Dating Magazine

Libby and Ed

By The Guyliner @theguyliner

As humans, it's in our nature to try to game the system. From behaving in front of our grandparents so we can butter them up for sweet shop money, to walking around the office holding a piece of paper to look busy, we like to think we're super-smart and the rest of the world are witless dummies. All we have to do is say the right things, drop some in-jokes or buzzwords, try a few confidence techniques that we learned in an NLP session once, and whoever we're dealing with will love us immediately, leaving the world ours for the taking. I am delighted to spot attempts to work this magic on me, and I usually go with it for a while, to see how far they'll take it. It's fascinating. Anyway, here are two people who have definitely never read my blog before, oh no. Meet Libby, a 26-year-old development fundraiser and medical student Ed, 24.

FLIRTING. Nobody admits to doing this anymore, do they? I never hear of it. Perhaps it's because nobody tries it with me. Once the #MeToo movement got going, flirting is one of the things mucky old pervs claimed would be the first thing to go, but that's not remotely the case. True flirting - mutually fun, thrilling, exciting and flattering - hasn't gone anywhere. It is still freely available and being employed across train carriages, in bars, and over chip shop counters the world over and will be for years to come. One-sided flirting - hot, Timothy Taylor breath in your ear and yellowy fingernails clawing at your third button down - is definitely off the menu, though. Sorry, creeps.

OK, so I'm guessing Ed is either Irish, or once sat next to a man drinking Guinness.

Whether this is a compliment or not depends on who's saying it, doesn't it? I mean, this would make me recoil in horror but perhaps this is something people in their 20s who are still obsessed with school hierarchies find... impressive? If her first impression really was he looked like someone "who was in all the school sports teams", that would signify to me that he came in dragging a younger skinnier kid behind him, flushed their head down a loo that just happened to be adjacent, belched a lot, smelled slightly mouldy, had cheeks like freshly sliced ham off the bone, and had a wanking sock under his bed.

Horses for courses, I guess.

Libby and Ed
School shenanigans, the NHS and her grouting skills.

NHS. A match! ✅ Topical and "relevant to their interests"
South London curry. I lived in south London for over a decade and I thought the understanding with south London curry was "Tooting or don't bother". Although O had some lovely ones in Balham over the years. Happy to be illuminated.
Outdoor swimming. Oh they love this, don't they? The clean shirts? (No offence.) So much of it going on. Those pink faces braving the elements because arthritis can't come soon enough for them.
"Shenanigans." This, and the earlier "craic" make me think perhaps Ed grew up above an O'Neill's. If, later on, he says, "a stranger is a friend you haven't met yet", we'll know for sure.

Libby and Ed

There's so much here. I... I haven't got time. I have to be somewhere today. It's just so.... No, I don't have time to be a class warrior and marvel at the absolute fucking audacity of both their viewpoints on this. Sorry.

Yes, probably.

A pebble on the table would be quite handy if you didn't like the look of your date as they were guided toward your table by a waiter wondering whether he was going to spend the whole night hating you. You could smash yourself in the head with it, or, if you fancied living ironically in a prison for a while - "such stripped back chic, I was in awe at the minimalism" - then you could lob said pebble at your date's head.

Libby and Ed

This is both gentlemanly and quite skeevy, if you think about it. He wouldn't want to rule out a snog later so very astutely made sure his mouth was a meat-free zone. What a pity it stayed that way.

Libby and Ed
I can think of a few she'd get on famously with.
Libby and Ed

Genuine, like an antique vase you accidentally find in your grandma's attic, which you are disappointed to find has a Post-it stuck to it, with your cousin's name scribbled on it. How distasteful, you think, as you rip it off and attach a very sticky label to it featuring your own name.
Chatty, like every shopkeeper in Streatham as soon as you or Ed leave the shop.
Kind, like the first four letters of the word "kindling".

Stylish, like good manners, which never go out of fashion.
Composed, like the symphonies you no doubt grew up listening to.
Confident, like a middle class person demanding his immediate vicinity be gentrified as soon as possible - so he can begin complaining about this very fact just minutes after the second Little Waitrose opens.

Libby and Ed

Seven glasses of wine each? Seven rounds of wine that came with stems intertwined? Did they have the same wine each round? Is "paired" a menu-ism that sounds so convincing you end up using it in real life? I went to the trouble of going to the restaurant's website - one of the worst I've seen in my life, in a hotly contested category - and couldn't see any such wankery so I assume this is Ed's own choice of words. Also, the restaurant website was still advertising its Valentine's Day offering. No further comment.

My grandmother will be reading this.

If your grandma is reading this, Ed, no doubt she'll wonder why you didn't just say "no" rather than suggesting that you may actually have kissed Libby? Because now, with this locker-room chivalry, you make Libby look like a liar and/or yourself look anything other than gentlemanly.

"A gentleman never tells", BOYS, or all variants thereof, is not actually a very gentlemanly thing to say. Do better. If you kissed and don't want anyone to know, I have two pieces of advice: 1. Agree at the end of the date that you'll leave that answer out as it's nobody else's business or 2. Don't be in a dating column in a national newspaper in the first place.

Quite why you would wasn't to suggest you had kissed someone when you hadn't - apart from at school where French kissing, dry riding and fingering were bizarre badges of honour worn proudly by people who drew on the front of their exercise books and fell off their chairs in class - is beyond me. How cool do you think you look on a scale of 1 to 10?

Libby and Ed

I can't take any more of this. Weird doesn't equal interesting, you know. It's just as exhausting as watching two library books knock back seven "paired wines" and talk edgy neighbourhoods. Normal is good. Not everyone can be a huge extrovert, although plenty are trying.

The world was not meant to full of flamingos. Some of us have to be starlings to make others stand out, and give everyone else a rest for the eye.

I believe these sevens. It seemed a seveny kind of evening. Nothing major happened, it was fairly straightforward, regulation-issue date between two young people who are on the normal side.

I'm sure we will at the lido.
Libby and Ed

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