I Can’t Say No To My Ex-Husband

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As I sat at the cluttered dressing table putting the final touches on my makeup for my date with Erroll, I prayed that Harry wouldn’t call—not tonight. I didn’t know what I would say if he did; I was running out of excuses. I yelled for Emily, my middle daughter, to set up the ironing board and plug in the iron. Late as usual, I grabbed a skirt and blouse out of the laundry basket and was headed down the stairs when the phone rang.

“Hi, babe,” Harry, my ex-husband, said in his sexiest voice. “What’s going on?”

My brain was racing “I’m just getting ready to leave, Harry. I’m going to the movies with Colette.” Lying was becoming too easy for me these days.

“Oh, really?” He didn’t mean it as a question, I knew. “Got a hot date, huh, D.J.?”

“Come on, don’t do this.” My voice sounded whiney to my own ears. “You know I don’t have a hot date. I just wanted to get out and I haven’t seen her for a while.”

“Don’t worry. I understand perfectly.” Then the line went dead.

I gritted my teeth. I’m not going to let him get to me tonight, I thought, and went downstairs to iron my clothes in the kitchen.

As the iron glided over the fabric, I thought of the tightrope I’d been walking on with my ex-husband since that day in court over a year ago. Why am I still torturing myself? I thought I hadn’t done anything wrong by divorcing Harry. The marriage had become unbearable. Neither one of us was happy and it would have ended sooner or later. Then why. do I feel so guilty? I thought for the thousandth time.

Harry and I had been married eleven years. He was right out of the Navy and I was one year out of high school with a typing job. It was hard for me to say no to him then, too, so we started sleeping together on our third date. The marriage had started out badly because I was pregnant. Harry used that against me for years, trying to make me feel like he’d done me a favor by marrying me.

He beat me down in other ways, too.

Oh, he never hit me; no, it was always more subtle than that. He belittled me constantly, whether alone or in front of other people. Nothing I did was good enough; I couldn’t cook, clean house, or take care of our three daughters to suit him. It didn’t help that I had a “Super Mom” for a mother-in-law. I couldn’t have lived up to her example for anything. That woman could work a full-time job, bake eclairs, turn out gourmet dinner, change the oil in her car, and landscape her backyard, all in one day!

The only thing Harry didn’t complain about was our sex life. That had always been good. That was what got me hooked up with him in the first place! I never understood how two people who fought so much during the day, could get along so well in bed. When he touched me, I forgot all the bad feelings—for a while–but they always came hack in the morning.

When we’d been married for about nine years and the girls were in school all day, I decided to go back to school, too. He had a fit about that.

“Who do you think you are, some fancy women’s libber?” he had screamed at me. “You’re just looking for an excuse to avoid doing your housework. I’d stuck to my guns, though, and managed to squeeze in a couple of classes a week. He finally gave up yelling about school and complained more loudly about my lack of housekeeping abilities. Now he had real ammunition; I was “never home.” The truth was, I was not a very good housekeeper, I tried, really I did, but clutter just never bothered me like it did Harry. I could never find anything; he always knew just where to look for an item. He would go in the kitchen on Sunday morning and cook a huge breakfast, and clean up everything as he went along. I couldn’t make a tuna sandwich without leaving the kitchen looking like a disaster area.

He was just as rough on our daughters as he was on me: They were “sissies” and didn’t like fishing or helping him work in the garage. Of course, it was also my fault that we’d had all girls. He didn’t know much about, biology either, or he would have had to take responsibility for that himself!

I finally decided that Harry just didn’t like women, small or grown. His overbearing attitude and sullenness finally wore me down, and I asked him for a trial separation. He was angry, but he finally found an apartment nearby and moved out of the house. I knew I wanted out of the marriage, but it was easier if Harry thought it was a temporary split.

Easier became my guideline. It had been easier to stay with Harry than leave him. It was easier to slide out of the marriage with a separation. And it became easier to lie to him after I met Erroll, then to tell him the truth and end the charade.

The doorbell brought me back to the ironing board, My oldest, Katie, let Erroll in and he peeked his head around the corner into the kitchen.

“Late, as usual,” he said pleasantly. Erroll never got ruffled at my tardiness.

“At least I’m ironing something to wear for you. I could have worn it wrinkled,” I said playfully as I kissed him. “Honest, I’m just about there. I’ll throw this on and we’re off.”

“You can throw something on and look better than most women do after hours of preparation,” he said in my ear.

I felt myself blushing at his compliment. I wasn’t used to having nice things said about my appearance. I knew I was okay looking, but Harry had never gone out of his way to make me feel attractive—except in bed.

Later, as I sat across from Erroll in the small Italian restaurant we had come to call our place, I looked at him over the rim of my wine glass. He was just the opposite of Harry. It was like comparing water to fire; both had good and bad points, but somehow I found it was more peasant  to float with Erroll’s personality than be burned by Harry’s.

“You’re quiet tonight, D.J. Is anything wrong?” Erroll asked after a while. He reached across the table and took my hand.

“Everything’s great, I answered. “I was just thinking how, lucky I are to have met you. If I hadn’t signed up for that art class, I wouldn’t be here with you now.”

Erroll was one of the new teachers at the junior college where I was taking classes. Our first date had been a picnic at a park doing sketches of trees. He tried to tell me I could do anything I set my mind to, and do it well. He had told me I was talented and only needed a little guidance, but I found it difficult to believe I was talented at anything. He kept reassuring me and he hadn’t given up on me—yet.

“I’m the lucky one. I found my love and a student who makes me look like a good teacher, all rolled up into one.” He gazed solemnly at me. “Your eyes glow gold in the candlelight, D.J. I think I’ve struck it rich!”

With a man this good to care for me, how could I be so stupid as to keep Harry hanging around in my life? I was totally confused by my own behavior. I knew this relationship was getting serious, and I’d better make up my mind to do something about Harry, or I would lose Erroll. He didn’t know I was still seeing my ex-husband.

Seeing! That wasn’t quite how my relationship with Harry should be described. I was sleeping with him!

As I sipped my coffee after dinner, I remembered that first day in court. The room was huge and attorneys with briefcases milled about, waiting for their turn to take care of business. Business was what it was, too. The questions, were all about finances, support, assets, property, and back accounts. No one brought up feelings. Divorce is so matter-of-fact these days, I thought as I waited for my attorney to call me to the stand. I was sick to my stomach, and as I looked across the room at Harry, I could see he felt pretty much the same way.

Out in the hall after it was over, my attorney congratulated me on a “job well done,” and left me standing there. Harry walked slowly toward me. I expected the worst. “Want to have a cup of coffee?” he asked.

“Are you serious?” I asked back. “I figured you’d never speak to me again.”

“D.J., I don’t want this, this separation as you call it. But hating you isn’t going to bring you back to me,”

Tears stung my eyes. I didn’t know if I could handle this. Harry had never been this reasonable, or looked this beaten in our entire marriage. He actually sounded gentle and caring.

Later in the coffee shop, we talked about the day.

“I don’t think I’ve ever experienced anything that cold and unfeeling in my life;” I said. “Well, maybe some of our arguments:..”

“Come on, babe, let’s forget the fights. I’ve been thinking about us a lot since I moved out. I guess I mightn’t been kind of rough on you, Maybe some of the problems were my fault.”

Kind of rough! For Harry, that was almost an apology! He must really be feeling down, I thought. Or is it just another game?

“How about dinner? Maybe we could talk about things.” Harry was being positively sweet. “You’ve never seen my apartment. I could whip up one of my delicious bachelor specials. I’ve become a pretty good cook the last several months.”

“I don’t know…” I began.

“Look, D.J., I just want to be alone with you so we can talk. When I come to the house, the girls are there and it makes it hard. Just come for dinner. Please?”

How could I say no to an invitation like that? He seemed so sincere, I couldn’t find it in my heart to turn him down. “I’ll be over around seven, okay?”

I drove my own car so I could leave when I wanted to. As I stood at his door, I had such butterflies in my stomach I almost ran away. I thought he must have heard my heart pounding, but I guess I actually knocked on his door.

“Hi. Welcome to bachelor heaven,” he said as he let me in and took my coat. He was really rubbing in the bachelor thing. The room was lit by candles, and a bottle of wine was chilling in an ice bucket. I didn’t even own an ice bucket! Something was cooking–it smelled good–and there were chips and dip on the coffee table. At least I can outdo him on the hors-d’oeuvres! I found myself thinking.

Harry poured me a glass of wine and pulled me down on the couch next to him. “I’ve missed you,” he said quietly. We sat sipping our wine and made small talk about the girls’ school activities and the day’s events, then he refilled my glass. I was starting to feel more relaxed. After all, this was just my husband, the same old Harry, I told myself. What was there to be ner­vous about? Then he reached over and took the glass from my hand, and his hand brushed mine. I felt like he’d set a match to me. He set my glass on the table and kissed me very slowly. Within minutes we were tearing at each other’s clothes and I was in his arms on the floor. Nothing had changed.

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“I sure can’t keep your attention tonight, can I?” Erroll was waving his hand in front of my face.

I came back to the present with a start. “I’m so sorry. I guess my mind just wandered. Please forgive me.” How could I be here with the man I loved and be thinking about sex with my ex-husband? I was filled with guilt at my thoughts.

“D.J., I want to ask you a question. You know I love you, don’t you?” Erroll looked serious. “I want to marry you and take care of you and the girls. I want to be with you forever. Will you marry me? Soon?”

I knew I wanted to be with Erroll. But how could I say yes to him with Harry hovering over me like a cloud? I thought. That night in his apartment had been only the first of many like it I would swear I wouldn’t see him anymore. Then he’d call, and I’d weaken. It was as if he had a spell over me. Once, after a date with Erroll, Harry had called and I’d gone over to his apartment and gone to bed with him. Of course, I’d hated myself later, but I also rationalized that at least I hadn’t slept with them both on the same night! No, I couldn’t promise to marry Erroll while I was living this double life.

“Erroll, I love you, too, and I do want to marry you. I just have to. . .talk to the girls about it. Give me a little time, please, darling?” I held onto his hands tightly over the table. I hoped he’d give me enough time to break it to my daughters. . .and to break it off with their father?

In the car, Erroll kissed me tenderly.  I won’t rush you, D.J, I know your marriage was a bad experience. Give me your answer when you can. I want you to be sure. Just remember, I love you.”        ,

I kissed him back. With all my heart I knew he was the right man for me. This sick tie to Harry had to be broken, or I would never have any peace in my life.

Harry had been treating our separation like a temporary situation, and that was my fault. If I had been honest with him from the beginning, the tie would have been broken and I would be free to get on with my life. I had to find the strength to do what I should have done when we first separated—end the relationship completely.

When we got home that night, Erroll walked me to the door and kissed me gently. He told me again that he loved me.

As I was hugging him, I looked over his shoulder and saw a car drive by the house very slowly. It was Harry! A ripple of cold fear went down my spine; Harry had caught me in my lie. At the same time, a feeling of relief hit me because I knew the game playing was over. It would be unpleasant, but then again it would be easier this way. . again. I wouldn’t have to struggle to find the courage to tell Harry the truth; he’d found out on his own.

I got ready for bed with a feeling of dread. At the very least, I expected a nasty phone call. It didn’t come. Finally I drifted off into a restless sleep.

I don’t know what awoke me. I thought I heard something, but when I strained to listen, there wasn’t a sound. I opened my eyes, trying to see in the dark. Gradually a form took shape at the foot of the bed. My breathing became ragged and I felt suddenly ill as I tried to remember if there was anything nearby I could use to defend myself.

“You’re mine, D.J.,” a voice said. It was Harry! I reached for the lamp.

“Don’t!” he said. “I want to be here in the dark with you.” He walked around the bed and sat down on the edge, leaning down over me.

“What are you doing here?” I asked. “How did you get in? You gave me your house key:” My thoughts were going in circles. Of course he hadn’t given me his house key. He’d expected to be coming back here to live. “What do you want?” I was too frightened to move.

“I told you, DJ. You’re mine. That guy I saw you with tonight can’t have you. He can’t make you feel like I do. . .You know it and I know it.” He pulled the blankets down to the foot of the bed, then very slow­ly peeled my nightgown up over my body and threw it on the floor. He kissed me then, very gently, beginning at my ear and then more roughly as he worked his way down. The familiar ripples of desire washed over me and all my good intentions went up in smoke with the fire Harry set in me that night.

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When I woke up the next morning he was gone. I thought it might have been a dream, but then I saw the nightgown on the floor, and felt the familiar pang of remorse. I felt like an adulteress, caught up in some web of lust, cheating on the man I loved. All I wanted to do was marry Erroll and forget Harry forever. Why can’t I find the strength to do it? I prayed.

When I got home from work the next evening, Katie told me Erroll had called, and said he’d call back. I asked her to tell him I had to work late. I needed time to think, time to work through some of this guilt and confusion before I talked with him. I had sunk so low. I was even having my daughter lie for me.

I avoided Erroll’s calls for several days.

Then one evening he was waiting for me in his car in front of the office where I worked. I could hardly avoid him.

“Well, hello, stranger.” he called. “Fancy running into you here.”

I smiled nervously. I hoped he wasn’t here to pressure me about an answer to his proposal. “Hi. I’m sorry I haven’t been able to see you for a while. We’ve really been busy at the office, and I’ve been beat.”

“I guess so. You weren’t in class the other night, and it’s not like you to miss a class. Want to grab a bite to eat?” he asked.

I couldn’t think of an excuse, I agreed. “Let me call my neighbor to check in on the girls, okay?”

At the restaurant, Erroll looked into my eyes. “What’s going on, D.J.? I know you’ve been avoiding me. Did I freak you out by asking you to marry me? If I’ve scared you off—”

“No, no, that’s not it,” I interrupted. –

“I love you! It’s just so soon after Harry, and I wasn’t quite prepared. I want to marry you, Erroll, I really do. I’m just confusted about some things. It’s hard to talk about it.” My hands were shaking. “Can’t you give me a little more tilme to work things out in my head?”

“Sure,” he said quietly.

We finished our meal in silence and then Erroll took me home. At the door he held me at arm’s length. “D.J., if you’re not ready, I’ll understand. I just thought marriage was the natural thing to do when two people love each other. We can keep things the way they are, if you like.”

I’d better do something, I thought or I’m going  to lose the best thins that’s happened to me in a long time. loud said, “I know in my heart this marriage is right for us. I won’t make you wait much longer, I promise.” I kissed Erroll good night and went into the house.

The next evening Harry called. Some friends of his whom I hadn’t met were having a small party, and he wanted his “lady”, there with him. I decided his was my chance to break it off. Since we wouldn’t be alone, there was no chance of my hor­mones taking over when my head could he in control! I told Harry I’d meet him at the party, and got the address. He didn’t argue, since he knew that was the only way I would go out with him at all.

It was a mixed group of people he worked with, a couple of fishing buddies and their wives, and a bartender he’d become friendly with. The men all con­gregated in the living room to talk about sports, while the women typically stayed in the kitchen and gossiped about their kids and men. When the hostess served the food, the groups melted together, and each woman planted herself next to he man to make sure his plate and glass were full. Harry patted the arm of his chair, motioning for me to sit there. It all was starting to feel very-familiar—and very uncomfortable. The bartender finally asked Harry where he’d found “that pretty little thing. ”

Harry put the arm that wasn’t holding his plate around me and smiled a broad smile. “This pretty little thing is my ex-wife.” Then he paused. “And if she plays her cards right, I’m going to marry her again.”

Everyone in the room whooped and cheered at Harry’s announcement. He put  his plate down and gave me a big kiss in front of the whole crowd, and whispered in my ear, “We’ll celebrate later, babe over at my place.”

I felt the blood drain from my face. Marry Harry again? I’d rather eat nails! A that moment reality set in with a vengeance. I’d been playing with Harry and Erroll’s lives, as well as my own. I had let Harry make love to me because I was afraid to let go, and I guess he made me feel desireable after all those years of self-doubt.

I took Harry into the hall, and told him I had to leave. The shocked look on his face turned to anger when I explained how I felt and told him I was in love with someone else.

“I’m going to marry him, Harry, and I don’t want you to call me anymore. I’m sorry if I’ve led you on, but it won’t happen again. My attorney will contact you about arrangements for seeing the girls. I don’t want to have to see you anymore. Oh, I’m also changing the locks!” I meant every word!

I drove from the party straight to Erroll’s apartment. When he answered the door, I threw my arms around him and kissed him hard. When he recovered from his surprise, he kissed me back, then pulled me inside looking t me with a question in his eye I couldn’t wait to answer.

“If it’s not too late, I’d like to formally accept, with honor, your proposal of marriage. And I want you to know that I am sure, very sure, that I want to be your wife!”

Erroll held me to him tightly, and I knew it wasn’t too late. In fact, I was just in time to get a new start on a wonderful life, with a wonderful man.

LOVE May Be The Next Big Netflix Show

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Episode to episode, there’s plenty to like about Love, Netflix’s new Judd Apatow–produced, Gillian Jacobs–led quasi-rom-com. The romantic comedy (premiering today on the streaming service, and not to be confused with the 3-D Gaspar Noe movie of the same name) is a savagely honest, frequently hilarious story about two thirty something screw-ups who use each other to fix themselves. If anything, the title often feels like a joke at the expense of its characters, whose deranged courtship reveals the maddening isolation of modern life in Los Angeles.

Mickey, played by the truly luminous Gillian Jacobs, is an alcoholic and all that entails amid the Echo Park singles scene (i.e. she makes a fool of herself at parties and has sex with many men, some of whom she treats badly). During a wholly expositional and overly wrought first episode we meet Mickey, whose job as producer of a radio self-help program works in eye-rolling contrast to her self-destructive personal life, and Gus (star/co-creator Adam Rust), an on-set tutor, passive narcissist and self-defined “nice guy” who can’t understand why his girlfriend has cheated on him.

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The rest of the episodes documents their courtship as a series of missteps, miscues and occasional moments of tremendous illumination (the Magic Castle episode is terrific on every level). With many Echo Park locations used as both exterior and interior, Los Angeles hasn’t looked this real since “Transparent” went to the Warehouse in Marina del Rey for drinks.

Unfolding like a five-hour Judd Apatow movie, the series has the time and patience to let us watch Gus and Mickey take two steps forward and one step back as they repeatedly crash into each other. “I think it feels like it moves more at the pace of real life,” Jacobs argues. “The show has enough time to have periods of confusion, misconnections, awkwardness — it just seems like dating is getting more complicated, and relationships don’t actually develop in a clean 90-minute arc in real life.”

Watch the Trailer Here:

Cupid’s Arrow—Does It Really Strike?

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With My Crazy Mom Gone—I Hope I Finally Have A Chance At Love!

Nearly half the class groaned as Professor Acosta repeated the assignment for the second time.

“I want you all to prove to me in a written report that this experience we call ‘true love’ really does exist.” He paused, letting his words sink in. “Make the case that it isn’t merely ‘ritualistic mating’ that we humans do on a subconscious level in order to continue the species.”

Great, I thought sarcastically. Another reminder that it’s almost Valentine’s Day, I’m single, and I have absolutely no grasp on the concept of love—just what I need.

Before anyone could question him on the complexity of his words, he held up his beefy, right hand and went on. “Now, it doesn’t have to be in depth or long—just enough to convince an old cynic like myself that we are indeed one step above other primates on the ladder of evolution.”

“I thought this was supposed to be a class on creative writing—not some course on biology or religion,” someone behind me muttered.

“Did you have something to share with the class, Mr. Herring?” Professor Acosta leaned forward as he brought his hand up to cup his ear. “I didn’t quite catch your words.”

I turned around just in time to see Daniel Herring flush with embarrassment. “Uh, no, Sir. I was just making sure I understood you clearly.”

“Good. Then remember, this will be due on February fourteenth.” Though Professor Acosta’s eyes narrowed, the corners of his lips quirked upward in a very tiny grin as he continued with his speech. “In keeping within the theme of this important holiday for lovers, I’m affectionately calling this assignment ‘Cupid’s Arrow—Does It Really Strike?’” Professor Acosta shook his head and chuckled at his own cleverness.

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I sat and watched as he wrote the name and the due date on the blackboard in large, pink letters. Then he grabbed a piece of red chalk and drew a huge heart around it, completing his handiwork. He smiled broadly, raising a bushy eyebrow in amusement. “Have a nice weekend, everyone.”

As we exited the room, rumblings and complaints were still being issued. Though I wasn’t one of the vocal protesters, I hated the assignment just as much as everyone else did, and with very good reasons.

“Hey, Dharma, wait up!” my friend, Maisy, shouted. Despite her heavy backpack, her skinny arms flapped frantically until she was sure I saw her through the crowd. “What’s your hurry? I had to race to catch up to you.”

I stopped and leaned against a tree and exhaled heavily. “I never thought I’d make it out of that class with my sanity intact!”

“Your psychology class got you down again?” Maisy asked, lowering her sunglasses so that she could peer at me more closely.

“Are you kidding? I love psychology! It’s my nutty creative writing professor that has me so bent out of shape.”

Maisy craned her neck around while twisting at the waist to get a close-up view of my backside. “Hmm, you look perfectly in shape to me, Dharma. What’s the problem?”

I shrugged out of my backpack and nearly collapsed on a small, wooden bench. For the next several minutes, I explained how Professor Acosta just handed me the writing assignment from hell . . . or purgatory, at the very least.

“Wow, that is heavy!” Maisy’s eyes briefly left mine as she watched a cute guy walk by. She sighed with lustful longing and then turned her attention back to me. “Can’t you just make something up?”

I scowled, wishing it were that easy. “This isn’t a work of fiction. It’s supposed to be factual, and most of all—convincing.”

Maisy smiled in the manner that only the children of the wealthy and the pampered can smile. I didn’t resent her for it; I simply wished some of her lucky dust would fall on me. “Well, Dharma, with the wild life you’ve led, I’m sure you’ll be able to come up with something.”

My brows drew downward to match my frown. “I may have had a lot of different experiences in my life, but I’m not so sure there is anything in my past that can come even close to proving the existence of true love.”

Maisy’s comment about my life started my thoughts churning. She was right about one thing—my past is anything but boring.

I was born while my mom was living in a commune in northern California. Willow—which is what Mom preferred to be called—was a wild and carefree teenager who embraced the hippie lifestyle even when it wasn’t popular to do so. Her mom, my Grandma Cecelia, finally threw her hands in the air and quit trying to control her wayward daughter’s life. At sixteen, Mom was declared an emancipated minor and was free to do as she pleased.

She met her sperm donor—which is the only way I heard my father being referred to—at a rock concert and conceived me that very night.

Though Mom planned a simple home birth with a few other ladies attending, a complication necessitated a trip to the hospital. A few hours later, I came screaming into the world by emergency C-section, amidst all the gadgets and sterile equipment that Mom so desperately tried to avoid.

“You were one lucky baby,” Robbie, a boyfriend of Mom’s, told me years later. “You were originally destined to be sacrificed to Satan, but then Willow had to go and have you in the hospital.” He grimaced with disgust. “Once they registered your birth, our plans for you fell through, and you were allowed to live.” Though he later recanted the story and claimed he just wanted to scare me, I towed the line for months. I was afraid that if I didn’t, I would disappear to the place where Robbie said all naughty, little girls go. So, you see, life wasn’t all peace and love in the commune. However, it was where I spent my most formative years.

The summer of my sixth birthday was a time of change for me. Mom decided that communal living was no longer for her, and she moved us in with a guy named Reed. This man both fascinated me and scared the stuffing out of me. He had these huge tattoos all over his body, and when he spoke, he got right in your face. The words would exit his lips in a low, menacing hiss, forcing me to unconsciously back away from him. He wore a blue bandanna wrapped tightly around his greasy hair, and a large, gold ring hung from his left ear.

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I seriously thought he was a pirate, though Mom said he was a motorcycle mechanic. I had my doubts.

During the day, Reed and Mom would sleep while I played or watched TV. At night they would disappear, leaving me to tend to myself. I didn’t know where they went or what they did, but I presumed it was normal for all small children to stay home alone.

“Now, whatever happens, Dharma, don’t open the door or answer the phone,” Mom would warn just before she climbed up on Reed’s Harley. Then, with a noisy roar, they would tear down the street, the sound of his motorcycle echoing for blocks.

One night, Mom’s instructions and my loyalty were tested when I heard loud banging on the front door. Instead of answering it, I ran to the bathroom and hid in the tub. I thought that was very smart thinking for someone who didn’t even attend school yet. I just knew Mom would be proud of me when she came home.

“Open up!” someone shouted, causing me to jump and hit my elbow on the faucet.

I pulled the shower curtain closed and crouched down. I squeezed my eyes tightly shut, concentrating on making myself invisible. I had this silly notion that if I couldn’t see someone, they couldn’t see me, either. It was actually a type of game that I played when I was bored.

“This is the police!” I heard the final warning, followed by the sound of splintering wood. Heavy footsteps filled the small apartment, and soon after, the shower curtain was whipped back. Cowering against the cold tile, my eyes opened a crack, and I stared into the face of what I thought was an unbelievably huge man holding a gigantic handgun.

“Call Social Services,” he announced, sounding disappointed with his discovery. “We’ve caught ourselves a kid.”

My notion was proved incorrect, and the policeman saw me, after all. After that, I never played the invisible game again.

A very good thing came from the circumstances of that peculiar evening. Though Reed and Mom went to jail for dealing drugs, I was sent off to live with Grandma Cecelia.

For the first time ever, I had a normal life—though it did seem a tad restrictive for a little heathen like me.

“But Grandma,” I complained that very first night. “I had a bath last week. I’m not that dirty.”

Grandma firmly persisted, and I finally relented. I was cleaned up, fattened up, and promptly enrolled in first grade.

Though I initially found it hard to adjust to my new home life, I absolutely thrived at school. I learned to read and to write, as well as a slew of other useful things that I never dreamed were possible. Most of all, I found that people liked me, and that thrilled me more than anything else did.

Mom entered back into my life five years later. She had straightened up her life, was out on parole, and wanted me to come live with her.

Grandma had mixed feelings about my leaving. Though she was happy to see Mom doing the right thing, she also knew that I would be leaving a stable environment and its many positive influences behind. In the end, she knew she had to give Mom a chance to be a mother to me. It wasn’t her place to come between us. With tears leaving a damp trail down her face, she wrapped me in her arms and pressed a phone card into my palm. “Just in case you need to call me,” she whispered. “I’ll always be here for you, Dharma.”

Mom and I trudged down the walkway, crawled into her beat up Chevy, and headed to our new life. It’s too bad her old car backfired in protest all the way.

We both were quiet for the longest time, and then I noticed Mom’s eyes darting nervously toward me.

“Dharma, I wanted to wait and tell you this later, but I can’t bear keeping it from you any longer.” Mom allowed herself a quick look at me before focusing back on the road.

“What is it, Mom?” I settled in my seat and blew a monster bubble with a huge wad of gum.

“Well, honey, while in jail, I met these people who helped me find myself through religion.” Mom gave an anxious cough and attempted to smile. “Because of them, Dharma, I was able to get my act together and set my priorities straight. I also came to realize my responsibilities toward you.”

I stopped chewing long enough to process the information. Then I deposited a few more sticks of gum into my mouth and commenced chewing.

“So we’ll be going to a new church and we’ll both make lots of new friends. Doesn’t that sound exciting?” She reached over and patted my leg, attempting to reassure me.

“That’s cool, Mom. Grandma and I went to church sometimes, too.” I blew a bubble even bigger than the previous one, groaning when it popped and spread its gooey mess all over my face.

The car pulled to a jerking halt at a dilapidated apartment building. Mom handed me a wet wipe for my dirty face and shut the car off.

“Now, Dharma, this church might be a little different from what you’re used to,” she said. Her voice once again became laced with uneasiness. “But you’ll like it—I promise.”

What Mom failed to tell me was that the people from her new church were more cult-like than Christ-like. Though I was only eleven years old, I was mature enough to know that I didn’t want to be controlled by anyone, much less a group of people known as “The Brotherhood of Purity.”

“Why can’t we go to a church like Grandma’s?” I complained after only a month. “These people are too weird, Mom! And I really miss eating meat. Can’t we go and get a cheeseburger? Just one . . . pretty please?” I begged, tracing a cross on my chest with my finger. “I won’t tell anybody—I promise!” I licked my lips, already anticipating the dripping ketchup and grease.

“Come on, Dharma. Try to understand. They’re my friends, and they helped me get my life on the right track. They’re good for us.” She brushed my overly long bangs off my forehead. “And besides, being a vegetarian never hurt anyone. You’ll thank me for it later when you’re strong and healthy.”

I folded my scrawny arms across my chest and pouted. “How can I get strong and healthy when all we ever eat is lettuce and tofu?” How disappointing it was that I was missing out on a big, juicy hunk of meat surrounded by a soft bun and condiments of every kind! I thought about calling Grandma and telling her how hungry I was, but I knew I couldn’t do that to Mom. She was trying hard, and I didn’t want to make things more difficult than they already were.

It turned out not to have mattered, anyway. A month later, Mom decided that the forced celibacy required by our new church isn’t for her, so we left. I’d heard of safe sex, but who would’ve guessed that I would be saved by sex? If it weren’t for Mom’s hearty appetite for men, we probably would’ve stayed in that strange cult forever.

At first, I was thrilled that we were leaving . . . but then, Mom told me where we were going.

“It’s a little nudist colony up on the coast—”

Mom!” My chin bobbed forward, waiting for the punch line of what had to be a joke. Certainly, she didn’t intend for us to live naked! I’d just recently purchased a really cool pair of jeans, and I had no intention of abandoning them.

“The people are really nice and accepting up there. I’ve already met a few of them, and I think it will be a great experience for both of us.” Translation: She already found a new boyfriend, and we were following him to his hangout, whether I liked it or not.

“But what about school?” I asked stubbornly. I planted both my feet rebelliously against the dashboard and refused to look at her.

“That’s the good part, honey. A former teacher lives there and home schools all the kids. Doesn’t that sound like fun?”

I rolled my eyes, knowing that Mom did everything because it sounded like fun. Well, I certainly wasn’t going to add to her joy. During the entire four-hour trip, I was silent and brooding. I couldn’t help but wish my mom would grow up and be like other responsible adults.

As luck would have it, life wasn’t bad at the nudist colony. Mom was right; the people really were nice, and Miss Wendy, the teacher, taught me things that I’m sure most sixth graders never learn. I didn’t particularly like the idea of shedding my clothes, but even that got easier with time.

People that I’ve confided in about my crazy life often wonder what sort of person chooses to live in a nudist colony. Did I come across child molesters or perverts? I can honestly say that nearly all of the people were fairly normal. Most of them were just like my mom—people who, for some reason or another, were disenchanted with their normal lives, and wanted to experience freedom and acceptance. Some of them lived there permanently, while others stayed for just a brief visit. Some even held down very prestigious jobs during the day and ditched their clothes come evening.

And these people were accepting. When a sudden attack of modesty struck me just after my thirteenth birthday, I was provided with a stack of shorts and tank tops. I proudly wore those for several months, until I realized that I stood out more when I was dressed than undressed. Budding breasts and sprouting hair be damned. I decided to shed my clothes and be as nature intended me to be.

Nude girl on the seaside

Probably the most memorable thing that happened during our time there was the night I lost my virginity. It was the eve of my fourteenth birthday. My eager suitor was a cute, sixteen-year-old boy named Milo, who’d lived in various groups such as ours for most of his life. The experience provided little pleasure and much pain, but what makes it stand out most was Mom’s reaction.

Oh—I didn’t tell her. She unexpectedly showed up and caught us doing “the deed” on her freshly made bed. With absolute shock, but no words, she frantically backed out of the room and quickly shut the door. Needless to say, the mood was swiftly killed, so I kicked Milo out. With much trepidation, I waited for Mom to return, all the while wondering what my punishment would be.

“Mom, I can explain,” I said when she reappeared an hour later.

She held up her hand and looked cautiously around, making sure my “date” for the evening was gone. “I don’t want to hear it, Dharma. You’re old enough to make your own decisions about things such as this. The last thing I would ever want to do is stifle you.”

My mouth dropped open.

“I just have two rules, Dharma.” Mom plopped down on the bed next to mine and looked at me thoughtfully. “You’d better be practicing safe sex, and next time . . . for crying out loud, use your own bed!”

It was then that I realized we were more like two friends, rather than mother and daughter. That brought a sense of melancholy that I didn’t quite understand. It took me several more years before I realized how much I really wanted a “real” mother. At the time, however, I was relieved that my butt wasn’t toast due to my adolescent romp with Milo.

Not long after that, my life was once again disrupted when Mom announced that she was pregnant. Victor, her current boyfriend and the baby’s father, asked Mom to go live with him in Portland. Unlike during her pregnancy with me, she was then concerned about prenatal care and agreed to go with him. She said she wanted the best for this baby. I guess she was growing up. And I was growing jealous. The invitation to move didn’t include me.

I pulled out the plastic calling card that I’d kept all those years, and attempted to call Grandma. When I discovered the expiration date on the card had passed, I ended up dialing collect.

“Of course I’ll come and get you!” she exclaimed, sounding very happy and very excited to hear from me. “I can be there tomorrow morning.”

True to her word, Grandma came for me. I said goodbye to Mom as I hugged a single paper sack to my chest. Inside that bag was everything I owned. It wasn’t much, but it represented my life.

It wasn’t easy adjusting to life with Grandma the second time around. I was used to absolutely no structure and little authority in my life. I ate and slept when I wanted, and I played when I felt like it. If I didn’t want to do schoolwork, Miss Wendy would shrug it off, and we would do it at some other time.

I guess I shrugged it off way too much. Though my aptitude tests were very high, I lagged behind the rest of the ninth graders, and a tutor was assigned to me. He was a cute boy named Mack, whom I flirted with and teased unmercifully. Though I undermined his tutoring efforts at every turn, in the end, he succeeded, and I caught up with the rest of the class.

Time passed quickly during my high school years. I made several good friends, dated quite a bit, and once again, learned to fit in with my normal peers. That was one thing that I was exceptionally good at—adapting.

I heard from Mom occasionally. She informed me that I had a baby brother named Gunther, and that she and Victor were thinking about getting married. She never mentioned having me go and live with them. Though that stung a little, I knew I was better off where I was. I needed Grandma, and I sensed she needed me, too.

During my senior year, tragedy struck. Grandma got in a car wreck and both our lives were changed. Because she had severe neck and back injuries, she had to quit her job and go on disability. This was quite a blow to my very young looking and very fit grandma, who was only fifty-four years old at the time.

To help out, I put my plans for college on hold and got a job in the children’s section of our local library. The pay wasn’t much, but every little bit went toward paying off Grandma’s mounting medical bills. I knew she wasn’t happy with the situation, but I felt it was my responsibility to take care of her then. It was the least I could do for someone who was always ready to take me in at a moment’s notice and never even complain about it.

My labor of love ended the day I walked in the door and heard Grandma shout, “Dharma, it came today! It finally came!” Grandma was so excited that I knew something big must have happened.

I took both of her small hands in mine. “What came? Tell me quick, before you explode!”

“The settlement from my car wreck! They finally agreed to settle with me out of court.”

My fingers went to my lips, and I just stood and stared. We were expecting this news for over two years, and finally, the waiting was over. I wrapped my arms around her and kissed her cheek. “I’m so happy for you.”

“No, not for me, Dharma . . . for you!”

I shook my head. “What do you mean, Grandma?”

“You’re going to college!”

My brow furrowed as I comprehended her words. “Maybe later, after you’re doing better and I save a little—”

“No,” she interrupted, “not later. You’re starting in the fall. You’ve put your life on hold for over two years, and now I’m going to help you achieve your dream.”

I felt hot tears well up in my eyes. This woman was so good to me that words weren’t enough to express my appreciation. “I just don’t know if I can—”

“Honey, you’re my only granddaughter. I’m going to do for you what I wish I could have done for your mom. I always prayed she would go to college and make something of herself.” She had a wistful, almost sad, look on her face and then it quickly vanished. “But that just wasn’t meant to be.”

Everything seemed to fall into place for me after that. I was apprehensive about moving away from Grandma, but she reassured me that a hundred miles isn’t all that far. I could visit often, and she would be sure to check up on me.

With heartfelt thanks, I said goodbye and promised to make her proud of me. It was a promise I intended to keep.

I threw myself into college life almost immediately, and my goofy roommate and I hit it off well. Maisy is the typical rich kid with a life’s-a-piece-of-cake attitude, but on the inside, she has a good heart. She went out of her way to be nice to me and attempted to include me in many of her goofy activities.

“You have the coolest name,” she told me the first day I met her. I watched as she stood in front of a mirror and teased her already spiky hair to even greater heights.

I made a dirty face. “I hate it! I think I was named after some famous Buddhist. Mom was going through one of her unusual phases at that time.” I smiled to myself. Going through various weird phases is normal for my mom, but I didn’t tell Maisy that. I have to know someone fairly well before I feel comfortable enough to confide in them about my upbringing.

“Well, if you wanted to translate my name into its literal meaning, it would be something like ‘corny.’” She tipped her chin skyward and laughed at her own joke. “Don’t you get it? Maize . . . corn!”

I pointed to her and chuckled. “Gotcha, Maisy.”

Though a tad eccentric, I couldn’t have asked for a nicer roommate than Maisy. She was gone a lot, which left me quite a bit of free time for studying.

I’m going to need it now, especially with this stupid, Valentine’s Day assignment looming over my head, I thought miserably.

What should have been a simple task seemed huge to me. I thought that it was pretty pitiful that in twenty years, I didn’t know of anyone who was truly in love or who I could use as a role model for love. Even Grandpa left Grandma just after she gave birth to my mom.

Tossing my notebook aside, I rose from my bed and approached Maisy. “Come clean with me. Surely you’ve been in love before.”

She shook her head, not one hair daring to move lest it be spritzed with hairspray yet again. “Nope. I’ve just been in lust.” She announced it as if she were proud of that fact. “Hey, wait a minute. I just thought of something.”

I instantly perked up.

“What about that guy, Keenan Roper? You dated him last semester; remember? He was so cute!” Maisy got all dreamy-eyed. “Surely he was in love with you, or you with him.”

I gave a soft snort. “Ha! His last name should have Groper the way his hands were all over me! The only thing old Keenan was in love with starts with a P and ends in his pants!”

Maisy laughed. “You still have two weeks before your assignment is due. Who knows? Maybe Cupid’s arrow will strike me and I’ll fall in love. And as your best friend, I’ll give you exclusive rights to the story.” Maisy gave me a smug smile and waltzed out the door.

Having an assignment based on love, and having it due on Valentine’s Day, really made me evaluate myself as a person. I’m sure when he gave the assignment, Professor Acosta didn’t think it would affect anyone in a serious way. However, it made me wonder about my own state of emotions and values. Maybe the way I was raised damaged the little part of my heart that would have allowed me to love a man in a romantic way. I know what “regular” love feels like—I feel that way toward Grandma. However, in my whole life, I’ve never experienced what it’s like for a woman to love a man. Heck, I’ve never even been infatuated. I experienced attraction, desire, and ultimately passion, but not once did my heart go pitter-patter the way romantic movies and novels say it should.

“Professor Acosta, may I have a word with you?” I asked timidly. After a week of driving myself crazy over an impossible assignment, I decided to do the only thing that made sense. I would go to him and explain why I couldn’t complete the assigned work.

“Ms. McNeal, what can I do for you?” He looked at me over the wire rims of his tiny reading glasses and motioned for me to have a seat.

“Thank you, Sir. It’s about that assignment.” I pointed to the ridiculous heart still drawn on the board.

“Ahh, the Cupid report.” He smiled in remembrance. “How is that coming along? You’re not waiting until the last minute to work on it, are you?”

“No . . . no, of course not.”

He leaned forward and rested his elbows on his desk, eyeing me intently. “Then what is it?”

I tried to slowly let the air out of my lungs before answering. “I can’t complete the assignment.”

He removed his glasses altogether and placed them down with weary resignation. As he waited for me to go on, he pulled a tissue from a box and wiped his bloodshot eyes. Finished, he looked up at me once more. “Why?” He uttered the simple word with curiosity, but with no exasperation.

In as few words as possible, I explained my position. If I wanted, I could have made something up, but in accordance with the assignment, I was supposed to write about a personal experience through my eyes or tell about someone I know. “I just can’t do it,” I said when I finished.

Professor Acosta exhaled deeply. “You’re a complicated, young woman, Ms. McNeal. Here’s what I’m going to do for you. Since you claim that you can’t write about love, I’ll allow you to take the opposite position. Prove to me that we should give in to our instinctive natures and mate simply to further the human species.” He turned back to his paperwork, as if the case was closed and the matter settled.

I slumped in my chair and gnawed on my lower lip. “I’m sorry, but I can’t do that, either.”

Professor Acosta’s eyes snapped to mine. “But you just said—”

“Yes, but that doesn’t mean that I don’t believe in true love. And to say that we should follow our instincts and just mate for reproductive purposes . . . well, I just can’t go for that, either.”

“Ms. McNeal, you’ve put me in a very difficult position here. Can you at least explain why you feel so strongly about the subject?”

Leaving out a lot of the unnecessary details, I gave Professor Acosta the abridged version of my life. He quietly listened for the most part, though he did ask for some clarification on a few of the points in question.

“You lived with a pirate?” he asked doubtfully. “I find that hard to believe.”

I shrugged. “Well, I always had my suspicions about Reed. At least to a six-year-old, he looked like a pirate.”

Professor Acosta nodded thoughtfully, so I went on. When I finally finished, I sat back, folded my arms, and waited.

He rubbed his chin and didn’t say anything for the longest time. Then, while tapping his pencil rhythmically on the table, he spoke. “You’ve lived an interesting life. I don’t suppose you’d want to share all of this with the rest of the class—in lieu of the other report, of course?”

I wrinkled my nose. “I don’t think so.”

He brought the pencil to his mouth and squinted. “How about for extra credit?”

“Nuh-uh.”

Professor Acosta made a tsk-ing sound and shook his head disapprovingly. “I must say, Ms. McNeal, that you’re the most difficult student I’ve ever had. And the strangest, too!” he added. He rose from his seat and stood facing me. Then, with little enthusiasm, he said, “Go ahead and write me a report on the origin of Cupid and his magical arrow of love. . . .” His voice trailed off. “Truth or fiction, whatever you like—just write it and be done with it.”

My face must have reflected my joy, because he warned me not to tell anyone that he caved in and gave me a new assignment.

“And Ms. McNeal,” he said just before I disappeared out the door, “you might not want to register for my class next semester.”

“Excuse me?”

“I always assign a very special Christmas assignment, and I’m sure you wouldn’t like that one, either.” His dark eyes bore into mine. “Do you understand what I’m saying?”

I nodded. “Thank you, Professor Acosta, and I’ll remember what you said.”

I left his class feeling like a huge weight was lifted off of me. Not only that, but telling him about my childhood helped me see things in a new light.

In spite of everything I’d been through—my upbringing, my mom, the various “homes”—I turned out just fine. Not perfect by any means, but normal just the same. Maybe personality and temperament are connected more to genetics and luck than surroundings. You know, the old “nature versus nurture” theory. After all, Maisy is more like my mother than I am, and she comes from a very straight-laced, cultured family. They were probably just as shocked by their “strange” daughter as my mom was by her extremely “ordinary” daughter. We are two very different women, raised in totally opposite ways, but good friends just the same.

I never was a great believer in fate, but a strange thing happened not long after that. I was sitting in a pizza parlor with a couple of friends when I literally ran into Milo. Yes, Milo! After we took a step back, we both apologized simultaneously and laughed. Then, glancing into his blue eyes, I noticed a spark of recognition.

“Milo?”

“Dharma, is that you?”

My mouth dropped open. I was amazed that I even recognized him, or vice versa. Standing in front of me was the boy/man who experienced life with me in the nudist colony—among other more personal things. Only then, he was all grown up. Gone was the teenager with the long, unruly hair and the lanky, too-thin body. And in his place was a man with close-cropped, stylishly cut hair and a body that’s firm and muscular and downright sexy.

Milo took my hand and led me off to the side. “My God, Dharma, do you realize how long it’s been?”

We both laughed as we once again spoke in unison. “Almost seven years.”

My gaze drifted downward, taking in his white, dress shirt, khaki slacks, and brown loafers. “I hardly recognized you with clothes on,” I said lightly.

Milo chuckled, and I thought I detected a slight blush creeping over his face. “I was going to grab a takeout pizza and head home, but I’d love it if you’d have lunch with me.”

I glanced over at my friends and hesitated. “I’d like that. Let me go tell my girlfriends, and I’ll be right back.”

I found Milo sitting in a corner booth. He’d set out a couple of plates and ordered us sodas.

“Dharma, I still can’t believe it’s you,” he said when I sank down in the seat across from him. “What have you been doing with yourself?”

A comfortable rapport settled over us as we filled each other in concerning the details of our present lives. I was surprised when he said that he left the commune not long after I did. His father remarried and asked Milo to move in with his new wife and he.

“What about your mom?” I asked.

Milo took a drink of his soda before answering. “She died last year.” He waved me away before I could say anything. “It’s okay, though. She was sick for years, but when she passed away, she was happy.”

I nodded and took a bite of my pizza. I told him how my own mother was still drifting through life, but I still held out hope that she would one day find what she needed to make herself happy.

Young couple eating pizza

“So, what about you?” he asked. “What are you doing these days?”

“Well, I’m now a full-time student and only a part-time goof off.”

He laughed. “Yeah, I remember a time when you were a part-time student and a full-time goof off! Miss Wendy was so easy on you, and I was jealous in a major way! I never told you this, but you were a bright spot in my life back then.”

I cleared my throat, feeling slightly uncomfortable about our past. Changing the subject, I asked, “What are you doing with your life now?”

“Actually, I’m following in Miss Wendy’s footsteps. Right now, I’m a student teacher, but I’ve had a stroke of good luck. I’ve secured a full-time position, and I start this fall.”

“I’m still just amazed,” I said, not expounding.

Milo’s eyebrows raised a tad. “What do you mean?”

“That we’re so normal. Have you ever stopped and wondered why you turned out the way you did, even after the way you were raised? I mean, we’re both so . . . average.”

“Is that a bad thing?”

“On the contrary. After growing up the way I did, I think average is very, very good!”

We both sat sipping our drinks, not saying anything. Milo was the first to speak. “Dharma, I don’t know if you’re involved with anyone right now, but I’d really like to see you again.”

My eyes widened, and I felt a grin forming. “I’d like that, too.” I rose from the table and grabbed my jacket. “And Milo,” I said, my smile once again turning mischievous, “you look really good with clothes on.”

Milo and I dated a few times and renewed our friendship. However, you really can’t go back again and relive the past. I wouldn’t want to do that, anyway. It seemed as if fate—there’s that word again—had a different sort of woman in mind for Milo.

He and Maisy fell for each other almost immediately and they’re still an item. I guess opposites really do attract.

As for me, I still haven’t found my Mr. Right, and I’m in no hurry. In my heart, I know that true love exists, and Cupid’s arrow will eventually strike me when I least expect it. I’ve got plenty of time. For now, I’m content being a college student—and a fairly boring and normal one at that.

For the most part, I can say that life has been good to me, and I even like the person that I’ve become. Because my experiences contributed to who I am and what I represent, I’ve learned to appreciate and even be grateful for the wacky, wonderful life I’ve led.

 

Top 10 Romantic Films Streaming on Netflix

 

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So many people end up emptying out their bank accounts in order to have a romantic night out with the person they love for Valentine’s Day. The buy new clothes, fill up gas for the car, splurge on an expensive prefix menu option at the restaurant with the best view of the city. Don’t forget about the drinking, dancing, more drinking and the exchanging of fancy gifts which all take place in one night to show appreciation for your significant others. It can be exhausting as well.

Sometimes this reckless abandonment of funds gets old and all you really want is to spend a nice quiet night at home with a cheap bottle of wine, some snacks, a warm blanket and a movie streaming on Netflix that you can watch with your love.

Here are some of our top 10 romantic movies that happen to be streaming on Netflix this month. Some are more traditional, while others appeal to that crowd that seems to fear the label of “Rom-Com”.

 

1. Pride and Prejudice (2005)– Sparks fly when spirited Elizabeth Bennet meets single, rich, and proud Mr. Darcy. But Mr. Darcy reluctantly finds himself falling in love with a woman beneath his class. Can each overcome their own pride and prejudice?

2. Silver Linings Playbook (2012)–After a stint in a mental institution, former teacher Pat Solitano moves back in with his parents and tries to reconcile with his ex-wife. Things get more challenging when Pat meets Tiffany, a mysterious girl with problems of her own.

3. Shakespeare in Love (1998)–A young Shakespeare, out of ideas and short of cash, meets his ideal woman and is inspired to write one of his most famous plays.

4. Blue Is The Warmest Color (2013)–Adele’s life is changed when she meets Emma, a young woman with blue hair, who will allow her to discover desire, to assert herself as a woman and as an adult. In front of others, Adele grows, seeks herself, loses herself and ultimately finds herself through love and loss.

5. New York, I Love You (2008)–Several love stories set in one of the most loved cities of the world, New York.

6. A Walk On The Moon (1999)–The world of a young housewife is turned upside down when she has an affair with a free-spirited blouse salesman.

7. Punch-Drunk Love (2002)–A psychologically troubled novelty supplier is nudged towards a romance with an English woman, all the while being extorted by a phone-sex line run by a crooked mattress salesman, and purchasing stunning amounts of pudding.

8. Roman Holiday (1953)–A bored and sheltered princess escapes her guardians and falls in love with an American newsman in Rome.

9. I Hate Valentine’s Day (2009)–A florist, who abides by a strict five-date-limit with any man, finds herself wanting more with the new restaurateur in town.

10. Across the Universe (2007)–The music of the Beatles and the Vietnam War form the backdrop for the romance between an upper-class American girl and a poor Liverpudlian artist.

Honorable Mention: Clueless, Love Actually, Moonrise Kingdom, Bridget Jones’s Diary.

And for movies in the theaters this week, check out How To Be Single!

Mother Knows Best

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From The How I Know I’m In Love Series

My story is not a fairy tale romance. I had my fair share of dates growing up, but I always seemed to pick losers of one type or another. Eventually, all of my friends got married and started their families. I was always included in their outings, but I felt like a third wheel, and some of them were even a little afraid of having a single woman near their husbands. I was stuck in a rut and I knew that my biological clock was ticking away quickly. In my twenties, I was told that because of numerous back operations, it wasn’t likely that I would be able to carry a child to term, so I stopped looking for a husband and resigned myself to growing old—alone. Boy, was I wrong!

It was 1984. I was thirty-six years old and single, with no kids, no siblings, and no steady boyfriend. My mother was in the hospital, dying of cancer. I went to visit her just before she fell into a coma and an old friend of ours was there visiting her, but he left when I arrived. During our visit, my mother said to me, “That man loves you, and I would be more than proud to have him as a son-in-law. I know that he could never hurt you, and I could die knowing that he was there for you.” Well, he was like an older brother to me and I had no romantic notions about him. Plus, he was a married man. I told my mother this, and her reply was, “He is not happy!” He had always felt close to my mother, and he had told her that he had been pressured into marriage to a woman who he had never loved and was getting a divorce. That was one of the last conversations my mother and I were able to have before she lapsed into the coma and passed from my life.

Well, I always did what my mother told me to do! She was rarely wrong. She was a very smart, intelligent, and loving woman, who would give the shirt off her back or her last penny to help someone in need. Plus, she was also my very best friend. At the time, I was lonely, afraid, and sad about her impending death, so ten months after she passed away, I married the man my mother had picked out for me. I married my best friend, but I didn’t love him at the time. I was always waiting for my toes to curl and my heart to skip a beat when he touched me or was nearby, but it never happened. We were together because we had a lot in common, and were both lonely and hurting.

Now, almost twenty years have passed and we are still together—and in love with each other. Now, my heart does skip a beat when he comes near me and my toes do curl when he kisses me. I’ve realized that a person does not need instant fireworks to have love. Love takes time, commitment, caring, and experience. I guess my mother really did know what was best for me!

—Bev Stephens, Alberta, Canada

How did you know this crazy, wonderful feeling was the real thing? Share your experience with others! Email your story, in 700 words or less, along with your contact info, to trulovebooks@gmail.com and type, How I Know I’m In Love, in the subject line. 

My Christmas List Is Naughty

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Let’s face it. The holidays are depressing. Even before the holiday season begins, the television is bombarded with commercials talking about “the happiest time of the year.” And the lonely, like me, start to believe in hope. No date or party invite for Halloween? That’s okay. Things will be better by Thanksgiving. Sifting alone at the table, or worse, at the kids’ table for Thanksgiving? That’s fine. Christmas will bring a new love.

All I had to do was ask Santa for the perfect man.

I came up with the Santa List for Gemma. Gemma, my best friend, could have any man in any place we walked in to—including farmer’s markets and bookstores. For some reason though, none of her first dates turned into seconds. Her suitors always had a fatal flaw—too tall, too short, too fat, too many muscles. Just not right.

Sitting at the winery with a lovely bottle of White Zinfandel, I forced her hand. “Gemma, no one will ever meet your standards if you don’t know what they are.”

“What, you want me to write up a checklist?” Gemma swirled the rose-colored wine in her glass before taking a sip.

“Couldn’t hurt. I mean really, John was perfect for you and he was gorgeous! And why did you dump him?” Honestly, I remembered Gemma’s weak excuse for dumping the financial genius that had somehow rode the market’s downturn without a hiccup in his portfolio. He’d been too focused.

“I just got the feeling that I wouldn’t be first with him. I mean, he had so much going on, maybe I’d be forgotten.” Gemma smiled at a passing hunk with ocean deep blue eyes and dressed in an expensive suit.

“And you got all that from a first date?” I shook my head. I had a feeling my friend was just too good at the catch and release game. She didn’t have any stamina for the long haul. Of course, I’d had one long-term relationship in the last four years, and Ted had dumped me for his dental hygienist. Total cliché.

“I can read people, Rachel. I’ve told you that.” Gemma looked at me, shocked that I’d question her psychic ability.

“Yeah, I remember. But I think you’re getting your messages mixed up.”

“And you’ve been so successful in the dating world?”

Ouch. “Okay, before we start throwing wine in each other’s faces, let’s get back to my idea.”

“Sorry, I didn’t mean to snipe,” Gemma said as she refilled my glass. “What’s your idea? Please don’t tell me you think we should try that speed-dating thing again. What a disaster.”

“No, I never want to do that again either. This idea is more up your psychic ability alley. I saw it on one of the talk shows.”

“Really? Was it Oprah? She has some of the best guests. Especially now that she’s found her sensitive side.” Gemma loved Oprah. And soap operas. And the rest of the wasteland that the networks feed up as daytime television. “You are so lucky to work at home. You get to watch television all day.”

“Except you missed one fact. I work. I don’t watch television.” I paused on my tirade. Gemma didn’t get it. But neither did my parents, or my neighbors, or anyone who found out I was a freelance editor. They all thought I spent my days with the couch and the remote. Somehow the projects that paid the bills magically got done with minimal work on my part. The truth was that I worked longer hours than anyone, including my paralegal friend sitting across from me.

“So how did you come to hear about this great idea?” Gemma shot a wicked smile my way.

Busted. Of course, the one time I take a break, all the stereotypes about my life of leisure are proven true. “Never mind. Here’s the plan. We list out what we are looking for in a guy or in a relationship. Then we sort them by order of importance. We’ll trade, call each other out on the bull, and then we have a list.”

“A list that we take to the man store and go shopping?” Gemma giggled, the wine was starting to affect my friend. After two glasses, everything was funny.

“Something like that. We put the list away and when we meet a guy after the first date, we match his qualities up to the ones that we said were important.” I stared at my friend. “If he’s ranking high on the list, we say yes to a second date.”

“Even if he’s too tall.” Gemma was taking in the crowd, looking for her next prey.

“If being a certain height, isn’t on your list, yes.” I pulled out a notebook. “Now pay attention. List off what you want in a guy. We’re starting these tonight.”

Twenty minutes later, Gemma had an entire page.

Two young girls using smart phone

“That’s all? You don’t have one more thing to add, like brain surgeon?” I held up my pen waiting for the next one.

“No, that’s about it.” Gemma was quiet, she’d ordered a basket of hummus and pita bread while we talked. Scraping out the last of the dip from the bowl, she looked up at me, “What’s next?”

I glanced at the list before I ripped out the page and handed it to her. I hadn’t believed it would be this easy. Gemma knew what she wanted in a man. “Now take this home and rank them in order of importance.”

“Everything’s important,” Gemma stuffed the page into her purse without looking at it.

“I know, but some qualities must be more important than others. Like being able to cook. Would you give that up if he had a great job?” I worried I had created a monster. Gemma wasn’t a girl used to compromise.

“I guess,” Gemma’s voice quavered, “but I wouldn’t want to.”

“Just try it.” I felt like I’d assigned homework to a high school cheerleader the night before the prom. I closed the notebook and was slipping it into my purse when Gemma cried out.

“Stop!” Gemma held her hands out in front of her.

I glanced up, wondering what I’d done now. “What?”

“We haven’t done your list. Give me the notebook and I’ll write while you talk.”

Seriously? I hadn’t thought I’d make a list. Usually our get-togethers were all about Gemma. I didn’t mind being the tag-along. Working alone all day, it was nice to just get out. I needed adult companionship, even if it was on Gemma’s terms. “Okay, if you have time.”

“I’m not the only one who needs some good luck in their dating life. When was your last date? Two months ago?”

Try two years, but who’s counting. “About that. . .” I sat back and thought about what I wanted in a life partner. “He has to be cute. Bad boy cute, not captain of the chess team cute.”

Gemma grinned. “I knew you liked bad boys.”

“I said bad boy cute. You know, kind of rough looking, scruffy. The opposite of a suit.”

“Glad we’re looking for two different types or we might fight over the perfect man.” Gemma nodded. “What else?”

“He has to be smart. Like he could be captain of the chess team.” I giggled. My expectations were total opposites. No wonder I was still single. “And he has to want a family. Not a big family, but the normal two point five kids.”

“And live in a house with a white picket fence,” Gemma teased.

“You got it. Or a cottage on the beach. That would be cool.” My daydreams surrounded what a perfect life would look like.

“Brown hair or blond? Tall or short? What else?” Gemma tapped the pen on the notebook. “Earth to Rachel. Let’s get busy here.”

I grinned. My list only took fifteen minutes to complete. My dream lover had danced through my mind enough times that all I had to do was let the description come out. Fantasy, total fantasy. I didn’t have the same problem as Gemma, too many suitors. I was sure the Santa List would work for her. But me? It was a long shot.

Putting the list into my purse, I agreed that I’d rank the list before we got together again on Saturday. Riding home in the cab to my apartment, I pulled the list out and glanced over my description of the perfect man. Someone who would curl up with me on the couch in front of the fireplace and read books with me on a Sunday. He had to like dinner theater or at least tolerate it. He loved to travel.

I sighed and stuffed the list back into my purse. It was a dream. A wish list for Santa. That’s all.

The next morning brought snow and a problem. My Internet connection was out. Picking up the phone, I called the apartment manager.

“Christen Homes, you’re on your way home, this is Alexis, how can I help you?” Alexis, was the receptionist, leasing agent, and on-site emergency after-hours contact. She was also one of the few people I saw enough to call a friend.

“Hey Alexis, it’s Rachel. My Internet link’s dead. Is yours?”

“Hold on. I was just online looking for new furniture for the clubroom. The stuff we have is so dated, don’t you think?” Alexis was always trying to get the owners to cough up money for renovations. Most of the time the answer was no, but at least Alexis was persistent.

“I guess. Is your Internet still up?” I was getting concerned. I had several projects with due dates in the next couple days. All my current work was due back to the magazines before the staff took off for their long Christmas break. I had no time for anything to go wrong. And although working in the clubroom until my connection was back up was an option, the thought of trying to work next to Alexis’s office with her constant Christmas music made my head hurt.

“Hold on, I’ll check.” Alexis mumbled something away from the phone. I wasn’t sure, but I thought I heard “pain in my butt.” When she came back on the line, her voice was all sweetness and light. “My connection’s fine. Did you pay your bill?”

“Of course I paid my bill,” I grumbled, hoping I was right. I thought I’d paid the bill.

“Call the company and have them troubleshoot for you. If they can’t help, my cousin is pretty handy with computers. Maybe he can stop by.”

Alexis had been trying to set me up with her cousin for months. “I’m sure the Internet company will be able to fix it. I’ll talk to you later.” I hung up the phone before she could respond. I didn’t need someone’s cousin hanging around and ruining my friendship with Alexis.

I dialed the number of my Internet provider. After ten minutes of commercials about how I could solve my problem by just going online and checking out their new website, I was ready to pull out my hair. I decided to put the time to good use and clean out my purse. Wallet, pens, hair comb, lots of change, and a sheet of folded up notebook paper—my Santa List.

I unfolded the sheet and smoothed it out. Gemma had great penmanship. Flowery, light, and girly—just like her. My writing was so bad that people had asked me if I was a doctor.

Bad boy cute, smart, funny, willing to try new things—my list sounded like one of those online dating commercials about how the actor found their perfect love by just answering a boatload of questions and plopping down thirty bucks a month for a membership. I started numbering the fifteen characteristics that made up my perfect man.

Fifteen items I thought would bring me true love. At least when I met up with Gemma on Saturday, my homework would be done. Gemma had probably already lost her list.

I was just trying to rank the last two items when a live voice came over the phone. “Speedy Cable, this is Nathan, can I have your account number or phone number to took up your account?” The sexy male voice cooed in my ear.

Scratching down a sixteenth item—a good, deep voice—I gave Nathan my account number. “I can’t get on at all. I checked my bills, and it looks like I sent your payment. Of course, I can’t see if it’s cleared since I can’t get online.”

Nathan chuckled. “You get dependent on the connection. I don’t make a purchase without checking out what the online review sites say about the product.”

I could hear ticking in the background as he reviewed my account. “I work out of my home so I need my connection. I’m feeling lost,” I admitted to this stranger who was miles or even continents away.

“I understand. Looking at your account, your bill was paid so that’s not the problem. Let me shoot a signal through your system. Do you have your computer turned off?”

“Hold on,” I walked over to the desk and shut down my system. “It is now.”

“Great. Now unplug your modem and wait to plug it back in until I tell you,” Nathan hummed while time passed. I’m pretty sure he wasn’t doing anything but watching the clock pass for the suggested time from his script. “Now plug it back in and turn on your computer.”

I followed Nathan’s directions and when I went to sign into the Internet, I held my breath. “Work, please work,” I whispered to my monitor. I had a project that had to be sent off this morning. I kicked myself for not sending it last night when I’d finished, but I’d wanted one last look to make sure it was perfect. And now I couldn’t send it.

The monitor fluttered and then an error came on the screen. I sighed.

“Did it work?” A hopeful Nathan asked in my ear.

“No, so now what?”

“Let’s try again,” Nathan walked me through all the steps on the cheat sheet on how to connect dummies to the Internet. Thirty minutes later, we were at the same point. Nowhere.

“So now what?” I was tired and frustrated and I’d eaten my way through a bag of red licorice while we talked.

“I’d suggest replacing your modem. We could send a guy out to troubleshoot, but that would be an hourly charge. If it’s your modem, you can fix that yourself.”

“I’ll go get a new one.” Why not? I wasn’t doing any work. I thanked Nathan for his time and hung up my cell. Before leaving my apartment, I copied the project onto a flash drive and hoped that Alexis wasn’t out of the office showing an apartment.

The smell of pine and cinnamon hit me as soon as I opened the office door. Bells chimed in the background, announcing my arrival. I headed up the stairs to the office. “Hey, Alexis? You up there?”

I heard rustling in the clubroom. “In here,” she called back.

Walking into the room, I’d found Santa’s workshop. The ten-foot Northwestern fir tree took up the area where the foosball table used to be as well as the poker table that the guys over in building B used each Friday night. Alexis was leaning over in the corner, and when she stood up, the tree sprang to life and an electric train circled the tree skirt.

tree

“Wow. . .” I was speechless. At home we’d had a tree, but nothing like this. Alexis’s tree looked like something out of the holiday stores or even a movie. The ornaments were tastefully color-coordinated with the room and gave the club­room the feel of a cabin somewhere on a lake.

Alexis grinned. “You like it, huh? I can see it on your face.” She headed to the counter where she had piles of wrapped presents just waiting to be strategically placed. “I wasn’t looking for furniture this morning when you called. I’ve been working on this for a few days.”

“It’s great, Alexis. Very tasteful.”

Her comment about my call reminded me why I was there. “Hey, can I use your computer for a few minutes? I  have to send off this project or I’ll lose the contract.”

“You didn’t get your Internet to work?” Alexis kept moving one present, left, then right, then put it aside and pulled out another one to place.

“Nope. I’m going to buy a new modem. That better work,” I turned toward the office.

“I can call Felix.”

“Who’s Felix?” I checked my watch. I had an hour left for me to hit send. Please let this conversation be short, I prayed.

“My cousin. I bet he could fix all your problems.” Alexis settled a box into what seemed like a perfect placement and then pulled it back.

“Alexis, I don’t want your cousin coming by to help.” I headed back into the office. Jeez, the woman never gave up.

“He’s coming by today anyway. He could stop by your apartment around two o’clock?” Alexis called out from the clubroom.

“No, don’t send him to my apartment. Besides, I won’t be there,” I sat down at her desk and slipped my flash disk into the slot. Pulling up the project document, I carefully reviewed my changes and updates. I’d sent the wrong version of a not-­so-finished project once. I never got work from that editor again. Now I checked everything twice before sending my completed finals out to the world.

Thirty minutes later, the document was reviewed one last time, saved to an email with an invoice attached, and sent to the editor. I came in under the deadline, but not by much. Now I only had four more rush jobs to finish before Friday and then I’d officially be on vacation.

Time to head to the Computer Warehouse and pick up a new modem. Merry Christmas to me. I just hoped my credit card had enough room for this one last purchase. I’d kind of gone crazy buying toys for my niece this year. I didn’t see her often and this was my time to spoil the kid.

“Alexis, I’m out of here. I’ll talk to you later,” I called into the Christmas clubroom that now had a manger scene on the mantle. Ten to one the management would make her take that down. They were sticklers on avoiding controversy.

“See you,” I heard Alexis call from behind a pile of presents she was still trying to fit under the tree.

Alexis’s over the top decorations made me glad I’d skipped the tree this year. Well, I guess I’d skipped it for several years now, since Ted had left. His timing had been horrible. The apartment we’d shared had been filled to the brim with Christmas cheer and hope. The same apartment where I currently lived. Now even thinking about putting up a tree made me miss the man. Stupid but true.

Swinging open the door of the leasing office, I walked straight into someone. I looked up into the bluest eyes I’d ever seen. Jet-black hair spiked around his head and a crooked grin on his face, this six-foot giant was one handsome man. Hmm, maybe a potential neighbor?

All of a sudden Ted’s absence didn’t feel like such a loss. “I’m so sorry,” I murmured.

The man had reached out to sturdy me and had his hands on my shoulders. “No problem.” He turned me to the right and headed into the office.

Watching him, I called out, “The leasing agent’s in the clubroom decorating for Christmas. The room looks great.” Now why did I say that? Babbling, I was babbling.

Romance cover guy turned back toward me, his black leather jacket framing the ZZ Top t-shirt that peeked out. “Looking forward to Santa’s visit?”

Heat burned my face. “I. . .Yes, I am.” I don’t know where my conviction came from, but I committed to the Santa List at exactly that moment. And from what I could see, this man met all my criteria. Especially the bad boy cute section.

“Me too. I’m a sucker for this time of year.” With that, he waved and headed up the stairs to the club­room. Later it dawned on me that I hadn’t told him the clubroom was upstairs.

Humming “Jingle Bells” to myself, I headed to the car. Maybe I needed to get out more during the day. I’d been locked up in the apartment working for weeks and hadn’t seen a sole except Gemma and Alexis for I don’t know how long.

I turned up the music in the car and sang along. While I drove, I wished for a brighter new year than this year had turned out to be. I felt like I was in a stall. Not going forward, not worrying about the past. Just being. And that wasn’t a good place to be.

I pulled into the parking lot and found a space way at the back. Christmas shoppers filled the store. My cheerful mood vanished.

Reluctantly, I headed into the store. I promised myself I’d stop for sushi on the way back to the apartment. I needed some sort of treat to get through the Christmas shopping crowds.

Twenty minutes later, I was still waiting for help in the computer aisle. Who knew there were so many different types of modems? I had my choices narrowed down to two, one four times as expensive as the other. I didn’t want to buy the expensive one unless I had to. Freelance editing may pay the bills, but it didn’t build up the bank account.

Frustrated, I sat down to wait my turn. Six couples in line before me were all bickering about the right netbook to buy their kids. Listening in on the conversations, I realized that some of these kids were still in grade school. What happened to the balls and games and toys Santa used to bring to kids? Now it was all computers, cell phones, and video games.

I noticed boots and jeans step in front of me. I followed the long legs up to see who was attached.

“I guess we are on the same wavelength today,” the familiar voice called down to my place on the floor.

It was the guy I’d run over at the leasing office. “I guess so.” Not my wittiest comeback.

“What are you doing? Taking a nap?”

I sighed. “I wish. I’m trying to buy a new modem for my computer. My Internet won’t boot up and the provider thinks my old modem died.” Struggling to my feet, I held up the two boxes. “I’m down to these choices, but I don’t know if I’m right or not. And I’d rather wait and find out than come back later.”

“I’m a computer geek. Let me see what you have.” The man who looked nothing like a computer geek took the boxes and read the back of each. “What’s your computer’?”

I pulled out a piece of paper that I had listed all the relevant information on before I left the apartment. “Here, this is what I got off the box the computer came in.”

He looked at me funny. “You save your boxes? How long have you had the computer?”

“Two years,” I cringed. Ted had hated my habit of saving empty boxes. I only did it on the big purchase items and sometimes, like today, it came in handy.

The man shook his head and grinned. “Whatever.” Comparing my notes to the modems I’d picked out, he walked over to the shelves.

Scanning the available modems, he pulled one down and quickly checked the back. Satisfied, he put the other two boxes back on the shelf. “This is the one you want.”

“Are you sure? I looked at that one, but I didn’t think it matched.”

“Trust me. This is more than enough for your computer. And it’s cheap. I’ve got the same one.”

“Thanks.” I paused before heading to the checkout counter. “I’m heading to the sushi place for lunch after this. Do you want to join me? My treat for saving me hours in that line,” I nodded toward the help line that hadn’t even budged while we were talking.

“I can’t. I’ve got an errand I have to run after this.”

“No worries. I guess I’ll run into you again.” I still was hoping he was moving into the building. Although, my luck, he probably was moving in with his fiancée. But there wasn’t a ring on his finger. I’d checked while he was busy reading boxes.

“I’m sure we will.”

I was in the checkout lane waiting when I realized I hadn’t even asked him his name. I scanned the store to see if I could pick him out of the crowd—no luck.

Kicking myself for not even asking his name, I hurried to pull out my debit card to pay for my purchase. / will see him again, I promised myself. Putting my game face on, I walked back out in the snow to find my car in the crowded lot. I almost believed it was true.

Two hours later, I was back on the phone with the Internet provider, and the girl who answered my call didn’t know squat about computers. I asked to speak with Nathan, but apparently he’d gone off shift.

“Will he be back tomorrow?”

“I’m sorry, I’m not allowed to give out that information. But you do understand it’s the week before Christmas. People have lives you know.” The woman’s voice was getting under my skin.

“Thanks for all the help.” I hung up the phone, not waiting for an answer or the list of questions asking if they had fulfilled my expectations for customer service. Let’s just say I was less than delighted.

I went through all the steps again. I unplugged and plugged in the modem. I turned my computer off and waited ten minutes, enough time to heat up my teakettle and brew me a cup of holiday cinnamon blend. I loved Christmas tea blends. Going back to the computer, I pushed the power button on and prayed.

After the computer booted up, I tried getting on the Internet. No luck. My prayers had gone unanswered. Maybe I should put computer geek on my Santa List. I checked the clock, half past three. Alexis’s cousin was probably long gone by now. Swallowing my pride, I called the office.

“Happy holidays,” Alexis’s voice came over the line as full of cheer as the room she’d been decorating.

“Hey, it’s Rachel.” I gritted my teeth and asked, “Is your cousin still there? I’ve tried everything and I can’t get this stupid thing to work.” I hated to blame the bad boy, but maybe he’d let me down with the modem he’d chosen.

“Felix was just getting ready to leave. I’ll send him right up.” Alexis was ecstatic. I could hear it in her voice. Now it would be months of dodging questions like, “Why don’t you call Felix? The two of you would make a great couple.”

But I was desperate. I’d deal with the fall out later.

A knock came at the door. Felix was quick; I’d give him that.

Opening’ the door, I started my sad computer story of woe, “Hey, thanks for coming. My Internet won’t work and I bought this stupid modem, and now, I’m. . .”

I looked into Felix’s blue eyes and realized he was the bad boy cute guy I’d been running into all day.

“And now you’re stuck with this stupid modem that some idiot told you to buy? Right?” Felix leaned against the doorframe.

“It’s you.” I was filled with snappy comebacks today.

“When Alexis said Rachel needed help, I was hoping it was you. Although you never told me your name.” He nodded toward the apartment. “Can I take a look?”

“I’m sorry, come in.” I closed the door behind him and waved my arm toward the desk. “The computer is over there.”

He sat down in my chair. “Nice set up. Printer, scanner, huge monitor, you’ve got it all.”

“I work out of my home. I spend a lot of time here.” What’s wrong with me? I was a smart, intelligent woman, but I could barely put together a sentence in front of this guy.

He pointed to my cup. “Do you have any more of this? I’ve been outside stringing lights all afternoon and my hands are frozen.”

“Sure, I could make you coffee or hot chocolate?” Great hostess I was.

“No, this tea will be fine. Did you get this over at the bookstore?” He leaned under the desk checking the connections.

“Yeah. I buy a couple tins before they run out for the season.” I headed to the kitchen. Bad boy cute had been in a bookstore? And he drank tea? The day was getting stranger.

“I found your problem. You didn’t hook up the second cable.” Felix’s voice called from the living room.

I sat his cup down on the desk. “Seriously, it was that simple? You’ve been here all of five minutes and you’ve fixed the problem I’ve been working on since seven o’clock this morning?”

“We’ll see once it boots up, but yeah, I’d say it was fixed.” He took a long sip of the tea. “Thanks, this hits the spot. I love Alexis, but she can be a slave driver when she’d determined.”

Laughing, I added, “I was surprised she didn’t have you over here after Thanksgiving to put up lights. She loves her holidays.”

“Believe me, she tried. I’ve been swamped at work. We just finished up a project that is going into production on the first of the year. I’ve been working ten to fifteen-hour days for the last month.”

“What do you do?” I watched Felix try to access the Internet.

Please work, please.. .

“I’m a software engineer. Not exciting, but I like it.” Felix’s face lit up when my home page filled the screen. Sixty new emails were waiting for me. He stood up from the desk chair.

“You did it!” I gave him an excited hug. “Thank you so much.”

His arms went around my body and I sank into his chest. I had meant the hug to be a short thank you, but it was turning into something more. My heart was racing when I pulled back.

“You’re welcome,” Felix looked down at me. “I guess my work here is done.”

We were both still standing in the same place. “I appreciate your help.”

He grabbed his jacket off the chair and started to walk to the door.

“Hey, Felix?” I called after him. This time I wasn’t going to let him go this easily.

“Yeah?” He didn’t turn, his hand on the doorknob.

“Can I buy you dinner?” I walked over to the door and put my hand on his arm, the soft smooth leather inviting my touch.

He turned toward me and leaned closer. “I thought you’d never ask.”

Saturday night I was sitting at the bar waiting for Gemma to arrive. My Santa List was in my hand. I’d marked off all the ways Felix met each and every one of my criteria. Smiling, I took a sip of my wine.

“Traffic was a bear. I can’t believe people are still shopping. Christmas is Monday!” Gemma slipped onto the stool next to me. The bar was filled with last minute shoppers and a few who, like us, were just out for a quick drink.

“I’m glad you made it. Did you bring your list?” I had to get Gemma to focus. She was too special not to have someone in her life. Someone who cared for her.

“I did. How about you?” She pulled the ragged sheet of paper from her purse.

“Mine’s right here.” I pushed it toward her and we traded.

 

She read the list silently for a few minutes. “I’m confused. I thought we were supposed to rank our choices, you just have check marks.”

“I had ranked them, but then I met someone. So I had to see if he met the list.”

“Wait, you met someone? Why didn’t you call me? When? Who?” Gemma stared at me, the list forgotten in her hand.

“I’ll explain later. Your list is great. You really have a clear idea of what you’re looking for.” I pointed toward her ranking. “So having a great job isn’t as important as listening?”

“Yeah, who would have guessed? I thought about the guys I’ve been dating lately and realized there was one that fit my list.” Gemma played with the lip of the wine glass.

“And…” She was hiding something. I knew it.

“I called him,” Gemma grinned then took a sip of her wine. “He’s a writer. He makes less than my cousin who works for that grocery chain, but he makes me feel important.”

“You are important. I’m so happy for you. Are you guys going out soon?”

“Tonight. I’m meeting him for dinner after this,” Gemma looked over at me. “Is that all right? I mean, I hate to leave you stranded.”

I watched him walk through the door. He was ten minutes early. Catching his eye, I waved him over. “I’ll be fine. There’s someone I’d like you to meet.”

Two girls at the bar with cocktail drink

Felix stood by my chair and leaned down to kiss me. We’d been out every night since he’d fixed my computer. Neither Felix nor I had pressing work until after the New Year so we’d decided to spend the time getting to know each other.

“Gemma, this is Felix,” I glanced over at my friend. She grinned at me and handed me back my list.

“Nice to meet you,” Gemma called the bartender over. “What’s your poison, Felix?”

“Miller Lite, bottle,” he said to the waiter.

We found Felix a chair and settled in to finish our drinks before we headed out to dinner.

Gemma’s eyes gleamed as she held up her wine glass. “A toast.”

“To good friends and a happy new year,” I added, lifting my glass.

“Nope, to the Santa List.”

Felix grinned. “To the Santa List.” I surrendered. “To the Santa List . . . and the future.”

Top 10 Horror Romance Movies

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It’s the oldest trick in the book to watch a scary movie when you want to hold a certain someone tightly. There’s a scientific reason why it works.

When we’re scared, our brains pump out the feel-good chemical dopamine, the same chemical we release when we’re infatuated with someone. Your heart races and you can become addicted to that feeling—as the euphoric serotonin hormone also shoots up.

So if your relationship is lacking, getting scared with a slasher film (heck, even a super-intense drama) can boost dopamine, to give you that infatuated feeling again. The arousal from being frightened becomes mixed up with the arousal of sexual attraction. The proof’s in the science.

Here is our list of the 10 most Romantic Horror Movies to mix the best of both worlds. No sappy Twilight movies to be found here. We’ve put together the classics, the obscure and the modern to get your blood flowing this Halloween. Enjoy!

 

Cat People (1942)

Irena Dubrovna (Simone Simon), a New York City–based fashion designer who hails from Serbia, begins a romance with marine engineer Oliver Reed (Kent Smith). After the couple gets married, Oliver becomes concerned about Irena’s notion that she is cursed and may transform into a large cat in the heat of passion. Confiding in his beautiful assistant, Alice Moore (Jane Randolph), about his marital issues, Oliver unwittingly triggers Irena’s curse, with tragic results.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992)

Adaptation of Bram Stoker’s classic vampire novel. Gary Oldman plays Dracula whose lonely soul is determined to reunite with his lost love, Mina (Winona Ryder). In Britain, Dracula begins a reign of terror and seduction draining the life from her closest friend, Lucy (Sadie Frost). Together they try and drive Dracula away.

Let the Right One In (2008)

When Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant), a sensitive, bullied 12-year-old boy living with his mother in suburban Sweden, meets his new neighbor, the mysterious and moody Eli (Lina Leandersson), they strike up a friendship. Initially reserved with each other, Oskar and Eli slowly form a close bond, but it soon becomes apparent that she is no ordinary young girl. Eventually, Eli shares her dark, macabre secret with Oskar, revealing her connection to a string of bloody local murders.

Shaun of the Dead (2004)

Shaun (Simon Pegg) is a 30-something loser with a dull, easy existence. When he’s not working at the electronics store, he lives with his slovenly best friend, Ed (Nick Frost), in a small flat on the outskirts of London. The only unpredictable element in his life is his girlfriend, Liz (Kate Ashfield), who wishes desperately for Shaun to grow up and be a man. When the town is inexplicably overrun with zombies, Shaun must rise to the occasion and protect both Liz and his mother (Penelope Wilton).

Warm Bodies (2013)

A terrible plague has left the planet’s population divided between zombies and humans. An unusual zombie named R (Nicholas Hoult) sees his walking-dead brethren attacking a living woman named Julie (Teresa Palmer) and rescues her. Julie sees that R is different from the other zombies, and the pair embark on an unusual relationship. As their bond grows and R becomes more and more human, a chain of events unfolds that could transform the entire lifeless world.

Only Lovers Left Alive (2013)

Artistic, sophisticated and centuries old, two vampire lovers (Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleston) ponder their ultimate place in modern society.

The Fly (1986)

When scientist Seth Brundle (Jeff Goldblum) completes his teleportation device, he decides to test its abilities on himself. Unbeknownst to him, a housefly slips in during the process, leading to a merger of man and insect. Initially, Brundle appears to have undergone a successful teleportation, but the fly’s cells begin to take over his body. As he becomes increasingly fly-like, Brundle’s girlfriend (Geena Davis) is horrified as the person she once loved deteriorates into a monster.

The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971)

In a desperate attempt to reach his ill wife, organist Anton Phibes (Vincent Price) is horrifically disfigured in a car accident and presumed dead. When he learns that his wife died during an operation, Phibes blames her surgeons and plots an elaborate revenge to punish them for their incompetence. With the help of a mute assistant (Virginia North), Phibes creates a mask resembling his own face and murders the surgeons one by one using bizarre methods inspired by the biblical plagues.

What Lies Beneath (2000)

It had been a year since Dr. Norman Spencer (Harrison Ford) betrayed his beautiful wife Claire (Michelle Pfeiffer). But with Claire oblivious to the truth, Norman’s life and marriage seem so perfect that when Claire tells him of hearing mysterious voices and seeing a young woman’s image in their home, he dismisses her terror as delusion. Claire moves closer to the truth and it becomes clear that this apparition will not be dismissed, and has come back for Dr. Spencer and his beautiful wife.

Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

A young wife comes to believe that her offspring is not of this world. Waifish Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow) and her struggling actor husband Guy (John Cassavetes) move to a New York City apartment building with an ominous reputation and odd neighbors Roman and Minnie Castavet (Sidney Blackmer, Ruth Gordon). When Rosemary becomes pregnant she becomes increasingly isolated, and the diabolical truth is revealed only after Rosemary gives birth.

Five Ways To Stay Happy in a Relationship

 

TS-186407421 Happy Couples

All relationships go through highs and lows, but sometimes the lows can often seem a bit overwhelming. The energy and determination to get yourselves out of these ruts can dwindle at times, but we have a few tips that might just help:

  1. Stop Thinking About Yourself!

Group Of Friends Enjoying Meal At Home TogetherOkay, as human beings we can all be a little selfish, stubborn and set in our ways sometimes. This is natural, and the transition from  ‘I’ to ‘us’ can be a difficult one. However, it is important that you put your relationship first. A lot of married couples still consider their own families and siblings to be more important than their new “family.” And while you love and treasure your own family, it is critical to a successful relationship to make sure your partner doesn’t feel less important.

  1.       Develop Your Own 2Person Club

TS-83163693 Happy Couple 4Having rituals within your relationship and secret communications allows you to share something private, and it gives you a special connection.  Be sure not to confuse rituals and habits with routine. That would become predictable and boring. Something as simple as having your morning tea together, or going for a walk on a Sunday no matter what the weather is, can be enough to ensure that you spend that special time together. The secrets and the moments that you share will bond you together in a time of need. A ‘code word’ can be used to be in place of ‘love you.‘

  1.       Communication is Key

TS-56295445 Happy Couple 3Be sure to talk to your partner every day. It’s an essential part of a healthy relationship. A lot of couples do struggle when communication breaks down, so having a chat about your day will ensure that you connect. Simply asking,” How was your day,” shows that you care – of course, you do need to be a good listener when he/she tells you about their day. Share your day, too, but try not to be negative and whine too much. You can also remember to compliment him/her, give her/him encouragement, and make plans to do something fun together.  Obviously, it doesn’t need  to be a long conversation, but even little touches can make a big difference.

  1.       Unplug and Focus

imsis008-030After work,  try to “turn off” the office. Our smart phones are not so smart when it comes to relationships. If we never switch off our phones, tablets and laptops, it means we are always distracted. Focus on your partner and give them your full attention. Also, work stresses should try to be left at the office. If you read an email with a new deadline, this is only going to make you more stressed, it doesn’t make you a fun person to be around. So, whenever possible, step away from the phone/computer/video game/etc.!

  1.        See the World

TS-485674557 Happy Couple 2Traveling can work wonders for any couple. Experiencing new sights, sounds, smells and sensations awakens your soul and creates a sense of peace and calmness. Anytime you get to experience an adventure with your significant other, it allows you to create new memories and adventures that you both can look back on for years.

 

Relationships take work, so don’t avoid it by doing nothing, or your love life could just fizzle out. No matter how perfect a couple’s relationship may look from an outsider’s point of view, no relationship is perfect. Make sure you spend time with your partner, communicate with them and keep it fun.

BroadLit To Publish New Paranormal Romance Thriller

Facebook Cover Photo black and greenThe Tempting: Seducing the Nephilim: 

Written by D. M. Pratt, Co-Exec Producer and Head Writer of the Hit TV Series ‘Quantum Leap’

LOS ANGELES (January   26, 2015)  BroadLit, a company putting a new slant on romance, is delighted to announce the publication on January 27, 2015, of award-winning Deborah M. Pratt’s new paranormal romantic thriller The Tempting: Seducing the Nephilim. This new novel by the author of Age of Eve and the Vision Quest series of novels will take readers on an erotic thrill ride that will keep readers turning pages until the shocking end.

As one fan told Ms. Pratt, “Reading this book is the best sex I have ever had!” According to Ms. Pratt, she stumbled across the Nephilim, or the ‘fallen Sons of God,’ while researching various paranormal mythologies. Because the Nephilim are linked to the Incubus and Succubus sexual demon lore, they are the perfect paranormal creature for a romantic fantasy thriller. The heroine being pursued by the Nephilim is Eve Dowling, a talented writer for a prominent New Orleans social magazine whose young life is unfolding as she had planned it would—until she is seduced by Beau Le Masters, an extremely handsome, charismatic stranger one night. After that one night, nothing will ever be the same for Eve.

the temptingWhen Eve awakes from a 13-month coma she sees, waiting by her hospital bed, the mystery man she last remembered making passionate love to in the garden of one of New Orleans’ most historic homes. Her almost too perfect Prince Charming, Beau, desperately wants her to marry him, become a loving mother to their son, who was born during her coma, and live in his historic mansion with all of them as a perfect family.

How could Eve possibly say no to Beau? Wanting the fairy tale and ignoring her gut, she moves in with Beau. Then the nightmares begin. Horrifying dreams of being ravaged by a strange, and of an erotic being who torments her.  After researching the entity that haunts her, Eve realizes it is a Nephilim. Will Eve have the strength to vanquish the evil that surrounds her and her son?  Is her true love Beau only an illusion created by ancient mythical beings to seduce her?  The answers are revealed in The Tempting!

Author Deborah Pratt is a five-time Emmy nominee, a Golden Globe nominee, and short listed for the Academy Awards for her live action short film Girl Friends. She has received the Lillian Gish Award from Women in Film, The Angel Award, The Golden Block Award, and six B.E.N. Awards. As Co-Executor Producer and Head Writer for the ground-breaking television series Quantum Leap, Ms. Pratt wrote 25 episodes and co-wrote an additional 15 episodes. She made her directorial debut on Cora Unashamed for the BBC’s Masterpiece Theatre’s The American Collection, which aired on both PBS and the BBC.

The Tempting: Seducing the Nephilim is currently available for pre-order (at $8.99 ebook, $14.99 paperback) on all major e-retailers, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, as well as on AllRomance.com and on BroadLit’s own branded hub TruLOVEstories.com. All BroadLit books are distributed by Perseus Books’ Constellation Services.

ABOUT BROADLIT

BroadLit is unique in that it brings to the market a combination of classic and new romance material through its many multi-media channels. BroadLit’s website hub, TruLOVEstories.com, is specifically designed for women looking for a little romance seasoned with humor. The site offers novels, stories, games, merchandise, contests, videos, and other opportunities for building a strong community.

In addition to bringing back to life the assets of True Love and True Romance Magazines in the TruLOVE Collection series, BroadLit is also publishing original contemporary romance novels and mobile games for women. BroadLit is a Los Angeles-based company launched by the owners of Broadthink, a boutique branding and new business development media company.

MEDIA CONTACT

Stacia Kirby

+1-206-363-1492

Stacia@speakeasy.net

Title

The Tempting: Seducing the Nephilim

Author: D.M. Pratt

Published by BroadLit

Published: January 27, 2015

Fiction: Paranormal Romance

E-Book ISBN: 978-0-9905156-2-3

Price: $8.99 USD; $     CAN $9.99

Print ISBN# 978-09905156-3-0

Price: $14.99

What Your Zodiac Sign Says About Your Sex Life

sex horoscopeBy Laura Agrintar from Elitedaily.com 

Are you sure you’re having the best sex you could be? Maybe you know you’re a natural-born leader, but haven’t figured out how to use that skill in bed.

Maybe you’re super aggressive and need to take it out (on someone else’s body). Well, you’ve come to the right place.

Who doesn’t enjoy reading about sex? Who doesn’t like to learn about themselves? We’ve combined the two in our newest, “What your astrological sign says about your sex life.” Enjoy, we know you will.

capricornCapricorn (December 22 to January 19)

Capricorns are the missionary position of the zodiac. Loyal, consistent, secure, Capricorns might not be creative, but they definitely get the job done.

They’re super reliable people, which means (good news!) they’ll also carry a condom. Bedding a Capricorn is kind of like wooing a Salem virgin in the 1600s – prudent and reserved at first, but casting spells in bed later on.

Song to get it on: “Let’s Get It On” by Marvin Gaye.


aquariusAquarius (January 20 to February 18)

The inventive and exploratory Aquarius is like one of those kinky sex positions you find in a deck of Kama Sutra cards. Their sex fetishes are a little unconventional and daring, but if you aren’t down, use the safety word.

Due to their agreeable natures, they’ll be happy to switch it up. Aquarius aren’t judgers; they had their brief “experimental phase” in college and that one night with two Justin Bieber backup dancers. They’re just as easy to be around as they are to f*ck.

Song to get it on: “Promiscuous” by Nelly Furtado ft. Timbaland.


piscesPisces (February 19 to March 20)

Pisces are emotional and nurturing people. They don’t f*ck; they make love. Pisces are like the spooning sex position – they get attached very easily, are super intimate and sometimes in your face. They’ll even mouth-breathe into your hair during a more vigorous romp. Sexy.

Pisces also care deeply about their partners’ needs, which means you’ll always come first. They tend to escape reality from time to time, making their sexual escapades out of this world. Nail one down and a Pisces will be sure to nail you too.

Song to get it on: “Best I Ever Had” by Drake


ariesAries (March 20 to April 19)

True to their sign, an adventurous and impulsive Aries will totally ramyou (preferably from behind). Their “take charge” mentality makes them the doggy style position of the zodiac.

Aries are a little forceful, like to take the lead and have an enthusiastic disposition, which means they were just as turned on by the “50 Shades” dominatrix as you were. If you’re looking for unapologetic and energetic sex, then find yourself an Aries.

Song to get it on: “Crazy in Love” 50 Shades of Grey Remix by Beyoncé


taurusTaurus (April 20 to May 20)

Taurus are lazy and persistent, so they’ll prefer being on bottom, but will throw in some good thrusts. A Taurus man is like the bottom layer of reverse cowgirl — self-indulgent, he’ll let you take the reins, but he will dictate the ride.

A Taurus woman is the ankles-up position — she likes feeling secure and stable and wants you to set the pace. A Taurus is practical and reliable, so (Good news!) there will always be condoms. Don’t expect any one-night-stands, as a Taurus can be a bit possessive. Like their bullish symbol, Taurus don’t like being pushed too hard, so be careful to keep it gentle.

Song to get it on: “Thinkin Bout You” by Frank Ocean.


geminiGemini (May 21 to June 20)

Gemini are energetic and imaginative, making them great partners for oral sex. Their flip-flopping personalities mean that you won’t get the same thing twice. Gemini are curious and spontaneous — they’ve gone to strip clubs on a whim and then tried those moves out in the bedroom.

They can be superficial and into gossip, so don’t be surprised if everyone knows the size of your penis afterwards. Boredom is a Gemini’s biggest fear; expect a wild ride if you climb aboard.

Song to get it on: “S&M” by Rihanna


cancerCancer (June 21 to July 22)

Cancers are affectionate and sensitive and like to make their partners feel good. Because of their intimate and protective natures, they are the “Om” sex position of the zodiac, in which you two are wrapped around each other, rocking back and forth as one, and lovingly gazing into each other’s eyes.

They’re all about feelings, so speak up if you’re not exactly feeling it. Cancers just want to get close to you — both physically and emotionally — so if you’re coming over, expect to stay and cuddle all night. Be prepared to share the bed because there will be no rolling over to opposite sides.

Song to get it on: “Adorn” by Miguel.


leoLeo (July 23 to August 22)

Leos love to be the center of attention, so any sex position where they are the star (of the threesome, the receiving end, on a table) is one in which they will shine. They love drama and being over-the-top, which means you’ll have loud, pornstar-worthy intercourse.

Your neighbors will certainly hear your Leo partner roar. As a fire sign, Leos have passionate and intense love affairs. They always crave the spotlight, so don’t be afraid to whip out the camera for a little fun. Vain and domineering, a Leo will gladly do it in front of the mirror.

Song to get it on: “Look at Me Now” by Chris Brown.


virgoVirgo (August 24 to September 22)

Practical, precise and meticulous, Virgos are any sex position that allows direct access to clitoral stimulation. Virgos tend to be perfectionists and slightly over-critical, so if you’re not hitting their spots, they’ll move on to the next lot.

They are methodical and logical, which means there won’t be any mile-high club memberships or getting down in dirty places. Sand and a Virgo’s crevice just don’t mix. Stick to the bed and they’ll be sure to stick it in you.

Song to get it on: “Crave You” by Flight Facilities.


libraLibra (September 23 to October 22)

Libra are the women on top. They are diplomatic, peaceful and hospitable. Where their strengths lie, however, so do their weaknesses.

As they are vain and superficial, sometimes they only like to be on top to make sure that you’re looking at them and only them. They want you to have a good time, but you better be appreciating them for it. Compliments and flattery are always appreciated.

Song to get it on: “Me and U” by Cassie.


scorpioScorpio (October 23 to November 21)

Observant Scorpios can spot a fake from a mile away, so don’t even think about pretending to orgasm. Fiercely independent and able to accomplish anything they put their minds to, Scorpios are the sex toys of the zodiac.

Like the toys in your goody drawer, Scorpios know how to satisfy themselves, are resourceful, dynamic and can easily manipulate their partners. They like to be in control and are a little harsh, so expect them to dominate you, no lube included.

Song to get it on: “Power Trip” by J. Cole.


sagSagittarius (November 22 to December 21)

Sagittarius are the masturbators of the group. Their strength and their weakness lie in their independence, thus, they have no problem admitting when they can (and will) do something better than you.

They are philosophers and adventurers and freedom lies at the very top of their list of things most coveted. They will have multiple sexual partners or spend weeks by themselves before committing to the wrong person.

Song to get it on: “Grindin’” by Pharrell.