Tag Archives: relationship

“Hi Beautiful”

How do we respond? And why does it make my skin crawl?

One day, new to Instagram, I received a private message from a man I didn’t know. It was an innocuous “hello.”

I did the responsible thing and checked out his profile: from the photos he’d posted, he appeared to be an actual human being, and not a spam robot. There were photos of him and his daughter. So I was the polite small-towner, the professional writer with a public social media profile, and said “hello” back.

He responded immediately; I could see those little dots as he typed.

His response and, more importantly, my reaction, left me baffled.

INSTAGRAM GUY: hi beautiful.

MY RESPONSE: [Nothing. I immediately blocked him.]

Let’s watch that again, in slow motion

INSTAGRAM GUY: hi beautiful.

Reaction part 1: Panic. “Duck before he sees me!”

Reaction part 2: Anger, at him and myself. “That sneaker. I let him in, and he’s being creepy.”

Reaction part 3: Disappointment. “I almost made a new friend, but nope.”

I didn’t think rationally about how to respond to him. I just clicked that “block” button and walked away.

Second-guessing myself

Almost immediately, I started second-guessing my choice to block this stranger.

First: maybe I overreacted. Maybe he wasn’t creepy. Maybe he was nice and deserved a polite response. This guy thought “hi beautiful” was a valid thing to say, and maybe it is. Maybe he thought he was complimenting me. Maybe we were in Mars vs. Venus territory here, and men think that’s a great way to break the ice with a woman they don’t know.

Second: was blocking him a responsible decision, given that it was my professional writer profile, and not just a personal profile? Was this how Michelle Obama would respond?

Maybe I should have thanked him politely for his kind words and redirected the conversation. I could get him to sign up for my newsletter, or be a patron. He might become one of my biggest fans.

In two or twenty years, when I’m a famous writer, I will have to deal with more socially awkward men like this. Will I block them all? How will I handle them in real life, at book signings and when they groupie me after I win the Man Booker Prize?

Fact: social media scams come in many forms

I did some Google research and learned that direct messages from strangers, even strangers with photos of their supposed children and/or dogs on their profiles, even strangers all dressed up as corporate executives or brain surgeons, are often red flags for scams. In retrospect, I’m 99% sure that first message was a scammer trawling for a bite.

Despite knowing I did the right thing by blocking him, that message (“hi beautiful”) and my reflex response puzzled me.

Why did this seemingly innocent, technically complimentary phrase trigger my negative reaction?

What’s wrong with “hi beautiful”?

Yes, it’s nice to be complimented. And sometimes I do strive to look “beautiful.” Why else wear mascara?

But on the list of qualities I want to be celebrated for, physical appearance is low.

Why not start a conversation with “hi outdoor adventurer,” or “hi future best-selling writer,” or anything that shows he’s read my writing, heard my story, and values what I value about myself? Why not “hi Heather”?

All “hi beautiful” shows is that the message sender has seen a photo of me: one I chose to post publicly because it was a good angle on a good day. Or not: maybe he says that to all the random women he cold calls on social media, not realizing he’s making our skin crawl.

When a man starts with “hi beautiful,” it’s a red flag that he’s focused on himself. He only sees our physical appearance, because he’s only thinking about his attraction to us.

He is not thinking about the three-dimensional person he’s addressing: the woman who has ideas, feelings, life goals, a story, strengths and weaknesses.

While I think physical attraction is essential for a romantic relationship, I would never want a relationship where he thought my physical appearance was the most important part of me.

What about those long minutes it takes my 40-year-old face to lose the pillow marks in the morning? What about my snotty nose when I’m outside in the winter? I don’t want to try to be attractive for someone all the time.

I love my smile lines and am proud of my wrinkles (aka battle scars).

Online vs. real life

The glorious thing about being objectified in this way through an Instagram message rather than in real life is that we can click that “block” button.

In real life, we don’t get to “block” and move on.

When someone physically objectifies us in real life, how do we respond?

There’s that pressure to be polite, to be nice, to smile and say “thank you for the compliment” or some other ridiculous phrase that puts us in the weird position of being grateful to someone for assessing our physical appearance and approving. As if we’re meat and they’re the health inspector.

Is this reaction to “hi beautiful” an over-reaction?

So far, the women friends I’ve spoken with have validated my response: yes, block that guy. One said “hi beautiful” is “grabby”. It’s invasive and aggressive.

One said this stranger (if he wasn’t a scammer) was in the wrong because he “didn’t follow the rules of engagement.” Maybe “hi beautiful” would be appropriate on Tinder or in a dating context, but not on Instagram to a person who doesn’t post sexually inviting photographs.

I wonder what a man would say about “hi beautiful” as a conversation starter, and about my reaction. Is this a Mars vs. Venus thing? Is it a generational thing, or an urban vs. rural thing?

Does it even matter what the guys think, if the women say it’s bad?

In the years I’ve now been on Instagram, I’ve received many more “hi beautiful” direct messages. Presumably this kind of trawling works, if the scammers continue to use this particular bait.

Therefore, some women must continue those online conversations. That means either some women like the “hi beautiful” approach, or their polite response to the line allows the scam to play out.

Do some women like “hi beautiful” as a first line?

What do you think?

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Not Part of the Plan

When I was planning our alternate life, and then in the long months after Brock died, at no time did I expect to be attracted to someone else ever again.

In fact, I looked forward to being a happy nun for the rest of my life, spending my evenings building Lego sets and watching mysteries on BritBox. I would write, and bake cookies for Isaac’s bake sales at school. We would have epic adventures, hike the Bugaboos and be a Power Team o’ Two. I never even considered the idea of dating someone new.

Mmmmmm Lego.

And so, this summer, when I ran into a guy I’d known growing up and was unexpectedly attracted to him, I didn’t know what to do with myself.

I felt guilty and ashamed that I was attracted to someone other than my husband. I ate Tums to calm my stomach and couldn’t make eye contact with our pictures of Brock.

I wondered what people (you) would think, if I started dating someone within a year of Brock’s death, or ever.

And I worried about how Isaac would feel if he saw me canoodling with a man other than his daddy.

I told myself it was too soon, because I hadn’t had enough time to work through my grief over Brock’s death.

In order to avoid the drama of dating again, and dating as a widow, I hoped I was misreading his interest in me. I hoped I’d find some fatal flaw in him that would make him less appealing.

I really, really wanted to talk about all this with someone, but I assumed my friends and family would be as scandalized as I was by the idea of my dating.

But Then

I realized I will never, ever “be over” Brock’s death, no matter how much time I give myself. Our life together and his death will always be part of me. My challenge as a survivor is to expand my new life beyond that life, to make room for new experiences and new people.

(As per this excellent video …)

I asked myself what a normal single woman would do if she were attracted to an available man, and I decided she would go for it. So, after weeks of angst, I relaxed and let myself enjoy the butterflies.

The Response from the Crowd

The first time I told a friend I was dating someone, she responded with: “It’s about time.”

When I pointed out that Brock had died less than a year ago, she said: “You’ve been grieving for three years.” Fair point.

In fact, all the close friends I (eventually, nervously) confided in were happy for me. They were glad I’d opened my heart again and found someone I liked that much.

Happily Ever After … Again?

This new relationship fizzled and flopped within weeks, but I learned a lot about myself from the experience.

For example: at some point, I realized I’m not only a “widow,” but also a “single mom.” Those two labels have such different connotations:

WIDOW
  • A “widow” is a woman whose spouse has died. (How interesting that we don’t call people like me “widowed moms.”)
  • Widowhood is all about loss: you had a husband, and now you don’t. It implies all that grief and messiness and emptiness that I feel: it’s a wonderfully handy word. You don’t even need to hear the details of how I became a widow, you just need to know I am a widow and you can safely assume there’s baggage there.
  • A widow never stops being a widow. Even if a widow dates, or finds a new partner, or gets married, that loss still happened and is still there: the new person is her “second husband,” her “second marriage.” (Interesting factoid: when someone dies in Canada, their spouse can qualify for a “survivor’s pension” if they’re old enough and/or if they have a child. I receive a small “survivor’s pension” every month from the government, and I will receive it until I die. Even if I remarry someday, the Canadian government will always consider me a widow.)
SINGLE MOM
  • A “single mom” is defined by her lack of a partner. It’s actually a paradox, since “mom” means you have a child, and it takes two people to make a child, and yet — you’re single.
  • To lack a partner implies you need one, and/or are actively seeking one.
  • You are no longer a single mom once you have a partner. You’re not even a “partnered mom” or a “married mom,” because our language makes the “married” part redundant. Now you’re simply a mom. (And no longer paradoxical. Good for you! Sigh.)

In many ways I resent this new layer of self-identity.

For one thing, I really liked the peace of believing I would be alone for the rest of my life. Before we moved from Duncan last fall I visited a senior friend in her home. She’s been a widow since early motherhood, and in her house I saw just how great a widow’s life can be: the rooms of her home were full of her hobbies. Looms crowded the garage, while baskets of wool and knitting needles waited in the corners of every room. She occupied that house fully, without having to make concessions for a husband who might protest using the dining room table as a permanent craft space.

I wanted a house like hers.

However, now that I’ve remembered how exciting relationships can be, now that I’ve had that fresh thrill of gradually getting to know someone, now that I’ve shared a bottle of wine and watched a sunset from my deck with an interesting man … now I realize I’m only 38 years old and, yes, there might be a second Big Love in my future.

Everything is Different Now

Dating as a 38-year-old widow could be wonderful. In many ways my standards have been raised, thanks to Brock: I know what a healthy relationship looks like and I know how to be a good partner to a worthy man. I’m perfectly happy on my own, so there’s no imperative to actively look for a relationship, or settle for less than I want or deserve.

At the same time, what I’d want in a relationship now is different from when I met Brock. In my twenties, I was looking for someone to marry and have a family with. Brock was my chosen life partner.

But now I have a kid, we have our ideal house, and I don’t care if I ever get married again, or even live with someone again. I know there’s no such thing as “happily ever after,” despite the best of intentions, and that’s okay. At 38, all I want is to write, to have adventures, to raise my kid to be a good person, and to spend time with my family and friends. I don’t need a partner of any sort.

This changes what I’d like in a relationship. He would have to be someone kind and fun to play with, who has his shit together to a point that we can have a healthy, symbiotic relationship, and who could be one of Isaac’s (many) positive male role models as my son grows older. (Bonus points if this guy stepped up as a dad-figure.)

I’d like someone to travel with. Someone to help me push my limits:

HEATHER: “Let’s go skydiving today.”

ADVENTURE PARTNER: “Yes. And to Greece tomorrow.”

BROCK: “Let’s road trip across Canada for two months.”

For Now

How lucky I am, to have met Brock and had 11.5 years loving him. And I still have him with me, or at least the echoes of what he’d say throughout the day. Last week, he reminded me to add peat moss to the garlic beds. He congratulated me when I submitted to a mystery novel competition. We talk all the time: me random and buzzing, Brock thoughtful and insightful. I hope I never lose this habit of anticipating his responses. I love growing older with Brock still in my brain.

And I’ve learned it’s possible to have Brock with me on the inside, but still have my heart open to someone new. I’ve learned it’s okay if the future ends up different from the independent widow-heaven I had planned. Either way, I’ll be happy.

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