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Home » The Vine

The Vine: April 27, 2006

Submitted by on April 27, 2006 – 7:20 PMNo Comment

To be as succinct as possible, here is my question with the minimum of back story. I have a male friend who smells. As in “Febreze the couch after he sits on it” smells. His former roommates have tried talking to him about it, his cadre of friends have made references to how nice he looks and smells on the occasion he does not have the “locked in my room, smoking, and playing video games” stench, and a good mate of his even sat him down once and spoke to him frankly about his odor. Even his freshly washed clothes give off a stench.

I don’t wish to offend him by offering to show him the proper way to do laundry or offer helpful hints on letting one’s bedroom air out occasionally. His group of friends have had discussions as to how to properly broach this with him, even consulting the last woman he lived with who kept him at a tolerable stench level, as to how to bring this up on a tactful level. Any input you or your readership may have on this situation would be greatly appreciated. Otherwise we may pull a ring and run, leaving a basket of toiletries and instructions.

He’s part of the reason Jersey smells

Dear I Can’t Wait To Hear The Rest Of The Reason,

It’s not really a question of tact at this point; he’s already been told, in so many words, that he smells, but he doesn’t seem to care — at least, not enough to change things. He has a mother, presumably, and just because she didn’t do her job in this regard doesn’t mean you have to take over and try to teach him proper hygiene.

With that said, his “group of friends” discussing this at such length behind his back isn’t really a solution either. Either nominate the most diplomatic person in the group to bring it up with him in as non-hurtful a way as possible, or accept that the guy stinks and work around it. And if that means you Febreze the couch every time he comes over — or stop inviting him over at all — so be it.

Dear Sars,

I am 21 years old and I’ve never kissed anyone. Now, I’ve been propositioned by
a few acquaintances and approached by strangers at parties, so I guess I’m not
hideous, but I’m just not into that sort of thing…I’d like a little
affection, please, not just “play.” Is that too much to ask?

Nearly all my friends are sexually active, and those few that aren’t at least
have or have had boyfriends/girlfriends. It makes me extremely uncomfortable
to be around them when they talk about their experiences and give each other
advice. I feel left out, embarrassed, maybe even like people look down on me.
Do people look down on others with no experience? My friends say they don’t
but, well. They’re my friends, of course they’re going to say that.

I guess my question is — is this normal? Do I just have bad luck? Are there
other people out there like me? Or is there something wrong with me — not,
like, seriously wrong with me, but maybe I give out the wrong vibe or maybe my
standards are too high? I have kind of a reputation as unemotional and
independent, and I know I have difficulty being vulnerable around people,
especially the opposite sex. But I feel like everybody has some sort of
emotional issue and really, statistically, by now it should’ve clicked with
someone.

So, what do you think? Should I just have more patience? Should I change the
way I interact with guys? The next time a stranger hits on me at a party,
should I just go with it? Should I seek professional help?

Thanks,
Still Dreaming Of That First Kiss

Dear Dream,

I’ll tell you the same thing I’ve told everyone else who’s written in with this same problem — I don’t know what, if anything, is wrong with you, because I don’t know you. I haven’t seen you in social situations; I can’t read your body language through the computer.

All I can really tell you is that, by now, you’ve overthought this to the point where it’s now officially A Big Deal, and you’re getting in your own way. Because it’s just kissing. I know it doesn’t seem like it from your perspective, when you still haven’t done it and it’s got you worried; I felt the same way at sixteen, when I was still kiss-free, and then I had my first kiss, and it was kind of prosaic, but at least it was done. You know?

“I’d like a little
affection, please, not just ‘play.’ Is that too much to ask?” That’s the thing; it…kind of is. Kissing isn’t always the culmination of a sweet story; sometimes, it’s the beginning of that story, and if you’re too invested in having it be cinematic or profoundly purposeful, you’re going to keep missing opportunities to get it over with. And I think you need to do that. I think you need to let yourself be hit on even if the guy doesn’t seem like a keeper, and kiss him, and see what happens or move on to the next thing.

Try to separate kissing from true love; they don’t always go together. It’s natural for you to want affection, to have there be feeling behind it, but at this point I think you’d be better served by smooching the next serviceable candidate and putting things in perspective. You’re not unkissable, I’m quite sure, but…you need to stop thinking of the guys in question as unkissable, I think. Don’t worry, it’ll happen. Just don’t talk yourself out of it every time.

Dear Sars,

I apologize in advance that this is yet another variation on “the end of the
friendship” letters. “Rebecca” and I have been working for the same company
for nearly three years now and were close friends for the first two years,
spending a lot of social time out of work together. It’s a pretty social
firm and I’ve met a lot good friends while working here. During the fall
last year, Rebecca and I started to see each other outside work less
frequently. Rebecca was often busy when I suggested getting together, and I
knew she had a big deadline coming up and understood that this would be
cutting into her spare time. After that project was over, however, my social
emails and invitations to get together outside work went unanswered. At
work, everything was superficially fine and all work-related emails were
answered immediately — just no response to gossipy emails or social
invitations.

At the time, I was quite hurt but recognized that sometimes people just move
on. I tried once more before Christmas, yet again with no response, and
figured it was up to Rebecca now and that I’d maintain a normal working
relationship but would let her initiate any social contact. Other mutual
friends had also noticed that Rebecca wasn’t as social as she had been in
the past, and we put it down to work pressure and the understandable desire
to spend non-work time hanging out with non-work friends.

Sars, I had thought this was a pretty straightforward case of the waxing and
waning of a friendship. Recently, though, Rebecca complained to a mutual
friend that she had been feeling left out of our social events. Personally,
after no response to social invitations for months I’d stopped inviting her
to things. I felt guilty, so got in touch with a “hey how’s it going, hope
to see you at mutual friend’s party” email — no response, no Rebecca at the
party. We were close friends once upon a time, so I feel sad to hear that
she’s feeling left out. But surely she realizes that when you don’t reply or
don’t turn up and don’t initiate social contact, people will take that as a
message that you don’t want to hang out with them anymore?

A complicating factor is that another friend with whom Rebecca and I both
worked at the firm, and who had moved to another city a couple of years ago,
will be moving back soon and moving in with me. She and Rebecca have
maintained long-distance contact and are still friends. I have become used
to just being polite and cheerful with Rebecca at work, even though it fellt
awkward and superficial at first, given that this woman and I had once been
so close. I’m not sure what to do when she comes over to hang out with my
new roommate, pretend we’re still friends or just make sure I’m out of the
house? It all feels so awkward because she’s never explained to me why she
just stopped returning my calls, although to be fair, I never asked, I just
took the hint.

I felt rejected every time I tried to initiate contact with no response, so
I figure I should just continue to accept that my friendship with Rebecca is
over and resolve to just see what happens when our mutual friend moves in
with me. Is this what you’d do, or would you try to get in touch with
Rebecca one more time to ask her straight out what’s wrong and see if it’s
possible to sort things out? Or is there some other obvious solution here
that I’m missing?

Thanks so much, Sars!

Taking the hint

Dear Hint,

I’d probably just see how it went once the mutual friend moved in, yeah. I have to say, I wouldn’t be falling over myself to clear things up with Rebecca when she blew me off, then complained that she felt left out, then…blew me off again. I mean, I’d be curious, but given that it’s not really reasonable, I think I’d sort of feel like, well, I tried my best and that apparently wasn’t good enough for you, so, see you around.

Maybe your future roommate will have some insight; maybe Rebecca won’t really be around much; there’s not much point worrying about it before you know how it’s going to play out. But I think your best strategy is to plan to be cordial and friendly to Rebecca, without taking it any further than that. You’re not a mind reader; that seems like it might be what Rebecca expects from you, but…that’s her issue.

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