Saturday, September 14, 2013

How to be a Trophy Wife

How to be a Trophy Wife

as told by someone who is clearly unqualified to make these claims


Fall is my favorite season.  Of course I'm looking forward to the gallons of pumpkin-spiced lattes and apple cider I'll be consuming, but even more exciting are those tall drinks of water that will be officially taking the ice again in a few weeks.  October 3rd marks the beginning of the regular NHL season, and after a devastating playoff loss last season I couldn't be more excited to watch our boys start dominating the eastern conference all over again.  Since the Steelers are painfully under-performing and since I have little fascination with baseball, I'm putting a lot of displaced enthusiasm onto the Penguins.  So in honor of my Pittsburgh sports I give you a list of items explaining why James Neal has still yet to propose to me.  

Be young
A professional athlete has a short shelf-life.  Where 40 is a normal age for most people to be reaching the peak of their profession, a 40 year old athlete has likely already mastered marlin fishing and played every golf course in North America in the leisure of his retirement.  I'm far too lazy to do research the average age of athletes, but chances are they're relatively young themselves, and just like the desire for their iphone 5s, they want the newest, shiniest thing on the market.

Be beautiful
If you're not fit to grace the pages of a jcpenney catalog or a dental hygiene pamphlet, you are certainly not pretty enough to be a trophy wife. No amount of personality is going to help you snag a hockey player if you need Valencia or X Pro to make yourself look good.  If you're the girl who is telling yourself "yeah...but I'm funny and down to earth so that must count for something," get a clue.  The amount of women in this world that are funny, down to earth, and supermodels far outnumber the amount of fucks that any athlete is going to give about you.

Be well-groomed
This could be the exception to the above.  If you're so-so looking, chances are if you spend excessive amounts of your money on skin-care products, blowouts, and clothes, you may be able to make yourself attractive enough to land a rich guy. This kind of trophy wife seems to be more prevalent in the business world though so talk to your friendly neighborhood football player and report back to me.

Be fit
I don't think you necessarily have to be a Jillian Michaels--look at Hilary Duff, she's short with a recurring weight problem, yet she snagged a pro hockey player--but you have to be in shape. Granted, Lizzie McGuire has a self-made fortune (see next point), but even if you have money you certainly can't be walking around with 40 extra pounds on your frame. Regardless of what you know about health and exercise, with the internet being a thing and all, there is absolutely zero reason to be overweight.  There are obviously a variety of body types in this world, but if you don't have one that is preferential and if you fail to keep what you do have in shape, then sorry, sister, you're out of luck.

Hilary Duff, I love you and I'm sorry I called you fat.  #comeclean

Be rich
These guys make a lot of money.  So why the hell would they want you leeching to their fortune to drain it on designer bags and a freaking Prius?  However, if you have your own money with which to do these activities, you are no threat to their earnings and therefore a viable mate. The poor person's alternative:

...be a stripper.
But really.  I'm not sure what the appeal is here, but those ladies with daddy-issues are doing something right. If not a stripper, at least...

Be great in bed
Of course, you probably have to be most the above in order to get to that stage in the first place, but if you get there, don't fuck it up.  Just saying.

Be an athlete
Sometimes professional athletes tend to date other athletes. Having given up my sports after high school, I would assume that this comes from 1. mutual respect for the other's sport and abilities or 2. proximity. Dating an athlete before they make it pro, usually a consequence of enduring study tables and strength training at a college level, can get you an in.  Truthfully, someone who has never played sports will never understand the complexities of emotional strain that an athlete undergoes, so it makes sense that relationships stemming out of support and understanding would be ideal.  Under this category I will also state that if you never played sports, you better at least understand them.

Be sharp
You're a trophy, so along with being beautiful and charming, you must be capable of at least feigning intelligence.  Really, you probably don't want to be too smart, otherwise you threaten to be the superior in the relationship, and goodness knows that's not how this works.  My advice: don't ever tell them that you're getting your masters degree at an ivy league school...just something that didn't really work for me. That being said, you want to be a trophy wife without appearing to be a trophy wife so bring something "smart" to the table.

Like children
Athletes seem to want families.  Why?  In most cases, getting to where they are required a support system, so family values tend to run deep within athletes.  Additionally, one must consider legacy.  Playing a sport professionally doesn't necessarily mean that he is setting all sorts of records.  The human need to leave some sort of contribution to the world is heightened when said human is put on a pedestal for most of his life.  Producing an equally successful child is a common pro athlete dream.  So that perfect body that you're trying to maintain, get ready to lose it when you pop out a few kids.

Be attentive
A professional athlete requires attention. Give it to him or get out.

but most importantly...

Be awesome
These guys can afford to be picky. If you find yourself fitting into all of the above and you are super attractive and super cool then I congratulate you. Now good luck finding yourself in the right place at the right time to actually put yourself on the pro athlete market.  Godspeed.


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Is there something in my braces?

It is a new month so I will no longer be beginning my blog with the formulaic "I am..." and then a bunch of barely-related nonsense. Instead, I will simply attempt to negotiate the hardships of graduate school and the ability to stay away awake long enough to crap out a coherent piece of 'writing' that may or may not entertain.


Is there something in my braces?



For those of you wondering, this is not what wearing a thong is like...

Today a friend asked me if I was a "dweeb" in high school.  I responded truthfully: I have no way to describe my high school self other than friendless, but I got to thinking about possible categories I could have fallen into. I was kind of a tomboy, but liked to wear makeup.  I was an athlete, but I did well in school.  I went to catholic school, but I loved to dance dirty.  I certainly never fit into one typology, and although I loved video games and fantasy novels, I never have and I never will describe myself as a nerd.  In a time when every girl on the planet wants to brag about seeing the latest superhero movie and talk about how great she is at  Smash Brothers, I am happy to reserve that title for the true nerds on this planet.

I don't know when it began, but the recent flux in science fiction blockbusters and shows like the Big Bang Theory have popularized being a so-called geek.  Additionally, the well-publicized success of nerds like Nate Silver and Steve Jobs, reveal the glamorous payoff that we all strive for.  Though it seems for the most part that people are ditching the whole, you know, lifetime of hard work and education and slapping on a slick pair of Warby Parkers instead. I, frankly, don't have a problem with this, but I feel for the souls who have spent most of their lives puffing their inhalers praying for Carrie Fisher to visit them in their wet dreams (I'm not nerdy enough to even have a reference from my own generation).  Since I'm sure these citizens of the World of Warcraft are getting pretty sick of the impersonators, I've compiled a short list of things to help separate the posers from the real deal.

- Wearing glasses does not make you a nerd.  It makes you an inferior member of the human race and you won't be invited the lunar colonies when our planet is destroyed.

- Liking superheros does not make you a nerd.  Liking superheros only counts as nerd points if you have read the comic books from which the characters of your beloved Henry Cavill, Christian Bale, and Chris Evans originate.  Tom Welling anyone?  #tbt.

- Knowing how to turn on your xbox does not make you a nerd.  Nor, for the record, does playing video games make you a "gamer."  Just saying.  

- If you wear makeup or care about your appearance in general, you are probably not a nerd.

- If you didn't get straight As in school, please stop telling people you're a nerd.

- If you've been in a relationship that didn't stem from a chat room, a mmorpg, or the rifle team meetings, I doubt you're a nerd.  If you had to look up what "mmorpg" stood for, YOU'RE NOT A FREAKING NERD.

- Watching the Zachary Quinto Star Trek does not make you a nerd.  Knowing that there are multiple Star Trek television series as a result of watching the Big Bang Theory also means you are not a nerd. Additionally, simply knowing the difference between Star Trek and Star Wars does not make you a nerd.

- Game of Thrones isn't nerdy. 
- Harry Potter isn't nerdy.
- Pokemon: not nerdy.

So stop.