Archive for the ‘Ballerina’ Category

True Loves List

Monday, October 19th, 2009

These girls wooed me the most over all.  Not that they   all   produced the greatest sexual or romantic desire and gratification, though some of them did.  But at times while either pining for or dating each of these, I felt I could be with no one more suited to my tastes, morals, values, education level, religious beliefs, social status, and so on.   While grazing in these ladies’ pastures, the grass immediately surrounding me was always the greenest.  Indeed, there was no such thing as greener grass on the other side of the fence.  There may have been   equally   green grass; but none greener.  I sensed that I was dating among the best I could, and that there was none better.  Now I’ve dated many others besides these.  But only relationships forged with the ladies in this list appeared to be the best that a relationship could be; at least for a few months to a few years anyhow. 

And now, the list:

  1. [First Love]   in 1972 through 1990.
  2. [Molly]   in 1974.
  3. [Ann]  in 1974, and briefly in 2004.
  4. [Maniac]   in 1975.
  5. [BT]   in 1976.
  6. [Shaina]   in 1977.
  7. [Dawn]   in 1979.
  8. [Cher]   in 1981 through 1983.
  9. [Andrea]    in 1982.
  10. [Shelly]   in 1983.
  11. [Shanee]   in 1983.
  12. Paula Eide    in 1984.
  13. [Fannie]   in 1984 through 1987.
  14. [Kate]  in 1986 through 1987.
  15. [Lenee]   in 1988.
  16. [Elstan]  in 1988 through 2002.
  17. [Cassee]  in 1989, 1994, and 2000.
  18. [Renee]   in 1990 through 1991.
  19. [Juanita]   in 1991, 1994, and 2001.
  20. [Roberta]   in 1991.
  21. [Chrissy]   in 1993.
  22. [Emeebee]   in 1993-1998, 2000-2001.
  23. [Carlene J]  in 1993 and then again in 2000.
  24. [Melinda]  in 1995, and briefly in 2007.
  25. [Alandra]   in 1996-1997.
  26. [Judith]   in 1997-1998, 2010.
  27. [Vee] in 1997 -2002, 2006.
  28. [Kar]   in 1998-2002.
  29. [J]   in 1999-2000.
  30. [Lynn]  in 1999-2000.
  31. [Beejay]   in 2000 through 2001.
  32. [LizDee]   in 2002 and 2004, briefly.
  33. [Emmy]   in 2003, and 2005.
  34. [Kandi]  in 2003 through 2005.
  35. [Ballerina]   in 2004.
  36. [Linda]   in 2009.
  37. [Miss Independent]  in 2009.
  38. [Prism]   in 2009.
  39. [Elsee]   in 2009.

 

Click on each name link to see the posts that pertain to that lady.

Take care.

Tom Hesley

Fast Love Can Be True Love

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Dear [Mentat],

I enjoyed our debate last weekend about how close to true love, love at first sight (LAFS) actually comes. You say that LAFS is not love at all, but rather just infatuation or lust. So you seem to believe that LAFS is not a useful indicator of how much in love we might fall, and so should be ignored while selecting a lover. If I understood you correctly, we should not use it therefore, to determine who we’re the most likely to fall in love with. I say however, that LAFS   is   love, or more precisely, it can be, because it often and quickly leads to the kind of life-long love the folks the world over revere. Allow me to further clarify my position.

I suppose that how meaningful   love at first sight   is, depends on the particular qualities you’re looking for. If you seek primarily a person’s “surface” or immediately-visible traits that attract you, then you needn’t delve too deeply to find those, as by definition, they are apparent at first sight. Example: How about the man who is moved romantically by a long pair of slender female legs? He need know little about her deepest, inner workings to know that she attracts him in the ways that he prefers. On the other hand, if you’re searching for less visible traits, such as a person’s pet peeves, their political views, or how they’ll treat you when you’re sick, then LAFS probably won’t occur for you, since you’ll have to spend some months digging for those “deeper” facts before your heart will allow you to “fall.”  Since the qualities sought here are not apparent at first sight, then LAFS will not happen.

Of course, most people don’t seek just one quality; they like several to many. Our leg man may also like women who speak with southern accents (an indicator of the preferred background he’s seeking). And / or, he may be drawn to a flautist or anyone who is deeply involved with music. If we observe a lady playing the piccolo, and a piccolo player is the sort of person that really turns us on, then we needn’t know any more about her than that she plays piccolo in order to feel the romantic draw of LAFS. Then, if the piccolo player thanks us for our applause with a southern accent, and has great legs to boot, we get even more excited.  My point: There are many readily discernible qualities therefore that can trigger the LAFS sensations; qualities that tell us much about the deep recesses of the person even though they are immediately visible.

To me, a person’s “surface” traits as you call them, are probably no less indicative of their attractiveness than their more obscure “inner” traits like personality, values, how they act once they really know someone well, and so on. If they look pretty outside, then they probably have the sort of mental constitution on the inside I’m looking for.  Conversely, if they have the lifestyles, intellect, and values that I prefer on the inside, then I’ll usually find them attractive on the outside too. The outside tells us much about the inside if you know how to read it.  Therefore, you really can judge a book by its cover. 

Now I must say that I’m reluctant to split humans into an outer or surface half, and an inner, personality-based half because the physical body resembles the personality and the personality resembles the physical body.  The two are so heavily connected and dependent on one another that they cannot be meaningfully discussed separately, since so much of what’s in the one is derived from what’s in the other. I make the distinction here though, because in your arguments on Saturday, you did it when you referred to the “surface” qualities Vs. the deeper, “inner” qualities of a lady.  I do it here just to show that it can’t really be done.  See my article, Outer Vs. Inner Beauty  for further arguments in this vein. 

I agree that LAFS is based primarily on more surface qualities than the more slowly developed love that you’ve experienced with your current girlfriend. But does this invalidate LAFS? I think not. Why? People resist the usefulness of LAFS, believing that how a person looks on the outside says   nothing   about who they are on the inside. This is wrong in my view. How they look and who they are, are essentially just different manifestations of a person’s whole essence. Their looks are very indicative of their total nature as human beings, just as are their personalities.  Click here for arguments that without personality (the insides) to animate a body (the outsides), the body cannot be attractive.   

But, people can make themselves look more attractive than they actually are.  It’s true that the outsides can be made to misrepresent the insides through the use of makeup, elevated shoes, toilet paper in the bra, cosmetic surgery, and so on. So you might argue that the outsides so manipulated, would not necessarily show the true, inner person, and you’d probably be right. But in this case, it’s the manipulation  of the readily visible traits that renders them less useful; it’s nothing inherent in the traits themselves.  However, they do show that the person is not comfortable in their own skin, which could indicate a host of hidden psychological problems and low self esteem issues.

I’ll admit that LAFS tells us little about the beloved’s capacity to love us back. The fact that we love them at first sight does not mean they will love us in return. To figure that out, we must take the necessary time to learn how they’ll treat us once romance begins to flourish. LAFS is therefore no crystal ball.  Indeed, it often misleads us to people not well-suited for us.  Just as sugar in and of itself makes not the perfect cake, so it is that LAFS does not by itself, create the forever-perfect relationship. In my view, love at first sight (LAFS) is a necessary  ingredient for a passionate, deep, and lasting relationship, just as sugar is for a cake that tastes good.  But it’s not a sufficient  ingredient. 

Without sugar, the cake is not sweet at all and so there would be little reason to eat it.  Yet LAFS does sweeten the cake; it predisposes us to view our beloved’s behaviors more favorably, and to love them with greater devotion; especially if they love us too. It boosts our tolerance of their idiosyncrasies, and thus, makes it easier to put up with them over the long haul. It causes us to reshape our goals and values to better accommodate our lover’s. In this way, LAFS can inspire a deeper love eventually that makes it easier to stay with the beloved through the rough times. Thus, I’d say that LAFS a necessary precursor to the most successful marriages.  So while LAFS is no guarantee of lasting love, it often results in such. See here for examples of how the quickest born romances in my life indeed lasted the longest. Thus, if you want the deepest and most lasting love, then LAFS would be a sure way to raise the odds of getting just that. LAFS can indeed be a significant indicator of lasting love to come.

Take care.

Tom Hesley

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Goodbye Growing Bulge

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

The chat group took offense at my willingness to leave a lover who gets fat, just because she got fat.  I defended my position as follows:

The other circumstances in the relationship would also influence my decision to stay or go if the lady got heavy.  If her weight gain happened because of some disease or was an unforeseen effect of some medicine she started taking, then I’d be less tempted to go.  But if she grew plump due to reckless abandon, and she did not exhibit a strong desire to lose it, then I’d be more eager and tempted to leave.  This is a very hard question to answer though because in each relationship, every set of circumstances is different.

But if someone would be afraid of me leaving them for gaining weight, well, there are many other potential reasons to go  as well.  She might fear a man leaving if:

  • She swore too much
  • She drank excessively
  • She drove too fast
  • She got gray too quickly
  • She was overly stubborn
  • She squeezed the toothpaste tube in the middle rather than the far end
  • She lost her mind
  • She lost weight

 

A person might up and leave us for any (or a combination of) hundreds of reasons like these. .It seems to me that more often than not, relationships move forward in spite of the potential terminating effects of these other reasons.  But when it comes to weight?  Like my ballerina friend back in 2004, some folks are just plain insecure, and they immediately rule out anyone who appears to be overly occupied with weight.  Yes, you’re right, this was probably one big reason that the ballerina called it off.

Just imagine if people didn’t worry so much about what MIGHT or MIGHT NOT happen in the future, I think relationships would flourish much better. 

 

Tom Hesley

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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:

Melinda Asked About Emmy

Monday, January 29th, 2007

Dear [Melinda],

Well, at this point, whatever you must do to get well, you’d probably better do it. You sounded none too good over the weekend.

Yep, I looked at all your pics on match. You look about the same as I remember.

I don’t mean to sound cold-hearted. But sometimes, being honest means being bluntly cold. Therefore, the reason I’ve stuck with [Emmy] for so long is because I haven’t, during the past four years, found someone who really attracts me (except for the ballerina). If [she] and I would have lasted, [Emmy] and I would not have. As we’ve discussed, [Emmy] helps take the painful edge off of being alone. I care a great deal for her, yes. But I don’t love her romantically, even though I am very sensitive to her feelings.

Further, dropping contact with you was NOT easy for me, and it took quite some time to arrive at that decision.

Finally, I’m not looking for much EXCITEMENT in my relationships. In fact, [Emmy] and I have a very calm, stable friendship, without drama. The only missing thing is that I feel no sexual attraction for her. You may be right that perhaps one day, I’ll decide that it’s the friendship that is ultimately important. But for now, I just can’t give up the hope of finding a sexually alluring mate.

I’m glad you’re feeling better, and hope you can beat that cold very soon.

Later,
Tom

Dear Melinda

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

Dear [Melinda],

Oh, most definitely I want to stay in touch. Let’s communicate for a while and see how it goes. Philly is four hours from here by car (six by train), but perhaps when it’s warm, we could spend an afternoon in Rittenhouse Square or walking up and down South Street, and make a weekend of it. We’ll see.

[Emmy] and I met in 2003 and dated until early in 2004. Then we stopped for about a year and a half. However, since the summer of 2005, we’ve spent at least one week a month together, either here, or at her place, or at a summer camp we both attend. I care a great deal for her. However, there’s no sexual attraction, and shallow as this may seem, I want to be sexually enthralled with my mate. Otherwise, the relationship feels incomplete. The sexual aspects are just as important to me as her good character, much like both chocolate and sugar are required to create a tasty cake. Who’s to say which one is more important to creating the over-all goodness of the cake? I need them both.

Actually, [Emmy] lives in Pittsburgh, and we take turns visiting each other each month. She’s scheduled to come here next in March. Yes, if she went far away, I’d miss her, and if she were to die, I’d certainly cry the blues. Yet there’s just something missing. I’m convinced of that because back in 2004, I dated a Romanian ballerina for a couple months. Now that relationship had everything I wanted. She was beautiful and exotic, accepted me, was not put off by my low vision, and didn’t mind driving here to see me. However, she stopped communicating one day without explanation. I believe what happened was that she was looking for a way back to Romania. She used to talk much about the two of us going there together. But at 43 years old, I wasn’t interested in relocating much less paying to relocate her as well (she had little money). And I feared that once back there, she’d up and leave me. I was bothered by how quickly she began talking about us getting married. (after only a month of dating).

Funny. It was exactly what I wanted. But things started moving way too fast for me, and I cautioned her to slow down. She didn’t like that, and I heard from her no more. After our last visit, she refused my calls and emails to her went unanswered. Yet while that relationship didn’t last long, it showed me that the sort of happiness I seek is at least   possible,  and it gave me a better idea of what to look for to maximize the chances of recreating it. Unfortunately however, I have no such feelings for [Emmy]. Though I wish full well that I did, the reality is that I don’t. And since, as we’ve discussed, we don’t easily control who turns us on, learning to romantically love [Emmy], I believe, is impossible, particularly since I’ve not been able to manage it after nearly four years of knowing her.

On making the quest for   The One   one’s primary goal in life: Yes, I’ve heard that age-old refrain that says that your best chance of finding what you want is to not look for it, and it will find you. But I’ve never been good at just sitting back and hoping for the best. I’ve got to be proactive. Besides for a number of years at [work], I didn’t raise a finger to find Her, as I was busy building my reputation. Yet, she never came. On the other hand, I spent three plus years in Philly and [...] hit the clubs, bars, dance halls, and skating rinks nearly every weekend. Same result. She never came.

So today, I have no evidence to prove that either the passive or active approach is best. But in other areas of my life, like my career, I know that a passive approach would   definitely not   have worked. If I would have just put my feet up and waited for success to come, I’d still be waiting. I see no reason therefore to suppose that a passive approach to securing a good love relationship would be any more likely to succeed than a passive approach to becoming a lead software engineer would be. Since appropriate action (as opposed to taking no action at all) is usually what wins the worthwhile prizes in life, I believe that for me, actively searching has the best chance of yielding good results, though admittedly, it hasn’t worked for me yet either. You’re right however. Some people can indeed sit back and wait for it to happen, particularly if they’re very attractive. For such people, opportunity will find them without them reaching for it at all. But it doesn’t work that way for most of us. More on that at another time.

While I acknowledge the possibility of   willfully falling in love,   I’ve never seen it happen to me. At least, not yet. Instead, I tend to learn more toward believing in   love at first sight  (LAFS). That, I have indeed seen several times. In my experience, the most enduring and passionate love is recognized within the first minute or two of meeting. Contrary to popular belief, a slowly growing love is not necessarily the strongest, most binding love. Again, we can talk at length about my reasons for holding to this view later. It’s rather involved and takes more time to explain than I can spend this evening. But now, we’re treading into topics that I’m writing about in my book. So it’d be cool to bounce some of my ideas off of you.

Changing the subject a bit: No, you were a very good friend. Never doubt that. Yes, I responded to your mentioning our day in Cincinnati. At times, I even dream of it.

Well, I’m off to bed. Get lots of rest and I hope you start feeling better soon.

Tom Hesley

Compassion Questing

Sunday, October 16th, 2005

Dear [Mentat],

Well I recently moved closer to overt compassion questing, by revealing the vision impairment in my telephone profiles once more. Since then, responses showing interest have filtered in at the usual trickle rate, but none from any hot women yet.

Of course, that’s been the problem all along, whether I mention the handicap or not. I’ve revealed it at times while, at others, kept it secret. In both cases, positive replies-per-week remained few, as long as I didn’t lie.

I don’t believe in   puffing  (that overemphasizing the   good   parts) that car dealers often do. Nor does it feel right to mislead, for example, by painting myself as well-to-do at the front of the ad, only to reveal in the “fine print” below that I have little money. Of course, blatant falsehoods are out as well, and the fact that I don’t willfully embellish and distort who I am may contribute to the empty inbox. But I’d rather be alone and truthful, than accompanied and deceitful.

However, though I openly offer my handicap these days, I’ve noticed an upsurge in positive responses now that I’m not too specific about the kind of lady I want. Perhaps this lesser detail helps positively offset my low vision admission. True, these aren’t attractive women responding so far. And perhaps the net gain from omitting exhaustive preference lists will be zero. But at least, I won’t [offend] the ladies I really want because they’re not as likely to deem me shallow. In fact, they may conclude that I’m profound if I don’t put it right out there that I want someone tall and thin. Some things we need to say up front – like the handicap. But others we’d do well to keep quiet – like detailed personal preferences in mates. More on this below.

Because historically, positive responses from babes have been few no matter what I’ve tried, it’s not clear if disclosing the handicap really hurts my already dismal chances. After all, how much worse could the odds get? But, to the few who enjoy serving the less fortunate, my candor would implicitly telegraph my need for what they have. Perhaps those with [Parker's wife's] psychological makeup will identify and hopefully answer. I’ll let you know how it goes. I still haven’t asked for their pity directly. Let’s see how just telling of the vision impairment works first.

Sadly, before omitting my weight preferences, I got many hostile quips from heavy women and thin women alike, saying how shallow I was for preferring the thin. Ironic that the thin would be offended, particularly since they embody the trim ideal themselves. Strange that those women spend much on looking slim and envy other females who sport sleek and slim bodies. They prefer clothing modeled by the thin over that displayed by heaver ladies. Yet they fault men who openly seek leanness. This may have been a factor in why that ballerina girl deserted me last fall. Though I offered nothing other than sincere praise for her healthy physique, she took great offense. Though thinness had been essential in her career, she, though meeting that standard well herself, clearly resented   having   to meet it and anyone who seemed (as I did that day) to advocate it.

But you know, whether its weight, IQ, income, status, specific values, where they live, the car they drive, or whatever,   someone   will say we’re shallow for wanting that, especially if they can’t offer it themselves.   [...] Even if they can, they may consider someone directly asking for it obnoxious, especially if though they can provide it, they don’t like providing it. It’s sad that women see a man’s draw to the thin as a sign that he’s not appreciating their totalities, rather than a good reason to strive to live healthy. But that’s the way it is today. I’ll certainly avoid compliments on specifics in the future. I’m not here to change the world, but rather, only to find a small piece of it that works as I think it should.

Though ladies claim to respect honesty, it’s so easy for a man to overdo it, as we’ve both learned — you with your past, me with my preference for the slim. Thus, my new strategy as I said, is to keep what I really want quiet. I need not tell women I want thin in order to get the thin. Should I find someone desirable, and then If they ask what I like about them, I’ll offer something truthful though general and nebulous like: Well, I love your personality and how pretty you are. It’s okay to tell them in holistic terms that they’re cute. Just don’t say precisely why. Or if you must, then just say that you like how they think and act.   :-)    As I’ve found, getting too specific leads them to think that we don’t appreciate their wholeness. This couldn’t be further from the truth.

Women want honesty for sure, but only the honesty they want to hear. They hate bad, though truthful news, especially when they already know the news. Most women believe for example, that men in general prefer slender females, but resent the man who says it, because his words insult their intelligence. Why would he, they ask, tell them something they already know?

Some even abhor premature divulgence of the handicap. Indeed, one woman argued last January that by declaring my impairment too soon, I was not giving women fair opportunity to know my good side first. Can you believe it? Though she herself responded favorably to my ad of full-disclosure, the fault she said, for my modest dating success, was likely mine due to my excess honesty rather than due to women’s for their prejudice. She thought that my goal, rather than detecting prejudice and then ruling it out if found, should instead be, upon seeing it, to help women get beyond it. This would be like the slave offering to enlighten his master while the master is beating him with a stick. Go figure! While Martin Luther King Jr. advocated such a tactic when he advised blacks not to resist the violence done to them by the whites (passive resistance), I cannot.

Might revealing the handicap up front constitute playing the honesty card too soon? Certainly, it hasn’t uncovered much compassion so far. Whether I advertise the impairment or not, women still brow-beat me for my preferences. At least, they did, until I stopped mentioning them. In fact, some thought that being handicapped would make me more accepting of heavy women, and were surprised to find that it didn’t. They felt that since my handicap would surely place the perfect ten women beyond my reach, that I’d have learned by now to settle,  without settling,  as one woman put it. She thought that I would have come to see the fours and fives as tens, as they were the best I’d likely be able to do, and was astonished when I told her that it doesn’t work that way. Even the handicapped I told her, deserve shots at the best life has to offer – the best for  anyone,   not just the best for the impaired. We deserve the best, just like you, I told her, whether we’re handicapped, or black, or in some other way, socially downtrodden. It didn’t sink in though. Instead, she viewed me as audacious and presumptuous for wanting to   date up   as she called it. Well, clearly, she didn’t see me as her perfect ten.

When will women learn that it’s foolish to argue with a man’s passions? Its funny how thin women, though they   do   gripe sometimes, complain less about those who like the slender than do the heaver women.   :-)    But for me, their wrath won’t be an issue anymore because I’m keeping secret my lust for the thin. They’ll never know it. But keeping the handicap a secret on the other hand, is quite another story, and in fact, may be less detrimental to a budding relationship if revealed, than admitting that one likes thin women. More on that below.

Could a love relationship that grew from pity ever be truly legitimate? Would it last? Could it be as fulfilling overall as a union with more selfish, uncompassionate, truly lustful beginnings? Doesn’t seem so, does it. But I know of one example where it did and several others where it’s likely to have. At least, it did for all meaningful intents and purposes.

When the Hesleys lived on North 3rd Street in Bellwood, we had a neighbor named [Ferrell]. Now [Ferrell], several years older than Mom, suffered a debilitating neck injury as a teenager. In the dark after a party, he dove into a swimming pool thinking it had water. However, it did not. The result of his hitting the head on the pool’s concrete bottom some eight feet below ground level, was a severe spinal cord injury that left him almost entirely paralyzed from the neck down to mid body, and then completely paralyzed below the waist. I only ever knew him after the accident, and so have no memory of him without his wheelchair.

All through the sixties and well into the seventies, he lived with his family. They took care of him, and he seemed to accept his plight gracefully. You could find him at every home Bellwood football game and hear him cheering for the team he loved so much, his voice often the loudest. The locals built him a wooden stand with a high rim, upon which his wheelchair could be lifted. With that, he could better see the game without fear of his chair rolling off. That stand was a permanent fixture at the football field for close to three decades. What symbolism it might have conveyed to future generations had they left it intact.

[Ferrell] coached little league football for Bellwood’s north side, and actually founded the program in 1969. Clearly, any shame he had for his condition did not keep him hidden inside his house, and he didn’t mind others seeing him, crippled as he was. The fact that he was willing to sit on his stand at the games and while coaching during team practice proves this. That platform stood between three and four feet off the ground, situated in an open area between the bleachers so that anyone in and around the field could see him. Everyone therefore knew [Ferrell], or at least knew of him from the games. He was never long invisible.

But you can well imagine the extensive care he needed. He couldn’t urinate without skilled help to change his bags, replace catheters, look for infections daily, and so on. Ambulances frequently came to alleviate the inevitable and numerous medical crises that typically befall the head-injured folks like [Ferrell]. In most every physical sense, [he] was indeed an   invalid, about as helpless as one can be while still conscious. He could do practically nothing without help.

So needless to say, the news in 1975 that [Ferrell] found himself a girlfriend shocked the neighborhood and became the talk of the town by young and old alike. His romance interested everyone; even those who avoided rumor. His marriage a year later became the de facto inspiration in Bellwood for gossip, speculation, conjecture, philosophical discussion, and church service themes. Everyone wanted to know who this woman was and what drove her to consign herself to a life of intense toil, while [Ferrell's] life was made so much easier by her presence.

I never got to know her well. But she was a handsome woman whom I’d rate an eight point five out of ten. Fully functioning herself, and shapely, she had a soft and sexy but powerful voice. Her hair, short, dark, and thick made her look much younger. A mother of two teenage children, she was friendly and my sisters still speak highly of her to this day. And it’s not easy to please my siblings. So she must really be someone special.

She and [Ferrell] stayed together until he died in 2002. Impressive, and inspiring wouldn’t you say? I’ve toyed with the idea of seeking an interview with her. Perhaps she could shed light on how to target other women who, like her, have great amounts of compassion. At times, [Ferrell] was barely able to speak let alone move any part of his body. So there was [likely] no sex, at least not in the biblical sense. Oral sex, perhaps. Hand sex, [maybe], when his arms worked well enough, which they rarely did. But not much else.

[Ferrell] lived modestly in a duplex, and his wife never did much conspicuous consuming once they were married. Unless they hid their wealth very well, they appeared [rather] poor. It seems then, that he did not offer her what so many women say they want in a man; the ability to provide for them in very real (read it, [abundant] financial) ways. Yet she stayed. And what’s even more interesting is that she married him as he was in the first place, severely crippled. I mean, it’s typical to see a woman stand by her man should his health go south   after   they’re married (Christopher Reeve, Nancy Reagan, et al). But what’s so much less common is to find women like [Parker's wife] and [Ferrell's] wife, who begin relationships with people already physically challenged. But rest assured. As I hope this story shows, these very special women are out there. Our difficult but achievable job as yearning handicapped men, is to find them.

Can we do better than handicapped women? Well, Parker did. [Breeze] did, [Sammy] did, [Cristobol], [Gerald], [Lanny], [Sabbo], Chuck Vidunas, [Sherwood], Chuck Boalo, [Kirk], [Roberto], [Francis], [Bart], [Tanner], [Billy Bob], [Denny] [...] [Gabby], [Tiny], [Ferrell] sure did, and so many others did too. [Ferrell's] story really underscores the point because he managed to attract a good lady   despite   his profound physical hardships. Now assuming that Dr. Joy Brown in her book   Dating For Dummies   is correct in her belief that independence augments a person’s perceived desirability, then clearly, you and I have more going for us than [Ferrell], as we are more self-sufficient than he was for most of his life. It follows then that our chances of meeting attractive though accepting ladies, dwarf [Ferrell's]. Yet he did it, and he had little, if any, independence at all. So we ought to be able to do it too.

I’m familiar with the mates of most of the guys mentioned in the previous paragraph. And I just don’t see these particular women (mainly ones like [Parker's wife]) turning a man away who, given his handicap, openly seeks compassion. Maybe Parker didn’t explicitly ask for it. But when [his wife] met him, surely she inferred, if not on a conscious level, his need for pity. She knew of his handicap before ever talking to him, even if he didn’t   voice   his special needs. Yet talk to him she did, and so much more. She stepped up to the challenge and has been with him now for going on twenty-five years. Now women who don’t have the right stuff (lacking maturity, gross selfishness, little life experience, and so on) will indeed turn us away. But this does not make us the more wrong for asking. If she’s properly equipped psychologically, she’ll hear our call and answer it, just as [Parker's wife] answered [his]. She will not denounce our call as overly expository, a symptom of deprivation, desperation, and so on. So we need to call, and keep calling until someone worthy responds.

I never mentioned this to [our friends]. But one night on Black Street, I slept on their couch prior to the flea market the next day. They must have figured I was asleep and also that their bedroom door was more soundproof than it was, because shortly after bedtime, the unmistakable sounds of passion filled the living room where I lay, listening. I knew I shouldn’t listen, and back then, couldn’t figure out what drew me to the moans of ecstasy so much that I had to get up and stand outside their door, pondering. But now, I believe I understand.

The only moans heard, were [his wife's], and all I heard from [him] was heavier-than-normal breathing. Even though by this time they’d been married a few years, I found [her] noises intriguing and out of place, perhaps due to the supreme irony that she should be so excited over a guy like [our good buddy]! What, after all, did he have that she found so irresistible? I’ll be darned if I could see it. He was obese; his posture terrible. He lay around a lot, rarely smiled, and was virtually impossible to deal with over sustained periods. He resisted rather than embraced new ideas, complained much, and had no concept of how to put himself in another’s shoes. What could he with his pristine American family background, know of hers, the hard life of a migrant orphan girl raised by non biological parents, not her same race and culture, outside her native country? He couldn’t even empathize with us. And we grew up with him in the same country, roughly the same culture, and we’re all the same race. How could he really relate to her, and what’s more, how could she love him if he didn’t relate well? Plus, she was sighted, and he blind, a clearly implied power imbalance in the wrong direction.

Traditionally, the male has the upper hand in setting the tone of the relationship. Up to this point however, their relationship appeared backward, much as it does today. That is, [she] has always held the   real   power, a fact made even plainer to [him] by her leaving him for a time. You remember. They separated for a few months in 1986. She really humbled him then by illustrating with action that she didn’t have to take his [arrogance], and wouldn’t. Obviously, it would be much harder for him to leave her than vice versa. He can’t do much saber-rattling while relying on her so much for everything from transportation to sustenance. Even if he did leave, he’d probably have to get her to help him pack and move his stuff. The point is that he’s really quite subordinate to her, and hasn’t done much in their marriage without her assistance.

Yet here she was, clearly orgasmic. He seemed to woo her as other women say they want to be wooed. The difference between she and they is the type of man who woos them. They attribute their states of woo to men of power, ambition, success, leadership, popularity, physical fitness, and independence. [He] may have some ambition, but does he sport any of these other traits. I never thought so. But apparently [his] saw   something   in him that made her so shamelessly exclaim, “I love you baby. I love you!” Maybe she gets off on assuming the dominating position with men? I don’t know.

Possibly, I hoped to find fakery in her moans, like she was just doing it for his benefit. As mentioned, the rest of their relationship, outside the bedroom, seemed lopsided in that she did far more for him than he ever did for her. She seemed the mothering type, and up to that point, I figured that her “love” for him was more selflessly maternal than selfishly lustful. Her groans however, suggested otherwise. Cruel as it may have been, I wanted to find some evidence that she didn’t really love him, for as I saw it, he didn’t deserve her. But I heard no insincerity, not that night, and not ever, to come to think of it. Back then, I considered a relationship based on pity invalid, and figured that unbridled passion could never exist alongside sympathy. So I listened intently for signs of do-goodedness, boredom, and   having settled   in her sighs. But, there were none. What I heard were earnest expressions of unmitigated pleasure. Plenty of pleasure too. At least on this occasion, his manhood genuinely and overwhelmingly excited her, and by the sounds of things, she had by no means “settled” for [him] in her mind. Perhaps he settled for her. But not she for him.

Now according to Maslow [in his book,  Motivation and Personality], any motivations beyond those at level one in his hierarchy, are composite. That is, they’re made up of numerous, perhaps even contradictory other motivations. People don’t like making money for example, just   to make money. Instead, they desire wealth because of the greater respect and admiration from others that comes along with it. They like its security and material trappings, and the power to control which it affords. He suggests that even the sexual desire is not discrete, and thus comprised of other motivations unrelated to sex. One of those could be compassion for the beloved such as [his wife's] has demonstrated in abundance for [the blind husband]. Her compassion could have inspired her love lust. Maybe he gave her a greater sense of noble purpose than she’d ever known before, and this is what got her off. But more about that once I’ve read further in Maslow’s work.

Perhaps [she] married [him] partly to take care of a needy soul (pity). Maybe in the beginning, her compassionate, level five needs dominated her motivation to mate with him. In fact, at [...] McKee Place [...], when they first started, I rarely saw them holding hands or kissing, never walked in unexpectedly to find her undressed, and never heard them flirt with each other using lewd innuendos. No, until that night on [White] Street, indeed their relationship seemed devoid of any carnal passions. Rather, she could usually be found helping him read books, clean the bedroom, cook meals, get places, transcribe class notes, and such. Hers seemed more the interest of a caregiver than that of someone in mad, passionate love.

So hearing her that night in 1986, so lost in love with [him], completely shattered my impressions of the motivating forces that kept her loyal to him. Whether or not she pitied him at first, here was proof that a sighted woman could indeed, sooner or later, be fulfilled at level three by a blind man. Even the more pitiful among us can still inspire that genuine, binding force of love lust in the hearts and loins of the right women. The open need for pity it would seem, does not therefore discourage all attractive women.

Though, as you say, a relationship born of pity might have developed on shaky grounds, these   grounds   might very well sure up later on, as they apparently have with [this couple we've been discussing]. It hard to say if [they] are truly happy inside. They may not be these days. Yet at their parties, she plays well the dutiful, supportive wife. She loves her children, welcomes his friends and family, and if it weren’t for all the time she’s sacrificed to drive him to his numerous medical appointments, he’d have lost his battle with cancer long ago I think. He owes his life to her. No one more than [his wife] deserves to have her feet kissed every day because she’s certainly a highly loving, devoted wife in the most meaningful measures. The fact that her love may have sprouted from pity for [him] [has not] diminished its quality, or its depth.

There’s no evidence to suggest that she’s any less comfortable in their union today than after they reconciled in the mid eighties. So maybe you and I are attributing too much badness to pity. It could be that our need for extra consideration isn’t as romantically debilitating as we think. I hope not. I’m counting on not. Pitiful grounds may still yield strong, healthy trees via energies invisible to the outside observer.

Tom Hesley

Related Posts

Internet Relationships

Friday, August 19th, 2005

Dear [Mentat],

Yes, there’s a place in the profile where you can indicate how far away you’re willing to have your date be. And most women say they only want to meet someone within 20 to 100 miles of them. Yes, I have entered many different zip codes from 15213 to 1660x (mine) to 90210. California has the most women I’d consider worthwhile dates. But they’re 3000 miles away.

I’ve considered moving back to Pittsburgh. But there aren’t many women there either, at least on match.com and americansingles.com. If I was really going to do this right, I’d have to come to CA. But, given my experience of going to Philly only to find continued romantic desolation there, I’m not sure that moving anywhere is the right answer, especially with the Internet so readily available. Internet relationships can work if people are patient.

Funny. These days, I’m more patient than the women. In fact, I’m often the one putting the brakes on when relationships start going too fast. That ballerina last fall mentioned marriage after only a month of talking. And Wow, I just had to say, “Slow down!”

Yes. Questionnaire surveys are only   so   reliable because they don’t provide an independent means of measuring a person’s actual responses. Their weakness is that they rely on the person being questioned to evaluate that response and then to put down what he thinks. Very often, people put down what they think the questioner wants (or does not want) to see, rather than what they actually feel.

No, on match.com, there is no way to search for women directly based on the ages that they’re looking for. However, there is a feature called “Reverse Matching” that allows you to search for women who say in their profiles that they’re looking for someone like you (based on age, educational levels, and other parameters). You can change the results you get by changing information in your own profile. However, you can’t change your age.

I have, and continue to appreciate all your attention. You’ve really helped me clarify many questions and resolve much doubt. You’re a gem of a friend. I have only two others like you, so you make sure to stay healthy, because I don’t want to lose you. :-)

Later,
Tom Hesley

Love Addiction

Monday, July 18th, 2005

Dear [Mentat],

Yes. When addiction becomes so strong that it compels you to throw good sense out the window, then it must at least be better understood, if not suppressed. Unfulfilled cravings drive many to exude antisocial, counter productive behaviors. E.g. The drug user, the over eater, and the woman so addicted to love that she tolerates physical abuse, lies, and neglect to the point that she routinely puts herself into harm’s way. Her symptoms of addiction make her self-esteem appear quite low, don’t they. Hmmm. Here’s another one of those chicken-and-the-egg questions: Does low self-esteem cause addiction, or does addiction create low self-esteem? Whichever one causes the other, the two seem inexorably linked. The good news is that if one can be improved, then the other will likely improve also. Doing things to raise self-esteem reduces depression and associated addiction. Likewise, when a person stops doing badness to himself because of addiction, this victory can raise his self-esteem. If one believes that he craves too much, he might do things, as you have, that raise self-esteem. Not simple, I know. But it is sound philosophy, and one that you already know well I’m sure.

But consider. Excessive addictions may not be your problem when it comes to women. Think for a moment about all those relationships gone sour in your life, which you attribute to obsession. Do you think any of these would have succeeded had you craved less? It’s certainly possible. But I’ve never known you to be “needy” and have never heard any woman complain about your privation.

Another question: How have your excessive cravings negatively influenced the way you treat women? Were you ever markedly possessive, controlling, temperamental, or clingy? Did any woman (except for  [First Love]) ever break up with you because she thought you were too addicted to the relationship? If not, then perhaps you weren’t as destructively addictive as you think. I say this not to argue. But I worry that if you succeed in ridding yourself of addiction, that you’ll also lose the ability to enjoy a romance beyond an intellectual level, and that the pleasures of the flesh would be lost to you. That would be sad. More on that below.

It’s true that blind passion, as induced by addiction, can lead one into undesirable affairs with dysfunctional ladies. Indeed, some of those scenarios can be so harmful that it’s no wonder people so quickly zero in on the underlying passion as the culprit. It’s easy to recognize and can be managed with things like RET [Rational Emotive Therapy], hypnosis, and drugs. Literature is chalk full of bad ends that its authors link to irrational passion.

But as I see it, the pitfalls of craving by no means justify vanquishing it. Like you, I’ve experienced the bad ends to which senseless cravings can lead (Snuff, overeating, overspending, reckless pursuits, et al). In my twenties for example, virgin curiosity along with rampant hormones, ushered me to the beds of several bottom-notch females. However, consider that it’s not passion itself that did this, but rather, blind passion – passion ungoverned by wisdom. Blind passion is one type of craving that we _should_ purge from our souls. That’s true. But not all passion. Not like the Vulcans. Craving in different circumstances is good, and should therefore be retained and enhanced to help keep life interesting. Nothing at all wrong with enlightened passion.

Looking back, I see that while my initial passions for those [twos] in my twenties were misguided, and that ridiculous passion coaxed me into going too far with them, I still can’t blame the passion itself for the resulting folly. Ignorance was the more-guilty defendant. In those days, the vision of my dream girl was unclear and muddled. While I knew that some women turned me on and others did not, I had not yet learned “the formula,” and thus could not accurately predict ahead of the bedroom which ones would and would not be exciting. I was more experimental as many college people are. Unfortunately though, with experimentation comes many, bitter failures. It’s inevitable. Yet along the way, we learn how to do it better the next time, and it’s craving that keeps us coming back for more. Where issues of the heart are concerned, craving provides the fuel we need to travel the road to wisdom.

Again, longing makes enjoyment possible. Though in the beginning, it lead me distasteful positions, it also forced me to acknowledge its usefulness nonetheless. The very cravings that regrettably drove me to [Peggy Sue’s] bed, also got me into   [First Love's],   a spot where I’ve never known more complete joy and satisfaction. The fact is, we need strong desire in order to reap pleasure. Now I enjoy the thrill of drinking a cold glass of water when I’m thirsty, just as I like eating a filling meal when I’m hungry. And I love going to bed with a women when my cravings for intimacy are especially strong. In these cases, passion is the required precursor to the enjoyment. And I don’t see how I could continue enjoying them if I were to purge my passions. For me, the flesh pleasures are dear. I would not therefore, want to give them up even though they might make me appear too vulnerable to some women. I wouldn’t make a very good Buddhist, would I. Yes, getting love cravings fulfilled in a timely fashion is often difficult, but well worth it to me. So, I attribute my poor judgment of women while attending Connelley, not to the overpowering nature of the craving, but to ignorance – unawareness that experience has since washed away.

You know, I’m befuddled while reading the profiles of eighteen to twenty-four year old women on match.com. So many are painfully specific and uncompromising about what they’re looking for. They want men to be at least a certain height and an exact weight, who makes at least a specific amount of money, and who has accomplished some very explicit career objectives. Now don’t get me wrong. I think people need to be very precise in their understanding of what excites them in love. But it took me years of trial and error to develop mine, (the formula). And I couldn’t have done it without experiencing many types of women. Now I know that an eighteen year-old clearly doesn’t have my experience, yet they’re so certain that one type of man works better for them than another. How could they know, for example, that black men don’t excite them unless they actually go out with one a few times? In my case, it was only after over a decade of trial and error that I came to the realization that fat women just don’t do it for me, and that the slender, quiet, meek, gentle, and introverted females I way prefer to the boisterous, outgoing, laughy, party types. Yet I’ve dated both types. Had to, in order to reach this self-awareness.

As a young adult, I rejected very few women, though in retrospect, if I knew then what I know now, I would have rejected practically all of them. The older I grow, the picker I become. The cravings at McKee Place stemmed primarily from curiosity of the unknown. I didn’t know how to judge good and bad then, so just about all women were fair game. As indicated, ignorance in my mind was as wild as the hormones in my blood. But since then, I’ve learned what it’s like to bed with the ugliest, prettiest, and a slew in the middle, and which of those groups yield the highest pleasure. Yep. You guessed it. I like the prettiest ones.  :-)    History proves it. Not prejudice. Not guesswork. Not unfounded childhood fantasy. But hard core experience is what most effectively governs my passions, and yours probably.

I’m not curious anymore, so that source of craving is gone. Today, because of what I know, I will not bed with a woman who doesn’t fit the formula, because experiences with [Lenee], [Shanee], [Hannah], and many others, repeatedly show the futility of such off-point dating. I’ve yet to meet a woman who at the outset is unattractive, but becomes very beautiful after knowing her for some years. Some people, especially women, swear that this happens routinely. So I do not say that it’s impossible. But I’ve never seen it. As a result, along with ignorance, all craving for such off-point women is all but gone. On those rare occasions when it does appear, it is easily suppressed by remembering the pains of off-point dating. In this way, knowledge helps suppress undesired craving.

In my case, the less I knew about life, the more I blindly craved. It is said that the best way to overcome an addiction is to succumb to it, to do what it demands. While I’m not convinced that intentionally overindulging in snuff would have released me from its bonds, with women at least, a bit of experience making bad selections did get rid of craving for those types. Allow it to drag you through the gutter for a time. If there is indeed a badness to reap, then experiencing that badness could retard that addiction. While I’ve learned not to crave most women as my tastes have grown more refined, there are those few out there that it’s so right to crave. And I’m going to crave ‘em ‘til I get ‘em.   :-)    I’m glad I didn’t abandon my passions, for I’ll need them to fully appreciate a true love if I ever find her. Thank goodness my desires haven’t lessened over the years. They’ve just gotten more specific.

You say that craving has led you to compromise your standards. But if you’re like me, those “standards” were far less detailed during the McKee Place years. Today, with two decades of adult dating experience under our belts, we both know implicitly that settling produces only heartache and regret. Our standards are very exacting, and we’re more insistent on them being met before starting a new relationship. The degree of conviction I have on this point, which has grown with each dating experience between then and now, keeps me on the right road. It keeps me from dating less than what I see as the best. I see this for you too. You’re a smart man. Well read with some true-to-life experience. I suspect that craving could not overpower you today as it has in the past, because now, you’re seasoned. You are far less likely today, as am I, to be blinded by your passions. You’re at a point now where you can embrace passion with courage. Indulge it with the confidence that you have the good sense to pull out if you discover badness in it.

Oh, and on your comment about cultivating patience and reducing craving in the hopes that this will bring longer-lasting, healthier relationships to you. Yes, that could be. But consider that when a lady’s heart really resonates for you, when she’s instinctually drawn to you by that electrical magnetism of romance, then you  will not  put her off, even if you’re moderately impatient. The smitten find impatience in their lovers flattering so long as it doesn’t turn into chronic demands that they don’t feel comfortable meeting. It’s especially important not to demand too early. But it’s amazing how tolerant of imperfection people who are in love can be. I hate to disagree with you again. But I just don’t see you as the overly impatient type. You have things that you want from a mate and you’re well within your rights to ask for them. Now women may call you impatient, as   [First Love]   often did me. But that isn’t necessarily because you’re  truly  impatient. It may simply mean that [she's] not in love with you. Nothing wrong with you in this case. Nothing wrong with them either, though they’ll tend to make it sound as though you’re the one at fault. Don’t buy that though. For a right woman, you’ll be tops as you are. You’ll be good enough for her.

Now, to your second paragraph [in your note]. Yes, it’d be foolish to waste time pursuing women we know for sure to be questionable. I agree. But how often do we  really  know this for sure,  before  we begin pursuing? Now that we’re older, and presumably wiser, we very often can know. But the inexperienced (like us when we lived on Mckee Place) don’t really know what they want much less how to recognize it, as I’ve tried to show above. So it’s natural that they make many mistakes, which, in hindsight, might seem very stupid. Now hindsight is always 20 X 20. But foresight is usually legally blind. In fact, it is totally blind in the undeveloped minds of teens and those new to adulthood.

However, the road to wisdom runs through experiencing inexperience, if you will. In order to grow wise, we must, for a period, be willing to shoulder the humilities of being green, and to endure the hardships of that greenness. One cannot dodge the adversity of inexperience if he wants to learn how to best improve his own condition. He must go through it himself. Among those hardships is having to live for a time with poor choices in mates, until we learn how to recognize potential problems from a distance – both physical and emotional distance. Advice from others just doesn’t cut it when it comes to how to choose the best mate for us. True wisdom comes from both good and bad experience, not from fairytales.

It makes no sense to blame ourselves once enlightened, for the poor choices we made while ignorant. This is pointless regret. I doubt that today, you would go after anyone you knew to be questionable, would you? You probably pursued such uncertainty as a kid, as did I. But now, I only pursue those who, in my best possible estimation, are unquestionably good for me. Consider, that pursuing questionable women in our younger years, is a necessary step toward knowing who’s questionable, and who is right for us. Thus, there’s a good side to questionable pursuits, especially when one learns from them.

Now to your point about pursuing ‘other’ accomplishments (besides questionable ladies) making us more attractive to women. Well, again I agree, but only to a degree. Only insofar as that women invariably say that they want a successful man. And perhaps, we men hear this so much that we internalize it as “the” manly goal to have. It seems right and just to want to do this, and we feel unworthy when we don’t (or can’t). However, I suggest that ladies’ motivation has less to do with his specific accomplishments per se, and more to do with the fact that he’s accomplished something at all. How many women for example, do you think would find the undertakings of a renowned physicist intriguing? Could most of them even really understand his work, unless they themselves were physicists? Probably not, right? In fact, there’s a pervasive downside to dating the ‘accomplished’ man. And that is that he tends to be away at work too much, and makes too little time for his family. Women complain about this time and time again. The ballerina I dated last fall talked of dating a multi-millionaire ophthalmologist. What intrigued her about him, according to her, was not the fact that he was a doctor. She didn’t care if he saw 5 patients a day or 50, and hated the fact that he was always on call. Rather, it was his wealth that caught her eye. How he made the money was unimportant to her, so long as he made it, and did so honestly.

In the end, however, she left him because, as she put it, he was too career-oriented, and overly protective of his material goods. The example she gave was of a thick glass coffee table he had in his living room. While they watched a movie one night, she put her stocking feet on this table so she could recline, and he angrily snapped at her. Such rich people are often high-strung she told me, and she seems to have dated many of them. So I trust her opinion on this. As I see it, women don’t care about the specifics of men’s accomplishments so long as whatever those are, they make him wealthy. He could sit home all day picking his nose. But if he can afford to wine and dine them, hey, all the better.

Now I know that this isn’t true in all cases. Clearly the man who pursues one thing obsessively, whether it’s women, or careers, or recreation, is probably less attractive than the more well-rounded individual. So again, there’s a ring of truth in what you say. But in all my experience, I never had a woman say to me, “Gee Tom, you really turn me on because you’re so good at computers.” Yet they have said, “Gee, Tom, you really turn me on because you’re so understanding and knowledgeable, and you listen.” So to be empathetic, a trait women love, it pays to be well-rounded, a condition difficult to attain if one is too focused on any single activity. In that sense, you’re correct, because the more diverse and numerous our accomplishments, the more likely we are to understand the plights of women, and this makes us more attractive to them. Onward.

You seem to be suggesting that passion is a force that  necessarily opposes  or clouds good judgment, as certainly as gravity causes a rock to fall. It appears that you live by the credo that the more craving there is, the greater the possibility that good judgment will be impaired, and that choices we make as a response to craving would very likely be bad ones. So, in classic Buddhist style, your mission appears to be to rid yourself of all craving, so that you can maximize the quality of your judgment, and therefore your choices. I agree with this, but only partly.

True, blind passion often does corrupt even the soundest mind as is the case with commonly uncontrolled lusts (like those for power, money, drugs, and love), in which insanity is the frequent result. But on the flip side, well-channeled craving helps animate the human spirit and places us way above mere automatons on the scale of evolution. Specifically, a healthy libido need not always preempt rational thinking, especially in the seasoned, mature mind, where the id and ego are more evenly matched, and the superego, drawing on the wisdom of experience, can properly suppress harmful desire while allowing healthful yearnings to be expressed and realized.

There are appropriate (and necessary) times for seeking the satiation of passion. Without frequent doses of the resulting pleasure, life loses its color, and depression becomes a constant companion. In short, not all craving is detrimental to healthy thinking. In fact, we need a certain amount of longing to help us understand our purpose here, and to figure out how to best achieve that purpose. In my view, we don’t master craving simply by purging ourselves of it, but by developing our superegos through learning which cravings are good for us and which are not, and then learning how to satisfy the good ones while getting rid of the bad.

One could argue that for the experienced man, passions are  products  of his good judgment and not impairing forces to it. In the interests of his own gratification as well as the perpetuation of the species, he should not treat his desires as wrongful lusting, but rather as cues to possible great joy. Evolutionary psychology would probably take this view and claim that the mating instincts are not irrational passions at all. I measure the probable success of a future relationship by determining how passionately I’m drawn to a woman. The stronger the attraction, the higher the chances of happiness. This assumes of course, that she returns the feelings in kind, which admittedly, does not usually happen. But when it does, for as long as it does, wow! It’s wonderful. Passion makes it easier to forgive a multitude of sins and to overlook a vast array of imperfections. There is a rational side to passion, and we need to keep that in mind when choosing which of our passions to purge.

Finally, to your last point, that being less absorbed with what we can get from the relationship might make us more attractive. Yes. Women say that they generally adore the less selfish man more than the self-absorbed, arrogant one (if you can believe what they say. But as we’ve discussed in the past, they often don’t say what really excites them. Many don’t even really know). If we’re too concerned about satisfying our own needs, and as a result, fail to consider hers, you’re correct, this is a very unattractive, obsessive way to exist. But again, the degree of our passions need not make us selfish. I’d even go so far as to say that craving is by no means inexorably linked to, nor directly results in  any  destructive behaviors. Specifically, it’d be hard to prove that excessive craving is what makes people overly selfish (and therefore, unattractive). Yet some claim this. In my view, the negative effects of passion have been greatly exaggerated throughout history. Too much badness in our world gets wrongfully attributed to it. And the whole concept of the so-called ‘needy’ man is likely far less a point of reality than it is the musing of some feminist who, rather than owning up to her own lacking passions, invented the neediness thing to exalt herself and blame the man for her problems. As you’ve probably guessed by now, I’m a passion advocate, arguing more for its discovery and resolution rather than blanket extinguishment of all of it.

Later,
Tom Hesley