When I was a
young man, in those dim and distant days when I found myself desperately
seeking female companionship, womankind had me in their clutches. They had
power over me and I was a slave to them.
I fancied
any woman who would talk to me and the more beautiful the woman, the more
enthralled I was.
Sadly, in
those days, society dictated that it was the man that had to do the chasing. It
was the man who had to ask the woman for a date or make his desires clear. And
that was why women had power over me. They had the ability to twist me around
their little finger.
And they
were cruel, dear reader.
I remember
one occasion when my so-called mates goaded me into asking a woman out.
“She fancies
you, Dave. It's obvious,” they would say, goading me into action by appealing to the optimist in me. “Shall we come with you to give you moral support?”
Being a fool
– and too blindly in lust to realise that the gorgeous target of my affections
was fancied by just about every other male in the vicinity – I marched over to
her with my “friends” behind me. She was with her mates too.
In order to
protect her identity, let’s call her Alison.
“Hi Alison,”
I said with a smile.
“Hi Dave,”
she said smiling back. Yes – she smiled – that means she must like me.
“Can I ask
you something?” I said summoning up all the courage I could muster.
“Sure,” she
said.
“Can we –
erm – get together? Will you go out with me?”
In my
imagination, she stood up, threw her arms around me and said “I’ve been waiting
for you to ask!”
In reality,
she said “WHAT? With YOU???? You must be joking!”
She laughed.
Her friends
laughed.
My “friends”
laughed.
I ran away
looking like a complete arse.
Don’t get me
wrong; she genuinely liked me – but because I was funny. She wouldn’t have even
entertained the idea of anything more than just friendship.
Bless her,
she later found me and apologised and asked if we were still friends. Of
course, still being enthralled by her, I agreed. But our relationship had
changed.
This was the
story of my love life around that time.
Thankfully,
something changed and all of a sudden women decided that it was time to turn
the tables. I guess they became fed up of waiting for guys to ask them out. I
don’t know when it started – I just noticed that women were actually marching
up to guys and asking them out on a date.
And then it
happened to me. My ex-wife W basically took control and made her feelings
perfectly clear. Many years later, my beloved Mrs PM did exactly the same.
In fact,
over the years, I have been approached a few times, and had to let the poor
woman down gently in the nicest possible way (realising how painful such
rejections can be).
I for one am
really glad that it happened and it marks a significant power shift in the way
women behave.
I had an
interesting chat with Mrs PM’s mum the other week. When we go to the pub with
her and her other half, she refuses to go to the bar or pay for any meals we
have in restaurants because, in her eyes, it’s the responsibility of the man.
Mrs PM is a modern woman and we share most of the responsibilities.
“Why are YOU
going to the bar,” Mrs PM’s mum says.
“Why not?” says
Mrs PM.
It’s the
same at home. Mrs PM’s mum does all the cleaning, washing, cooking etc. and
accepts that role. She even packs both suitcases when they go on holiday,
selecting all of his clothes and everything else he needs.
And she
accepts this without question. In fact, she positively revels in it.
There is no
way I would let Mrs PM choose or pack my clothes for me. Besides, she wouldn’t
do it.
Not all
women have embraced the power shift. Mrs PM has friends who still want the man
to chase them. She calls them “princesses” presumably after fairy tale
princesses who are swept of their feet by handsome princes.
When I cast
my mind back to the time when I desperately wanted to be that prince, I recall
being let down almost every time, sometimes cruelly.
I used to
think that I wasn’t “prince” material and I considered myself, with the aid of
Captain Paranoia, to be a hideous villain who would never get the girl.
Of course,
these days, the whole concept of dating has changed. People do not have to
humiliate themselves by marching confidently up to a member of the opposite sex
and asking them out. The internet and social media has revolutionised the
dating game.
You can join
a dating site and now even get a smartphone application to help you. Take
Tinder, for example. This app allows you to find other people within a certain
distance of your location and matching certain criteria and, if you like them,
you simply tap a heart icon if you like them and a cross icon if you don’t.
Obviously two people like each other then they can arrange to meet.
I wish there
had been something like that around when I was about eighteen years old. It
would have protected me from being humiliated and having my poor heart shredded
by a female friend who had no desire to take our friendship further.
Unbelievably, there is also an app called Binder that allows you to dump people too if you are too scared or too much of a coward to do it yourself.
This is the kind of message you get:
If there had been an app like Tinder around when I was young and single, I wouldn’t have been told to “Piss off” when I resorted to desperate chat up lines.
In fact, I would have been equally concerned by a crass app like Binder because in those early days I can only imagine my poor heart being destroyed by a text message.
At least I wouldn't have received it in front of a group of people, I guess.
Anyway, I for one am glad that times have changed and that there is more equality when it comes to relationships.
After all, we are in the 21st century now, and not in the 1950's.