Sunday, May 29, 2011

All I Want For (Before) Christmas

As of Friday 13th (oh fortuitous day) I am single. I actually did the lamb dance from court all the way back to the car park as soon as the Judge smacked her gavel down. This is not to say I was happy about being divorced, because the word I am looking for is closer to ecstatic. And it's not to say I don't have regret, because I do. My ex is a lovely bloke but we were just not lovely for each other. Heaven knows we tried hard, through two marriages in fact, but we were like anti-marriage for each other and the more time that passed, the more horrible we became to ourselves and each other. And now, after a year of separation, I am me again, and he is himself again, and we can both, with grace, move onto new chapters. So I did the lamb dance.

And move on I have. I am dipping my toes in the dating pool. Some may feel going from divorce court directly to a coffee date is a little extreme, but at 43, I don't have a whole lot of respect for standing on ceremony. I am emotionally intact, not in need of rescue spiritually or financially and what the hell. Problem is that I live in the arse end of beyond where the local entertainment is limited to one very dodgy pub called "Pistol's Saloon and Wild West Museum" that attracts the kind of clientele best avoided. And all my friends are heavily married and very very much younger than me so a fix up will brand me as a Cougar and that is so just not my style. Which leaves dating, in the old fashioned sense of the word, with limited scope. In fact, none at all.

The thought of dragging myself through another freezing, wet, Natal winter on my own is just abhorrent. Not that I want to be someones girlfriend, but a companion would be fabulous. Companion, did I actually just say that? But that's precisely what I want. Someone with enough oomph and intellect to have funny, interesting, thought provoking but not exhaustive conversations and to share life's special pleasures with would be marvellous. And that can eat with a knife and fork and get on with my friends. With his own home to go back to. So how to get this right when the night life here is limited to the wailing of feral cats and the rutting of the over population of wild pig in the forest over the road.

Since my internet connection has been fully restored, the answer is simple. Internet date. What could be easier than filling in a little questionnaire about likes and preferences and waiting for a clever computer to filter out the dross and provide a list of potential companions for winter? Despite being brutally honest in my profile, and using really big difficult words like eloquence, capability, chivalry, courage, raconteur and bon vivant (yes, my dream man is a cross between James Bond, McGiver and Bruce Willis, sort of like Robert Redford's character in Story of an African Farm), I attract peaches from Pongola who "want 2 kiss and hug U stukkend". For my limited international audience, "stukkend" is Afrikaans for "broken". There are odd bods from Limpopo Province who would like to be showing me their tractors and various other bits of machinery and yet more, closer to home alarmingly, who are bold enough to admit their marital status (married) who suggest discreet hook ups in local hotels. This in a town where even the petrol pump attendants know every customer by name. Discreet? I think not. And to crown it, a call from my ex to say that one of his friends (and a very married one at that with a lovely wife) had called him to tell him he had seen me on the dating website. The mind boggles.

But date I did, straight out of court and nearly collapsed at the hilarity of it all. Two forty somethings completely inept and incapacitated by nerves. The Date almost fell in his swimming pool so anxious was he; he could not sit still, and I could not stop laughing. And we get on really really well, except he thinks he isn't ready for a relationship and I know I am not in need of a relationship, and like a pair of idiots, we have flip flopped into a friendship of sorts that has its cornerstone clearly marked with big writing "SELF DENIAL". His, not mine. It's a bitter irony.

Wading through the detritus of what constitutes a single South African man has lost its comedic appeal and has actually become a little alarming. Consequently, my profile is now permanently disabled. So short of moving a few hundred kilometres north, I am afraid I may have to take up knitting and start rescuing cats. I haven't, however, completely given up hope - watch this space.


Saturday, May 28, 2011

So In Love

It has to be said, I have to confess, finally, that I am totally utterly, completely in love love love with Greys Anatomy. On so many levels. This astounds me somewhat, that I could be so besotted with a crowd of narcissistic, self obsessed, immoral, horribly opinionated, serial sexaholics, but I am. There is not an ounce of moral fibre in any of them but in love I am. And it doesn't stop there. No, I have allowed Greys to infiltrate so much of my life that I use "Greys Speak" often in my normal everyday conversations. Corinne is "my person". Unless you are a Fundy yourself, you won't get it. I do, and I have a person. It gives me the warm fuzzies that finally there is a perfect description for a best best best friend. I have a person, people.

Since being Greyed, it is so easy to voice my upset at silly, annoying, stupid, thoughtless or cruel people. No longer do I have to plumb the depths of my backbone to find the courage to voice my dissent. No longer do I have to think of words that fit together to say something in defence of the situation or to slap the idiot down. No, thanks to Greys all I have to do is arch an eyebrow (which took some practice in front of the mirror to get it perfectly ironically arched) and say "Seriously?". And this word is amazing. You can say it flat like a statement, lilt the end like a question, bark it out like a command. It is the all purpose shut up and think command. I love it. Seriously.

No more for me evenings of morbid self pity, no. I dance it off. Thanks to Christina Yang, I have the perfect pick me up for a shitty mood. I dance it off. The fact that I dance it off to the Greys Anatomy Soundtracks I, II and III is a little tragic, but it is so, so good. And most of the music from Greys is by militant anarchic chic bands. Nothing better to dance off an "all men are idiots" mood to a song called "Lifespan of a Fly" or "Your Head's too Big".

Monday nights for me are sacrosanct. Between 7:30 and 8:30 I am mesmerised. And what a perfect combo. Hot thirty and forty something professionals all chasing each other round the doctor's lounges and sneaking in and out of utility rooms, a bit of blood and gore and snapping of bones, human angst and a wry look at the human condition. I am hooked.

So hooked that one evening I worked out that its only Miranda Bailey and The Chief who haven't vicariously slept with the entire staff. They even chuck a few patients into the mix. Its a Petrie dish of human emotion and raw, unanaesthetised pleasure seeking.

I have decided if I were ever in the position to be hospitalised at Seattle Grace, I would never leave. They would have to get an eviction order. Ooh and that is such a provocative thought; hot steamy doctors and unemotional, feisty lawyers. What an episode!