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Dating in the New World
Bachelor Girl

Get her advice on dating, relationships, and life


Dear BG,

A Muslim guy just asked me out–but with all this terrorism and anthrax and war and everything, I’m not sure I want to "date the enemy." What should I do?

- Confused in the USA

***

Dear Reader,

Not all Muslims are bad. In fact, I once fell in love with one, despite our many differences–religious (I’m Jewish), cultural (couldn’t tear him away from the TV if soccer was on anywhere in the world), intellectual (even after six years in the U.S., his limited English made it tough to plumb the depths of his mind), and professional (his ambition: to wait tables for the rest of his life. Don’t get me wrong–it’s a noble profession). I even considered marrying him. Yes, I did.

I first spotted Abdellatif during a concert by the Algerian Rai musician Cheb Mami at Central Park’s Summerstage. Fabulous music, and Abdellatif was dancing in the stands with a bunch of Middle-Eastern looking men. Dark, swarthy, macho-looking–just my type. I think I was staring at his roommate…but Abdellatif came over to ask for my phone number, and, well, he was pretty cute, too.

From Morocco, a liberal kingdom (by the standards of today’s Muslim world) where Jews and Muslims largely live in harmony, Abdellatif was kind and soft-spoken, gentle and funny. In his macho, protective way, he really made me feel loved.
There was spicy homemade Moroccan food in the kitchen of the apartment he shared with two other guys (and sometimes more men who slept in the living room) in Long Island City–next to an auto body shop in the shadow of the Long Island Expressway.

There were soccer games (a kind of ethnic league for past-their-prime players, i.e. 30-somethings with bellies and families)–a Moroccan team, an Algerian team, a Colombian team, and others, battled it out on a field somewhere on Long Island. No one could get past Abdellatif–a hulking brick wall; his roommate Mosker, smaller and quicker, dodged like a cat and scored frequently (and not just on the soccer field. He had a thing for Hispanic women; usually had several going at the same time).

Abdellatif and his friends were entirely courteous to me. They seemed proud to have American girlfriends and wives. Abdellatif gave me presents his mother sent from Morocco: long baggy tunics (the kind Muslim women back home wore); a prayer rug depicting the arches of a mosque that had an actual built-in compass (so I would be sure to face Mecca when I prayed); a purse and matching shoes embroidered with gold thread.

On Fridays, he spent afternoons at the mosque; I went to synagogue in the evening and we met afterward for Vietnamese food at the Saigon Grill on the Upper West Side.

We ended badly after a little over a year, as mismatched people often do. When things began to go downhill, Abdellatif started a relationship with a Moroccan woman in Boston; they married shortly after we broke up but soon divorced. Last I heard, he was still waiting tables at Houlihan’s, (which he pronounces "Holy Hands").

All this is to say: Muslims in general are not the enemy. Many Muslims want modest things like peace and security, a decent job, a place to live and a happy family, just like you and me.

Some are fanatics who want to kill people. Don’t date them.

Yours truly,

BG

***

Dear BG,

I haven’t felt like having sex since the terrorist attacks. But every time my friend spots a HumVee in Lower Manhattan, it just makes her want to hump. What’s wrong with us?
Sexless in the City

***

Dear Reader,

I’m with you. I felt depressed and numb for a couple of weeks after Sept. 11, and until recently, I felt really bad about having anything resembling a normal life. Nearly 4,000 people died in the attack. It’s hard to think about all the husbands, wives, significant others, children, parents, friends and colleagues they left behind, and how much pain they must be feeling.

For several weeks after the disaster, in Greenwich Village, where I live, flyers with photos of the missing were posted everywhere–on mailboxes, supermarket windows, bus stops, street lamps, police barricades, news vans, hospital walls. Impromptu shrines spread over a the wall outside Ray’s Famous Pizzeria and over the windows of Elephant & Castle restaurant nearby. People in the photos were smiling–a young man in cap and gown, a woman in her wedding dress, an old guy with his grandkids–and probably dead. All the flyers listed vital stats–distinguishing marks, height, weight, and that all-important piece of information in the days after the World Trade Center went down: floor number.

Every time I went outside, I saw something that made me cry. How could anyone think about something as banal as sex?

On the other hand, the attack made many people feel terribly alone and sent them seeking consolation of the carnal kind. Both approaches are understandable. We all grieve in our own ways. For some, that may mean you can’t bring yourself even to touch your loved ones because suddenly you realize they could, quite literally, disappear. For others, it means clinging to strangers, because someday soon, you could disappear–and you might as well live it up while you can.

What to do? Try to face the world with compassion–for our loved ones, for strangers, and especially for ourselves, because right now, we all need time to heal.

Yours truly,

BG

***

Dear BG,
I’ve heard a rumor that you’re no longer a Bachelor, girl. What gives? Have you sold out single-womanhood?

Single and Still Lovin’ It

***

Dear Reader,

Obviously, you don’t get your intelligence from the CIA or the FBI.

Yes, it’s true. I’m a traitor to my name. After years of carrying the standard for single women, I finally got hitched.

When the proposal came–I got engaged last November, at 39–let me also confess that I became my own worst nightmare of a bride-to-be. I ran right out and bought "Weddings for Dummies"; anxiously awaited "Martha Stewart Wedding" every month; spent hours scouring the web for wedding dresses and party favors; and even made Dream Man take swing dance lessons. I agonized over the guest list, wording and design of the invitation, the web page, the location, menu, music, flowers, accommodations, seating chart, water pitchers. For six months, wedding planning was practically a full-time job, and we bickered and stressed over every detail.

Well, I’m happy to report the result: a wonderful weekend wedding at the Minnewaska Lodge, just outside of New Paltz, NY. Friends and family from overseas and around the U.S. came to help us celebrate. My brother Gabriel, an airline pilot, gave me away, and then slipped Dream Man a set of keys and a "warranty" for his new wife ("due to high mileage, no returns, exchanges, replacements…").

Living together was really fun. Getting married was hard work–but thrilling. Being married after 40 years of singlehood–well, that’s something altogether different. It still seems strange enough to me that at least once a week, I grab Dream Man’s hand, my eyes wide with alarm and say: "We’re MARRIED!!!"

At first, Dream Man just laughed indulgently and said "Yes, and so…?" Then he began to get annoyed. Now he just says "Oh, shut up." And maybe someday, I will.

In the meantime, in the interest of accuracy–and following in the footsteps of pop-culture icon Puff Daddy–I’m changing my "nom de plume" to DeBachelor Girl (DeBG, for short).

Yours truly,

DeBG

***

Write to Bachelor Girl!

Bachelor Girl wants to hear from you! She can't promise to respond to everyone, but she's sure to have intelligent, useful advice for all her readers.

Email: bachelorgirl@ducts.org.