R E C E N T L Y
If love's not there to begin with, is it ever gonna be? Does love have to be a five-alarm fire? Men from Philly are cheese steaks Can you fall in love based on someone's writing? Should writers breed with other writers? - - - - - - - - - - A L S O - - - - - - - - - - C O L U M N I S T S
Sexpert Opinion
Bestseller Hell
Left Hook
Right On!
Ask Camille
Under the Covers
Second Thoughts
American Squirm
Unzipped
|
LOVERS AND WRITERS _|_ MR. BLUE_ Dear Mr. Blue, I want to become a poet, but I don't seem to be able to comprehend meter. Can I live without it? Wannabe in DC Dear Wannabe, There is meter in everything we say, everything we write. There is even meter in your question. All writing has a cadence to it and I can't imagine a writer who isn't interested in this, though you needn't sit around and think about it. You can simply write your poems and read them aloud to yourself and the meter will be obvious to you, artful, clunky or whatever.
Dear Mr. Blue,
Every time I go out with my friend Ruth, she brings along some
friend of hers that I barely know. It seems like Ruth and I never get
to talk just the two of us. I'm beginning to worry that she thinks I'm
boring or something. Am I being selfish with Ruth's attention, or is
Ruth being rude?
Worried
Dear Worried, If you want to be alone with Ruth, invite her to your house for dinner and set two plates at the table. And if Ruth asks if she can bring a friend, say no, and she won't.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I've met a really sweet woman who I'm very attracted to and
well-suited for and who feels the same way about me. The problem is
that she has been seeing a dishonest and emotionally screwed-up
bartender for a year and half and has not broken off her relationship
with him yet, although she is on the brink. She says she likes the
"communicative" sex with him and likes being able to help him out
with things like emotions and career. She describes their relationship
as "unhealthy" and seems to want to drop the ax, but sometimes she
seems stuck in some kind of loop. In the meantime, she doesn't
respond to my e-mail or phone calls. How do I deal with that?
On Deck in San Francisco
Dear On Deck, I'll say this as gently as I can: This really sweet woman is emotionally screwed up, and you should quit calling her and sending her e-mail. You should go for a long walk through your elegant city and ponder the vagaries of human nature and sit in cafes and drink coffee and study the Minnesotans and Iowans who come to San Francisco to relight the flame under their kettles. Do yourself a big favor. Drop her and get attracted to somebody else.
Dear Mr. Blue:
I got a letter three months ago from a publishing house that says, "I
am happy to say that we are interested in your book proposal and I
have sent it off to London for a couple of the other editors to look at.
I will write again as soon as I have any other news." How promising
does this sound to you? How long should I wait before I send a
follow-up letter? The anxiety is killing me. Any tips for staying
optimistic?
Anxious in Manhattan
Dear Anxious, No reputable publishing house would toy with you and say they were
interested if they weren't, and after three months, you could
reasonably send them a note and ask, "How are the deliberations
coming?" Better yet, call them up on the phone, it's easier to tell if
they're lying if you can hear their voice. Don't be afraid of people in
publishing. Walk tall. You're an author, after all. And if they've lost
interest in your proposal, it's no big deal. Send it on to someone
brighter.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I moved to Los Angeles six months ago and discovered I am not
really the L.A. type. I don't like the beach, cars, palm trees or
mainstream films. I'm attractive (some say beautiful), yet L.A. men
aren't exactly breaking my door down. What might I be doing
wrong? Are men intimidated by opinionated, smart and articulate
women?
An Outsider
Dear Outsider, Los Angeles is a big city, and like other big cities, it
contains large populations of people who aren't "the type." New
York has inhabitants who aren't loud and in a big hurry and Dallas
has people who aren't brash and Miami has some who aren't on drugs
and Seattle has plenty who don't hike or bike and Minneapolis has a
large supply of non-Scandinavians -- being untypical is hardly a
social disadvantage. Men aren't intimidated by smart women, but
sometimes we are put off by arrogance, as anyone would be, and
what does "articulate" mean, anyway? Why offer that as a badge?
Everyone is articulate in the right company. I recommend that you
take it easy and enjoy L.A. as long as you're there. It's a great city
with a fabulous history and the more you learn about it the more
you'll want to know. And in the process, you might meet a couple of
men you'd want to get to know better.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I have been dating an older man for about a year, on and off. I like
him very much; at times I feel I love him. He does not tell me he
loves me, but he did say that I was "growing on him like a fungus
lately." Well, before we warmed to each other, back when our
relationship was difficult, I started writing to my former boyfriend
from college, whom I hadn't spoken to for two years, and I like what
I am finding there as well. A while ago, I invited him to move out
here and now he says that in a few months he will. I haven't told him
about my current boyfriend. He is very attractive and we have much
in common. Plus, I'm not sure if my current boyfriend will ever fall
in love with me. Although I am not sure if I trust the motives of my
former boyfriend.
Am I blinding myself to something here?
Confused
Dear Confused, You have a couple of interesting months ahead of
you. It's brave of you, encouraging one guy, even as you string along
another, but the blind one is not you, it's your current boyfriend, the
older man. When the college boyfriend moves to wherever you and
Uncle Bud are, you will no doubt get some good stories that you can
amuse your children and grandchildren with someday.
Dear Mr. Blue,
I'm a teacher, freelancer, soon to be MFA candidate, and I've gone
and fallen in love with a sweet, generous, taciturn
lobsterman. We're each 39, never married, both very busy, have been
seeing each other for just over three months, but already I can see our
children's smiles in his eyes and hear their giggles in his laugh. How
can I keep myself from telling him these things? I'm certain he knows
what path we could be on here, but I don't want to buzz past him at
warp speed.
Some Impatient
Dear Impatient, There's a kind of giddiness, a helium quality, in the
early months of romance that you ought to enjoy and then allow to
dissipate, and when the balloon comes down, you can settle into the
relationship and learn to feel comfortable with each other, regardless
of mood, and find out what each other's habits are regarding civility
and so forth. When you and your lobsterman get to some stable point,
you can pick your moment and look him in the eye and say, "I want
to have a baby with you." He may grab his slicker and dash for his
boat, he may grab you and make love with you, or he may simply
become very thoughtful. The odds of him choosing the right door will
improve with time.
Dear Mr. Blue.
Perhaps you can help, perhaps not. My husband has insisted on
subscribing to TV Guide, and recently I spotted him taking TVG into
the bathroom. It dawned on me that I have never seen him read an
actual book, only periodicals. I confess this disturbs me terribly. Does
this constitute a relationship problem or should I just learn to live
with it?
Turned off
Dear Turned, I can't help. If your husband had been a major book
reader and gave up books in favor of TV Guide because of lower
digestive-tract problems, I'm sure you would know that. You married
a guy who is vitally interested in TV. There are worse things. Live
with it.
Dear Mr. Blue:
Does oral sex constitute a sexual relationship? I asked a friend who is
a Republican and a Bible scholar, who says it isn't. Now I wonder if
my Irish Catholic upbringing may have locked me out of a lot of fun
open to Baptists. Are there religions in which oral sex is OK, and
where do I go to convert?
Curious
Dear Curious, Oral sex is sexual, and people who engage in oral sex
have a sexual relationship. I don't care what the Baptists say about
this. Oral sex is perfectly OK, and you can practice it to your
heart's content, but it is not asexual. And in the Christian religion, we
would prefer that you practice it with your wife. It is precision close-up
work
and takes some expertise and isn't something you'd offer to strangers.
That's our feeling, anyway.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus
Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.