Life was marching on too, as I was already well into my forties without having solved my happiness problem. So I promised myself in the summer of 2001 to either find my dream girl or die trying. If that meant devoting full time to the quest, then that’s what I would do.

It would be some months before I appreciated fully what that promise meant. But I knew right off that I’d have to free up lots of time to work on me. I would need to quit my job and learn once more how to live cheaply, at least until I found Her. But I agonized over doing this because the job treated me better financially than I could do on my own; guaranteeing me a spot among the middle class as long as I kept working. Plus, after reading hundreds of thousands of ladies’ profiles on the dating sites, it was clear that lots of women find richer men more attractive than those with modest incomes. So quitting would exclude me from consideration by many attractive women and thus, set me way back in my love quest. These and other truths made leaving one of the toughest choices I’ve ever made.

I suspected that I’d never find another position that paid as well; at least not initially. But so what? What good was the money if I wasn’t happy? Money had not made me happy to date. In fact, the joy of having it did not counterbalance the hardship of earning it. In the end, I was indeed worse for the wear.

True. The job qualified me for, and surrounded me with, lots of women. But simply being among ladies and having lots of money in my pocket and a nice suburban home was not enough. While the job exposed me to more women, the fact that I had it did not interest the ladies, any more than did my previous endeavors. They still saw me as, at best, too plain, and at worst, too ugly to date. The job with all its trimmings therefore, did not end this now-monotonous love quest.

Plus, and most sadly, women still looked down their noses at me, the same as they had twenty-five years earlier in high school. The fact that I was now earning close to ninety thousand dollars a year didn’t matter. The results of my approaches had remained essentially the same as it was in my teens. Zilch. I was still as lonely as I’d been in the 70s, yet still just as eager to win at love. Working so hard at a career just hadn’t gotten me where I thought it should, and I was ready to give it up in order to try something different.

So, in late 2001 I began preparing to resign: I saved money, moved back home with Mom, fixed up her house while I still had my software engineer’s salary, and spent thousands of hours journaling and mentally turning myself inside out. I looked for ways to change for the better, all the while seeking tools I could use to finally end my love quest victoriously.

This effort became my full-time job. Everything else, including my real job became a distraction. I substituted self-help books about relationships and dating for computer and software manuals. In the evening, time that I’d normally spend working extra hours on some programming project, I instead spent trolling the Internet for ideas and dates. My day job had become second priority, especially after business hours. Imagine that!

Now I’d planned to keep working for three years once I knew that I’d be leaving. But as the first of those years progressed, the job changed into an irritating distraction from my true purpose. That purpose, which I now understood since making the promise to myself in 2001, was to finally win the love quest. I wanted to really give the quest my all.

Though I had given up the extra hours, I was still putting too much time into the job, and too little into finding fulfillment in love. Not only did I wish to spend my evenings and weekends working the quest, but wanted to throw in the forty regular weekly work hours as well. As usual, the loneliness which had been with me since the age of twelve continued pounding at my soul, and I was getting really tired of it, and more eager than ever to find relief. From my history of many things tried and many things failed, I figured that I wouldn’t silence its doleful voice unless I could fully focus on it – something I’d never really done before. What else could I do?
It seemed like I’d done everything else. Let’s see. As I mentioned earlier, I:
• Acquired a good self image,
• Reduced my teenage fears of talking to women.
• Held jobs all through grade school and high school,
• Stayed out of serious trouble,
• Successfully completed high school and trade school,
• Held an electronics technician job for nearly two years,
• Completed psychotherapy,
• Joined the computer users group in college,
• Successfully completed college,
• Got a good job,
• Owned a nice home,
• Learned how to maintain a home,
• Attended singles groups and churches,
• Approached more than ten thousand women,
• Achieved a respected status at work,
• Earned close to ninety thousand dollars a year at the end,
• Which enabled me to give a lady a very good time,
• I avoided drugs and immoral behavior,
• I was stable and kind,
• Threw myself into lots of new environments and cultures throughout the quest so I might find the best areas in which to search.

But the one thing I hadn’t done so far was to completely devote my entire life to the pursuit. Up to this point, the love quest had always been more of a hobby; one that I worked during weekends and sometimes on weeknights. I’d never really gone at it full tilt before. Yet I knew that I would never be as happy as I could be unless I could find Her, and I was convinced that the way to do that the most effectively, was to sink every last waking hour into the search and into fixing myself.

So it came about some fifteen months after I began executing my plan to resign, that I did indeed quit. Was this too early? Perhaps. True. I didn’t make it to the end of 2004 as in the plan. I actually resigned in March of 2003. Nonetheless, I managed to pay off all debts and finish all the maintenance projects on Mom’s home too. I cancelled any magazine and music subscriptions I no longer needed, hauled away a ton of junk, and began saving coupons. This resignation was a pivotal moment in my love quest, and I’ll discuss more about this difficult choice in future episodes as well as what happened subsequently.

An all-time approach to this problem (as opposed to a full-time or part-time approach) proved to be grueling. So I devised a few diversions. One was part time DJing. Others included writing, computer repair, reading a lot, buying and selling on eBay, and watching classic movies. I enjoy watching Dr. Phil McGraw and Dr. Joy Browne as well, as my philosophies generally align with theirs. I’ve written numerous articles and stories which are, as of yet, unpublished. But they will be, in this blog and podcast. I’ll share some of my best works, which center on the quest. In fact, most of them do actually. Also, as in high school, I still enjoy ham radio, and hold an extra class Amateur Radio license (my call sign is N8UBU). Also, I got certified by Microsoft as an expert on various versions of their Windows operating system. Nowadays, I’m butler and caregiver for my Mom, who is recovering from open-heart surgery. I just finished re-plumbing her house last March and installing a wooden banister alongside the bridge from the parking lot into the side walk, so she has something to hold on to when entering. I do keep busy, which is one way of reducing the feelings of emptiness I discussed earlier. It’s not a cure. But it is good, temporary relief.

Perhaps my love quest talks will sound humanist or Buddhist in that they encourage us to tap our own inner strengths rather than looking to greater, outside, and improvable forces. This is my mantra now and it is an essential premise in my philosophy throughout the love quest. This should help clarify why I chose as I have as well as why I’ve tried doing much of it myself.

Through no other force than my own hard work and lady luck, I think I’ve found Her. But I’m not sure. I’ve enjoyed a wonderful relationship with [Emmy] for going on six years now, and prefer this association far over being alone. We get along quite well; we’re lucky if we fight once a year, and even then, we never yell at each other. We always maintain respect for each other and never go to bed mad. Although we have problems sexually that we’re working on currently, [Emmy] is among the most caring and understanding woman I’ve known. I have 95% of the relationship I’ve sought, and feel that once we work out the issues of eroticism, I’ll officially be able to end my love quest.

So since I’ve not yet actually won the love quest, I admit that I’m no expert. So while you’ll see many success stories here, you’ll see much sadness and despair as well. Indeed, the bulk of my experiences have been sad, sorry to say. For every one hour of joy I’ve experienced in my quest, I’ve probably had a hundred hours of pain and disappointment. In my search, sorrow has been a big part of the reality. Many have suggested that I express more of the joys than the sorrows. But to preserve the truest essence of my quest, I must relate completely my sad times because as painful as they were, they made it possible for me to have the good times that I do now. So I’d trade none of those sorrowful years away.

Not all the stories are sad. There are many pleasant ones. I’ll tell you about my introspections and the changes to my philosophy and approach to the problem that enabled me to reduce depression. In short, I’ll let you know how I learned to cope with being alone. Merely coping however is not ideal. So I’ve not given up. I hope through this blogcast that I can persuade those of you who have abandoned your search, to keep trying. In 2001, I declared that I would either win at this game, or die trying. You’ll need this same resolve if you’re ever going to experience true happiness, and I hope that through sharing my experiences and insights, that they’ll help you find the resolve to press on yourself.

I am no psychologist and have little formal training in this subject. My writings come not from any large-scale clinical studies or other systemic techniques for deducing human behavior. They come however, from my own three plus decades of experience chasing “the perfect woman”. So any advice I give should be considered no more than inspirational, and is not intended to replace bona fide professional help. This blog is for informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as anything other than me, telling my story of my love quest.

What is “the perfect woman,” you ask? Well, stick around and I’ll tell you about my vision of her. But not now. However, I will tease you and say that the word “perfect” here does not mean absolutely without flaws. More on that in future episodes, along with much more about the struggle to find perfection and the many strategies I’ve tried, to get it.

So thanks very much for stopping by and I hope you’ll visit again soon. There’s lots more to say.

Tom Hesley
http://tomhesley.com/