logo
I Had A Crush On My Married Video Store Clerk For 7 Years. Then I Got A Message I Never Expected.

I Had A Crush On My Married Video Store Clerk For 7 Years. Then I Got A Message I Never Expected.

Yahoo27-06-2025
Hi, I always wondered if there were unspoken rules about acknowledging your mutual profiles on Match.com with someone you sort of know. I've been curious to compare notes and hear what it was like from a woman's viewpoint. What do you think? ~ Kevin
It took me a few seconds to realize who this Kevin was when I read his message. At first I didn't recognize him from his photograph, but then I realized he was the clerk from Captain Video, my local video store. An avid movie buff, I had been a frequent customer since it opened.
However, it was more than its good selection of videos that I liked about Captain Video. For seven years, I had harbored a huge crush on Kevin, the boyish man with twinkly eyes behind the counter.
You can learn a lot by observing someone for that long. I noticed how witty he was when bantering with co-workers and other customers. I loved the turn of Southern phrases he used like 'dumb as a box of hair.' And I loved his excellent taste in videos. He watched a lot of indie art house movies and I relied on him for recommendations.
But whenever I asked him for suggestions, I never looked directly in his eyes, fearful he would see the faint blush on my cheeks and my weakness for funny, smart men. I never dared hope that my interest in him might be reciprocated. To start with, I could tell he was younger than me. But it was the wedding ring on his finger that kept me from harboring any serious fantasies about the charming Captain Video clerk.
My marriage had ended 12 years earlier and I had fallen in love once or twice since then, but ultimately none of these suitors had been the right match. When Kevin's message showed up on Match.com, it had been several years since I had been in a relationship, and I missed having a partner.
Online dating had been unpleasant for me: the mutual visual assessment with the inevitable disappointment on one side or both; the banal small talk; the painfully awkward parting when it becomes clear that you are being voted off the island or were doing the voting. Everyone I met either bored me or they didn't like short, opinionated Jewish women. It rarely took more than one date for me to know there was no chemistry. After having met dozens of prospects that went nowhere, I was ready to give up.
So when the newly divorced Kevin showed up in my inbox, I was ecstatic. I couldn't believe the man I had had a crush on for years might actually be interested in me, but at the same time, I worried that he might not be. After all, he hadn't asked me for a date. It sounded like he just wanted to compare notes. I was hesitant about getting too excited and I responded cautiously, trying to sound as noncommittal as him.
'The way I see it,' I wrote back, 'it's a crapshoot. Sometimes I think I shouldn't bother doing this at all, but I like it because it gives me a tiny bit of hope.'
His response yielded no additional clues. He shared that he too had had no luck with online dating and had used it because he worked two jobs, had a kid, and didn't have much time to meet people. He was reluctant to date customers, he said, because he was worried about the awkwardness that might ensue should the romance go south.
'So here we are on Match,' he wrote, 'waiting to see if lightning will strike online or off.'
Hmm, I thought. I was a customer who felt like I had just been struck by lightning. Did he mean to exclude us? Was my excitement one-sided?
I ran the scenario by my friends who were also unsure, but wondered, as I did, why he would reach out to me on a dating app if he weren't interested. I was certain, though, that the minute I'd see him again in person, the answer would be clear. There would either be chemistry or there wouldn't.
Every time I went to the video store, I drove there with a mixture of trepidation and excitement because I didn't know his schedule. I had never thought about what I was wearing when I went to the video store before, but now the stakes were high. My typical outfit until then had been a tank top and a worn pair of overalls. I wondered if I should wear something more attractive, but figured I'd stick with my usual comfortable hippie style. Maybe that was a look he liked.
Part of me hoped he would be there, but I also hoped he wouldn't. I desperately wanted to know if he liked me, but I also wasn't ready to let go of the fantasy that this might be the beginning of something big. So it drove me a little crazy that each time I went to rent a video, he was never there.
Our email conversations continued, though.
'When I started on Match,' he wrote in his next email, 'I viewed it as somewhat of a sociological experiment. Like do you usually reply even if you are not interested?'
That was exactly what I was wondering! Was this his roundabout way of feeling out if I was interested in him — or was this really just a platonic query about online dating protocol?
We were now exchanging emails daily and I could see the man clearly knew how to write. His language was so artfully ambiguous and that turned me on even more. I read his words over and over, searching for a clue. Even though it had been nearly two weeks since we started corresponding, I still could not figure out his intentions.
I wrote to him that I had really enjoyed 'Box of Moonlight,' a movie that had been on his 'staff picks' shelf.
'If you like that, you should also try 'Love Liza,'' he replied. 'I love Philip Seymour Hoffman in that movie but it almost never gets rented. I have a few more sleepers up my sleeve, if you're interested.'
That evening I decided to drive to the video store and rent his recommendation. I didn't know whether he'd be working, but if I couldn't see him, at least I could watch one of his movies. As soon as I got there, however, I knew the moment of truth had arrived: there was Kevin, standing behind the counter.
I took a deep breath, nodded hi, and quickly headed to the indie film section. Just as he had assured me, the movie had not been rented. I picked up the case and took it to the checkout counter and stood at the end of a long line of customers.
I could feel my face getting warmer and warmer as the line moved forward. And then it was my turn and there he was with a big smile on his face. The minute we started talking, we couldn't stop. I was grateful that I had been the last customer in the line.
Somehow we got on the topic of our favorite local swimming holes and the joys of jumping in a cold body of water on a hot day. While he was talking, I could tell by the way he was looking at me that we would do this together one day.
I left Captain Video feeling electricity buzzing through my body. When I got home, there was a new email from him.
'I'm liking this little testing of the waters,' he wrote, 'and really enjoyed our face-to-face today. So do you want to take this to another level and have dinner or at least a drink?'
'Sure,' I wrote back.
It's been over 20 years since I sent that email. Three weeks after our first date, Kevin and I were inseparable. I learned that men who appreciate good movies and good writing make for good partners. At least for me. I also found out that sometimes it's worth putting yourself out there, even if it feels uncomfortable or hopeless, because it's one way you can up the odds that life's randomness might actually tip in your favor.
Since we've been together, we've jumped into many cold bodies of water and enjoyed lots of adventures. We've traveled the world and built a cabin in the woods. Now we're growing old together and playing with our grandchildren. It hasn't been all ducks and bunnies, as Kevin would say, but mostly it has. I still love his movie recommendations and he hasn't bored me yet. Plus, he still likes me in my overalls.
Sarena Neyman is a writer living in Leverett, Massachusetts, whose essays have also appeared in Cabin Life and Business Insider. Her opinion pieces have been syndicated nationally through PeaceVoice.com.
Do you have a compelling personal story you'd like to see published on HuffPost? Find out what we're looking for here and send us a pitch at pitch@huffpost.com.
I Was On A Perfect Date Until His Comment About My Face Caused Everything To Unravel
My Boyfriend And I Were Falling In Love. Then He Hit Me With A Deal Breaker I Never Saw Coming.
I Got A DM About The Man I Was Dating. It Changed My Life In Ways I Never Imagined.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This Bird ID App Has Helped Me Practice Mindfulness More Than Any Meditation App
This Bird ID App Has Helped Me Practice Mindfulness More Than Any Meditation App

CNET

timean hour ago

  • CNET

This Bird ID App Has Helped Me Practice Mindfulness More Than Any Meditation App

Mindfulness is grounding ourselves in the present moment, which means paying attention to our inner feelings and thoughts as well as what's going on around us. Easier said than done. Like many, I struggle to keep my mind stationed in the present and often turn to meditation apps for assistance. Yet, what has helped me practice mindfulness the most came in the form of an unexpected app -- not one for breathing exercises or mental health, but one for identifying birds. Merlin Bird ID was created by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in 2014 to help people identify the birds they see and hear. Thanks to eBird, the world's largest database of bird sounds and photos based on 800 million global sightings, the app allows you to record a bird, answer a series of questions or upload a photo to name your winged friend. Or, you can simply use the app to explore the different birds in your area, no matter where you are on the planet and even if you're offline. The app's homepage, with three avenues for identification. Anna Gragert/CNET One of my favorite features of Merlin Bird ID is that you can use it to keep track of your bird sightings and, like an IRL Pokemon GO, "collect 'em all." The first time I used the app, I sat out on my balcony, clicked the green "Sound" button and watched as the app identified the birds chirping and singing in all directions. You can see the different sound frequencies as they appear on a real-time spectrogram, a visual representation of the audio world. The next time I checked the clock, I was shocked to see that an hour had passed. Then, I dug out my binoculars and let even more time fly. What a spectrogram on the app looks like. Anna Gragert/CNET As any Merlin Bird IDer knows, there is no thrill quite like pressing the "This is my bird" button for the first time, although it never gets old. From there, you can record your location and the app, in turn, will save your report to improve its performance. Before long, I had different bird sounds memorized. In the morning, I would wake to the sound of a California Towhee's alarm-like and frankly, yes, annoying cheeping from a tree outside my window right as the sun started to rise. On walks around my neighborhood, I'd auditorially part the sound of cars and distant construction to hear the melody of House Finches mixed with staccato chirps of Lesser Goldfinches and the droning coos from a pair of Mourning Doves religiously stationed on electrical wires. It was the song that had been the soundtrack of my world but I hadn't noticed until now. By sight, I'd recognize Red-Whiskered Bulbuls with their black crests and fire engine cheeks, a blush color waiting to be replicated in powder form. Black Phoebes made themselves known with their fluffy soot-black heads, statue stillness and ivory bellies. At the hummingbird feeder on my balcony, there is a never-ending line of customers with iridescent throats in sunset colors: Anna's Hummingbirds (my favorite, as you might guess), Allen's and even the uncommon Rufous, who spend all day fighting over sugar water when not watching the feeder from their magnolia tree perches. A customer at our feeder. I think they're an Allen's Hummingbird. Anna Gragert/CNET What's most thrilling is when the Merlin Bird app hears a bird that you can't see, making it feel as though it's your mission to treasure hunt your way to it. This is often a lesson in patience, as it may take you several tries to find the songbird you seek. Recently, while sitting in a new-to-me park, the app told me a Mountain Chickadee was nearby and I spent the next 45 minutes trying to spot it with my binoculars. It ended up on a branch directly above my head, and when I got up to leave, it flew down right by my face as if in on the joke that it was there the whole time. I've yet to find the Red-Winged Blackbird who always seems to be just out of reach, no matter where I am in my city, but I console myself with the seemingly all-knowing flock of Common Ravens (also unjustly called an "unkindness") evermore on my street and the surprising number of noises they can produce. Birds I've heard, but haven't seen yet. Anna Gragert/CNET I also often listen back to the comforting hoo-hoos of a Great Horned Owl singing a 9:30 p.m. lullaby right before the start of spring. I like time-travelling to these moments, though I have come across some retrospectively hilarious conversations I unintentionally recorded in between birdsong. With that being said, Merlin Bird ID does save your audio recordings but only on your device in the app. To share the recordings with eBird, you have to manually export and upload them. I now seek out unexplored wooded spaces to meet new feathered friends, an excuse for forest bathing, which has led me to see the shade of blue unique to a Ruddy Duck's bill. After a rainstorm, I've come across a group of Acorn Woodpeckers with impressive red mohawks excitedly pecking wet, softened wood while calling to each other. Like a conversation between punk besties over dinner. My area is known for its large flocks of Amazon parrots (and their persistent screeches), whom I've now had the pleasure of seeing up close as they use their light yellow bills to climb trees and collect their berries. And once, just once, I caught the backside of a Yellow Warbler in a nearby watershed park. The Acorn Woodpecker Anna Gragert/CNET Because of this app, I've spent more time listening to the world around me and less time in my own head, bobbing between the past and future. I've found myself surrounded by and in conversation with nature more than ever before. It may be the closest thing we have to magic here on earth. Now, perhaps that is the key to grounding yourself: Getting your butt on the ground and taking the time to listen to those who are singing around you.

Kim Cattrall Shares Cryptic Message as And Just Like That Ends
Kim Cattrall Shares Cryptic Message as And Just Like That Ends

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Kim Cattrall Shares Cryptic Message as And Just Like That Ends

Originally appeared on E! Online And just like that, has spoken. Hours after Sex and the City creator Michael Patrick King announced that And Just Like That—the sequel series to the beloved HBO show—would be ending after its current third season, the actress shared a cryptic note on Instagram Aug. 1. Posting a picture of a sunset overlooking a body of water, Kim wrote alongside emojis of a heart and a pair of lips, "It's the end of a very long week." But she isn't the only Sex and the City alum to speak out amid news of And Just Like That's final bow. Cattrall's former castmate Sarah Jessica Parker—who stars in the revival alongside Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis—reflected on her iconic character's legacy. "Carrie Bradshaw has dominated my professional heartbeat for 27 years,' SJP wrote on Instagram. "I think I have loved her most of all. I know others have loved her just as I have. Been frustrated, condemned and rooted for her. The symphony of all those emotions has been the greatest soundtrack and most consequential companion." More from E! Online Tom Selleck, 80, Looks Unrecognizable During Rare Outing Without Signature Mustache Why Bryan Kohberger Left Roommate Dylan Mortensen Alive, According to Idaho Prosecutor Former NBA Player Danilo Gallinari's Pregnant Wife Attacked by Shark She continued, "MPK and I together recognized, as we have in the past, this chapter complete." Cynthia also marveled at the franchise's decades-long journey, calling it "such a delight from start to finish." "I can't believe our wild beautiful And Just Like That ride is almost over," she wrote on her own Instagram page. "I will miss working with these people everyday SO incredibly much but know we will always be a part of each other's lives." Although Kristin felt "profoundly sad" about the show ending, she expressed gratitude to the cast and crew who worked "so hard on our show with deep love." "Thank you to you all," she added in her own post. "You hold me up and i do not take it for granted!!!" And Just Like That premiered in 2021, more than 17 years after Sex and the City went off the air. Out of the series' four main leads, Kim was the only star who opted not to return. "It's a great wisdom to know when enough is enough," she told Variety in a new 2022 interview. "I also didn't want to compromise what the show was to me. The way forward seemed clear." And while Kim did reprise her role as Samantha Jones for a cameo in the season two finale, it was a one-off thing. As she told Today in 2023, "This is as far as I'm gonna go." To see what other TV shows are also going off the air this year, keep reading... Ending: And Just Like UntamedRenewed: PluribusRenewed: Days of Our LivesRenewed: StickRenewed: Top ChefRenewed: WednesdayCanceled: The Late Show With Stephen ColbertRenewed: King of Collectibles: The Goldin TouchRenewed: The Ultimatum: Marry or Move onRenewed: MurderbotRenewed: The Flip OffCanceled: The Flipping El MoussasCanceled: Christina on the CoastEnding: UploadRenewed: Squid Game: The ChallengeEnding: Queer EyeRenewed: Slow HorsesRenewed: The BearRenewed: The BachelorCanceled: Doctor OdysseyRenewed: Outlande: Blood of My BloodRenewed: MoblandRenewed: Reacher For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App Solve the daily Crossword

‘Peaky Blinders' creator to pen new James Bond movie
‘Peaky Blinders' creator to pen new James Bond movie

News24

timean hour ago

  • News24

‘Peaky Blinders' creator to pen new James Bond movie

Theo Wargo / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP Steven Knight will collaborate with director Denis Villeneuve to develop the 26th instalment of the Bond franchise. Amazon MGM, which gained control of the series earlier this year, aims to revive the iconic spy films after the 2021 release of 'No Time to Die'. Known for the global success of 'Peaky Blinders', Knight has also co-created 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire' and written novels, along with notable TV projects like 'Taboo' and 'All the Light We Cannot See'. Steven Knight, the creator of gritty TV crime series Peaky Blinders, will write the highly anticipated next James Bond movie, studio Amazon MGM announced Thursday. Knight will work alongside previously announced director Denis Villeneuve ('Dune') to bring the world's most famous fictional spy back to the big screen after a prolonged absence. Amazon MGM Studios acquired creative control of the 007 movies in February and has moved quickly to get one of Hollywood's most valuable franchises back into production. There has been no new Bond film since 2021's No Time To Die. Knight is best known as the mind behind violent British gangster series Peaky Blinders, which was set in industrial England at the turn of the 20th century and became a global hit. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Amazon MGM Studios (@amazonmgmstudios) Running for six seasons, and with a Netflix film version currently in the works, Peaky Blinders turbo-charged the careers of leading man Cillian Murphy, alongside a stellar supporting cast including Tom Hardy, Anya Taylor-Joy and Kingsley Ben-Adir. In addition to Peaky Blinders, Knight also co-created the wildly popular television quiz show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and has penned four novels. The Birmingham, England-based screenwriter, producer and director's other TV credits include 'Taboo,' 'See,' 'This Town,' and 'All the Light We Cannot See.' The Bond films, based on Ian Fleming's novels, have earned more than $7 billion collectively at the global box office since debuting in 1962. No release date or title has yet been set for the film franchise's 26th instalment. And despite frenzied speculation among fans, there has been no announcement on which actor will replace Daniel Craig as the suave British super-spy. Among the actors most discussed to be the next Bond are Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Tom Holland, Harris Dickinson, Jacob Elordi, and Ben-Adir - but Amazon MGM has so far refused to disclose the franchise's most closely guarded secret.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store