Impossibly Awkward Conversation

Oliver Lee Bateman admits that this may not be exactly how the conversation went, but it is exactly how it felt to him.

 “Hey, I’m this one guy you met.”
 “Hi, good to see you. I’m Emily.”
 “Hi Emily. Are you ready for our date?”
 “Are you calling this a date? Is that what this is?”
“I guess so.”
“I’m not comfortable with the term ‘date.’ That puts a lot of pressure on me.”
“I agree. Let’s call it hanging out.”
“No, I don’t like that, either. Let’s just call it nothing.”
“Okay, Emily, then it’s nothing. We’re doing nothing.”
“I like that. I like doing nothing with you.”
“Yeah, I guess it beats doing something.”
“Does it? I like staying active. You know, going out and doing stuff.”
“So do I, Emily. I’m a big fan of doing stuff, especially when I go out.”
“Well, there are also times when it’s good to stay in.”
“You’re so right. Most nights, I’d just like to curl up in my pajamas while staying in. It’s a jungle out there and so forth.”
“I hope you’re not one of those guys who just wants me to come over and stay at his dirty rat hole of a place. I want a guy who comes up with interesting ideas for dates.”
“But I thought you weren’t comfortable calling this a date.”
“This? No way—definitely not a date, definitely not with you. What I mean is when I’m on a date with a guy I’m in a relationship with who isn’t you.”
“I see. So what do you want from a relationship, Emily?”
“Relationships? Ugh, those are so twentieth century. I just want something casual.”
“I’m all for that. Casual is best.”
“I don’t agree. See, I want you to want to have a relationship with me, but I don’t want to have a relationship with you.”
“What? That’s confusing!”
“No, I need attention from you. But I’m definitely not going to reciprocate. Not your attention, anyway. I’m going to reciprocate someone else’s attention, except that’ll be a one-way street, too. What I want, I guess, is at least two one-way streets: One where you’re needing me and one where I’m needing some other, better guy.”
“If you need a better guy, why are we hanging out?”
“Hanging out? I thought we were doing nothing.”
“Excuse me, why are we doing nothing?”
“You asked me out, right?”
“Huh?  You sent me an e-mail asking me if I wanted to have coffee with you, Emily.”
“I didn’t mean it. I think you totally misinterpreted that.”
“Did I?”
“When a girl says or writes that she wants to have coffee with you, she’s trying to tell you that she doesn’t want to have coffee with you. I was being nice.”
“But I didn’t want to have coffee with you. However, I did want to have coffee after you asked me, because I thought you were interested in me…”
“Why on earth would you think that?”
“You wrote that you were interested in me and wanted to have coffee!”
“I wasn’t, though. That’s just what I wrote. You’re so silly.”
“Okay. Let me see if I understand: Right now we’re doing nothing, and this isn’t a date, and you didn’t want to go on it, even though you asked me to go.”
“Exactly. How hard is it to understand that?”
“What about this other, better guy? Why don’t you have coffee with him?”
“If I had coffee with him, he might learn that I liked him. I want to have a relationship with him, but I don’t want him to know that. Besides, I have a fear of relationships. Also a fear of dates.”
“But not a fear of doing nothing.”
“No, doing nothing is okay. Anyway, you’re harmless. Like a brother or a best girlfriend. I can say anything to you and it won’t bother you at all.”
“Yeah, I’m glad you can, Emily. Lucky for you, I’m a total doormat. I don’t have any feelings. I’m the perfect guy to do nothing with, and I certainly won’t challenge you in any way.”
“Just don’t pressure me. I don’t like being pressured.”
“Have I pressured you, Emily?”
“I can’t shake the feeling that you’re trying to turn this nothing into something. This nothing will never be something, guy I met.“
“I don’t expect it to be. In fact, I have no expectations at all. You matter, but I don’t. I’m happy to sit here and listen to you ramble about your doubts, hopes, and dreams. I won’t even point out how contradictory they are.”
“Great! So I can tell you how I want a guy who will love me with all of his heart, except he’ll ignore me most of the time. Money won’t matter, but he’ll be very rich and will buy me lots of expensive crap. He’ll be handsome but not really, not enough that he’ll ever make me feel insecure about my looks, and I’ll always be able to outsmart him, even though he’s a genius. We’ll have kids, and I’ll care about them so much that I’ll never see them because I’m always on vacation or getting my nails done or getting my highlights retouched or whatever.”
“That sounds so wonderful, Emily. It sure does. My life is of no consequence, and I’ll die alone and forgotten, but I’m happy that you have it figured out.”
“I don’t respect your opinion, but I’m glad you’re listening to me. You should be, too.”
image: crazycatchthecat / flickr
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About Oliver Lee Bateman

Oliver Lee Bateman is one of the founders of the Moustache Club of America and Penny & Farthing, blogzines specializing in flash fiction and creative nonfiction that he co-curates with web developer Erik Hinton, medical consultant Nathan Zimmerman, and freelance writer Christie Chapman. He is a lawyer as well as an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Arlington. Follow him on Twitter @MoustacheClubUS or Google.

Comments

  1. HeatherN says:

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – if the whole world were gay we wouldn’t have these problems. lol ;)

    Seriously, though, that Emily sounds like a piece of work.

  2. Heather D. says:

    Wow. The Emilys of this world give the Heathers of this world a bad name!

  3. Steele says:

    I hope that one day all the boys who post statuses about how girls don’t want nice guys, and all the boys who post statuses about how they want a ‘real man’ who will do absolutely everything they ask ever immediately can hook up and live in a colony together somewhere away from people interested in relationships with equality involved.

    And I say ‘boys and girls’ because I don’t think that the Nice Guys and Emilys of the world have shown maturity worthy of adult terms.

  4. Robert says:

    Does this shed light on anything. Caricatures are funny, but I feel like that’s all you’re doing – exaggerating. No one really feels this way. Sure people act this way, but you do nothing by just mocking up some extremely unrealistic account of this conversation. I’d say try to make it funnier or more insightful because where this is at now, isn’t working…

    • John Brier says:

      I agree. For some people they will hold this up and say “see!: this is what women say/think/want/do!” but while there are women that actually exhibit some of these behaviors and contradictions let’s be careful to generalize.

  5. Robert says:

    Does this shed light on anything? Caricatures are funny, but I feel like that’s all you’re doing – exaggerating. No one really feels this way. Sure people act this way, but you do nothing by just mocking up some extremely unrealistic account of this conversation. I’d say try to make it funnier or more insightful because where this is at now, isn’t working…

    • Kmac7778 says:

      Well, Robert – seems like quite a few people who appreciate this piece, saying it strikes a chord with them (and have noted as much above) beg to differ with you.

      • Robert says:

        That’s fine with me. I didn’t post this because I couldn’t see that other people enjoyed this. I just think this kind of thing gets done a lot, especially on this site, and it’s a platitude. The girl who merely wants attention because the guy she actually likes flummoxes her. I get it… I’m just saying, I can see why people like this, but to me it’s akin to liking Rom Coms: overly obvious and lacking sophistication.

  6. Inners says:

    I became happier when I decided that the Emily’s of the world were best responded to by flight. If she’s short, climb a tree, if she can’t swim, hit the river, if there’s a window nearby, auto-defenestration.

  7. John says:

    If I were this guy I would have left and I would not bother to have a conversation with her. That girl is weird, but sure the guy is more weird because he want to follow her stupid conversation. I would just drink my coffee, not saying anything, and leave money for the coffee and leave.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] This is a followup to the original:  An Impossibly Awkward Conversation [...]

  2. [...] recycle in later years–stories, gags, plot points, and even a really early mock-up of the “Awkward Conversation” piece I published here on the Good Men Project–were hashed out over marathon AIM chat sessions [...]

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