The Ultimate Man-child

Beware, dear reader, of imminent heartbreak. This story comes from my first three (virginal) months after entering the online dating rabbit hole. There will always be a soft, vulnerable place in my heart for this one, unlike so many others, who don’t leave a scar and an achingly bright memory.

After being catfished and left hung out to dry, I needed some sweetness and honesty in a world where these were precious commodities, especially after Johan stole another shred of my innocence.

James first struck me as a baffled child lost in the big smoke. He was new to online dating and at 30 years old, he’d only been in two relationships. Before and after Johan, I’d been taking in all the attractions in the seedy side of this world with wide eyes; digesting my observation of married men looking for sex or intimacy, guys looking for NSA sex or kinks, guys looking for threesomes, guys looking for all sorts.

I definitely wasn’t looking for ‘a relationship’ and yet it crept up on me while I was distracted. At first I was scared, but just for a fleeting minute because most of the time with James I was gloriously happy.

I’d learned the basics of James’ life in just a few text messages. He was living with a mate, suffering from a fairly debilitating back injury and therefore not working. His last relationship of four years had ended suddenly because he said his girlfriend had become a lesbian.

Most importantly, James seemed genuine and friendly. He had an open, youthful face, enormous green eyes and he didn’t flirt or talk sexy-dirty.

I liked the way he hadn’t mentioned the word ‘cougar’ – he’d just taken me at face value. Fairly quickly I’d slipped into a slightly maternal role of asking after his wellbeing. I was trying to show that I cared but I was already cognisant of the power imbalance. I was more than a decade his senior, with a solid professional career, children, friends, my own home, car – all the usual accoutrements of ‘success’. Whereas James was – if I cared to view it in a negative light – unemployed, penniless, and with no furniture or possessions to speak of.

James really appreciated my attention and my care. He’d said several times that I was ‘so nice!’ and that said I seemed ‘really intelligent’. After a couple of weeks chatting nightly, I suggested that we could meet up the next day, a Sunday, at my local wetlands nature park. I said I’d bring my beloved fox terrier. We’d talked about her because he’d had to leave his border collie behind after the demise of his last relationship.

As I saw James waiting for me, I knew instantly that I was attracted to him. My heart beat baboom at the sight of his body. He was so tall – somehow I’d forgotten that it said he was 6’4” on his profile – and slender, with broad shoulders. He wore a buzz cut hairstyle and had a chiselled face dominated by those big eyes and a generous mouth. I was purposefully casual and friendly, which came naturally with him. I discovered that, in person, he was actually similar to the picture I’d built up in my mind. This was uncommon.

Intelligence, sophistication or a good education were not James’ strong points. I already knew that his spelling was truly atrocious and he didn’t understand one word in five that I spoke. But he was honest, genuine and sweet. There were no hidden agendas, no subterfuge or murky depths with James. He’d grown up in a wealthy family, but he didn’t have any affectations or noticeable prejudices. He seemed to like me and there was a connection between us that grew steadily as we strolled and talked, or sat and smiled. As usual, I greased the wheels of conversation. By the time we parted with an impulsive hug, we both spontaneously suggested meeting again.

Two days’ later, our second date was at his place. His mate was at work that day so I sat on the front lawn, reading a book in the winter sunshine while I waited for James to arrive. He’d messaged to say he’d been delayed in traffic but very soon he whirred up the driveway on his moped.

Inside, we talked rather more awkwardly this time, without the distraction of physical activity and scenery. After a while, I was running low on ideas. It was already clear to me that our bond was not over stimulating conversation. I sipped my milky tea and boldly asked him how he intended to entertain me.

James looked coyly back at me in sunlit silence. I held his gaze and said, “Actually I’d really like to kiss you.”

He moved smoothly in front of me and drew me into an embrace that was sensually charged and completely, utterly delicious. His lips were so gentle and his kiss was tentative and yet measured, delicate and filled with sweetness. His tongue gently brushed mine and he drew me in with contained passion and tenderness. He smelled of clean laundry; fresh and wholesome. It was a defining moment of power and potential between us.

We spent the rest of the afternoon on the couch languidly kissing, holding and caressing each other, our eyes often locked together in a silent bond of emotion. We briefly discussed my ‘limitations’ but it didn’t seem important. I explained that I couldn’t do nights, that I had Sundays and some weekdays I could spend with him. The fact that he wasn’t working seemed very convenient.

“That’s fine!” James assured me in the sudden rush of new intimacy. “I don’t have to go out at night with you. You’re amazing and I feel so lucky to have met you!”

There was an electric connection; not just passion but fun and laughter. After I left his house to collect my children from school, he texted me of his excitement and blossoming feelings. We messaged most of that evening and arranged our next date for a couple of days’ time. I was brimful of joyful anticipation. All night I re-ran enticing scenes of his body, his face, his lips. The way he needed to crouch down to meet my eyes or cradle my face. Every portion of James was magical to me.

At work the next day I suggested to him that I could call in on my way home, since his place was right on my route. He was excited at my idea, and when I arrived, he met me eagerly at my car door and engulfed me in a welcoming bear hug and passionate kiss. We strolled arm in arm to a small park nearby and chatted, held hands, kissed as we sat on the grass and stared into each other’s eyes for the short time I had. It felt as if we were already a couple.

I arrived bright and early the next day for our date, and after a familiar but exhilarating hour spent reacquainting ourselves, we headed to a nearby national park. There we spent a glorious spring morning meandering along woodland paths, while wrapped together and gazing adoringly at each other. We had the place almost to ourselves.

The afternoon was similarly spent on the leather chesterfield back at his house. With every passing second, every lingering kiss, I felt more and more as if I was falling into something serious. All my reservations about not wanting a relationship went out of the window, because I wanted James one hundred percent. I hadn’t thought further than wanting things to develop organically, but I had eyes for no other.

“I think we both need some sweetness in our lives,” I told him. With tear-filled eyes, his forehead pressed against mine, James nodded and kissed my eyelids. “You need someone good for you, and good to you,” I said.

I’d sensed almost from the start that he was carrying a heavy emotional load. Often, he seemed to be struggling for composure. We were both exploring unfamiliar territory and the intensity of our feelings for each other had taken us both unawares.

Five hours together was not enough. That night the emotional tone of our messages escalated as we each dived deeper. We’d spend several interactions just trying to say farewell because neither of us wanted to stop that feeling of togetherness.

I began mourning our separation for the coming two days of the weekend, when I had commitments and parenting responsibilities. It should have been my first warning sign – how badly he coped with our separation, and how painful it was for us both to be parted. With a sense of desperation, we planned our Monday together. Because his car was out of registration and his moped would not make the long distance to my house, he planned to catch a bus to a nearby town. I would collect him about nine in the morning, then we’d spend another five glorious hours at my place.

Monday, he opened my car door and surprised me as he folded his lengthy self into my small car. His kiss was tender and slightly tentative. My sense of the growing connection between us was still powerful and I was silently anticipating the hours of sex we might enjoy.

I’d already mentioned how glad I was that I’d ‘waited’ for him. He’d revealed that he hadn’t had sexual contact for over a year. I sensed that he was anxious about it.
After a few sensual kisses, I led him to my bedroom where we collapsed onto the bed in a tight, fierce embrace. And there we spent four and a half hours, getting up only for toilet breaks and water bottle refills.

After only a short time, my fantasy of slowly undressing him and kissing every perfect inch of skin was slightly dented. He helped me lift off his top and then pushed down his jeans and boxers in one fluid movement. All too suddenly he was naked, and he lay there, serious, vulnerable and wide-eyed, staring back at me as if seeking my approval.

There were many unfamiliar and beautiful things about that day. The gossamer touch of his body, his smooth warmth, the almost constant exploration of tongues that turned him on so much.

The stroking of his face. The stroking of my face. He matched my caresses in every way. The emotional language between us was so intense that several times tears rolled down his cheeks. He said they were tears of happiness but I sensed the depth of hurt within him. We talked about that; my first tentative explorations into his psyche to try to understand the who and the what of him.

“I’ve never felt such a strong emotional connection to a man,” I confessed during one of the many long interludes where we lay naked and entwined, just breathing in the scent of each other, every touch like an electrical charge. I’m still not sure if that was entirely true. Memory plays tricks on us, but certainly it was correct of my past decade.

But for every yin there is a yang.

The dark side of that joyous time was his sexuality.

I realised early on that I was unlikely to be achieving any sexual satisfaction that day. Again. I was baffled by his inability to maintain an erection and I slowly gained a picture of a man who was so damaged by his past, so emasculated, that he was mistrustful of even his own ability to sexually perform.

“I just want to make you happy, babe,” he whispered to me, almost sobbing in – what was it – fear? Trepidation? His heartfelt assurances that it wasn’t me, it was him, did eventually reassure me. I believed that he did genuinely desire me, but my own growing need for sexual satiation was overwhelming. It wasn’t until I resigned myself to its lack and partially re-dressed, that I began to feel truly adored and comfortable again with him.

His long body wrapped itself around mine and he snuggled into me as if our bodies were two parts of a whole. He filled me with yearning for that closeness to last forever, for his presence not only in part of my life but in my bed at night. It was foolishness and infatuation speaking, for I was certain in my rational mind that I did not want to cohabit or share my bed more than occasionally.

When we parted, we both recognised that something had shifted. We had declared our wish for mutual exclusivity. James reassured me that I had nothing to worry about, that he would contact the two other girls he’d been talking with and tell them that he was seeing me.

“You don’t have to worry,” he said. “I’m loyal to my woman.”

I was drunk on him. When I cupped his face in my hands he closed his eyes, sharply inhaled and shivered. “I love your touch so much,” he whispered. “I can’t keep my hands off you.”

Where did things go wrong from there? Was it the fact that once he’d seen my home, the pictures of my life and my children, that he wanted more of me, more of that, to belong? Or was it that he suddenly felt his own ‘lack’, his own inferiority in every sense?

He was no longer a youthful twenty-something and yet he was reliant on the charity of a friend to live and the welfare system for money. His parents were polite strangers who’d changed his old bedroom into a hobbies den. His health was precarious and he’d been told that he may never be free from the constant back pain that plagued him. It was uncertain whether he’d be able to retrain for a career because of all those years of heavy lifting and manual work.

He was at a crossroads in his life and yet he seemed to have no plans or ambitions. Maybe he was looking to a new relationship to fill that void?

“When you kiss me,” I messaged him before bed, “it feels as if you’re giving me your heart and soul.” I’d never been kissed like that before and it enticed me like a powerful narcotic.

And so the yang to the yin. Again. A darkness came.

On my way home from work that week I called in to see him and found James teary and troubled. His housemate had callously announced on Facebook that James, “might need to find another place to live,” in just a week’s time.

I held him while he silently stared into my eyes, as if wanting me to make a decision for him. I started to plan instinctively for solutions. We parted solemnly but knowing that we would be spending the next morning together.

As James ate breakfast, I arrived unprepared for calamity. As soon as he opened the door I sensed that something was wrong. His face was not lit with delight as I was used to seeing it. In those first few minutes as we kissed and he crouched and wrapped me in a hug and asked how I was, I put it down to the unsettling dread of possible homelessness. James told me quickly that his housemate had agreed to let him stay on until he found alternative living arrangements.

His eyes were serious and moist as he announced, “there’s something I have to tell you.” He led me to the couch and sat down close to me. He held my hand and explained, haltingly, that he was choosing another woman over me.

Except, he didn’t say it quite like that. I needed to elicit clarity, because although I could not believe what I was hearing, he did not want to be too blunt. I needed to cut through his ambiguity and hear him say it plainly. I was shell-shocked.

This shock kept the pain of understanding at bay as I tried to comprehend his words. He’d met someone before me, gone on a couple of dates. There’d been no sharing or revelation of feelings but they’d kissed. He’d liked her, though she smoked a pack of cigarettes a day. I sensed that she was more ‘his kind of person’. There was nothing like the intensity of closeness we’d developed. He wasn’t saying the same things to her as to me. He’d had no contact with her after she’d gone on holiday for the fortnight we’d come physically together. He thought there’d been no expectations, and he had willingly given himself to me.

After the day we’d spent at my place, James had messaged her, as he’d promised, to say that he could ‘only be mates’. She’d reacted unexpectedly by breaking down and pleading, over the course of the day, to change his mind. He’d spent a sleepless night trying to make a decision, to choose between me and her. He was stunned – he’d had no one for so long and now there were two!

He told me then that he hadn’t fully understood what my limitations meant. That he couldn’t live in my home and share our life; that he couldn’t see me 24/7, that my children would always come first.

“I’m needy,” he said. “I want someone to be with me all the time.”

Had I heard him utter that phrase right at the start, alarm bells surely would have rung. Yet, sitting on his housemate’s couch, I turned my back and sobbed. As warm tears slid down my face I thought, numbly, of all the things he’d said… “you’re perfect, I love everything about you, you’re so beautiful, the loveliest, nicest, kindest woman I’ve ever met…”

I thought of those fledgling hopes and dreams lying crushed. I thought of how the nullifying ache of my first and deepest heartbreak decades ago was crashing in on me, again. I was paying the price now for those intense highs.

Two sides of the same coin. The yin and the yang again.

We held each other gratefully, tragedy heavy in the air with our united grief and his confusion. He didn’t know if he was making the right decision, didn’t know if he could bear the anguish. He’d been up most of the night with worry and confusion. This was the hardest thing he’d ever had to do.

All this was nothing to me. I refused to give him an ounce of sympathy. “It shouldn’t be easy to do this,” I said, my voice thick with tears. “Because what you are doing is horrible. It’s unforgiveable.” I would not make it effortless for him. I didn’t want to know about ‘her’ and ‘her’ feelings. What mattered was his decision and his feelings! He could not even countenance the idea of having the both of us. And I didn’t think I could share him anyway.

We talked and cried, and held each other and sobbed. And then we started kissing again. It was gentle, lips resting against each other’s and sharing our air. It was tender, tongues intertwining a familiar dance. It was fierce, teeth knocking and this time, no apologies. It was urgent, passion rising and boiling with the sadness of inevitability. In my mind, every tiny stroke, every breath we shared and long drawn-out moment that our eyes locked together was tinged with the devastating knowledge of finality.

This most perfect body would not be mine to explore. This smooth and chiselled face would not be mine to stroke. Those luscious lips would not be mine to kiss. We’d had 18 hours physically together – and I wanted more!

Inevitably, our passion turned more sexual. I discovered that, at the eleventh hour, his body could indeed manage an erection and that it was glorious. I would now never feel that length and hardness inside of me and stare into his eyes as we united our bodies. It was over.

I’d gone from being the best thing that had ever happened to him, to history in less than four weeks.

“I don’t think you realise how special you are,” I whispered, my voice catching as I held his face in my hands, one last time. He covered my hands with his and said, meeting my eyes, “No, you don’t realise how special you are!” My face collapsed as I mumbled through my sobbing, “But it’s not enough, is it?”

When I told him that we just could not stay ‘friends’, that he mustn’t contact me, that it would hurt too much, tears ran down his face as the full impact of his decision hit. I think he expected me to say, “Oh well that’s fine, we’ll still be friends and see each other occasionally and chat now and then on kik.”

No.

In the end, I sent him away from my car because he would not let me go. He would not stop hugging me and earnestly looking into my face, wiping my tears, kissing my face. I said, “You’re making it impossible for me to leave. You have to go!”

And then I drove away. Gutted.

For six days grief overwhelmed me. I took two days off work. I cried until my eyes puffed up and my head split open with pain. I sobbed over my keyboard and into my phone as I texted friends. I sobbed while walking my dog and at the kitchen sink and in bed late at night.

My younger son found me bawling in the bathroom and wrapped his warm body around mine in silent support. I sobbed as I talked it through with my inner circle. I sent James one long text message of my grief. He did not respond. Fully one year later I deleted his message thread on my phone.

Interview with Back in Stilettos Again

Welcome to the third in my series of interviews with interesting people navigating the strange and unpredictable world of online dating, aka modern dating.

Lauren, firstly I’d love to hear in your own words why you started Back in Stilettos Again and how you describe it?

Thank you, Eve! I started my blog because I was new to dating after my 16-year relationship/marriage ended. Online dating had changed A LOT since I’d done it back in the late 1990s! It was extremely entertaining and I remember telling some friends, “After two weeks online dating, I have enough material to write a book!”

The propositions were outrageous and it really opened my eyes to the dating underworld I wasn’t previously aware of… such as kinks, fetishes, and outright foolish behavior. Lots of guys would simply contact me on OkCupid to play games… and at first I was naive. It blew my mind that some people had that much time on their hands. I was also overly eager because I was touch-deprived after getting out of a sexless marriage.

I started my blog as a diary of my dating adventures. My slogan was Diary of a San Francisco Serial Dater, because I was on a focused mission of finding someone who knocked my socks off. Within two months of starting the blog, I unexpectedly found myself in a relationship with one of the first guys I met online after splitting from my ex-husband.

Unfortunately, I didn’t start the blog until six months after I had started serial dating and, as a result, lost out on documenting a lot of fabulous dating stories.

I recently changed my blog’s slogan because I’m no longer ‘serial dating’. I’m now taking a more deliberate, careful approach to dating. After 3+ years of awesome sex, I’m no longer constantly touch-deprived. Of course, I still have a very high libido… but I’m no longer trying to make up for lost time when it comes to touch…and that fortunately takes a lot of pressure off the dating process.

So, to make a short story long, my blog is a diary about my dating adventures. I write about dating, sex, love, relationships, and self-discovery. The simple act of writing helps me discover a lot about myself!

You’ve been dating again after marriage and kids for three years now, what have you learned as a standout lesson, and what are some of the smaller ones?

I have dated A LOT of guys in the past 3+ years. In the first six months of post-marriage dating, I met 55 new guys. Now I’m guessing the number is around 80 (I was off the market for several months while in two long-term relationships). And this isn’t even counting the 100 or so guys I dated through my late teens and 20s. I’m experienced! I’ve always loved dating – It’s fun, it refines your social skills, and it teaches you what you do and don’t like.

Lesson #1: The perfect match doesn’t exist. There is no such thing as a ‘soul mate’. I’m sorry to disappoint the teens and 20-somethings who are reading this!

The biggest lesson is that the perfect guy… and even the perfect guy for me… doesn’t exist. Some guys will obviously be better suited than others but it’s all a sliding scale. Figuring out what I will and won’t accept is tricky because I have to take some bad qualities with the good. Always. So the battle becomes: “Can I tolerate the thing(s) I don’t like?” And then there’s the whole phenomenon of change. People change. I made a good choice marrying Mars and don’t regret it one bit… but we both changed and ultimately became incompatible.

I highly recommend that every single person looking for a long-term relationship date a lot of people! It’s a great way to learn about yourself.

Actually finding a relationship, on the other hand, is like magic: The right place, the right time, the right physical attraction and chemistry, the right values/morals/goals, and the right compatibility. It seems damn near impossible. No wonder it always seems so unbelievable when it actually happens!

Lesson #2: I don’t think I believe in marriage. I believe in healthy committed monogamous relationships, but I believe they have a shelf life and aren’t necessarily meant to last forever.

Lesson #3: Finding someone I like who is compatible and who doesn’t annoy me is pretty damn difficult. I’m an easy-going, naturally curious person so this was surprising. People are quirky! Interpersonal relationships are complex!

There are probably a lot more lessons but this is all I have right now. Haha.

With your expertise are there types to watch out for or avoid? And for what reasons?

Nah. It’s all a matter of personal taste. I have my own preferences and my own type… and “what I’m looking” for has changed over time, too.

That said, there is one tip I’ll share here on how to spot a catfisher. I was catfished once back in December 2014, and there was one major red flag in his profile that I should have been suspicious about: All seven of his profile photos seemed professional (great lighting, great angles, etc). They were also only of him solo – none of the photos included family or friends. Well, after he stood me up I did a reverse Google image search on one of the photos and learned that the photos were of a famous Indian actor.

What are the issues as you see them for women in their 40s or older dating again after long-term relationships and perhaps children?

I honestly don’t see any issues with women dating in their 40s UNLESS the woman has kids. With kids and full or partial custody, scheduling dates can be problematic. Otherwise, dating as a woman in your 40s is better than ever. You don’t have the pressure of wanting to choose a life partner and start a family. In other words, you no longer have the biological clock pressure so dating becomes a lot more fun and carefree. Freedom!

I love the way you detail some lifestyle touches in your blog, I feel as if I learn a little about the San Francisco area a little more each time I read it. The pieces have a diary feel to them – is this intentional? How have your blog posts changed as you’ve grown more of a following?

Yes, I definitely started the blog as a diary concept and I’ve maintained that over time. I occasionally throw in more ‘article’ type posts if I think it might be helpful for readers looking specifically for dating advice or if I think I may have something helpful to share.
The content of the posts hasn’t changed much, if at all, over time as the blog has grown and I have more readers. I write for myself, using it as a tool to document my memories… but I love that there are other people rooting me on, offering great advice, and keeping me accountable. I’ve been both admonished for acting like a jerk and comforted when going through heartbreak. I let it all hang out – It’s my real life. I’ve developed some fabulous friendships here and I’m so thankful for the WordPress community.

You mention aggressive serial dating as your sometime approach – what do you mean by that, and what is your preferred modus operandi? I guess what I am saying too, is what is your ultimate goal?

When I’m single, I tend to take an aggressive serial-dating approach. It’s hard for me to do something halfway. When I want a boyfriend, I want a boyfriend now and I’ll get somewhat obsessive about it until I either find my flame or get burnt out and take a break. Ideally, I would take a more relaxed, leisurely approach but my personality doesn’t lend itself well to that. I’m pretty Type A.

I’m a hopeless romantic and tend to think my next heart-throb is right around the corner. I love love, and I love being in love. It’s a natural high! Love is the drug.

My goal is to find romance and passion with someone who rocks my world.

What are the apps you recommend and those you avoid? Have you found a different type of clientele on each app? I know from reading your posts that you’ve had the most success with Tinder? Any thoughts on why that is?

I’ve actually had the most success with Ok Cupid. It’s where I met my post-marriage boyfriends Tex and Hayden and where I also met Joaquin (an ‘almost-boyfriend’). I haven’t met any boyfriends on Tinder… yet! I prefer the Tinder interface over the Ok Cupid interface, though. I love its simplicity.

I haven’t found a different clientele on any of the apps and actually find many of the same guys on several of them. I think they like to keep all their options open, as I do.
That said, there are several dating apps I have tried and didn’t like at all: Zoosk, Coffee Meets Bagel, Happn, and Once. I know Bumble is a popular dating app but I personally don’t care for it. Every dating site and/or app I’ve tried are all mentioned on my blog.

You write about your sex drive dramatically increasing at age 38 (when you were unhappily married). I’ve encountered the same and read about the huge increase in sex drive in premenopausal women (which can be any time after about that age until mid-50s). How has this affected your approach to dating and what you’re looking for?

Oh boy. Hahaha. My massive libido made a big impact on how I dated immediately after splitting from my ex-husband! I almost found it to be a disability. I was inexperienced in the current dating world and was also a bit desperate to feel adult human touch…. which made me a lot more tolerant than I would have been otherwise. Granted, I didn’t want a relationship with anyone at the time so anything went. I simply wanted to make out, grope, and/or have sex with a relatively nice, normal, fun male human.

It took me a while to figure out what I would and would not tolerate, and what I really wanted. I was occasionally chatting with a guy who had a fetish for impregnating women. I regularly chatted with a bisexual guy who wanted to have a BDSM threesome with me and another guy. And there were a couple of guys I briefly dated who were polyamorous and in open relationships.

This was all completely new to me and nothing like I had experienced when I was in single and dating in my 20s.

I was fascinated by it all at first. Over time, though, I realized what I really wanted: An emotionally intimate monogamous relationship with one special guy. And I ultimately realized that I’m pretty vanilla. Sex is awesome on its own; I don’t need props, fantasies, or elaborate scenarios (although I do acknowledge that I might re-visit that if/when I’m with the same guy for several years and want to shake things up).

You say that before your marriage ended, you felt lonely, ignored and invisible. I know for sure that A LOT of women in long-term relationships feel the same way, whether or not their relationships end. What are the challenges of starting again after this phase, and how do you reconcile your needs with all the other factors at play – kids, ex, time alone, hormones/sex drive and meeting new people who aren’t necessarily on the same page or sexual groove?

I feel like I lead a double-life. I’m a single, carefree woman with a very busy social life half the time and am a responsible mom the other half. My child-free time is spent staying out late, flirting, meeting lots of new people, and having sex (hopefully lots of it!) while the time with my kids is spent staying in at night, cooking meals, overseeing teeth brushing and bedtimes, and often going to bed early myself.

The split lives are such a dichotomy. I think part of the reason I love relationships so much is that I can merge these two different lives. I feel my time spent in relationships is much more balanced.

If a guy I’m seeing isn’t on the same sexual page as me, well it’s simply not going to work out. Sex and intimacy are extremely important to me. Sex is a fabulous stress-reliever, too. It would downright suck to have a boyfriend who couldn’t keep up with me sexually. I just can’t see it working. It’s important for me to be with someone who places just as much value in it as I do.

You say that writing our your thoughts and feelings is way to understand yourself and process events in your life. I think we can all relate to that. I like the ways you credit your readers, too, for helping you see something differently. I feel the same way, even after only a month or so of running this blog. Can you share an example of how a reader’s perspective changed your view or helped you see a situation differently?

Readers’ own personal experiences with alcoholism really helped me navigate how to proceed with Hayden after he admitted to being dependent on alcohol. It was really eye-opening. Just hearing everyone’s perspectives really helped me be more supportive of Hayden and more aware of the illness’s limitations.

What are your thoughts on marriage and monogamy after being married and then almost being married? Do they go hand in hand? What do you strongly believe in about your future needs and wants in relationships and what do you think is problematic?

I am a huge fan of monogamy. Huge! A big stressor for me when casually dating is the risk of sexually transmitted infections. They can happen even if you use condoms! Condoms aren’t foolproof. And let’s face it: condoms suck. Nothing beats skin-on-skin. Condoms are a necessary evil until I’m in a monogamous relationship, though.

I was always faithful in my marriage despite being sexually unfulfilled. I never considered having an affair. I did, however, tell my ex-husband that I was considering looking outside the marriage if he couldn’t at least try. And so he tried… but it was a half-try and only done out of fear of losing me rather than truly wanting intimacy. It felt forced and emotionally vacant. It screwed with my self-esteem and ultimately wasn’t enough anyway. I wanted more. I wanted passion, romance, fun, and most importantly connection. Life is too short!(Just to clarify, the lack of sex and intimacy were symptoms of bigger problems in our marriage.)

I want a monogamous, emotionally intimate relationship with plenty of hot passionate sex.

The problem I foresee with a future relationship is that I tend to become anxious in relationships… and it always revolves around texting communications. It happened in my relationships with Tex and with Hayden. I’m trying to figure out why it happens and how to prevent it from happening again.

You say that perhaps you have never had a relationship that wasn’t dysfunctional – don’t you think that applies to most of us? You’re also pretty hard on yourself (quote: I freak out, over-react, and get spooked easily. I overthink. I need to calm the fuck down and relax.) OK here’s the hard bit – what are your BEST features and what would make you an AWESOME catch for some lucky dude?

If you really think about it, yes, almost any relationship is dysfunctional… just like almost every family is dysfunctional. We’re all imperfect with our own quirks. Just because a relationship is dysfunctional doesn’t mean it won’t work, though! It might work very well for the couple in it.

As for me, I’m an incredible catch! I am a friendly, genuine, approachable, happy, stable person. I have a fabulous ‘cool’ job in an architecture and engineering niche that constantly challenges me. I like going to work every day. I am great at managing my money, am financially savvy, and live within my means. Health and fitness is really important to me; I don’t take it for granted and constantly push myself to become better without being obsessive about it. I am attractive thanks to good genes and taking good care of myself my entire adult life.

I’m intelligent, educated, and a reasonable person with sound logic. I have a wide range of interests and know a little about most topics even if they’re obscure – I’ve dazzled past dates and boyfriends with my knowledge of what vector causes Lyme disease, knowing what ‘alba’ means in Latin, and how to ask for water in Mandarin. Haha. Most importantly, I am very devoted and loyal when I’m in a relationship. I’m like a dog!

What’s not to love?! Haha. I’m currently accepting applications for my next boyfriend.

How do you navigate the timing to get off the dating apps after you meet someone you think has serious potential? Do you discuss exclusivity first? Do you quit the apps and wing it? And how do you know if he’s not secretly back on the apps, or never quit? The dating world got a whole lot more complicated post the internet!

I close down dating apps only after falling in love whether we’ve had the exclusivity talk or not. I just don’t feel comfortable chatting with or dating potentials when I’ve told another guy I love him. It’s not fair to anyone. The exception to this was Tex… and I didn’t discontinue the dating apps because he was pro-polyamory and I knew I ultimately didn’t want a polyamorous relationship. So I told him, “I’m looking for something monogamous but I’ll continue dating you in the meantime.” I loved him but he couldn’t provide what I wanted or needed. (He eventually changed his mind and wanted monogamy… at which point we both closed down the dating apps.)

Otherwise, I use my intuition. If the guy seems completely devoted to me (ie Hayden) and is so busy seeing me that he wouldn’t have time to see anyone else, I don’t worry about it. Hayden and I never had the dating app talk because he admitted he wasn’t dating anyone else.

I was interested to read about what you describe as your low level anxiety. I suspect we’d get along just fine! And also that we’re both introverts? I’m immediately curious about how this anxiety pans out before dates, and before sex dates in particular. I have noticed an unhealthy pattern myself and I’m trying to deal with it.

I don’t have any anxiety when it comes to dates or sex. Dating and sex are the fun, easy parts! The worst part about dating for me is when I’m simply tired or suspect the date might be a dud and then I have to psyche myself into going. Relationships, on the other hand, tend to bring out my anxiety. It sometimes makes me wonder why I even want to bother! Interpersonal dynamics are so complicated.

On a personal note I’m also interested in how you negotiate sex and whether or not it will happen.

The only times sex is ‘off the agenda’ on a date is when I have an active yeast infection or a bacterial vaginosis infection. Otherwise, it’s always a possibility! If we’re both feeling it, it’ll [hopefully] happen. And if I’m not feeling it, then it typically doesn’t happen. I say ‘typically’ because there was one time I felt bullied into having sex and then I gave in only because I wanted to get it over with and leave without him harassing me further. It was icky.

How do you manage what to tell friends and family about your new post-marriage life? I enjoyed reading about some of the challenges and judgements in the past. Do you keep your dating life to yourself, let it all out or somewhere in between?

I have mostly kept my dating life completely to myself. My family knows nothing but that’s only because they don’t care to know. My friends know a little. Mars knows a little. One friend – actually my ex-boss – knows about my blog but she doesn’t read it. Several online friends know about the blog and are regular readers. My ex-boyfriend Tex accidentally found out about this blog right after we became exclusive. Needless to say, shit hit the fan hard. It was emotionally devastating and nearly broke us up. In hindsight, we should have ended the relationship then because I don’t think the relationship ever recovered.

Mine is a secret blog and I intend to keep it that way. I would be mortified if anyone I knew found out about it.

Finally, we’d better touch on cougars! What do you think of the whole cougar mythology? Do you ever use that terminology yourself? I know from experience that you like younger men – can you tell me why, and your thoughts on younger vs older and the issues with both?

I don’t like the term ‘cougar’ and definitely don’t use it myself. I like all men! But I’m kind of like Baby Bear in that they need to be ‘just right’… not too old and not too young. I seem to have the best luck with early 30-somethings. They’re not bogged down with life, they don’t have big responsibilities like mortgages, child support/spousal support payments, and child custody schedules. They are still enthusiastic and passionate. And they tend to be responsive text communicators.

I look younger than my age and I think my energy level simply better matches with men in their early 30s.

Older men tend to be lazy with dating and look much older than their age unless they’ve taken immaculate care of themselves (and most men just haven’t). They are also more set in their ways, tend to be harder to get along, and are pretty judgmental.
I recently wrote a long post about my theories involving the pros and cons of younger vs older.

Thank you so much for interviewing me, Eve. This was fun!

Thanks to Lauren for sharing her views and feelings on so many intimate topics. If you haven’t seen her blog before, head on over to Back in Stilettos Again.