I Smell Trouble, Boys...


IT IS SATURDAY, a crisp spring afternoon, and you're exactly where you 
should be: stretched out on the couch in front of a televised sporting 
event, opening beer number two, relaxed in the knowledge that the pizza
you ordered is even now on its way. Nothing could improve this moment, 
except maybe a bigger television. Suddenly your girlfriend enters the 
room and says, "What exactly do you think you're doing?" 

Is this a trick question?

Yes, it is. The trick is that no matter how you answer it, you will 
immediately find yourself driving down to your nearest home-improvement 
centre, where you will spend the rest of the afternoon trying to decide
the type of curtain rod that's right for you. 

How does this work?

It has as much to do with the nature of the question itself as with 
anything else. Women are expert at posing questions that seem to have no 
right answer. Here's a common example.

"DO I LOOK FAT?"

There is no answer to this question that won't be interpreted "yes". "No" 
means yes. "Yes" means yes. "I don't know" means yes. "It doesn't matter" 
means yes. The briefest hint of a pause before speaking means yes, yes, 
yes.

Most of us would rather take our degrees again than field this one, yet it 
may well come up several times a week. Your only real choice is to say no, 
clearly and immediately, leaving no possibility for any subtext, and
making it sound like a widely acknowledged fact and not simply your opinion.
This doesn't work, but all the other options are worse.

There are several other questions for which "no" is the only answer, and 
several more that call for an emphatic and unqualified yes. In all of 
these cases, elaboration, justification or ANY ATTEMPT TO BE FUNNY IS 
UNLIKELY TO PAY OFF.

Consult this handy chart:

JUST SAY NO

>Is there someone else?
>Do you still fantasise about her?
>Are you tired of me?

JUST SAY YES

>Do you still love me?
>Do you ever fantasise about me?
>Do you like my hair this way?

Unfortunately, many female inquiries require more than a simple yes or no 
response. Some of them are more like riddles. Such as this one:

"WHICH SHOES LOOK BETTER?"

Typically you're already late for dinner when your girlfriend confronts 
you, with one pair of shoes on and another alongside them. This is no 
ordinary choice. It's a devious chicken/egg puzzler, the sort of choice 
that would lead even Hobson to say to Mrs. Hobson, "Whichever, you old 
trout!" If you pick the shoes she already has on, she'll think you're 
trying to hurry her. If you pick the other pair, she'll think it's because 
you know you can't pick the ones she has on. Some men try a non-linear 
approach and opt for a third, unoffered pair of shoes, but this is
inevitably taken as either an attack on her judgement or an opportunity 
for her to attack yours. On no account suggest another dress. You might 
as well say, "You're fat." This raises the question of why she's asking 
you at all. She knows you don't know which shoes look better, and she 
knows you don't care, so why is she trying to elicit your opinion? This 
is part of an ongoing campaign to domesticate you. As part of the same 
campaign, she will occasionally consult you about alternative table 
settings or new towels. In these two cases a disdainful and dismissive 
"beats me" should do the trick, but don't try that with the shoe dilemma, 
or you'll miss your reservation. Instead, suggest that she try on the 
other shoes, then tell her the first ones look better. This lets you more 
or less off the hook, as long as you don't raise a fuss when she decides 
that the second pair are better after all.

"WHERE DO YOU SEE THIS RELATIONSHIP GOING?" 

This could be described as an essay question, since you're obviously not 
going to get away with snappy little answers such as "forward" or 
"upstairs" or "I dunno". Another problem is that you and your girlfriend 
are operating at cross-purposes here. She wants a heartfelt expression of 
your feelings and an honest assessment of your future together, and you 
want an easier question. There is certainly no point in answering a 
toe-curling query like this one without at least a rough idea of precisely 
what it is she wants to hear. Questions such as this one are a category 
unto themselves, i.e. questions that should be answered with another 
question. See how easily some of the more difficult leading inquiries can 
be parried through the simple deployment of reflexive interrogation.

>HER: Where do you see this relationship going? 
>YOU: Where do you see this relationship going? 

>HER: Do you think she's attractive? 
>YOU: Who?

>HER: Will you marry me?
>YOU: Where am I?

>HER: What if I were pregnant?
>YOU: Are you pregnant?
>HER: Why? Do I look fat?

Whoops! We're in a bit of trouble here. You should have seen that coming. 
Try a more surreal approach:

>HER: What if I were pregnant?
>YOU: What if I were pregnant?

At the very least it gives you time to think up a better answer. Some 
all-purpose question-answers include: How much is a lot? Why do you ask? 
Should I be? What are you saying? Does it matter? What's love gotta do 
with it? Are you talking to me? (Note: Are you having your period? is not 
one of these.)

Let's try a math question.

"HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE YOU SLEPT WITH?" 

Hmmmmm....Now, you can tell her the truth, unless the truth is more than 
12, or you can have a guess at the number she's more or less expecting. 
Like most arithmetic problems, the answer is a lot easier once you have a 
formula. This one should work as long as neither of you has sex for a 
living. Number of people she's slept with + Number of people she knows 
you've slept with + Number of people you actually have slept with. Add 
these up and divide by 2. If you round up to the nearest whole person, >you 
should end up with a realistically healthy but not particularly shocking 
number. If the result is greater than 12, then say 12. Let's move >on.

"WHY DON'T YOU LIGHTEN UP?"

This rhetorical gem is used whenever you express your disapproval of 
shoplifting or speeding, or whenever you go to a nightclub and spend the 
whole time complaining because the music is too loud and there aren't any 
chairs. There's no good answer to this one. You could draw attention to
her inconsistency in this matter, noting that she doesn't like it when 
you act like a kid or when you act like your dad; then again, if you do that,
she's liable to see your point and break up with you. Speaking of breaking 
up, how about this one.....

"ARE YOU SAYING YOU WANT TO END IT?" 

Women, like lawyers, rarely ask a direct question, unless they already
know what the answer will be. As for women lawyers, I don't know what they 
do, and I'm pretty sure I don't want to know. The point is, when a woman 
asks you this question, she knows you're going to say no. Even if you want 
to say yes, you'll say no. You can't turn the question back on her, because 
you have no idea what her answer is going to be. If you are trying to break
up with her, you'll have to say no and start the whole painful process again.
If you aren't trying to break up with her, then it's best to change the 
subject.  Let's try some-thing easier.

"NOTICE ANYTHING DIFFERENT ABOUT ME?" 

Well, slightly easier. This question is of a piece with two others: "Have 
you forgotten what today is?" and "Have you been listening to a word I've 
said?"

Apart from being questions that are easier to answer wrong than right, 
they're the kinds of things women say in sitcoms.

They are best treated in an ironic post-modern context; ie, just say what 
Ward Cleaver would say.

>HER: Notice anything different about me? 
>YOU: New apron?

>HER: Have you forgotten what today is? 
>YOU: Of course not. It's Thursday.

>HER: Have you been listening to a word I've said? 
>YOU: That's nice, dear...

Funny, huh? Well, it's not your fault if she doesn't get it. If she wants
a better answer, she's going to have to start asking better questions. 
Questions such as:

"HAVE YOU TAKEN A LOOK AT YOURSELF LATELY?" 

This question and its cousin, the almost always uncalled for "Who do you 
think you are?", are ways of gently reminding you how much of a factor
pity was in her original decision to go out with you, and how that decision 
could be rescinded if you behave in any way that cannot be described as 
abject.

You probably brought this rebuke on yourself by mentioning that you reckon 
Brad Pitt is getting a little chubby or by speculating that Jack Nicholson 
doesn't have to wait until his birthday for oral sex. You're not really 
supposed to answer either of these questions. You're just supposed to 
apologise for your wanton self-esteem-having. Instead of apologising, just 
smile. Your manifold inadequacies as a boyfriend - nay, as a man - are a 
kind of revenge all by themselves. Next!

"DO YOU BELIEVE IN FIDELITY?"

Like most philosophical questions that seem to pop up out of the blue,
this question doesn't pop up out of the blue. This general query about 
fidelity is in fact a coded inquiry about the extent of your fidelity on 
a specific occasion or occasions. Your response will also have to be coded. 
Consult this translation chart before giving your answer:

YOU SAY - Yes
YOU MEAN - How much does she know?
SHE THINKS - He's hiding something

YOU SAY - It depends
YOU MEAN - How much does she know?

SHE THINKS - I knew it!
YOU SAY - Why do you ask

YOU MEAN - How much does she know?
SHE THINKS - Bastard!

YOU SAY - I dunno. Do you?
YOU MEAN - How much does she know?
SHE THINKS - How much does he know? 

There are several more variations, but they're not worth going into. By
the time she asks you this question, you're already in deep trouble. It
doesn't really matter what you say, as long as you don't blush when you 
a answer. Let's look at an example that calls for more straight forward 
lying.

"WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT?"

She means, "You were looking at that girl, weren't you?" And you thought 
you'd perfected that trick of keeping your neck still and just letting
your eyes swivel. Obviously, the truth is not the best answer here. We all 
know that the truth can set you free, sometimes before you've found somewhere 
else to stay. It may seem easy enough to answer this question with a 
cunning lie, but when men are caught off-guard, their ability to deceive
is impaired.

Here are a few of the more common mistakes men make when asked "What are 
you looking at?"

TOO SPECIFIC: "The rust around the bolts on the handle on the flap of that 
mailbox on the northwest corner".

NOT SPECIFIC ENOUGH: "That thing."

TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE: "A diamond necklace in that window back there that 
would be perfect on you".

TOO TRUE TO BE GOOD: "A see-through nightie in that window back there that 
would be perfect on you."

TOO OBVIOUS: "Nothing."

WAY TOO OBVIOUS: "That blonde babe over there with the big...I mean 
nothing."

Here's one that requires a little interpretation. 

"WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO NOW?"

This one often crops up whenever some kind of emergency or seemingly 
unsolvable problem arises. The part that requires interpretation is the 
mysterious "we" in the middle. This means two things: in one sense, "we" 
clearly means "you" - as in, "What are you going to do now"; but there is 
also a sense of "we're in this together" implying that you bear equal 
responsibility for the fact that she's just dropped her keys down a grate, 
or that she stores her jack and spare tire in her garage so they won't get 
stolen.

In such situations you'll probably find that the only answer to "What are 
we going to do now?" that you can think of is "We are going to break up. 
Good-bye." Most likely you'll decide not to say anything. After which she 
will probably let loose with the rather ill-advised:

"WHY DON'T YOU SAY SOMETHING?"

Whether you answer this one is up to you. There is only one question that 
you should never, ever answer. Keep silent, cower behind your Fifth 
Amendment rights, pretend you didn't hear, run away, whatever, but don't 
say anything when she asks:

"SHOULD I GET ALL OF MY HAIR CUT OFF?" 

If you say anything, then when she does get all her hair cut off (and
let's face it, she's already made up her mind) and she hates it (and she 
will hate it), it will be your fault. Even if you say absolutely nothing, 
the best you can hope for is that she will come home with all her hair cut
off, stare you straight in the eye and say: 

Does it make me look fat?  You're on your own. 

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Submitted by: Chandran Monikandan


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