I declined, saying, "If you guess wrong, and too high, my self-esteem could be, like, permanently ruined."
He replied, "Oh, come on. There's nothing wrong with you. You have a perfectly fantastic athletic body."
Athletic!?!? He consciously chose NOT to say thin. Instead, he said athletic. Which means muscular. Which means thick. Which is as good as saying fat! Which brings me to my first point ...
1. I always want a guy to tell me I look skinny.
Now, yes, I know I sound like a real anti-feminist, saying this. But it pleases me to no end when people — male and female — say things like, "My god, you're tiny!" Or, "Wow, what are you these days, a size two?" I know societal pressures have done some bad things to my body image (and to our collective body image); I won't deny that. But I do love to feel petite.
2. I always want to hear I look shockingly young.
New Friend just made things worse after the "athletic body" debacle by trying to guess my age — and he got it right on the nose. Fishing for a compliment, I said, "Ah, too bad, I actually look as old as I am, huh?" He replied, "You're incredibly well-preserved for someone your age." Oh, dear. Well-preserved?! I felt like a canned sardine. Couldn't he — just to be nice — have told me I looked like I'd just gotten back from shopping for my prom dress? Couldn't he have told me my skin looked as soft and smooth as a a baby's bottom? Couldn't he, at the very least, have said, "Wow, you must be getting Botox, because you look terrific!"?
3. I also don't mind it when guys say, "Now you — you I'd sleep with!"
Luckily, New Friend turned things around a few minutes later. He was describing some woman in his office who drove him nuts because she thought she was the cat's meow; she'd dissed one of New Friend's male coworkers who'd asked her out. "And this woman, she's empirically attractive, I guess," New Friend said. "But she totally lacks charisma! I'd never sleep with her — and I can't imagine too many men who would." Then, gratuitously, he turned to me, and almost out of the corner of his mouth, he said, "But you? You I'd sleep with in a second. You've got the je ne c'est quoi."
Now, sure, it's a little embarrassing, a little crude, when a guy says something like this. But I like to think it's also his awkward, dorky way of flirting. Of trying to say, as directly as he can without downright asking for it, that he thinks you're hot. Call me crazy, but I find it kind of endearing.
Get more from Maura Kelly at her daily blog: A Year of Living Flirtatiously
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Reprinted with Permission of Hearst Communications, Inc.
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From the Community…
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Posted by Sat Jun 13, 2009 8:12pm PDT
Report Abusewow, people here are being really vicious. i totally understand where you are coming from, I dont want to hear truthfully how I look from a guy friend, because its not their job to tell me that i need to lose a few pounds, take better care of myself, etc. i have my mother for that. they can stick with the compliments, thank you.
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Posted by Sat Jun 13, 2009 11:33pm PDT
Report AbuseIt's your issue that "athletic" translates into "fat" in the Maura dictionary. Not all girls are like this. Some of us are actually comfortable with our bodies. And p.s. admitting you have insecurities that need to be demoted by the opposite sex does not make you sexist. It makes you honest.
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Posted by Sun Jun 14, 2009 5:08pm PDT
Report AbuseI cannot get over the "athletic" as "fat" comment. I'm athletic, and I wear a size 2. What part of "fat" is that exactly?
You will not find happiness through other people. Find a purpose in life, and you will no longer need the validation of others.
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Posted by Mon Jun 15, 2009 8:39am PDT
Report Abusehow the hell thick n athletic means ur fat? this s--- makes no sense
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Posted by Mon Jun 15, 2009 3:26pm PDT
Report AbuseJust an FYI, I am Petite (I was born pre-mature), I am Skinny (in a healthy way, I don't look anorexic, I eat constantly) and I look VERY young for my age. So next time before you rant and say you want all these things, think about the girls who already have to go through it.
For instance, people constantly think I look younger than what I am, (I am 20 and people constantly think I am atleast 5 to 7 years younge rthan what I am!) and it's not always a piece of cake. Especially when you want to be taken seriously. And I do consider it a compliment that I adore. Since aparently so many Women strive to look young.
And being called SKINNY by other people who are not happy with themselves by others who don't exactly have the best self esteem is actually kind of rude,I was blessed with my shape and I am comfortable in the skin I am in, so being constantly reminded that you want to be my size is...I don't know, annoying in a way. And it just constantly reminds me of what an awful affect the media has on the Women in our society today.
So please, please PLEASE do us all a favor gain some confidence in yourself. Then maybe, you can realize that true happiness doesn't come from some guy fishing you shallow and stupid compliments, but from within.
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Posted by Thu Jun 18, 2009 7:56pm PDT
Report Abusei have to say, i agree with your last idea the least. There are many women, myself included, that would feel offended and awkward if a guy said that they would want to sleep with them.
I really hope you get some self-esteem honey, sounds like you just need some coming from yourself, not from a man. best of luck to you in that respect! =)
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Posted by Sun Jun 28, 2009 6:35am PDT
Report AbuseYou are dumb. Athletic isn't thick and thick isn't fat. Thick means you have curves an a real body instead of a twig. Next time make sure you know what you are talking about.
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Posted by Sun Nov 22, 2009 7:01pm PST
Report AbuseWow, every time I thought this piece couldn't get worse, I was wrong. It's terrible. I don't even have all the words I need to describe how damaging I think this is.
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