Sexy Arrogance

New York has a way of kicking your ass like no other city I’ve been in. Anywhere else you can have a long tough day and your journey home will suck for no other reason than you are just in a bad mood. In New York you will leave, try and get a cab and there’s suddenly none, a passing car can splash dirty puddle water right up on you, your heel will snap and when you finally grab that elusive taxi, you’ll realize half way home that you’ve left your wallet in the office. It’s never just one kick, New York will grab that sucky ass day and kick your butt the entire length of Manhattan.
In the months I’ve been here, I’ve come up against more challenges and more tough situations than I could imagine. What’s gotten me through this is the friends I’ve made. We laugh over the shitty tests this city manages too throw at you seemingly on a weekly basis. When you know people are facing the same trials, it’s reassuring and gives you that strength to see it through.
Sunday afternoon I’m sitting with my gay male buddy having chats over beers. We’re discussing exactly this, the challenges of living in the Big Apple. He tells me that October and November were two of his toughest months in the city. Work politics, money issues and lack of knowing people in this big city got on top of him. He tells me how happy he is since we met in January. Having a partner in crime changes your perspective on how life is. He tells me, in a love-in moment, that I’ve brightened up his life. I feel the same, he’s an awesome guy and someone I instantly connected with.
We discuss our similar personality traits, he’s as brutally honest as I am. We can tell each how how it is, straight and without bullshit. Then he tells me he loves my arrogance.

I nearly fall off my barstool laughing. I’m arrogant? He says yes, but it’s sexy arrogance. What the fuck is sexy arrogance, I ask him. He tells me to think Heather Locklear in Melrose Place.

Not bad, I can handle that. I can be Heather.

The night before I’d gone to a birthday party hosted by Australians I know from my years spent in Sydney. There’s an Aussie guy there that I guess I’ve caught the attention of judging from the glances he keeps throwing my way.

We leave the house and hit Niagra in the East Village. He still does not approach me properly, but instead employs the Aussie lad technique of showing me he’s interested by buying me beers.

It gets to the point where I’ve got three full bottles of Bud in my hands and I’m unable to literally hold anymore beers. I have to tell him to stop buying me drinks. He’s not even chatting me up, just throwing drinks at me. He’s no idea how else to show his intentions.

At the end of the night, he orchestrates it so that we share a taxi home, despite the fact that it’s a stretch to pretend we are going in the same direction.

The next day I receive a Facebook friend request from him. He messages me telling me that when we were in the cab and he’d gone for the kill, afterwards he’d leaned back and looked at me and said “Wow, you are a really good kisser”.

He tells me I played it cool, apparently rolling my eyes and answering “yeah, I know”.

Right so that’s this arrogance coming in.

A couple of days later I’m walking with my girlfriend laughing about this interaction. I’d forgotten how Aussie guys are.
“I mean, I’m just used to how fucking arrogant New York men are”. I’m feeling passionate about my observations so my voice is loud along this street and I manage to lock eyes with a passing New York dog walking bloke as I say this. He smirks at my statement and winks at me as he passes. “I’m sorry”, I tell him, embarrassed. He shrugs, unoffended and acknowledging.
That’s sexy arrogance right there.

New York men are sexy arrogant. They are unapologetic about what they want.

New York City is sexy arrogant. It’s the city that will kick your sore ass from the top to the tip and it knows you’ll come back. New York knows it’s appeal and it’s arrogant about it. Oh yeah, you find me tough? You still love me though and you’ll come back for more.

Sexy arrogance.

Dazed and confused on a first date

I met Dazed & Confused on a late July Sunday evening. I was leaving a bar when he stopped me. Sucked in by the big brown eyes, and maybe too many happy hour beers, I gave out my number after speaking to him for less than two minutes.

The very next day D&C called me up and asked me to go for a drink. Loving the spontaneity while also twiddling my thumbs on a Monday afternoon in a city where I knew nobody, I jumped at the chance.

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We met in a pub in the East Village and I was pleasantly surprised with the specimen in front of me. He was gorgeous – like GORGEOUS, properly good looking.

It took just a few moments for me to realize the guy was insane.

Three sips into our very first beer, he lunged at me, trying to kiss me.  I backed away, laughing it off, telling him not to move so fast. But why not he asks, he thinks he’s falling in love with me.

One glance at my expression caused him to sink into deep reflection.

I politely asked him what he’s thinking about. He answered telling me he was thinking about his daughter.

Right, not the answer I was expecting right at that moment. He went on to tell me he had her when he was 19 – he’s now 30.  Struggling to deal with this whole situation I lamely asked how old his daughter was. He said 4.

“Shouldn’t she be at least 10 or 11?”. He looked at me shocked, like it was a relevation and then sheepishly admitted “I lose track of time”.

Lose.track.of.time.

He pulled out a picture then of two blonde girls who were identical.  ”Is that her cousin, they are so alike?” I innocently asked.

“No, that’s her twin”.

Um, so you have twin daughters?

Dazed & Confused couldn’t deal with the four questions in succession and paranoia kicked in, with worry sketched all over his beautiful face. “I’ve really fucked this up haven’t I?, now you think Im weird”.

Suddenly I had my own revelation and asked him if he was high.

Yes, he was.

I slipped to the restroom to contemplate how to politely excuse myself from the whole bizarre situation.

Coming out to find our table empty, I took my chance to exit the bar swiftly when I heard my name being yelled from the back.

He was out in a tiny beer garden with four college students, all smoking pot. In a bar. The barmaid came out for a smoke and nobody batted an eyelid. Another New Yorkism I’ll have to get used to?

Dazed & Confused had the joint in his hand and burst into giggles.

Enough is enough. So I went home – my first New York date had lasted a whole hour.