He wasn’t my type.
We worked together, and he kept asking me to do things with him, in a collegial sort of way. But when my friends asked if he might be a romantic possibility, I assured them that he wasn’t my type at all. I had always been attracted to powerful older men —the kind who charm the pants off every woman they meet.
But Jeremy was a peer. He was almost three years younger and a fellow reporter for the same newspaper. I always dated aggressive guys whose idea of a good time was hurtling down a black diamond run. Jeremy was a bespectacled theater expert who had spent the Vietnam War years as a conscientious objector teaching emotionally disturbed children.
But Jeremy was also patient and persistent; no matter how many invitations I declined, he didn’t take offence and always tried again. As cultural news reporters, we were both required to see the same plays, so we’d go together. Afterward, starving, we’d go to dinner. Our conversations grew more intimate.
Read more: “The kids at school told me I’d never have sex, never mind get married.”
As the months rolled by, my friends became increasingly suspicious: Jeremy again? Are you sure there’s nothing going on here?”
“Absolutely not,” I insisted. “He’s not my type at all.” And, if truth be told, I was pretty sure I wasn’t his type, either. His previous wife was very short, dark, introverted, and Jewish. I am a tall, blond, extroverted WASP. We were clearly not a match. But I was 36 when I met him, and pretty soon I was 37. My biological clock was making quite a racket.
As for Jeremy, every time we passed a baby in a stroller or saw a toddler at a restaurant, the smile would never leave his face. He really wanted to start a family, an issue that had been a source of conflict in his former marriage.