Categories
It Happened to Me

Relics

As the last remaining occupant of my house, a place that has seen many housemates come and go — my sister and brother-in law, Dan, Paul, Kenji, Samantha and finally Robertson — the responsibility of cleaning up any junk left behind by the other occupants has fallen to Yours Truly.

Among the left-behind junk:

  • Some old computer books left behind by Kenji, including the Myst Strategy Guide.
  • Various bits of Dan’s esoteric computer gear, such as a Sparc laptop (encased in steel, heavy and non-functional) and a Symbolics Lisp Machine (even heavier, equally non-functional).
  • A banker’s box of jewel cases for electronica CDs. They are all empty.
  • One large bag of cotton stuffing.
  • The shelf from the desk I have loaned to various housemates. It looks as though it was removed from the desk using a crowbar as opposed to the proscribed screwdriver.
  • “The Chick Stash”: a collection of various herbal teas kept on hand for those visits from charming lady friends.
  • One empty bottle of girly hair care product.
  • A small ziploc bag containing a set of fine-mesh metal discs — presumably filters of some sort — of unknown purpose and provenance.
  • One bordering-on-disturbing manga.
  • A badly-scratched unlabelled CD-ROM containing two smutty videos: one titled facial_table.avi (a surprisingly descriptive name once you view the file) and the other containing a short clip of Alyssa Milano removing her shirt and going topless.
  • 6 boxes of cake mix, 10 cans organic beans. I know that Paul is a big fan of both these foods, but this is too much for even him to eat. I suspect that he has somehow found a way to turn cake mix and beans into crystal meth because that’s what people who buy suspiciously large quantities of seemingly innocent household products (for example, Sudafed) do. There’s something about crystal meth that turns people into MacGyver.

Although the aforementioned finds do tell some interesting stories, they don’t hold a candle to another find. Deep in the farthest recesses of the crawlspace storage area of the basement were two banker’s boxes full of “memories” — things I’d collected between 1985 and 2001.

Some highlights include:

  • A notice from small claims court telling me and George to cough up the money we owed to the silk-screening company for our failed attempt to become rich by selling “Frosh” t-shirts.
  • A cardboard star wrapped in blue foil: a decoration from a particularly memorable Havergal College semi-formal.
  • A ticket to a New Year’s 1991 GWAR concert. I somehow managed to convince Robertson to come see the show with me. I believe he had a good time. That concert changed the way I looked at live rock performance forever.
  • Security clearance to be part of the press scrum for the Prince and Princess of Wales’ visit to Crazy Go Nuts University, Fall 1991.
  • My “licenses” from Crazy Go Nuts University’s 1987 engineering frosh week: a necklace made of five beer caps and a purple string.
  • A $150 mini-bar bill from Labour Day Weekend 1986, when I rented a suite at the downtown Holiday Inn to throw a party. It seemed like an impossibly large amount of money back then (I was 18).
  • A collection of notes left for me by various people throughout my university career:
    • A note from Stacy telling me to get in touch with her if I’m not feeling too “laid back”. I can no longer remember the context. Do you, Stacy? (She reads this blog from time to time.)
    • Another from my engineering classmates Lois (a.k.a “Snowbunny Number One”) and Heidi inviting me to help them with their surveying homework.
    • A guest list for a party to be held at Terry’s, Brad’s and Drew’s house, Spring 1992. One group of invitees on the list is simply referred to as the “House of Annoying Women”.
    • A message from George that reads “happy birthday, you old poop”.
    • A request left for me during one of my DJ shifts at Clark Hall Pub. The top entry is in girly handwriting and is a request for ABBA’s Dancing Queen and Boney M’s Rasputin. Below it, someone has written “For the love of God, please ignore above requests”.
  • A carbon copy of a summons written up by a police officer, dated July 1985. The charge: “fouling the sidewalk”.

Strangely enough, I’m planning to throw away the most interesting things: the letters from “exes”. I’d already tossed out those I’d found in a box of mementos I kept in my room, but the lion’s share are in these boxes. These go back all the way to the end of high school.

I read each one. Some made me laugh, others made me wince and one or two just made me sigh.

Most of these letters date from the years spanning 1987 to 1997, after which email took over and any handwritten was relegated to greeting cards. While email is quicker, the medium of “snail mail” allowed many of my exes and those who didn’t quite fall under the category of “girlfriend” (“dalliance”, perhaps?) to show off their creativity. Many of the letters and notes were written in multicoloured ink, on the backs on interesting posters or other unique scraps of paper or had drawings in pencils, coloured pencils, ink and pastel crayons. A few had photos pasted in; some were letters composed entirely out of phrases cut from magazines, and a number were embellished with stickers.

(Whenever a male geek gets annoyed at email written in HTML rather than plain text, I suspect that he never got letters like these.)

Mail attachments in those days were different. One girlfriend sent me some sand from a beach in Spain with a note saying “we’ll do this next year.” Another who worked in a biology lab sent me her DNA sample (I returned the favour later, but without the benefit of lab equipment).

Some of these letters very clearly showed the state of mind of the author when written. One note from a girl at McGill University was written while drunk in blue hi-liter and large letters. Another letter had its writing blurred by a couple of tear stains, although knowing her, she deliberately wept over the paper for effect. Another was a blank Valentine’s day card that a rather clingy one had sent to me to fill out and send to her. She’d done everything but send a self-addressed stamped envelope.

A couple were prolific writers: I counted over 40 from two. They’d both written them over a one-year period.

One particularly good one was a poem from a rather gifted English major. I normally run in the opposite direction as fast as I can when approached by a university-age woman who wants to read me her poetry, but this one was quite good. It’s a damned shame that the poem is a searing indictment of me.

All in all, this stash of letters, cards and notes made me realize that although I often had absolutely no clue of what the hell I was doing, I didn’t do too badly with the ladies. (I became way more clued-in later, right around the time I started playing accordion.)

As I mentioned earlier, I’m trashing these. I’ll keep a photo or two, but those missals with lines like “a part of me will love you until the day I die” or “you’d better pick up your clothes before I throw them out, jerk-face” are going.

The combination of moving and an impending new life as a married man have motivated me to do this. I think that when you get married, you should put away those old love letters, especially if you’re still friends with one or two of these exes (or dalliances, as the case may be).

Although I’m sure that some of the stories behind those letters may end up as blog entries, I can’t see any good reason to keep them around once I’m sharing a home with a woman to whom I’m promising me for the rest of my life, especially when she’s leaving so much behind to be with me. I had the experiences, I have the memories, and I’ll have a future with her with which to gather new mementoes.

Categories
In the News

"The Girls from Ipanema are Not Impressed"

Even though I am retiring from dating at the top of my game, I still

find articles on the topic fascinating. So does Richard over at Just a

Gwai Lo, who found a New York Times article titled The Girls from Impanema are Not Impressed.

In the article, three young women who’ve come to New York from Brazil

talk about their dating experiences with American men, and precious

little of them are good. The key excerpt:

Forget getting a job, learning English, finding an apartment. The

true challenge for the young, single and foreign-born who arrive in New

York is cracking the code of the dating scene.

For Brazilian

women, who come from a place where public displays of affection are a

way of life and men rarely lack for amorous gusto, the task is

particularly confounding. Ask Brazilian women what they think about

American men, and most respond precisely the same way: with gales of

laughter. Then they tell disturbingly similar tales of men who fear

making advances lest they be accused of date rape and who coldly

calculate how many days they need to wait between meeting a woman and

asking her to dinner.

There’s a bit of a culture clash here. Brazil — like my

native country, the Philippines — is a

Latin culture. I’ve never been to Brazil, but I’ve gone clubbing in the

Philippines, and if you’re a guy, you have to dance and you have to

approach the ladies directly. On the other hand, the U.S. and Canada

are WASP cultures, and as the

joke goes…

Q: What do WASPs say after sex?

A: “Thank you much. I’m sorry. It won’t happen again.”

An aside: my former housemate Paul is currently in Prague and observes in a recent entry on his site:

I first noticed on the tram, girls sitting on guys laps,

and I thought maybe they didnt want to take up two seats. But then I

saw it on otherwise completely empty park benches. And people nuzzling

each other while waiting for the subway, kissing in the street; boys

with arms around girls shoulders. None of the

we-musnt-show-affection-in-public of north america. So cool.

Another source of the problem: universities and colleges.  The university dating scene

circa the early 1990s — remember, this wasn’t much long after the late

1980s explosion of “political correctness” and Marc Lepine’s evil rampage in Montreal — was a social minefield. At Crazy Go Nuts University,

“Every man is a potential rapist” was a popular phrase used at womyn’s

(note the spellyng) empowerment gatherings and most

socio-politico-complexo-migraino discourse had been pretty much reduced

to people saying “We’re white, we’re straight, we’re sorry!” Still, we were dating paradise next to Antioch College, who passed a student code of conduct that required explicit consent for each sexual act. It’s every policy studies professor’s wet dream — they effectively turned sex into a series of negotiation meetings!

Along with the good things that university feminism teaches is at least one very bad thing:

that “gender is solely a social construct”, or more simply: a man is just a woman

with a penis and an attitude problem.

I am donning my flame-proof accordion as I write this. Let me be

clear that I am not advocating date rape or any form on non-consensual

sex nor am I advocating viewing women solely as sex objects. I am also

not advocating everything in the Brazilian Man Repertoire, asthe women in the interview did say that:

American men have other good qualities – their faithfulness, for

example. Brazilian women often say that Brazilian men are safados

shameless – and love to chase the fairer sex. Americans actually mean

what they say (at least more often than Brazilians do). And they are

sweet.

What I am advocating is understanding that men and women are different,

and as my gay and lesbians friends would say, “we’re born that way.”

Anyone who doesn’t believe me should watch toddlers, who haven’t had

enough time for much social conditioning, play.

Simply put: more Astrid Gilberto! Less Cathy!

In the meantime, until such a social revolution comes, guys may want to

start taking up the accordion and carrying it when they go out. It

requires confidence (and upper body strength) to tote one about,

teaches you the fine art of The Swagger, gives you an excuse to be more

forward and lends you the power of the Electra Complex (“Oh! My dad/grandfather used to play the accordion!”)


Want to read that article? It’s available, but hidden behind the New York Times registration wall. Failing that, the blog

agádoisesseóquatro has it transcribed in this entry.

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

The Best Way to Attract the Ladies in This Fair City…

…is to get a nickname that ends with “Guy”.

Being the Accordion Guy has worked for me, and having a “Guy” moniker has worked for others, as this Toronto Craigslist posting shows:

Dear Portuguese Chicken Guy,

I hear that you are a Jehovah’s Witness and that you attend Kingdom Hall once a week. While I don’t understand your “religion” I have to admit that I do enjoy seeing you dressed up in a suit on a weekly basis when I walk by your “church” bound for the YMCA. Your dedication to that organization must be your only flaw, because other than that you are, in a word, perfection.

The evidence of my burning passion is abundant. Sitting on the College streetcar with my hand pressed up against the glass, I gaze into your shop as I sail by silently with 40 others. I linger outside your window a little when I am on my way to some College St. attraction. I know you like to flirt and when I say that I like the sauce on the chicken to be like me, hot and sweet, I am sure you know that’s a hint. If all that evidence isn’t enough, surely you have noticed the flame in my eyes when I watch you slather breasts and thighs in the sauce of my choosing.

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods It Happened to Me

The Most Harmful Book of the 21st Century?

I’ve referred you to Human Events Online’s list of the “most harmful books of the 19th and 20th centuries”. I’ve also referred you to the counter-list posted on the blog Ghost of a Flea, which lists what the Flea considers to be the most helpful books of the past 200 years. For the record, I agree far more with the Flea’s picks.

However, the books on both sets of lists are about Big Ideas:

large-scale concepts that often touch on our lives in a rather indirect

fashion. “Yes, John Maynard Keynes, Charles Darwin and John Stewart

Mill have all been important thinkers,” you’re probably thinking, “but

will they help me find a new job, get in shape or…you know, meet chicks?

Okay, maybe you’re not thinking that. I’m not (anymore). But those of

us who are still eligible bachelors probably are. Looking through their

C.S. Lewis, they’re probably screaming “Dammit, Clive! Less tape, more screw!

A friend of mine — a charming, perfectly nice, well-educated gentleman

to whom I’ll refer to as “Diego” — if asked to compile a list of

candidates for most harmful books of the 21st century (yes, it’s a

little bit early, but why wait?), would say that this book deserves the

number one spot:

Book cover: 'He's Just Not That Into You'.

Diego claims that He’s Just Not That Into You

has poisoned the dating landscape. The basic premise of the book is

sound: if a guy doesn’t put much effort into the relationship, it means

that he’s not into you. The problem, Diego says, is that the book

(whose popularity was no doubt helped by the fact that one of its

authors wrote for Sex and the City) has raised the bar on what one has to do to prove that he’s truly “into you”.

“Returning her calls, dinner and a movie — those used to be the

baseline,” he said, “but not anymore. Everything has to be a event. If

you haven’t somehow planned a date to be some kind of production, they think you’re just not trying hard enough anymore.”

After saying this, he put a bid on a hot-air balloon ride for two at the auction at the singles charity event we were attending.


A couple of women approached me at that point and asked if they could

touch my accordion. This led to a conversation to which I invited

another single gentleman friend of mine — whom I’ll call Bilbo — to

join. These days, I use the hook-up powers of the accordion to benefit

my single friends. The Universal Code of Dudes demands it.

Without the accordion, that conversation never would’ve happened. Yes,

I like to think I’m a sharp-looking fella who was snappily dressed at

the time, but it was a singles event where another fifty or so guys

were — depending on your tastes — equally handsome and stylish. If

the accordion didn’t give me some kind of edge and the ability to turn

ordinary evenings into unusual events (here’s an example), I wouldn’t drag its thirty pounds of bellows, reeds and mechanics whenever I went out on the town.

Maybe Diego’s right.

For My Darling Fiancee

Wedding planning can sometimes be stress-inducing, but remember: one of the alternatives is…this!

As my future in-laws would say: Oy!

"Loneliness is their drug of choice"

[via Just a Gwai Lo] Food for thought from an article in the blog called The Cake Eater Chronicles titled Lonely or Broken?

How many people do you know who seem to have a serious attachment to

being lonely? They’ve made loneliness into their mate and they talk

about loneliness the way some women and men talk about their

significant others. Because those people are out there. I’m sure you’ve

met a few: single women and men who constantly bemoan how if only I could meet the right person

and then never actually get off their ass to do something about it. You

invite them out, you introduce them to someone you think they’ll get

along with, hoping against hope that this will get them to quit their

bitching, or at least move to a new stage of bitching, and five minutes

later—POOF!—they’ve hit the self-destruct button and are back at

your side, bitching and moaning again, about how that person wasn’t

right for them, what were you thinking, etc. They have run back to

their ever faithful mate: loneliness. These are the people, in my

experience, who have the ideal mate all laid out in their mind and they

won’t settle for anything but that, while they know, somewhere in the

back of their mind, that said ideal mate simply does not exist in

reality. They set the bar too high for any mere mortal to pass over.

In other words: there are people out there for whom loneliness is their drug of choice and, boy are they ever addicted to it.

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods

Sex Advice from Accordion Players!

Patrick Lee pointed me to this Nerve story (some of the ads on the page might not be safe for work): Sex Advice from Accordion Players!

Photo: Sex Advice From Accordion Players.

My only complaint about the article is that they didn’t invite me to contribute!