Disaster-proofing Your Habitat
For Special Guests
As appeared in the "Los Angeles Times," Feb. 17
I might own a book called "Stop Obsessing! How to Overcome Your
Compulsions". There may be some CDs in my collection by Mariah Carey. I own various
expired prescription rash medications and a jar of Jolen Cream Bleach. I have the
entire series of "Fat Blaster Plus" home workout videos.
But if I'm going out on a date and there's any chance you'll be coming
over afterward, you won't see these things. Not for a long, long time.
Let me introduce you to the concept of the Pre-Date Sweep, a secret
ritual every woman I know undertakes, the once over for once you come over.
It's not that we're trying to hide who we really are, it's just that
perhaps once you get to know us, that would be a better time for you to discover
we use "I Can't Believe it's Not Butter" spray and bunion pads.
In a very unscientific poll involving six girlfriends and a long brunch
at Doughboys, I learned our methods don't vary much. The Sweep intensifies if
we really like a guy and gets sloppy if we don't care, but it usually goes
something like this.
First, the bookshelf must be purged of any titles reeking of self-help or
man hunting; that is to say, we hide "How to Get to 'I Do,'" "Why Men Love
Bitches," "Spiritual Abundance" and anything in the Louise Hay canon.
Frankly, I keep a couple books just for show that I never intend to read
("Underworld"? That's not going to happen). By the way, if an old picture of
me from cheerleading camp falls out of it, oops!
The kitchen is a minefield of potentially dangerous items. More than two
baby photos on the refrigerator can scream "baby fever" and create the sort of
potpourri-infused Spinster Museum feel that's unfortunate. We tuck away the
Get Regular Tea, the teeth bleach in tubes that look like hypodermic needles,
the Weight Watchers literature stained with spaghetti sauce.
Moving into the area of grooming, anything designed to remove unwanted
hair (even tweezers) is generally bound for the bottom drawer. I would no more
leave out a tube of blemish cream than I would a family of stuffed bears.
Speaking of animals, I happen to have two cats, which doesn't leave much
wiggle room for extraneous girly items. Let's just say I keep the throw pillows to
a minimum and it's Jim Beam to the front, dry Sherry to the back.
Music is a critical area, as guys will generally gravitate toward a CD
collection.
Every woman I know hides her Mariah Carey.
Alanis Morissette can be a problem ("You Oughta Know Š that I'm angry").
For the record, I don't hide my Lucinda Williams; if a dude can't hang with
Lucinda, he might as well know I lighten my eyebrows and sleep with a
night-light.
There's nothing un-Feminist or phony about the Sweep in my mind ‹ it's
simply a matter of putting one's best feet forward, as long as they're not
wearing those Reebok high-tops we hide under the bed and use to tap along to
"Dream Lover."
I don't know if men do much of a Sweep, other than basic cleaning and the
hiding of the porn, but I do know this: a girlfriend of mine once came home
from a date and told me she was never seeing the guy again.
"Why?" I asked.
She hissed, "He has an Abdominizer, a gold curling iron and a Mariah
Carey CD."
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