
Should You Call Him?
By Ian Kerner
There comes a time in every seasoned dater’s life
when she finds herself in the annoying and frustrating position
of waiting for him to call. She’s faced with the ultimate
dilemma, “Should I call him?” What’s a girl
to do in such a situation? Curious ourselves, Savvy Miss turned
to sex & relationship expert and New York Times bestselling
author Ian Kerner, Ph.D., for his expert opinion.
Dear Ian:
I went out on a few dates with this guy that I thought I wasn’t
really into, and now he’s not calling and I can’t
stop thinking about him. Should I call?
As the Rolling Stones sang: You can’t
always get what you want. And as anyone who has been run ragged
on the dismal dating treadmill knows, it’s far, far
worse when you can’t even get what you didn’t
want in the first place!
Sure you were never that into him,
but that doesn’t mean you didn’t need him to be
into you. After all, who doesn’t want to be wanted?
But now that “loser” has
pulled the old fisherman “catch and release,”
and you’re, well, floundering. And as you wait for the
phone to ring, you can’t help but wonder what you did
wrong: Was it the piece of salad stuck between your teeth
during dinner? Did those jeans make you look fat? Was it the
fact that during sex you called out “Enrique”
when his name is Henry?
Maybe while you were busy getting
your ego stroked, he was stroking all that and more and got
what he wanted out of the bargain. Or maybe he got the message
that you weren’t really that into him. We guys may look
oblivious, but even the worst of us can read the dating-signals
and employ a bit of ESP—Ego Superiority Perception.
You’ll never know for sure unless you call, but your
friends will have your head: After all, why the hell should
you call that loser?
But is he really such a loser? As
a friend of mine recently remarked, “Dating should be
like buying art. Stay open-minded while you shop and wait
to be struck by the uniqueness of a piece that you want to
frame. But the problem is that so many of us go about it in
reverse. We walk around with a frame, trying to find a piece
that will fit.”
So maybe you found a masterpiece, but didn’t trust your
gut because he was a bit on the surreal side and your taste
tends towards the romantic. Or maybe you listened to the opinions
of your friends. At one time most art-snobs thought that Van
Gogh’s work was worthless—are your friends just
dating-snobs?
You’ll only know if you pick
up that phone and call him, even though most advice books
will tell you not to.
I say go for it. But before you do,
consider what the writer George Sand wrote, “Vanity
is the quicksand of reason.” Are you about to step into
a whole mess of the stuff? Just as Socrates said that an unexamined
life is not worth living, so too is an unexamined relationship
not worth rekindling.
So think about your motives and then
make the decision. Maybe he is an overlooked piece of priceless
art or maybe in the end it just doesn’t matter who dumped
who: A cheap forgery of love is still a phony no matter how
you slice it.
Yes, you can’t always get what
you want—or even what you don’t want for that
matter—but like the Stones said, if you try some time,
you might just find you’ll get what you need.
|