How to tell your Tinder date you had cancer
Before I was diagnosed with testicular cancer, my doctor thought the pain might be an STD. I told him that was highly unlikely, because, you know, you usually have to have sex to get a sexually transmitted disease.
Many people dealing with cancer have the support of a spouse. I did not. I was a 30-year-old very single gay man living in Los Angeles, where dating is less about love and more about settling for someone until the next best thing comes along. I was so single that one night I seriously looked into having my ashes put into little Etch-A-Sketch keychains so that friends could play with me in the event of my death.
Before I got cancer, I thought dating was hard. Then I turned 30, got sick, and quickly learned that dating with cancer is an entirely different game.
During chemo in Beverly Hills—six hours a day, five days a week—I’d peruse dating websites, at first not revealing I was sick. Even though I was dealing with something very serious, I still wanted to love and be loved. All around me spouses sat by loved ones hooked up to IVs, and here I was, alone, swiping away on hookup apps. What’s the point of getting cancer if you can’t use it for pity sex?So I started to masturbate—a lot. At chemo, at home, at Target, at gas stations. I masturbated obsessively to feel alive, and to pass the time. If I couldn’t have sex, then I might as well entertain myself.
Feeling drained (for obvious reasons, not all cancer-related), I did go on a couple of dates during this stretch. For the first time in my life, I wasn’t choosy. It’s hard to be picky when you’re dating with cancer; you’re more focused on living and less focused on his third nipple. Plus, the upside to chemo is that my skin never looked better, and I was super skinny because most food wouldn’t stay down.
The dates—well, the dates did not go well. For one, being gay with cancer is pretty terrible because the first place your date’s mind goes when you look frail and weak is “AIDS?” Second, it’s hard to talk about anything else.
“This food is great,” my date would say.
“Yeah, it is. Here, taste this. I can’t tell if it tastes funny or if it’s just my chemo.”