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December 30, 2011

Finding Love (Or Lust) Online

Filed under: date, dating, find, internet, meeting, online, people, women — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 5:26 am

“We met on the net” isn’t a phrase you’ll hear too often.

But while Australians may be shy to admit their partner was a dating website find, plenty of them are using the net to find love – or just a fling.

In fact, 23% of adults in New South Wales have used online dating and a further 35% are considering it, according to a 2010 “Date of the Nation” report from RSVP, one of the most poplular sites, along with sugardaddie.com, eHarmony, match.com and Plenty of Fish.

Now a British study has found that internet dating is a more successful way of finding long-term romance and friendship for thousands of people than was previously thought.

Dr Jeff Gavin, of the University of Bath, says that when couples who had built up a significant relationship by emailing or chatting online met for the first time, 94% went on to see each other again.

Perhaps surprisingly, his study also found that men were more emotionally dependent on their “e-partners” than women and more committed to the relationship.

“This study shows that online dating can work for many people, leading to a successful meeting for almost everyone we surveyed,” he says.

“Given that the most successful relationships lasted at least seven months, and in some case over a year, it seems that these relationships have a similar level of success as ones formed in more conventional ways.”

One couple who met on RSVP – and are now planning to marry – are John, 41, and Katie, 40, of Ballina.

When he joined the site, John wasn’t sure what he was looking for, beyond meeting some compatible women, going out for coffee or a date and being open to the possibility of a relationship.

But soon he came across Katie who sent him a “kiss”, opening up a channel of communication.

They emailed through RSVP’s internal mail system – a safety device that John thinks is one reason the site is so well-regarded, especially by women.

They went out for a while – the movies, 10-pin bowling – but continued to see other people.

Their casual dating went on for a long while, until he and Katie began taking salsa classes together, “which took it up a notch”, John says.

Then Katie went on holiday to New Zealand and John missed her. He told her so on her return and they decided to establish a relationship, sealing it with their first real-world kiss, eight months after they first met.

That kiss was in April last year and on New Year’s Day this year they became engaged and plan to marry at Boulders Beach in the spring.

It’s a fairy-tale ending to a very modern-world situation.

While other people might be coy about internet romance, John is not. But he is the only man we could find to talk openly about his experience and the women in this article asked for their names to be changed.

The conclusion of his search was so fantastic, John says, that he is singing the praises of internet dating to all and sundry.

It’s the best way in the modern world to meet a partner, he reckons.

“I’m a very practical person. How many people do you meet when you go out? And how many of them are truly compatible? I was socially active – there are a lot of things to do in Byron Bay – but I wasn’t meeting many suitable people.”

He and Katie don’t take salsa lessons any more. They’ve moved on to 50’s rock ‘n’ roll classes.

In fact, rock ‘n’ roll is going to be the theme of their upcoming wedding.

One song they won’t be singing is Heartbreak Hotel.

Kiss a frog and find … a toad

Jessica, a pretty woman of 29, was in a bar waiting to meet a young man she had clicked with on the internet dating site OasisActive.

“He seemed nice and came across really well on the phone,” Jessica says.

But when she saw the 32-year-old walking towards her wearing a Superman T-shirt she knew she had made a mistake.

“Almost immediately he started telling me really personal things, such as that he was an insomniac, and a drug addict; that he had just separated from his wife,” she says.

Polite to a fault, Jessica chatted for two hours then made her excuses and left

He texted her repeatedly afterwards: “Really random things, such as the fact he’d made porridge for dinner at his grandmother’s, where he was living.”

Jessica had another date with a man who claimed to be 30 but who she swore had had “a bit of Botox. He looked more like 40”.

Unsettling enough, but certainly not the worst or the weirdest tales you’re likely to hear from the world of internet dating: there are endless stories of women receiving “booty calls” for sex, of bludgers, bores and gold-diggers.

But online dating is spreading like a rash across the social sphere. Nearly 70% of people in NSW know someone who has used a web service.

Oasis has hundreds of young, attractive, apparently normal people on it, looking for love, friendship or a casual “hook-up”.

Jessica says at her age it’s getting harder to find eligible singles.

“Most of my friends are in relationships or married, so unless I go to bars I don’t meet single guys,” she says.

She reckons the internet provides an effective way of meeting men she may hit it off with – and screening out the rest.

All of her single peers do it, she says, and some of them have met really nice partners.

Sarah, an attractive 40-year-old from Ocean Shores, was out for the second time with a man she had met through the online dating site RSVP when he told her: “You know, you must have been really pretty when you were younger.”

He wasn’t the only toad she found herself sitting across the table from and while her experience of male moronism is not uncommon, she also said she had met many “really lovely guys” in the virtual world.

One such guy is Peter. Wanda, 50, has been living with Peter for eight months after meeting him through RSVP, the online service she chose over eHarmony, which she thought had a more global reach.

She says that the downside of internet dating is the men who turn out to be obvious “players”, capitalising on the “smorgasbord” potential of the system.

“They meet an interesting woman, discover the slightest incompatibility, go home and immediately log on to find another woman … ad infinitum. No doubt there are women who are players, too.”

Her observations point up one of overlooked traps of the online dating services: it can be addictive.

Sign up – it’s free! – and soon you’ll have “kisses” or “stamps” coming your way.

There’s an instant “hit” and the sudden popularity can be exhilarating.

When someone checks you out you receive an email saying: “You are popular! The following members added YOU to their favourites list!”

Tips for Success

  • Post a photo – profiles with a picture get twice as many replies – but make sure it is both recent and flattering. Guys – no singlets or slogan shirts, girls – a little cleavage is good but a nice smile is better.
  • Don’t use capitals i.e. NO TIMEWASTERS, and try to concentrate on what you do want, rather than what you don’
  • Don’t use your word allowances to dish the dirt about what was wrong with your ex, or all the other people you’ve met online.
  • Use spellcheck!
  • Try not to use cliches. Not all women want a guy who “loves bubble baths, chocolate and romantic walks on the beach”.
  • Never, ever invite a first date to your home, or for dinner. Ten minutes at a cafe is enough, especially if there are no sparks flying.
  • Be gracious. Always reply to your emails, even if it’s only with a polite no thanks.
  • Remember, you may have to go on 10 or even 20 dates to find someone you like, so don’t get discouraged.

September 8, 2011

The 5 Truths About Dating

Filed under: date, dating, find, meeting, partner, people, work — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 8:25 pm

By Melissa Lafsky

The best line is when the author, a confirmed bachelor, says of his married friends: “I doubt many of them would actually choose to trade places with me. Although they may miss the thrill of sexual novelty, absolutely nobody misses dating.”

There’s no denying it: we all despise dating. It’s a cruel joke played on us by modern society — while human beings are hard-wired to seek love and companionship, our culture plops giant boulders in the path of intimacy and calls them “dates.” Movies and TV and YA books and grandmothers of all ethnicities push us to partner up, but the actual skills for successfully navigating a dating situation somehow get overlooked. Since my last column about weddings, I’ve gotten a slew of unhappy replies from women (and the occasional man) saying, “Quit complaining — I’d love to have your problems. Meeting the partner is the hard part.” Fair enough. Dating friggin’ sucks.

Assuming you are a person who puts up with the suckiness of dating for a purpose — to find a longterm partner — then chances are you’re looking to find an end to your dating days (if you’re someone who goes on dates simply to have sex, or get out of the house on weekends, then this column will hold no use for you — but read it anyway!). And a big part of reaching this proverbial happy end is facing a few icky truths. Full disclosure: I met my husband-to-be at a party in New York City, when I was in my early ’30s (meaning I’m now in my less-early ’30s). “You’re so lucky!” people gasp when I tell them the story, as if I was a prepubescent plucked from Cesky Krumlov and handed a supermodeling contract. Casey Anthony was lucky. I’m just someone who decided I was ready to find a husband, and then did the necessary work to procure one. Yes, I said “work.” Which brings us to the five truths about dating that no one ever tells you (but are nonetheless true):

1) Dating takes work.

We’re taught to work hard to achieve our goals. Study until your eyes bleed, and you’ll make the Honor Roll. Take 6 zillion extracurricular activities and snort Adderall before the SATs, and you’ll get into college. Stay late and work weekends, and you’ll get the promotion. And on and on until you fulfill the American expectation of constant accomplishment (or you die, or both).

Yet somehow, in the midst of all this cultural “can-do-it-iveness,” a crucial lesson gets lost: meeting your life partner also requires work. Lots of work, in fact. This reality gets totally scrubbed from the lore of modern romance. We honestly think it just happens. We arrive at a bar on Tuesday night and our beloved is standing there with a rubber stamp on his/her forehead and 2 tickets to eternal bliss. Not true. Even the people for whom this sort of thing “happens” are lying about it — they worked (whether they realized it or not) to ready themselves and prepare their lives to meet someone, be it by conquering fears of intimacy or overcoming emotional scars that kept them from nabbing the great people they did meet, or just cleaning out all the crap in their apartments to make room for someone other than the cat. And most of all, they got their butts to that bar on a Tuesday night.

So what’s the specific work you need to do? Hell if I know. All I know is that if you’re dating like a fiend and never getting what you want (more on that later) then there is work left to do. In a way, deciphering what work is necessary for you is like 10th grade algebra — if you study the same way for every test and flunk them all, then clearly the way you’re studying isn’t working. And if you’re putting on the same makeup/dress/mental state and heading to the same bar/restaurant/speed dating hall and expecting different results every time, same rules apply.

2) Chances are, you don’t really know what you want.

All the frustration that accompanies not meeting the beloved of your dreams can be exhausting. And yes, it (both the dating and the frustration) can go on indefinitely. People do find themselves 60 and alone. Hell, people die alone. No point in sugarcoating it. But whether this happens to you is a choice — specifically, it’s a choice right now to make one thing a priority over another. In other words: figure out exactly what you want right now. Do you want to get married? Do you want it badly enough to do the work discussed in Truth #1? Why? What’s so great about being married that makes it worth your time and energy? What traits/activities/emotional needs are you focused on enriching/fulfilling with a partner? What major life goals (travel/children/etc) are you looking to achieve with this theoretical spouse? Because if you don’t have a clear idea of what you’re trying to accomplish by dragging yourself on dates every week, you’re just tossing matches at a tree and hoping it ignites. Or something.

3) Even if you do know what you want, you don’t really think you can have it.

We’re so good at negating ourselves. No other human has a chance at making us feel as crappy as we can ourselves. It’s not even a contest. Just listen to that little voice in your head for a second — it’s negating you right now: “This chick is full of it. She just got lucky. I never get what I want. Nothing good ever happens to me.” This charming voice is screaming at you during every date. It knows every insult and jibe to slice right through your good time and sense of possibility. And to make matters worse, it has countless arguments at the ready to convince you that what it says is true: “It’s been clinically proven that men your age only want models or cocktail waitresses. Plus the 2010 census showed that single women outnumber single men in this city 8 quatrillion to one!” (I had a professor once who loved the quote “Statistics are like prostitutes — play with them enough and they’ll do anything for you.” He may belong in a high-security ward, but there is truth buried in his awful metaphor).

Here’s the thing: That godawful voice in your head is basically a life-destroyer. It will almost never help you achieve blissful happiness. It will never tell you that you can/will/should have everything you want in a lover/partner/spouse. And not to go all motivational speaker on you, but we all die in the end. So why not at least try for what you really want, inner voices be damned??

4) Every date really does go how you say it will go.

Whether you realize it or not, every time you go on a date, you’ve performed a mini-voodoo ritual to predetermine how it will go. If you’ve shaved off every body hair and wrapped yourself in lacy pink underthings, the chances are high you’re gonna get laid. If you demand that your best friend wait a block away to sweep in and rescue you in case he’s a psycho? Guess what — you’ll date a lot of psychos. When you’re a hammer, every dude from Match.com looks like a nail. So to speak. You set it up from the moment you say yes to the date (or have the other person say yes). Just keep this in mind — it’ll save a lot of wondering “I wonder how it’s gonna go tonight?”

5) The hardest part of dating is hearing reality — even if that reality makes you want to rip off your fingernails with a pliers.

Dating is all about uncertainty and hard truths. You’re not really sure what this person across the table thinks of you, and that opinion could be a hard one to hear.

The good news is that after every date, there are only 2 outcomes: either 1) you will see this person again, or 2) you won’t. (Once you get into the relationship phase, it’s much more complicated — but that’s fodder for another column.) The really tough part is going to be when it’s option 2 — and you’ll have to face rejection. Which is never, ever something anyone wants to hear — we’ll yank out our eyebrows and rip off our pubic hair without hesitation, but hearing “I don’t want to see you again” is somehow exquisitely painful.

The important part is facing that this pain is a possibility, and making yourself hear what is so. Not what you want to be so, not what romantic comedies say will be so, but what is actually so. He or she does not wish to continue seeing you, and the possibility for that relationship is now gone. Which sucks, but it doesn’t MEAN anything (remember that nasty “meaning” trick we’re all so good at?). If this guy doesn’t fall-down adore you, it MEANS NOTHING about your status as a worthy and valuable human being. It also means nothing about your ability to find partnership in the future. Likewise, if a guy rejects you, it doesn’t MEAN anything about men in general. All it means is that this one was a douchebag. And that you found out early enough to recover, pick yourself up, and get back to work. Which is precisely what I did approximately 38 times before meeting my husband. And hey — it was worth it.

August 21, 2011

Smartphone Dating Apps Localize Love

Filed under: dating, find, grindr, location, looking, online, people, tingle — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 12:28 am

What do dating and real estate have in common?

Location, location, location.

This is what the recently launched (and proudly Canadian) iPhone app Tingle is tapping into.

“I went on like three hundred online dates,” says Tingle creator and AppSocial CEO, Ian Andrew Bell. “It was pretty evident in my own personal experience that online dating is a really crappy experience. It’s filled with all sorts of indignities and social transgressions and insults. It’s actually a very dehumanizing process.”

According to Bell, some key problems with traditional online dating are pathetic response ratios for men (who can send out 50 messages, only to get two replies) and the fact that singles are cloistered in front of computer screens instead of out on the town, where social interactions are actually taking place.

By moving online dating to a mobile app platform and allowing users to check into locations a la Foursquare in order to scope who’s single and available in any given bar, restaurant or coffee shop, Tingle (which is currently focusing on Toronto and Vancouver markets) makes it easier to break the ice, flirt and initiate conversation.

Dating apps like Tingle, Skout and the wildly popular gay dating app Grindr solve the age-old problem of deciphering (A) Who in this bar is single? (B) Who in this bar is actively looking? and (C) Who in this bar is straight (or, in the case of Grindr, who in this bar is not straight?)

But are such technological advancements making it easier for people to find love, or just easier to find tonight’s conquest?

“Grindr is mostly used as a hook-up service,” says Sam, a Grindr user who signs in three or four times a day. “It takes all the work out of going out and meeting someone, and allows us to cruise on the go. We’re all addicted to our phones, so it makes perfect sense that this app should be as popular as it is.” Despite the hook-up culture surrounding Grindr, forging a real romantic connection is possible. Sam met a man on Grindr last fall that he wound up dating for a while.

Innovation and trends expert and well-known speaker Max Valiquette believes Tingle to be a good idea in theory, but worries about the potential threat to female safety: “The Tingle folks are pushing the safety elements, such as being able to communicate without giving out your phone number or e-mail address, but it’s based on people knowing what someone looks like when that person is close enough to do something scary with that information. That could be a huge barrier, if the women don’t come, then the men aren’t going to, either. The worst thing for Tingle would be for a straight guy to join and find the male-to-female ratio is roughly the same as, well, Grindr.”

Bell acknowledges that not every user on Tingle will be looking for true and lasting love.

“There’s a definite immediacy bias,” he says. “But the reality is, I think the way most people use online dating is Now, Soon and Eventually. They’re always looking for Eventually. Occasionally, they’re looking for Now. Most of the time, they’re looking for Soon. Right now, Tingle is very much about Now and Soon. I’d like to get to Eventually, eventually.”

Tingle can be downloaded for free from the iTunes app store.

October 13, 2010

Five Important Things to Consider About Dating

Filed under: advic, date, dating, find, girls, guys — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 11:03 am

Everyone does it. Not everyone loves it. Whether you enjoy dating or find it stressful and horrible, you know that if you are ever going to find the one person who can stop your dating life forever, you have to do it. Gentlemen, you just have to date girls if you are ever going to find the perfect one for you. So, here is some good advice for you.

Extraordinary dating can be broken down into the five most important things about dating girls.They are:

Girls are not guys. They do not think it is fun to make noises by placing their hands under their armpits and acting like a winged creature. Even if they are drunk, they don’t like this. Save this type of behavior for guy’s night.

Girls are not guys. They do not think it is cool to brag about your previous relationship conquests. They do not want to know about the ditzy blonde who had nothing to say but had the most amazing rack ever created. Nor do they think it is great to have their guy greeted by every woman in the place. Take your date to an another place just to be on the safe side and never, never, never mention your ex-girlfriend.

Girls are not guys. They do not like to see you show up at their door in your inferior old jeans with a cheap five-buck pizza in hand. Trust me on this one. Maybe later – way later, like after the kids become teenagers – it will be okay for this kind of thing to happen. But for now, please, guys: take a shower, put on something nice like khakis and a pullover shirt, and have flowers in hand instead of greasy fast food.

Girls are not guys. They do not love it when their date pulls out buy-one-get-one-free coupons at the restaurant cash register. There is nothing wrong with a bargain, especially in these tough economic times, but use those freebies when you go out with your mom (who will love your thriftiness) or your best buddy (who wouldn’t notice or care how you paid). Don’t make your date think that she is not worth full price.

Girls are not guys. They do not find burping and farting contests hilariously interesting and pleasing. Who can come up with most-silent-but-most-deadly one without any prior warning is nothing to be proud of, according to the female half of the population. Neither is it way cool to be able to belch out the melody to “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Again, save it for football night with the frat brothers.

Remembering the five most important things to remember about dating girls will take you farther than anything else when it comes to having a great time on your dates. The five most important things to remember about dating girls will also allow you to get more than one date with the same lady. There are lots of people who will offer you lots of advice about dating, and even some who will simply say, “Be yourself.”

That is not terrible advice, but trust me, if being yourself includes any of the forbidden actions in the five most important things to remember when dating girls list, don’t be yourself. Be better. Remember these five most essential things about dating girls and have a better dating life.

January 26, 2010

How To Create Your Adult Dating Profile

Filed under: adult, dating, find, girls, profile — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 12:38 pm

If you are interested in dating sexy people online and have decided to join an adult dating site, then the first and most important step you will have to take is to create your profile. Visiting your profile is the only medium that will make the girls to be interested in communicating with you and therefore, you have to make it most sizzling and attention grabbing.

The first thing is your profile should be well written and free from any spelling or grammatical mistakes.

While writing your profile, never talk about your bad experiences with past relationships and never indicate that how keen you are to find a true love or a physical relationship. This will absolutely disinterest any woman and she will never click on your profile.

If you do not tell everything about your life in your profile and keep something secret, the girls will be interested in knowing more about you and will be interested in adult dating with you. However, you can talk about general things, such as your hobbies and your travels.

It is a fact that women love the men who have a passion for something and while creating your profile, talk about your passions, such as art and music.

Apart from all these things, try to add some humor in your profile so that more and more girls are attracted for online adult dating with you. If you want to know more about adult dating and find out some adult personals, then go on to Find Hot People

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