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Flirting 101

Even at our age, flawless flirtation doesn’t always come naturally. So Cheryl Hawkes decided to seek help

Updated:
2010-03-25 10:49
Published:
2008-09-27 00:00
By:
Cheryl Hawkes
flirting 101

Top tips to flirt by

The course is called Flirting 101 and I’m sitting on the floor in a circle, staring at the reinforced toes of my Wigwam socks. I paid money for this. I am anxious to learn. Please don’t tell my friends.

The instructor’s name is Coco La Crème, an exuberant young woman with a curvy body and a staccato laugh. Coco is a burlesque dancer, performance artist and designer of stripper wear and lingerie. Tonight, she is my flirting instructor, dispensing knowledge I do not have — or claim not to have — about something I’m told even insects understand: negotiating access to the opposite sex with a complicated set of primordial signs and signals. Unlike an insect, I take lots of notes.

Getting our flirt on

While Coco explains the art of flirting — the idea that we are like fairies, going from flower to flower, touching down lightly, making ourselves and others feel interesting and interested — we, her students, clamour for clarification. One woman repeatedly asks how she can possibly execute Coco’s flirting moves if she can’t bring herself to actually talk to someone. One man concludes the evening by handing out business cards for his eyeglass store — the closest any of us get to flirting that night. I keep thinking, We need videos here. Some kind of demonstration would help.

How did I arrive at this place in my middle years, here on the second floor of a sex shop, wondering if I’d missed something, somehow in high school? In those days, I thought flirts were the bad girls who tried to take away your boyfriend. Later, when I married, it was the flirty ladies who regularly hip-checked me at parties as they worked to get closer to my husband. I did not appreciate their sport. I was not, I told myself smugly, one of them. But every woman crosses that line at some point — the day you walk by a construction site and the men keep working. When you’re riding the up escalator and all the guys on the down escalator stare straight ahead. When hockey players, police officers, firemen look younger and younger, and you wonder how that happened. When you start to realize that your flirt circuits have been on “Receive” mode all your life and it may be time to throw the switch to “Transmit.” But how?

Coco gave me her top five tips

  • Slow down! Remember to breathe! Make eye contact!
  • Flirt often. You need to practice “taking it to the next level” until it becomes natural and easy.
  • Don’t let fear of rejection stop you from trying to connect with people.
  • Think of flirting as something you do to make others feel good about themselves.
  • Smile at people as you walk down the street. Say hello. It’s good practice.

It’s time to put theory into practice.

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Pagination Documents

Page 1:
Top tips to flirt by
Page 2:
Making progress
Page 3:
Getting the flirt on

Comments

  • SallyMB's avatar SallyMB wrote:

    2008-10-12 6:50 PM

    Eeven those of us perfectly contented with our marriage enjoy engaging in a little flirtation. It puts a bounce in the step of the typically "average" men being flirted with, and also puts a smile on the face of those of us doing the flirting. It's fun, and is a real morale boost when the object of our glances flirts back.
  • alexanderkeith's avatar alexanderkeith wrote:

    2008-10-14 8:02 PM

    if you are in a committed relationship, i don't believe there is such a thing as engaging in "harmless" flirting with another potential mate. "practice" in flirting, as with practice in any activity, leads to an ease and comfort in the activity which may encourage some people to cross boundaries that otherwise may have been more firmly set. flirting with your significant other is great! just don't delude yourself into thinking that it's "healthy" and "normal" to flirt with other people than the one you are with. it's okay to go against the "flow" that society portrays as normal and healthy. honestly, would you want your lover to engage in that behaviour with someone other than you? (or would you rather just be on the receiving end of all the fun and excitement??)
  • Lilyann's avatar Lilyann wrote:

    2008-12-18 8:47 AM

    typical male response
  • Jen Murray's avatar Jen Murray wrote:

    2009-01-20 2:17 PM

    I find it interesting how men can flirt whenever they want, with whomever they want, and it's called being 'charming' and is a desired trait in men. Yet when women do the exact same thing it's purely sexual and something that is discouraged unless you are on the prowl. I find flirting harmless; it can be used for good and evil just like everything else. My favourite analogy: For me, flirting with a cute man is like admiring a nice painting at a gallery; just because you appreciate the painting and like looking at it doesn't mean you intend to buy it and bring it home.
  • joannems's avatar joannems wrote:

    2009-01-27 4:08 PM

    I agree...just 'cause your're on a diet doesn't mean you can't look at the menu. I guess I just feel confident enough to know that it doesn't matter what activities you engage in, if you want to stray, you will. Flirting isn't the catalyst to make that happen.
  • Survey's avatar Survey wrote:

    2009-02-11 5:20 PM

    I agree with Alexander Keith. Once you become comfortable with playing the flirting game while you are in a relationship.... your significant other is not going to feel as special. Redirecting all your flirting energy towards the person you truly love is the best recipe for a long-lasting and exciting relationship.
  • mistechal's avatar mistechal wrote:

    2009-03-20 1:23 PM

    I agree with Survey. In fact I used the same words when I recently broke up with a man I was very fond of. An incorrigible flirt, I told him that I just didn't feel 'special' amongst his gang of girls that he flirts with. His reply was... "well I'm with YOU and not them, that should make you feel special I then told him that I felt it was time to say good bye.. So flirt at your own risk !
  • watcher55's avatar watcher55 wrote:

    2009-03-30 2:22 AM

    I agree also with Survey. I feel really unattractive when my husband flirts with women in front of me. He tries to say he isn't flirting and just being friendly but he has to remember that he use to to do that to me some thirty nine years ago and yes I still remember his flirting techniques.I don't know if he does believe he's being just friendly or not but it doesn't make me feel special either.
  • Charlotte's avatar Charlotte wrote:

    2009-03-31 3:40 PM

    I think some people missed the point of the article... The author is obviously single, so of course she's going to flirt, and it's not a bad thing. If you're with someone then no, it's not ok to flirt with other people if it makes your partner uncomfortable. Some people might be ok with their partner flirting, and really, almost everyone flirts with the opposite sex at some point, in a relationship or not. But as soon as it becomes a problem for either partner, it has to stop.
  • ducky123's avatar ducky123 wrote:

    2009-04-20 2:51 AM

    Could it be that flirting is a sign of something that is missing in your relationship! Perhaps a sense of adventure or danger or being on the edge that makes you all James Bondish or Lara Crofty
  • Spirit Seeker's avatar Spirit Seeker wrote:

    2009-08-13 5:27 AM

    All smiles for you! You must have been clicking your heels as you spent the day recalling that moment and probably grinning from ear to ear " I did it!" : Wait till all these recepients start flirting back - congratulations on diving in and believing in yourself !
  • Justine's avatar Justine wrote:

    2009-11-12 6:19 AM

    my husband tells me he loves me and that I am the most beautiful woman in the world, that I am his sole mate. he is romantic and caring. Yet when we go out with freind s to a party or Dinner. He directs his attention and the other women. Fussing over wether they are warm enough, rubbing their backs and looking at them in the way he looks at me when we are being very romantic. Now every time he starts to be romantic with me I feel repulsed that it means nothing. Not sure where I can go from here?
  • minxy's avatar minxy wrote:

    2009-11-22 11:50 PM

    It all depends on your relationship with your partner. If you are friends first and then lovers, each of you will understand and appreciate that both of you need space. Always voice your concerns to each other and ensure that boundaries are made in the flirting department. Maybe both agreee to not flirt around each other as long as it doesn't proceed to the next level. Honesty is a key ingredient in any relationship. Friendship with your spouse is very important as well.
  • Jennie911's avatar Jennie911 wrote:

    2010-02-05 9:10 PM

    I am the biggest flirt & love it! I don't know why, but I am more confident in myself than I did when I were 20. Guys love to flirt with me as i think it all has to do with eye-contact! Sometimes causes trouble between my g'friends & I. My spouse has no problem with it, so why should I??
  • jjack2's avatar jjack2 wrote:

    2010-08-06 2:06 PM

    Flirting can be quite damaging to a relationship. Recently on a trip to Costa Rica with my boyfriend, whom is also a flirt, obviously made flirtatious motions of some sort to a beautiful 26 something. The next four days of our holiday was spent being followed by her everywhere we went at out all inclusive resort. It turned out to be the worst holiday of my life. If he would not have done the flirting to begin with she would have known to back off and that he was happy with me. By the way I am 48!
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