And the winner is…

Choices, choices, choices.

I’ve been working hard on my new website and social media items for reviving my Simona Taylor profile, and I want to share a few of them with you. I visited the wonderful treasure trove that is Fiverr and commissioned a new logo, but first, I had several choices to make. These were all clever, but my final choice is down below.

Choice #1, pretty but a little pale.
Choice #2, pretty, but hard to read from afar.
And the winner is: Choice #3, which says exactly what I want to say.
Also available as a circle. We likes it, precious!

What do you think? Let me know in the comments.

Simona’s back!

It’s so good to be back on the romance scene!

Cartoon image of Simona Taylor with braids and a wide smile.
New profile, new me.

Amazing news! After a hiatus of ten years (really!) I am reawakening my Simona Taylor alter ego. I’m preparing to bring you several new romance novels, with all the fun and flirtation of the old Simona.

I also want to share some artwork I’m working on, including my new profile pic here.

Simona’s also gonna have her own website: SimonaTaylor.net. It’s still under construction, but I hope you visit soon! She’s also on Facebook and on Twitter and her updated Amazon Author page is here.

It’s going to be a great ride. I hope you come along!

Can your relationship stand the test of time?

Know your green flags.

The funny thing about love is that it keeps us so rooted in the NOW.  We like how it makes us feel…right now.  We like the way our heart thumps when he looks our way, and the second he touches us…ooh, we wish this moment will never end.

But NOW is just a series of moments, some good, some not so good, trickling through an hourglass.  It behoves us to bet our chips on a relationship that will still be there, thriving and growing years into the future, rather than waste precious time on one that feels good now, but doesn’t stand a snow-cone’s chance on a hot pavement.

How can you tell if your relationship is here to stay? Take my utterly uninformed and random quiz and see.

His past relationships:

  1. He’s had a few long-term girlfriends, thinks of them fondly, and can still remember their food preferences, dogs’ names, and favourite songs.
  2. He doesn’t mind a little weekend fling, but has had a girlfriend or two. 
  3. His guest towels are embroidered with “His” and “Whoever”.

Family ties:

  1. You feel comfortable enough with his family to turn up on his mother’s doorstep with your belly in your hand, even when he’s not with you.
  2. His folks are warm and welcoming, but occasionally his mother slips up and calls you by the name of his previous girlfriend.
  3. His family refers to you not by name but by number.  And it’s a high number.

“The biggest arguments you have about your future is what you’re going to name your children and what colour you’re going to paint the kitchen.”

Sex

  1. Your bedtime romps are loving, playful, adventurous and satisfying.  If he doesn’t know what you want, he’ll ask.  Toys are involved, but not the kind so scary you need a licence just to rev them up.
  2. Sex is good…when you have it.  It’s just that sometimes, your appetites don’t seem to mesh.   You have this nagging feeling that if you didn’t work hard at keeping your desire up, the embers would cool to ash…and deep down, you wouldn’t care.
  3. The man has so many moves in his playbook you begin to suspect he WROTE the playbook.  He talks dirty, which is nice…except when his sex chat consists of long, detailed descriptions of his past adventures, and the woman he’s had them with.  Some of his exploits could have gotten him arrested.

Money

  1. For the most part, you see eye to eye on how money should be handled.  When the subject of future finances crops up, he uses the word “we” a lot.
  2. You have occasional rows about money, and sometimes you wish he paid more attention to financial management.  He spends way too much on tech toys and i-Whatsits, but he hasn’t let the electrical service get cut…yet.
  3. Hello, Ant?  This is Grasshopper.  You have a lil’ change to spare?

Future goals

  1. You pretty much want the same thing.  The biggest arguments you have about your future is what you’re going to name your children and what colour you’re going to paint the kitchen.
  2. He’s feeling nesty, but you want to travel a bit before you settle down.  But you come up with a compromise that works for both of you.
  3. You want a house 45 minutes from town, a son and daughter, in that order, and a dog rescued from the pound.  He wants a houseboat moored on the banks of the Caroni, children give him hives, and his only use for small mammals is to feed his pet macajuel.

Other good indicators are similarities in:

  • Religious beliefs
  • Educational background
  • Politics
  • Women’s rights
  • Friends

Scoring

Mostly As – One day, you’ll sit on the porch with your grandchildren on your knees.

Mostly Bs – You may not be as compatible as hops and ham, but with some work—and some serious, honest discussions or your goals, hopes and needs—you just might make it.

Mostly Cs – The life expectancy of your relationship slightly exceeds that of yogurt.

How not to fall for the wrong guy

We all do it, don’t we!

Some of us (and we aren’t calling any names) are such die-hard romantics (and suckers for a cute smile) that once we’re bitten by the love bug, we just can’t stop ourselves from coming down with a serious case of romantic fever.

You know you shouldn’t.  You know he’s bad for you.  You just don’t know how to stop yourself.  Lucky for you, we do.  Here are a few pointers.

Stop looking for a daddy

It’s well known that as girls, our concepts of masculinity are moulded by our fathers.  Very often, we hook up with men who remind us, even on a subconscious level, of the first man who ever loved us and made us feel like a princess.  But if daddy wasn’t good to mommy, we run the risk of falling into the same trap—even if we swore we wouldn’t.

We need to remind ourselves that, living or dead, absent or present, loving or distant, we only ever had one daddy, and the last thing we need to do is go searching for Daddy #2 among our pool of suitors…especially if he won’t live up to our expectations.

 Don’t be fooled by chemistry

Maybe you don’t believe that sex is only for marriage, but chances are you see love and sex as inextricable….after all, that’s what we’ve been taught, right?  Good girls only sleep with men they love.

But if you follow that logic backwards, good girls must love the men they sleep with… and here’s where the problem starts.  You find a man who gets that electrical current flowing and you say to yourself, I want him, I desire him, I’m even sleeping with him.  So I must love him, right?

Wrong.  As nice as it is when the two meet in the middle, sex isn’t love, and love isn’t sex.  Keep your head on; don’t let your hormones dumb you down.

Stay away from him

Duh!  The best way not to get burned is to keep your hands out of the fire.  You might think you’re cool enough to handle him, so it’s okay for you to take a little drink now and then, play a little mas with the man, roll around on the cushions once in a while, and walk away unscathed.

But the love bug is ruthless when it sniffs out a victim, so if you can’t immunise yourself, at least stay far from the source of infection.

Stop believing in fairies

Or elves, good witches, or any magical creature you think can sprinkle pixie dust on the wrong man and miraculously make him right.  For that matter, stop deluding yourself into thinking he’s a piece of play dough and, if you squeeze and rub him right (mind out of the gutter, we’re speaking metaphorically here) you can mould him into what you want.

Honey, please.  The only woman who ever did any moulding on that man was his mother, and he’s way past that now.  So what makes you think you can change him?

Learn more about yourself

Once you’ve survived the train-wreck of your relationship, (or narrowly avoided a collision) use the experience to learn more about yourself.  Ask yourself a few hard questions, such as, Why do I keep falling for men like this?  Am I afraid of a relationship that will actually WORK?  Am I punishing myself, trying punish my parents, enjoying the drama? 

When you find the reasons behind your attraction, use this new knowledge about yourself to help you spot—and avoid—your next disaster in the making. 

The Nile is full of crocodiles

And denial is full of bad choices.  If you know he’s not the man the Universe has reserved for you, stop telling yourself everything is going to be okay.  Get out while you can, and keep looking.  Don’t run the risk of true love walking right past you in a pair of well-fitted jeans while you’re busy hanging on to something that just shouldn’t be.

Keep telling yourself you deserve to be happy—and so you will once Mr. Right knocks Mr. Oh-hell-no out of the picture.

Any more ideas? Leave a comment!

The Dog’s Bollocks

Yeah, you read that right.

You’re never too old to learn something new. For example, I only just learned that this punctuation mark :— (a colon followed by a dash or hyphen) is known by typographers and other people who have a sense of humour as “the dog’s bollocks”.

Really?
Really.

If you take a good look at it, I don’t need to tell you why, because the physical similarities between the mark and a certain anatomical appendage not limited to canines is quite apparent.

It’s an archaic bit of punctuation once used to indicate a pause, hopefully a tantalising, teasing one, before you go on to cite items in a list. Nobody uses it anymore because meh.

But it’s good to know that generations preceding ours enjoyed the pleasure of inserting a naughty emoticon into their writing, isn’t it?

8 Reasons You Shouldn’t Be The Other Woman

Seriously, though. Don’t.

A married man is like a great-fitting pair of pre-stressed jeans: already tested, broken in, and approved. The relative independence of not being tied down to a “real” relationship also has its allure. But there are many good reasons why you shouldn’t succumb to the temptation of an illicit affair. Here are just a few of them.

  1. It’s anti-feminist

Feminism isn’t about burning bras or marching in the streets with placards. It’s about respecting and supporting the rights of other women. If you participate in the destruction of something a sister has worked hard to build—such as her marriage and her family—no amount of banner-waving will make you a feminist.

  • It hurts other women . . . and children

Your dalliance with a married man isn’t a victimless crime. Not only are you hurting another woman, but your selfishness will affect her children as well. And, depending on how deeply affected the kids are by the downfall of the marriage, the hurt just might filter down to their kids. Do you really want a stain like that on your soul?

  • You’ll be miserable on Christmas and Valentine’s Day

And any other day he’ll be expected to spend with his family. If the man is determined to hang on to his marriage and his family, you’ll wind up taking a back seat to it every time. Which brings us to . . ..

  • You’ll be selling yourself short

The mistress is the second banana, and that’s all she’ll ever be. Wouldn’t you rather be with a man who is able to—and wants to—give you all of him, rather than a tiny sliver at a time?

  • You’re wasting chunks of your life

You’re treading water, going nowhere. It’s a dead-end relationship. Shouldn’t you be out there looking for a full-time relationship of your own? Especially if you want to have kids. Don’t mean to be cruel, but . . . tick tock, tick tock . . ..

  • What goes around, comes around

He’s already proven himself capable of infidelity. He’s shown that he’s willing to put his own selfish desires ahead of the feelings of the woman he once loved. Or even still professes to love. If it comes to pass that he leaves his wife, and you take her place, how long do you think it will be before you are the one lying alone in an empty bed, listening out for the sound of his key in the door?

  • You’re going to hate yourself

Sure, sneaking around is naughty, and so is taboo sex. Feels great, right? But one day you’ll wake up and hate yourself. With good reason.

  •  It makes you look bad

Being the outside woman is just plain tacky. Don’t do it.

How to Get out of an Invitation

Without getting caught in a lie

I don’t want to sound mean, but sometimes you get invited somewhere—to a dinner with people you’d rather avoid, to your cousin’s god-daughter’s piano recital, or even on a date with a guy who’s trying to get his ear-hairs into the Guinness Book of Records. You’d rather chew on tinfoil that go, but you don’t want to hurt any feelings either.

We’ve come up with a few off-the-cuff excuses that you can throw out in a moment of panic . . . but be warned: some can come with a backlash.

  1. “My car’s making a strange thumping sound, and I’d rather not be on the road at night.”

Backlash: They might turn out to be amateur mechanics, and begin hurling questions at you like, “Is it a steady thump-thump-thump, or more like a thumpety-thumpety-thump? Did you try rotarising the neutrals?” Worse yet, they might offer to pick you up.

  • “I think my dog has chikungunya. I need to stay home and monitor him.”

Backlash: They might point out that dogs don’t get chikungunya, to which your only response is, “As far as you know . . ..”

  • “I’m on a new Hollywood detox. It’s an extremely powerful cleanse, so I can’t be away from home for more than 20 minutes.

No backlash I can think of. If they begin to protest, launch into a graphic description of all the stuff that comes out of you. They’ll be off the phone before you can draw a second breath.

  • “I have to help my grandma sort through her photo albums. You know how they are when they get old and start cracking up . . . the photos, I mean, not my grandma . . ..”

Warning: this excuse only works if your grandmother is still alive.

  • “My kid flushed her teddy bear down the toilet. Then she tried to send the cat down to retrieve it. It’s hell in there . . ..”

No backlash here: they’ll hang up feeling relieved that they decided to remain childless.

  • “Thanks, but I’d rather not.”

Clean, simple, and honest. If all else fails, try this one out. Let me know how it went.

Moving in with him … after 40

Not ‘for better or worse’ … more like ‘for better or slightly less better’.

You’ve gotten past the “getting to know you phase” and the “impress each other on dates” phase.  The first blush of love has mellowed to a nice, comfortable pinkish hue, and after investing months or even years into your relationship, you start to think, hey, why not take this baby for a test drive around the block and see how she handles?  You’re not ready to jump the broom, but maybe sharing an address is the next logical step.

The only thing is, you aren’t exactly spring bunnies; you’re both over 40, survived a few relationship wars, and haven’t called your mother’s house ‘home’ in 20 years.  Is moving in with a man at this point really a good idea?

Let’s break it down and see.

Pro: You probably already have two houses to choose from.

By now, you’ve both got property, so running the gruelling housing gauntlet isn’t an issue.  All you have to do is decide which home is most convenient to both of you in terms of distance from work, access to friends and family, and so on.

Con: Dogs aren’t the only creatures with a territorial instinct

As much as you love him, deep down you’ll still see your house as YOURS, and so will he.  On a subconscious level, you’re going to resent the interloper if he tries to put his own stamp on your territory…and he will.  Don’t be surprised if you have to choke down a grizzly-bear roar when you see him hammering a nail into YOUR wall to hang HIS butt-ugly painting.

Pro: you’ve probably got everything you need

Unless you’re excited about kitting out your joint home with spanking new stuff, you probably have between you all the furniture, appliances and linens you need.

Con: His, yours, ours

Which of the two fridges, master beds, coffee makers and salad spinners do you keep?  And what do you do with the duplicates?  Storing them might feel like you’re blighting the relationship…keeping a backup plan in case you have to move out again.  Selling them might make you nervous…what if you break up and need them?

And just wait ‘till you catch him using YOUR measuring cup as a drinking glass…

Pro: You’ve probably lived with someone before, so little can shock you

Walking into the bathroom and discovering that your man doesn’t only use his beard trimmer to clip the hair on his FACE probably won’t send you screaming.   There are, uh, personal things that people do in the privacy of their own homes that they don’t own up to during the ‘just dating’ phase.

 Also, be grateful that he knows you bleach your moustache, but loves you anyway.

Con: Old habits resist death like Tasmanian devils resist being petted

Honey, in his 40-plus years on planet Earth, the man will have cultivated some stomach-churning habits that will not endear him to you.  He’ll have friends who’ve been by his side since school days, and you can bet that at least one or two of them will leave you yearning for the solitude of a Tibetan mountain peak. 

Think you can lay down the law and ‘fix’ him?  Think again.  This isn’t a young bronco you can break: this is an old work horse accustomed to his routine and he likes it that way.  Try not to grind down the enamel on your teeth as you learn to live with it.

Other issues to consider:
  • Baggage isn’t just found in airports.  By age 40, most of us have accumulated a fair amount of it.  Children…exes…a whole shopping list of life’s little collectibles that you will either have to love, tolerate, or get used to hating.
  • Money matters.  You may be used to ‘handling your stories’ financially, but now there are two of you.  Do you pool your money and use it as you see fit, set up a separate housekeeping account and pay your bills out of that, or simply split up your expenses and each handle a specific set?  Whatever you do, come up with a clear agreement early, or you can bet your bottom dollar (ha) that it will come back to haunt you.

Moving in together has its challenges, and shouldn’t be taken lightly.  Making that decision at ‘a certain age’ might have its own set of considerations.  There may be lots to lose, but there’s lots to gain: love, companionship, sex on tap, and someone on hand to kill spiders and unscrew tight jar lids.

And there’s nothing wrong with that.

Easy ways to improve your life … 30 days at a time

I dare you!

Every once in a while we stop and take stock of ourselves, and feel like we should change something.  The problem lies in the mistaken belief that we should make huge, life-shaking changes…and that’s when we become discouraged.

The secret is to take on small, easy challenges, that take very little effort, but add up to so much in the end.

Here are 5 easy 30-day challenges that won’t take a whole lot out of you, but which are sure to add richness to your life.

  • Watch one documentary a day for 30 days.

Try short pieces like those on TED Talks; they usually run 15 minutes or so.  Browse through and pick from the endless variety of topics.  Be sure to share what you learned.

  • Take a photo every day for 30 days.

Keep your phone or pocket camera nearby, and keep an eye out for something that touches you or says something about your life.  Post your photos online or in a private journal, with a short note explaining what the shot means to you.  You’d be surprised how textured your life will seem once you open your eyes.

  •  Say hello to a stranger every day for 30 days.

No, not creepy looking guys in the street, but people you pass by or interact with wordlessly all the time.  The cashier at the store, the doubles man, the janitor at the office.  “Hello?  How are you?  How’s your day going?” can make all the difference in someone else’s day.

  • Take a cold shower every day for 30 days.

No joke; most of us have become a little too dependent on the luxury of warm showers.  A good, bracing daily shower will brighten your skin, wake you up, and make you more alert to face the day.  It will also make you less dependent on first-world niceties that the vast majority of the world does without.

  • Swallow negative or pessimistic comments about yourself or others for 30 days.

You’ll be surprised how eliminating negativity from the tip of your tongue also erases it from your heart and your mood.  You’ll start to feel lighter in no time.

Try one of these challenges, starting today.

Any more to suggest? Comment here.