My friends always laugh with (or at) me when telling me how
quickly my life changes. Events occur in
my life with such rapidity; I put the speed of light to shame.
And so it seems this is the case with the amount and
frequency of relationship advice I seem to have received recently. I don’t mind receiving the advice at all –
heaven knows I clearly need it – but it is the origin of the advice that amuses
me the most.
First of all we had Lenny the gate man, who not only asked
me out on a date, but gave me huge pointers here and there, most of which, I have
to admit were sound. Yesterday I summoned
my old faithful TV repair man to come and help at home for a big problem I currently
have: a willful six year old and an even
more willful thirty nine year old who oddly enough don’t like watching the same
television channel at “TV time” – from five to seven every evening. I am so over Hannah Montana it is scary, even
though I love her song “The Climb”, but even more of a problem is that my six
year old has absolutely NO patience for my favourite soapy The Bold and the
Beautiful and she is tired of seeing who Ridge will marry next – Taylor or
Brooke – the same love triangle that has been going on since the very early 80’s. To me, this is nothing short of fascinating,
but not to my daughter. Clearly two
televisions are needed.
Anyhow, I digress.
Along comes Steve, the ever faithful TV man. Of course I get the questions – “what the
hell happened down there?” followed by a statement that I wasn’t sure was a
compliment – “but HELL, you are such a BELTER, he was mad to let you go!” Belter???
I have Googled this and I keep getting told to refine my search
criteria.
The TV man did manage to help me in one way, with the actual
TV issue I have – this is extremely good news; he also sat down with me over
some tea (I am clearly kind to men in the trade and feel obliged to serve them
tea) and said quite calmly, “Philippa, it is time to get back on the bike – you
need to start dating again”. My response
“Steve I can’t, I am not ready”. Steve’s
response, very directly, “bloody nonsense, of course you are ready”.
I sent Steve on his way, but did spend the day thinking
about what he had said. Am I ready? What am I afraid of? In terms of getting “back on the bike” – it
just doesn’t seem that easy to me – not only do I now know that a fall off the
bike is not only likely, but most likely inevitable; I am also all too familiar
with the bruises, scrapes and cuts that come with that fall, and I am just not
sure I feel like that.
But the cherry on top was still to be had yesterday. Returning from a dinner with my favourite
taxi driver, Minute (yes, that is his name), I got the twenty questions again, “so
Philly, no boyfriend yet?” My reply, “no,
Minute, no boyfriend yet”. “But why not?”
Minute asked. “Because I am scared Minute”. Minute then launched into a statement that I found
profoundly amusing – “so you want to spend the rest of your life alone, like a
dog?” Suddenly this struck home – like a
dog??? I am not sure that dogs are to be
classified as beasts that are alone, but it made me somehow feel that perhaps
being compared to a dog is not an analogy I am altogether happy with.
And so the moral of the story: If one chooses to listen to men in the trade,
most of which have known me well for a long time, and whom I am inherently
honest with – does one follow their advice?
Is it finally time to get onto the bike and out of the kennel?
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