We meet at a social function and enjoy conversation during the evening’s events.
He seems respectful, sensitive, soulful. So - I accept when he asks I share dinner with him. We meet at a lovely restaurant, we offer up pieces and bits of our stories, we laugh. And . . . as the evening comes to its close, he asks me to take him home with me for the night. He informs he is free of sexual ‘hangups’ (religious constraints) and believes that when pheromones swirl, by all means, let them collide - enjoy! I respond I’m not casual, I’m long-term, I’m monogamous. He smiles, nods in response and asks for another date. Date? To what end? It will not be pheromones but our dissimilar minds that will collide.
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AuthorAs a young adult, I believed there to be a point of arrival; a place where internal struggles with fear or anger or confusion give way to assurance and appropriate displays of passion and clarity of thought and direction. Where striving with relationships transform into understanding and acceptance and the propensity to self-protect shifts to trust and confident vulnerability. However, to my dismay, I was startled to learn, through a friend in her 80s, my perception was most definitely a misconception. Archives
November 2024
Categories - Personal Growth |