of Playboy, and he's ready to go. In fact, show him a pitted avocado and he's
ready to go. Women, according to the speed seducers, aren't persuaded as
easily by direct images and talk. They respond better to metaphor and sug-
gestion.
One of Ross Jeffries's most famous patterns uses a Discovery Channel
show about roller coaster design as a metaphor for the attraction, trust, and
excitement that are often necessary preconditions for sex The pattern de-
scribes the "perfect attraction," which provides a feeling of excitement as
the roller coaster rises to a summit and then whooshes down in a rush; then
it offers a feeling of safety, because it was designed to allow you to have this
experience in a comfortable, safe environment; finally, as soon as the ride is
over, you want to climb back on and ride it again and again. Even if it seems
unlikely that a pattern like this will turn a girl on, at least it's better than
talking about work.
It wasn't enough, though, for me just to study Ross Jeffries. A lot of his
ideas are simply applications of neuro-linguistic programming. So I went to
the source and bought books by Richard Bandler and John Grinder, the
University of California professors who developed and popularized this
fringe school of hypnopsychology in the 1970s.
After NLP, it was time to learn some of Mystery's tricks. I spent one
hundred and fifty dollars at magic stores, buying videos and books on levi-
tation, metal bending, and mind reading. I'd learned from Mystery that one
of the most important things to do with an attractive woman was to
demonstrate value. In other words, what makes me any different from the
last twenty guys who approached her? Well, if I can bend her fork by looking
at it or guess her name before even speaking to her, that's a little different.
To further demonstrate value, I bought books on handwriting analy-
sis, rune reading, and tarot cards. After all, everyone's favorite subject is
themselves.
59
I took notes on everything I studied, developing routines and stories to
test in the field. I neglected my work, my friends, and my family. I was on an
eighteen-hour-a-day mission.
When I finally crammed as much information in my brain as it could
hold, I started working on body language. I signed up for lessons in swing
and salsa dancing. I rented Rebel Without A Cause and A Streetcar Named Desire
to practice the looks and poses of James Dean and Marlon Brando. I stud-
ied Pierce Brosnan in the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair, Brad Pitt in
Meet Joe Black, Mickey Rourke in Wild Orchid, Jack Nicholson in The Witches of
Eastwick, and Tom Cruise in Top Gun.
I looked at every aspect of my physical behavior. Were my arms swing-
ing when I walked? Did they bow out a little, as if trying to get around mas-
sive pectorals? Did I walk with a confident swagger? Could I stick my chest
out further? Hold my head up higher? Swing my legs out further, as if try-
ing to get around massive genitalia?
After correcting what I could on my own, I signed up for a course on
Alexander Technique to improve my posture and rid myself of the round-
shouldered curse I'd inherited from my father's side of the family. And be-
cause no one ever understands a word I say—my voice is too fast, quiet, and
mumbly—I started taking weekly private lessons in speech and singing.
I wore stylish jackets with bright shirts and accessorized as much as I
could. I bought rings, a necklace, and fake piercings. I experimented with
cowboy hats, feather boas, light-up necklaces, and even sunglasses at night
to see which received the most attention from women. In my heart, I knew
most of these gaudy accouterments were tacky, but Mystery's peacock the-
ory worked. When I wore at least one item that stood out, women who were
interested in meeting me had an easy way to start a conversation.
I went out with Grimble, Twotimer, and Ross Jeffries nearly every night
and, chunk by chunk, learned a new way to interact. Women are sick of
generic guys asking the same generic questions: "So where are you from?...
What do you do for work?" With our patterns, gimmicks, and routines, we
were barroom heroes, saving the female of the species from certain ennui.
Not all women appreciated our efforts, of course. Though I was never
hit, yelled at, or doused with a drink, stories of spectacular failures circled
constantly in the back of my mind. There was the story of Jonah, a twenty-
three-year-old virgin in the seduction community who was hit in the back
of the head—twice—by a drunk girl who took his negs the wrong way. And
there was Little Big Dick, a sarger from Alaska, who was sitting at a table
60
talking to a girl when her boyfriend came up from behind, yanked him out
of his seat, threw him to the ground, and kicked him in the head for two
minutes straight, fracturing his left eye socket and leaving boot marks on
his face.
But they were the exceptions, I hoped.
These beat-downs were foremost in my mind as I drove my car to West-
wood, home to UCLA, for my first attempt at sarging during the daytime.
Despite the cheat sheet of my favorite openers and routines in the back
pocket of my jeans, I was petrified as I roamed the streets, trying to select
someone for my first approach.
As I walked past an Office Depot, I saw a woman with brown glasses
and short blonde hair that danced on her shoulders. She was thin, with
smooth, gentle curves, jeans that were just tight enough, and a beautiful
complexion, like burned butter. She looked like the undiscovered treasure
of the campus.
She walked into the store, and I decided to move on. But then I saw her
again through the window. She looked like a cool intellectual whose inner
bombshell hadn't blossomed yet, someone I could talk with about
Tarkovsky movies and then take to a monster truck rally. Maybe this would
be my Caresse. I knew that if I didn't approach her, I'd chastise myself af-
terward and feel like a failure. So I decided to attempt my first daytime
pickup. Besides, I told myself, she probably wasn't that good-looking up
close anyway.
I walked into the store and found her in an aisle looking at mailing
envelopes.
"Hey, maybe you can help me settle a debate I'm having," I told her. As
I recited the Maury Povich opener, I noticed that she was even more beauti-
ful at close range. I had stumbled across a genuine 10. And I had to follow
protocol and neg her.
"I know this is wrong to say," I blurted, "but I grew up on Bugs Bunny
cartoons as a child, and you have the most adorable Bugs Bunny overbite."
I was worried I'd gone too far. I'd made the neg up on the spot and was
probably about to get slapped. But she actually grinned. "After all those
years of braces, my mom's going to be mad," she replied. She was flirting
back with me.
I performed the ESP routine, and fortunately she picked seven. She was
amazed. I asked her what she did for work, and she said she was a model
61
and hosted a show on TNN. The longer we talked, the more she seemed to
enjoy the conversation. But as I noticed the material working, I became ner-
vous. I couldn't believe that a woman who looked like this was into me.
Everyone in Office Depot was staring at us. I couldn't go on.
"I'm late for an appointment," I told her. My hands were shaking from
nerves. "But what steps can we take to continue this conversation?"
This was Mystery's number-close routine. A pickup artist never gives a
girl his phone number, because she might not call. A PUA must make a
woman comfortable enough to give him her number. He must also avoid
asking for it directly, because she could always say no, and instead lead her
to suggest the idea herself.
"I could give you my number," she offered.
She wrote down her name, followed by her number and e-mail address.
I couldn't believe it.
"I don't go out much, though," she warned, as an afterthought. Maybe
she was already having regrets.
When I returned home, I pulled the scrap of paper out of my pocket
and placed it in front of the computer. Since she was supposedly a model, I
wanted to look for a picture of her online. She had only given me her first
name, Dalene, but fortunately her e-mail address contained her last name,
Kurtis. I typed the words into Google, and nearly a hundred thousand re-
sults came up.
I had just number-closed the reigning Playmate of the Year.
I sat in front of my phone and stared at Dalene Kurtis's number every eve-
ning. But I couldn't bring myself to call. I wasn't confident and good-
looking enough for this perfect specimen of femininity. I mean, what was I
going to do on a date with her?
I remember meeting a girl named Elisa for lunch at a summer job when
I was seventeen. I was so nervous, I couldn't stop my hands from shaking or
my voice from quavering. And the more awkward I became, the more urn
comfortable she grew. By the time the food arrived, I was too self-conscious
even to chew in front of her. It was a disaster—and it wasn't even a date. So
what hope did I have with the Playmate of the Year?
There's a word for this: unworthiness. I felt unworthy.
So I waited three days to call, then put it off to the next day, and then
decided that calling on the weekend would sound like I had no social life, so
I figured I'd call her Monday. And by then a week had passed. She'd proba-
bly forgotten about me. We'd talked for ten minutes at most, and it had
been, admittedly, a soft close. I was just some weird, interesting guy she had
met in an office-supply store. There was no reason this woman, who could
have her choice of any man in the hemisphere, would want to see me again.
So I never called.
I was my own worst enemy.
My first legitimate success didn't come until a week later. Extramask,
from Mystery's workshop, dropped by my apartment in Santa Monica
unannounced one Monday night. He was very excited because he'd just
made a fascinating discovery.
"I always used to think jerking off and pain came hand in hand," he an-
nounced the moment I opened the door.
Extramask looked different. He had dyed and spiked his hair, pierced
his ears, and bought rings, a necklace, and punk-looking clothes. He actor
ally appeared cool. In his hands, he had an Anthony Robbins book, Unlim-
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