Someone on another site really caught my eye and was available to chat for a while last night. We moved on to yahoo for more comfortable chatting and I asked him to call me tonight. We are supposed to meet up on Sunday.
I am not going to spend my life being afraid. The only real way I have ever found out if I was truly attracted to someone was to meet him in person. Just pick a public place and go.
If you are having a problem with worrying about it I don't know if internet dating is the way to go. I figure I could say hi to some guy in the grocery store, he could get my plate number or follow me home. Whats the difference?
I just went out for breakfast with a man I was chatting with a bit. I see no reason not to give out the phone number either. I am not here to chat. i am here to meet people, ya know? Sherry
LOL, I wasn't trying to tear you up. Consider this: I grew up in a place where you could say, "that sure is a fur piece to go for a drive".... a fur piece is a far place
Also, I confuse people when I refer to someone saying he/she is "lazy as a wagon dog."
When I would leave a patient's room I would hand him/her "warshrags" and say to "give me a holler," when they got to the point during a sponge bath where some help was needed.
Depends on whether or not you believe its true and if she matters in your life anymore. Sometimes, if not most times, some things will never be explained to your satisfaction and you just have to move on with your life. Call it an unexplained mystery if you will. Sherry
I would date a disabled person. Finding love is important and it seems silly to shut out a segment of people and not even consider them based on an arbitrary difference. Why limit yourself? Also, if you are so selfish as to only think of "all the hard work" or thinking its too much work to accomodate the other person's needs then perhaps you might fail to be accomodating in another relationship that starts with no disability. People tend to think its not going to happen to them. But it does. Sherry
I am a nurse who just left the hospital clinical setting last year. It is a heckuva hard job and requires a lot of learning in the sciences, a certain touch, strong nerves and a strong body. I worked Ortho for fifteen years. I think its great when anyone, men included, wants to get into nursing. There are never enough and the job is physically harder to do as you get older. I now work for an insurance company because my body said "enough" when it came to rolling or lifting patients who couldn't do it for themselves. I say go for it! You will never not have a job. There will always be patients no matter where you go.
RE: Can you drive?
I drive a stick shift car. Most of my cars have had it, better gas mileage and control