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L.A. Affairs: Who knew Home Depot was the most romantic place on Earth?

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Shortly after I turned 70, my husband of almost 50 years died because of a significant stroke he’d suffered 13 months earlier. Our marriage had been rocky; twice I’d requested for a divorce, however every time we sought counseling and stayed collectively. I’m glad we did, since I used to be capable of turn out to be his part-time caregiver throughout his sickness.

Within the weeks and months after his passing, I targeted on time with mates, taking lessons (in opera and artwork historical past appreciation, and movie as literature), spending time with my daughter and her household, and having fun with my two grandchildren. Initially, that was sufficient. It took me about two years to really feel like I wished male companionship once more. I knew I didn’t wish to remarry and even stay with another person. I used to be pleased with my freedom and independence and the numerous actions I’d began participating in.

I simply wished a “good friend with advantages.”

I joined Jdate after which Match.com. I made it by a number of one-date experiences that might warrant their very own sitcom (or a “how-to-not” handbook).

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One man clearly simply wished somebody to spend money on his new enterprise. I bought up and walked out of the lunch we’d been having at Las Brisas in Laguna Seashore.

One other date talked endlessly about his “kinky” intercourse life. He was sitting on my couch when he requested me if I favored being tied up and blindfolded. (It wasn’t that this stuff upset me as a lot as the truth that we’d solely began courting and had by no means even been intimate. It was approach too early for that type of discuss.) I requested him to go away.

I virtually went on a date with the fix-it man who got here to switch my kitchen faucet. He strung me alongside for some time earlier than lastly admitting he was married. I confirmed him the door after which employed another person to do the remainder of the roles in my apartment.

I had excessive hopes for an additional man. We went on our first date on New Yr’s Day 2020. We continued courting for a couple of months, however seeing one another throughout COVID-19 occasions once we couldn’t take pleasure in actions like motion pictures, eating places and different diversions made me notice that his “idiosyncrasies” had been really huge failings in his persona. (He was boring. He didn’t vote, cared little about politics. And I needed to do all of the planning; he by no means advised something.)

Finally, a couple of months into the shutdown, I broke up with him. I had no regrets. I didn’t need a relationship that supplied so little. I used to be happier being by myself once more. I took my profile off these two courting websites and sat out the remainder of the 12 months with no want to satisfy another person.

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Because the pandemic precautions had been slowly lifted earlier this 12 months, nevertheless, I took an opportunity and joined a courting web site for the 50-plus set referred to as SilverSingles. I put up a couple of new pictures of myself and wrote what I believed was a superb profile.

Two residents who stay in the identical senior group as I do responded. I went out as soon as with every of them. There have been no sparks with the primary one. I made plans for an additional date with the second gentleman however realized he had an issue with being “in contact” between dates. He didn’t name, textual content or electronic mail me as soon as after our first date, so it was going to be a full eight days earlier than our deliberate second date. Once I despatched him a textual content asking why I hadn’t heard from him, he replied that he believed solely in face-to-face conversations. I instructed him that our second date was going to be like a primary date once more since we hadn’t progressed in attending to know one another.

I made a decision to interrupt that second date.

By this time, I had had sufficient. I used to be accomplished with on-line courting. However on the very day I went to delete my account for the final time, I discovered a brand new profile ready for me. His title was Mark. He appeared to have a twinkle in his eyes; his smile was boyish — broad and pure.

In his profile, he talked about issues that matched what I used to be on the lookout for in a relationship. Lots of his pursuits mirrored my very own; we each loved crops and gardening and getting out in nature. He adopted politics too. I despatched him a message. Not 20 minutes later, I acquired a pleasant response. Over the following few days and weeks, we might be taught that we had a lot in widespread. We’d even lived close to one another in L.A. at one level. We had been additionally capable of converse overtly about dropping our companions after a protracted marriage (he was divorced). Once I instructed him I hadn’t ridden a motorbike in years, he supplied to show me the way to take pleasure in biking once more. His humorousness got here pouring out in his phrases. I used to be charmed by him, as he was by me.

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Earlier than lengthy, we deliberate our first date: I invited him for a stroll round Aliso Creek in South Orange County. Once we lastly met, we instantly, and with none shyness or hesitation, threw our arms round one another and hugged.

Though we’d deliberate solely a stroll that morning, we ended up going to lunch collectively and speaking for hours. Every part simply clicked. By the tip of that first date, we knew one thing particular had began. We had been on a quick observe to falling in love.

This all occurred just a little over eight months in the past. We agreed that, at our age, if the connection is an effective one, we should always embrace it and each second that comes our approach.

He’s transforming a brand new house, and far to my delight I’ve been constantly invited to assist him choose lights, sinks, taps and extra. By no means earlier than has Dwelling Depot been such a romantic place. No candles essential. A kiss whereas trying up at a doable ceiling fan to buy, holding arms whereas strolling down the bathroom aisle …

At 75, I’m having the time of my life giving and receiving love once more.

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The writer writes a month-to-month column within the Globe, the native newspaper for the Laguna Woods Village retirement group, and has written many poems and brief tales.

L.A. Affairs chronicles the seek for romantic love in all its wonderful expressions within the L.A. space, and we wish to hear your true story. We pay $300 for a printed essay. Electronic mail LAAffairs@latimes.com. You will discover submission pointers right here. You will discover previous columns right here.

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A member of the 'T-Shirt Swim Club' chronicles life as 'the funny fat kid'

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A member of the 'T-Shirt Swim Club' chronicles life as 'the funny fat kid'

“The first place I learned to be funny was on the schoolyard trying to defuse this weird tension around my body, says Ian Karmel. He won an Emmy Award in 2019 for his work on James Corden’s “Carpool Karaoke” special with Paul McCartney.

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Kenny McMillan/Penguin Random House

Comedy writer Ian Karmel spent most of his life making fun of his weight, starting at a very young age.

“Being a kid is terrifying — and if you can be the funny fat kid, at least that’s a role,” Karmel says. “To me, that was better than being the fat kid who wasn’t funny, who’s being sad over in the corner, even if that was how I was actually feeling a lot of the time.”

For Karmel, the jokes and insults didn’t stop with adolescence. He says the humiliation he experienced as a kid navigating gym classes, and the relentless barrage of fat jokes from friends and strangers, fueled his comedy.

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For years, much of his stand-up comedy centered around his body; he was determined to make fun of himself first — before anyone else could do it. “At least if we’re destroying me, I will be participating in my own self-destruction so I can at least find a role for myself,” he says.

Karmel went on to write for The Late Late Show with James Corden. He has since lost more than 200 pounds, but he feels like he’ll have a lifelong relationship with fatness. He wrote his new memoir, T-Shirt Swim Club: Stories from Being Fat in a World of Thin People, along with his sister Alisa, who channeled her experience into a profession in nutrition counseling.

“Once we lost a bunch of weight … we realized we’d never had these conversations about it with each other,” Karmel says. “If this book affects even the way one person thinks about fat people, even if that fat person happens to be themselves, that would be this book succeeding in every way that I would hope for.”

Interview highlights

On using the word “fat”

There’s all these different terms. And, you know, early on when I was talking to Alisa about writing this book, we were like: “Are we going to say fat? I think we shouldn’t say fat.” And we had a conversation about it. We landed on the determination that it’s not the word’s fault that people treat fat people like garbage. And we tend to do this thing where we will bring in a new word, we will load that word up with all of the sin of our behavior, toss that word out, pull a new one in, and then all of a sudden, we let that word soak up all the sin, and we never really change the way we actually treat people. …

I’ve been called fat, overweight or obese, husky, big guy, chunky, any number of words, all of those words just loaded up with venom. … We decided we were going to say “fat” because that’s what we are. That’s what I think of myself as. And I’m going to take it back to basics.

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On the title of his memoir, T-Shirt Swim Club

T-Shirt Swim Club: Stories from Being Fat in a World of Thin People

T-Shirt Swim Club

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Thank God for learning about the damage that the sun does to our bodies, because now all sorts of people are wearing T-shirts in the pool. But when we were growing up, I don’t think that was happening. It’s absurd. We wear this T-shirt because we … want to protect ourselves from prying eyes — but I think what it really is is this internalized body shame where I’m like, “Hey, I know my body’s disgusting. I know I’m going to gross you out while you’re just trying to have a good time at the pool, so let me put this T-shirt on.” And it’s all the more ridiculous because it doesn’t change anything. It doesn’t actually cover you up, it hugs every curve!

On how bullying made him paranoid

You think like, if four or five people are saying this to my face, then there must be vast whisper campaigns. That must be what they’re huddled over. … Anytime somebody giggles in the corner and you are in that same room, you become paranoid. There’s a part of you that thinks like, they must be laughing at me.

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On how fat people are portrayed in pop culture

Fat people, I think, are still one of the groups that it’s definitely OK to make fun of. That’s absolutely true. … I’m part of this industry too, and I’ve done it to myself. … Maybe it’s less on the punch line 1719964293 and more on the pity. You know, you have Brendan Fraser playing the big fat guy in The Whale. And at least that’s somebody who is fat and who has dealt with those issues. Maybe not to the extent of like a 500- and 600-pound man, but still to some extent. And good for him. I mean, an amazing performance, but still one where it’s like, here’s this big, fat, pathetic person.

On judgment about weight loss drugs and surgery

It’s this ridiculous moral purity. What it comes down to for me is you [have] your loved ones, you have your friends. And whatever you can do to spend more time on earth with those people, that’s golden to me. That’s beautiful, because that is what life is truly all about. And the more you get to do that, the healthier and happier you are. So those people out there who are shaming Ozempic or Wegovy or any of that stuff, or bariatric surgery, those people can pound sand. And it’s so hard in a world that is built for people who are regular size, and in a world that is also simultaneously built to make you as fat as possible with the way we treat food. It’s like, yo, do the best you can!

Therese Madden and Joel Wolfram produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Beth Novey adapted it for the web.

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Christopher Reeve's Son Will Reeve to Cameo in James Gunn's 'Superman'

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Christopher Reeve's Son Will Reeve to Cameo in James Gunn's 'Superman'

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Dining out with a big group? Learn the social etiquette of splitting the check

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Dining out with a big group? Learn the social etiquette of splitting the check

Let’s say you’re at a restaurant with a group of friends. You ordered appetizers, maybe got a bottle of wine for the table, went all in for dessert … then the bill arrives.

No one is offering to cover the whole tab. So how do you handle the check? Do you split it evenly among everyone at the table? What if you only got a salad while your buddy got the surf and turf special?

Splitting the bill is a fine art. Whether you’re eating family-style at a Korean barbecue joint or having a three-course meal at a fancy restaurant, there should be “a sense of equality in how the check is divvied up” when the meal ends, says Kiki Aranita, a food editor at New York Magazine and the former co-chef and owner of Poi Dog, a Hawaiian restaurant in Philadelphia.

She goes over common scenarios you may encounter while dining out with a large group — and how to dial down the awkwardness by keeping things fair and square.

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Scenario 1: I arrived to dinner late. Everyone at the table already ordered drinks and appetizers and are about to order their entrees. What should I do?

When you’re ready to order, tell your server you want your food and drinks on a separate check, says Aranita. “It’s easier to deal with than having to split a check in complicated percentages at the end of the night.”

If you do choose separate checks, tell your server that at the start of the meal, not the end. That way they can make note of everyone’s individual orders. Not every establishment offers this option, but it doesn’t hurt to ask.

Scenario 2: Everyone ordered alcohol except me — and now they want to split the tab fair and square!

Speak up, says Aranita. “Just be like, ‘Hey guys — I didn’t drink.’ Usually, that’s enough for everyone to reconfigure the bill to make it fairer. The problems only arise when you don’t speak up.”

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If you are ordering round after round of $20 cocktail drinks, be conscious of the people in your party who didn’t order as much as you. When the bill arrives, “maybe pick up a larger portion of the tip” to make up for your drinks, says Aranita.

Scenario 3: We’re a party of six. Is it OK to ask the server to split the check six ways?

Many restaurants now have updated point-of-sale systems that make it easier for servers to split the check in myriad ways, says Aranita. But it doesn’t always mean you should ask them to do so.

Aranita, who has also been a bartender and server, recommends a maximum of two to four credit cards. Servers “have enough to deal with” when working with a large party, especially on a busy night. And running several cards with different tip percentages isn’t ideal.

“If you’re a party of six, just put down two credit cards” and Venmo each other what you owe, she says. This approach also works out great for that person in your group who’s obsessed with racking up credit card points. 

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Scenario 4: It’s my birthday. My friends should pay for my meal, right?

In American culture, it’s assumed that if your friends take you out to dinner for your birthday, they will cover your meal. But that’s not always the case, says Aranita.

If you set up your own birthday dinner, don’t expect to people to pay for you, she says. You picked the restaurant and invited your friends on your terms. So in this scenario, put down your card at the end of the meal. Your dining mates may pick up your tab, but if they don’t, “that’s perfectly fine. You’re saying: ‘I can celebrate me and also pay for me.’ ”

Scenario 5: It’s my friends’ first time at my favorite restaurant. I’m going to order an appetizer that I think everyone at the table will love. We’re all splitting the cost of that, right?

It can be easy to get swept away by the menu at a favorite restaurant, but don’t assume your dining partners share the same enthusiasm for the twice-fried onion rings. “You have to get their consent at the beginning of the meal. Say, ‘hey, is it cool if I order appetizers for the table?’ ” says Aranita. If you forgot to ask this question, assume that you will pay for the order.

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This episode was produced by Sylvie Douglis. The digital story was edited by Meghan Keane. The visual editor is Beck Harlan. We’d love to hear from you. Leave us a voicemail at 202-216-9823, or email us at LifeKit@npr.org.

Listen to Life Kit on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and sign up for our newsletter.

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