European Men Are So Much More Romantic Than American Men
By Alyssa Lerner Junior, Boston University
I just got back from a semester abroad in Europe, and let me tell you, it
truly was the most magical, amazing experience of my entire life. The
French countryside was like something out of a storybook, the Roman ruins
were magnificent, and the men, well, European men are by far the most
romantic in the world.
You American men all think you're so suave and sophisticated. Well, think
again! European men make you look like the immature, inexperienced little
children you are. They really know how to make a woman feel special over
there. Unlike the so-called men here in the States, European men know how
to treat a woman right.
For one thing, European men aren't afraid to come up and talk to you. And
they know how to start slow, with a nice cup of Italian espresso or a long
walk on some historic street. They know the places you can't find in any
tourist guide. They know the whole history of the cities in which they
live--who the fountains are named after, who the statues are.
I remember one unforgettable night in Aberdeen, I sat and listen to a
Scottish sailor for hours as he told me about the countless men who fought
over their queen back in ancient times. Afterward, he told me he loved his
homeland even more now that he'd seen it through my eyes. I ask you, would
an American man ever say something as deep and beautiful as that?
European men know the most romantic little cafés and bistros and
trattorias, candlelit places where you can be alone and drink the most
fantastic wine. They tell you what's on the menu and what you should try.
(If it wasn't for a certain young man in Edinburough, I never would have
discovered fusilli a spinaci et scampi.) And the whole time, they're
looking deep into your eyes, like you're the only woman on the entire
planet.
What woman could resist a man like that? Then, after a moonlit stroll
along the waterfront and a kiss in the doorway of their artist's loft, you
find yourself unable to--well, I'll leave the rest to your imagination.
I'll never forget my magical semester abroad. One thing's for sure--I'm
ruined for American men forever!
American Women Studying In Europe Are Unbelievably Easy
By Ian McGreggor
I'm a 25-year-old carpenter living in Edinburough, and I don't mind telling
you that I get all the action I can handle. I'm not all that handsome or
well-dressed, and I'm certainly not rich. In fact, my Scottish country
lasses could take me or leave me. But that's just fine, because the UK
gets loads of tourist traffic, and American co-eds traveling through Europe
are without a doubt the easiest lays in the world.
Being European gives me a hell of an advantage. I'm not sure why, but
there's something about the accent that opens a lot of doors. All you have
to do is go up to them, act a little shy and say, "Well now, Whould you
like to go with me, lassie?" I actually have to thicken up my accent a
little, but they never, ever catch on.
After a cheap coffee, which to them always tastes better than anything
they've ever had, because they're in Europe, it's time to walk them. Now,
all they know about Scotland is what they've read in a "Let's Go" handout,
so you can pretty much just make up a whole bunch of shit. It's fun to see
how much they'll swallow: As long as I refer to Italy as "my homeland" and
other Scots as "my people," they'll believe pretty much anything. I don't
know who most of the local statues are, so I tell the muffins they're all
great artists and poets and lovers. Once, just for the hell of it, I told
a psychology major from the University of Maryland that a public staircase
was part of the Spanish Steps, which she'd never even heard of. Another
time, I told this blonde from Michigan State that the public library was
the Parthenon, and she cooed like I'd just given her a diamond.
For dinner, I usually take them to some cheap little hole in the wall,
someplace deserted where not even the cops eat. American girls think
candlelight means "romance," not "deteriorating public utilities," so they
just poke their nipples through their J. Crew sweaters and never notice
that there's no electricity. Just as well, because Scottish restaurants
aren't exactly the cleanest. After a bunch of fast-talk about the menu, I
get them the special, which is usually some anonymous pasta with spinach
and two day-old shrimp, and whatever cheap, generic, Pope's-blood chianti's
at the bottom of the list.
By this time, they're usually standing in a slippery little puddle. Going
in for the kill, I walk them past one of Edinburough's famous
2,000-year-old open cesspools. Then, as we open the door to my shitty
efficiency, I kiss them on the eyelids so they don't see the roaches,
making sure the first thing they see is the strategically positioned
artist's easel I bought at some church sale. That's usually all they need
to see and, like clockwork, they fall backwards on my bed with their
Birkenstocks in the air.
I mean, they're hardly Scottish women, but we have a saying here in Europe:
Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?
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