Why I don't believe in online dating.
Sometimes, my friends would ask me how comes I am still single.
Although I hope to meet my Mr Right some day, I like where I am in life right now, and people around me do not always understand that. But still, the not meeting the right guy is probably the main reason.
Of course, there will always be someone to tell me that if meeting men is the problem, it can easily be solved. With a few clicks, on an online dating service. Ah, what cannot be solved online these days?
The truth is, I gave it a try a few years ago. I have no horrible story to tell about meeting total jerks, or guy who had lied about their age or appearance, or married guys looking for an affair... I only met men who were alone and looking for their significant other, just as I was. But it didn't work.
At first I thought it just didn't work out for me: I was finding it hard to be online very day, available for anybody who wanted to talk because well, you never know, the one you turned down could have been the right one. I was finding it hard to have 3 dates with 3 different guys on the same week. And I was finding it hard to decide which one of those guys I liked best. If I liked any, that is.
So I gave up.
It was one year later that I read several articles on the subject, and began to think about my experience again. And this is how I see it now (and sociologists see things the same way). When you enter that see full of fish, you look for someone who shares your interests because you need something to start a conversation. Oh, that guy likes Fiona Apple and Bruce Willis, too, I am going to contact him! And of course the standard questionaire we fill in when we subscribe are full of information of that kind. So we look for someone like us.
But look around you, look at the happy coupled, ask them what they love about each other. I bet they won't tell you that having a favourite actor in common made their relationship last. Actually, it is their fundamental differences that brought them together and made them a good match. One of my friends'husband finds it hard to make any decision; he says that what he loves about his wife, is that she can always decide what to do so quiclky. Unlike him. My best friend, before she had her kids, told me she thought she was going to be a terrible mother because she's so anxious, but that it was OK because her husband would be a great father. Unlike her, she thought.
What we need in a long-lasting relationship, what we crave for, is someone to give us a hand and help us walk when all we want to do is sit on the side of the road and stay there for ever. And vice versa. And that is something you cannot look for in those standard questionaire.
You will probably tell me that you know someone who met their significant other online. Actually my colleague just married a guy she met online. She kept looking for 3 years, so I guess if you look long enough and have a bit of luck, you might find a partner this way.
But I am convinced that looking for someone this way is mostly unproductive and leaves a lot to luck.
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I am Marie D., a 30 yo marketer and aspiring writer from Belgium.
I blog at http://itsmylife.terapad.com
Comments
funny, you hit it right on
funny, you hit it right on the money. to be ridiculously cliche; the yin-yang of relationships. he is the practical, logical one (does that come with the y chromosome?) i am the airy fairy. he loses his keys/wallet/sunglasses/phone, i remind him to grab his keys/wallet/sunglasses/phone. we all want someone to metaphorically (?) wipe our bums into our old and wrinkley dotage. to fill in the gaps that we miss. that does seem rather contraindicated to personals/matchmaking etc. perhaps there is an unmarketed 'how i made my millions' niche here for you..... ;Disa Fedorowicz