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February 15, 2012

Why American Women Are Wild About Irish Guys

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 1:32 am

What makes Irish men such a hot commodity in the U.S.? MOLLY MULDOON talks to men, women and some experts, including the Millionaire Matchmaker, Patti Stanger, about the everlasting appeal of the rogue Irish man.

When Patti Stanger was 19 she fell in love with an Irish bartender.

“The accent totally got me, he looked like Gabriel Byrne and I remember he was the best kisser,” the U.S. dating expert told the Irish Voice during an interview on Tuesday.

Stanger, a third generation match maker, CEO and star of the hit Bravo TV show Millionaire Matchmaker, says she can easily see why Irish men prove so popular in a U.S. context.

“They are rugged, tall, sexy and they take charge. You feel like a woman next to them,” she says.

“I would rather have an Irishman than a pretty Wall Street feminine man who makes a lot of money,” she revealed.

The former director of marketing for Great Expectations, the oldest dating service in the U.S., Stanger recalls even in high school in New Jersey that she liked the Irish guys the most. She describes the Kennedy brothers as the “epitome of an Irish American who we all drooled over.”

In one of the world’s largest melting pots such as New York, an Irishman’s brogue will provide endless opportunities with the ladies.

Stanger, who has made her fortune through matchmaking for the wealthy, says her advice for an Irish man wooing that special woman is to “put the whiskey down and don’t drink the whole bottle.”

Stanger also said she wouldn’t mind checking out what’s on offer at Ireland’s famous matchmaking festival at Lisdoonvarna.

“I always wanted to attend and see that,” she said.

“A drinking, fighting, poetic tongued man,” is how David Power, a former New York bartender describes your average Irish man in the New York.

The Dubliner, who met his American girlfriend while working as bartender, says Irish heritage is a big windfall on the dating scene.

“We are new, unknown territory with a good reputation for boozing and banter,” he summed up.

“We are also polar opposites of American men, so in a way we are a niche market.”

Since trading his life behind the taps for a career in finance, Power reflects that most Irish men are equally in awe of American women.

“You’ll also find few Irish bartenders that have Irish girlfriends,” he said.

Monaghan man Brian O’Reilly works as a bartender in Eamonn Doran’s bar in Brooklyn and admits he has been known to use his Irish charisma to win over the ladies.

“It helps quite a bit to be honest. They ask, ‘Where are you from,’ and when I say ‘Ireland’ it’s an ice breaker right away,” he told the Irish Voice.

“Basically the big difference is the same type of woman at home wouldn’t look at you. Being Irish you have an advantage.” O’Reilly, who grew up with five sisters, says from an early age he was taught how to treat his female companions.

“You learn to be polite to woman and how to treat them they way you want your sisters to be treated,” he said before admitting that “Mammy is number one!”

As he prepared for a date that night with his latest U.S. love interest, O’Reilly reflected that the dating scene in New York is completely different to back home.

“At the beginning it would hard to get used to the fact that dating was not ‘going out’ with anybody, but I adjusted really fast,” he laughs.

After living in New York for over five years the Monaghan man says he approaches dates with American women in a different way.

“American women don’t drink as much as Irish women so I would take them to the park or a movie or to see sites,” he says.

After spending a semester studying in Ireland, Megan Lynch from Geneva in upstate New York has come to some conclusions concerning Irish men.

A junior in St. Mary’s College Notre Dame, Lynch says Irish guys are very good in social situations.

“Irish guys are much more forward, they are confident in a less arrogant way,” she told the Irish Voice.

“When they approach you it’s in a fun, friendly way and you feel comfortable right away, but here in the U.S. guys can be more arrogant about it,” she added.

Aesthetically she says American men win over, but it’s the Irish charm that really catches the attention.

“Good looking American men are easy to come by, but once you find a good looking Irish man their personality makes them even more attractive, once you are around them and see their true potential,” she maintains.

With leading Irish actors such as Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson and Colin Farrell now household names in the U.S., dating coach David Wygant, says that Hollywood has done a lot to enhance the appeal of modern Irish men.

Wygant says Gerard Butler’s portrayal of an Irish man in the film PS I Love You is just one depiction of a romantic Irish man which would make most American women swoon.

“Hollywood is making the Irish man the new flavor of the month,” Wygant, who is based in Los Angeles, told the Irish Voice.

“Irish guys are more charming because of their voice.

“You can take the same sentence spoken by an Irish man and an American man, but women will swoon over the accent,” he said.

Describing Dublin as “one of the most beautiful cities in the world,” the dating expert said he was pleasantly surprised by how Irish men reacted to women in bars.

“The men weren’t staring at women like they hadn’t seen meat in 14 years,’ he recalls. “American guys can be very lecherous.”

Dating an Irishman for the past year, Steph King from Virginia says in her experience the drinking stereotype concerning the Irish is accurate.

“Yes, the cliché is actually true. They also drink during the day, more than any American men I’ve dated or known,” says the digital marketer, who is not turned off by her boyfriend’s drinking habits.

“I’ve noticed that sure Irish men drink often, but they aren’t half as loud as a group of American men can be,” she added.

One drawback she says is their obsession with the American brand Abercrombie and Fitch, something the Virginian adds most U.S. guys grow out of in their teenage years.

“Unfortunately Irishmen wear a lot of Abercrombie. American teenage boys wear Abercrombie, but men do not, so that was something I noticed was very popular with an older age set of Irish guys.

“It would be odd to see an American guy over the age of 20 wearing Abercrombie,” she added.

Despite the occasional drunken slur and odd fashion faux pas, it seems the appeal of the rogue Irish man in the U.S. is popular as ever.

Seasoned Irish American matchmaker Maureen Tara Nelson says in recent years she has seen a surge in American women looking for Irish men.

“I would say over the past couple of years we have seen more of a demand for Irish men,” she told the Irish Voice.

Winner of Best of Long Island Matchmaker and Dating Service for the third year running and with over 1,000 clients on her books, Nelson admits she can see why her female clients are so attracted to Irishmen and suggests a good upbringing has a lot to do with it.

“One of the great advantages and why they make such great husbands is that they are brought up to be great sons,” she says, adding the accent is “the icing on the cake.”

January 31, 2012

Dating Is Not Project Management

Filed under: projects, women — Tags: , — admin @ 1:30 am

By Wise Diva

I happened to catch a snippet of the Frank and Wanda radio show on TV the other night. I paused when I heard them describe men in Atlanta as Ikea Men, i.e. men you have to “put together” or assemble.

Apparently one of the callers had used this term and it caused a couple of laughs, but it kind of saddened me. I have a sense of humor, of course, but I was most bothered by the idea that some women in Atlanta consider dating to be some kind of project management.

Do you think that calling men projects or Ikea men is the way to a man’s heart?! I don’t get it. Whatever happened to, you know,

simply accepting a person for who they are – not who you want them to be?

What’s really sad is that women who don’t feel this way have to contend with this later. They have already met the women in Atlanta that goes around calling them Ikea Men. The type that made them feel less than just makes them bitter for the next woman. Am I the only one that sees this annoying trend?

It probably would be funny if it wasn’t so ridiculously frustrating to encounter men have dated those egomaniacal women and expect the same treatment.

I don’t want to point fingers and go on a scream tour of who’s to blame, but how do we get past it?

When you encounter people with bad attitudes and unhealthy views about relationships, how do you handle it?

Do you cut your losses and save your energy for someone who sees things the way you do?

If men in Atlanta are projects that have to be together, what do you think that makes women? Bob the Builder? Yeah, that’s sexy.

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.

December 24, 2011

Is All Really Fair in Love and Dating?

Filed under: date, dating, fair, influence, people, techniques, women — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 6:26 am

By Jeremy Nicholson

Today I’m going to depart from my usual article style to dialogue with you all a bit. Last Friday I published an article on “5 Ways to Indirectly Ask for a Date” and then began my long Memorial Day weekend. During the weekend, that article prompted passionate debate, both in my social discussions and online from readers. It appears that there are strong differences of opinion about the use of persuasion, influence, and compliance techniques in dating.

After listening to some of my friends’ reactions, I got to wondering what my readers thought. After all, it is a common expression to hear “all is fair in love and war”. But, is it true? Is it ok or even beneficial to be persuasive or influential? Is it just flirting? Does “everybody” manipulate a little anyway, in their initial hiding of embarrassing secrets, embellishment of strengths, and use of makeup, nice suits, or push-up bras? Or, should we argue for “radical honestly”? Is it only appropriate to be serious, authentic, and display our true selves for the judgment of potential dating partners? Those seem to be the two extremes…

Looking Unofficially at Both Sides

On one hand, during my weekend, I found people who approved of the use of indirect influence techniques to get a date. They (primarily women) thought such techniques were fun, flirty, and cute. They also saw nothing wrong with using such indirect methods. Essentially, they fell into the “all is fair” group.

On the other hand, I also found people who had reservations about the use of influence. They were primarily women as well (most men didn’t seem to have passionate opinions about it – at least in my social circles). These individuals felt that some of the techniques might be inauthentic and perhaps make someone feel pressured to accept a date they didn’t want. These folks fell into the “not fair” group.

My Thoughts on the Debate

Personally, I was not expecting the debate at all. In fact, I was a bit surprised that some (particularly women) had reservations about the techniques, for two reasons. First, I actually created the article at the prompting of a woman. She had read my “Just Ask” articles, liked them, but couldn’t see herself being so “direct”. So, the techniques were created with women’s use in mind, who might not want to be seen as aggressive, forward, or bold by asking directly. Second, I have a small readership who screen my articles before I publish them. The majority of that group is women, some very conservative and proper. None of them offered any reservations about the techniques.

The only sense I can personally make of it is that perhaps it is a difference of perspective. The people who liked the techniques seemed to be primarily thinking about using them with others. Those who didn’t care for the techniques, were primarily thinking about their reactions to others using the techniques on them. So, perhaps we have a double standard? My (very unofficial) asking around seemed to support this idea. Some of the people I know in the “not fair” group are also among the most “influencing” and “persuasive” people I know. So, I wonder. Do people want to be “influential”, but also not be influenced by others?

Conclusion

Personally, I think being persuasive, influential, and seeking compliance is unavoidable. Everyone influences others every day, and is influenced in return. In fact, as I pointed out during my socializing, the people speaking out against using such techniques the most “passionately”, were also being influential and coercive in their arguing. They were using the very same techniques they were arguing against!

We are all mostly comfortable with this fact about influence when we persuade others to donate to a charity or give blood. We’re still pretty comfortable when it comes time to sell a car. But, some get cold feet when it comes to being persuasive in dating. It is almost like, in dating, it is somehow “less fair”. But, in my opinion, you are only being “unfair” or “ripping someone off” if you persuade them to “buy” something that isn’t worth much, or doesn’t give them something in return. That includes dating too.

So, maybe the problem with persuasion in dating is not ethics, but rather perceptions of self-worth and intentions to share with a partner after the date is secured? While I am okay with a bit of influence to get a date’s attention, I firmly believe it is important to make sure they are “getting a good deal” too. Personally, I do draw a line between indirect asking and making false promises. I think intentions should always be good and equitable.

In the end though, I recognize that there are many styles of love and each person has preferences. That is why I try to mix up my advice from “mild” to “spicy”. Some people are straight-forward and concrete, others indirect and flirty…most in the middle. My job is to know it all and dish it up as each person needs it.

I am curious though…where do you stand? What is your style? Is “all fair in love and dating”? Why or why not?

December 6, 2011

5 Best Ways to Meet Men if You Are Over 35 and Divorced

Filed under: dating, life, meeting, people, research, single, women — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 10:46 am

I get so many female clients who are over 35 and divorced who come to me operating under the assumption that they are at an automatic dating disadvantage because of their age. They tell me how frustrated they are trying to date being in the “over 35” age group.

Let me tell you something. They could not be more wrong. The biggest problem that these women have is not their age, but their mindset. So to any women who are in this demographic and feel like these women do about dating as an “over 35,” here are five of the best ways to meet men if you are over 35.

1. If You Believe It Then It’s True: Do you remember the famous Henry Ford quote “Whether you think you can, or that you can’t, you are usually right?” I have found that you can meet amazing people anywhere and at any age. It’s all about having an abundance mindset. So many people listen to their friends or the monkey chatter in their own head telling them all the obstacles that stand in their way as a single woman over the age of 35. Many times this comes from other single friends.

I don’t listen to friends like this, because I find that many singles have attitudes that are just ridiculous. They love to buy into the negative, instead of the positive. I hear so many people who live in Los Angeles tell me that Los Angeles is the worst place to date if you’re a woman over 35. Really?! It’s the biggest city in the country and there’s no one to meet if you’re a woman over 35? C’mon!

What happens is that people will manifest the things on which they focus. So if women are focusing on disappointment, scarcity and failure in their dating life, then that’s what they are going to experience in their dating life. I have found that you can always find someone who will agree with you when you are looking for confirmation about something negative because most people are negative. Most people love to commiserate, and most people really like having others commiserate with them. So the first thing you need to do is to change your mindset.

2. Take A Good Look At Yourself: I want to give you a little bit of a wake-up call. I want to challenge you to look deep inside your life. If you have had trouble meeting men, I want you to ask yourself if you’ve really done enough on your part to meet them.

Just like I tell singles of any age, your perfect person is not just going to show up at your doorstep one day with flowers and a bottle of wine in hand. You need to be proactive. So I want you to ask yourself if you’ve done enough. Have you really networked as much as you can? Have you gone on a great online dating site, wrote a really good profile and started contacting some men online? Have you researched what things are going on in your area to which you could go?

Have you truly done everything you possibly can do, because I seriously doubt that there are no men in their 40s that you can date. I just think that you’ve been frustrated, and you’ve let that get to you. It happens to a lot of single people . . . but take time now to “reset” and regroup.

3. Do Your Research: The next thing to do is to do a little “homework.” Do some research and find out what things are going on and available in your area. See what things are interesting to you. Don’t choose things you have no personal interest in just because you think there might be men there to meet. You will not only have more fun, but will also be most successful meeting people, when you are enjoying your life and creating good energy. At the same time, though, be open to lots of possibilities.

Here are some ideas for you to research. Try finding out about happy hours that are out there for people in their 40s. Consider speed dating events. Try having lunch in areas where there are hospitals where you can meet doctors. Go where lawyers are hanging out around lunchtime or during happy hours. Have you thought about going to car dealerships? Many of the high-end ones actually have parties. Go to one and tell them you’d love to come to one of their parties when they have new car releases. There’s networking events like Toastmasters where people will go and they will speak. There are fundraisers. Think outside the box and get researching.

4. Make A List: So, I’m challenging you right now to put together a list. Find at least ten places you can go or ten things you can do in your town other than what I’ve suggested. I had a client one time who actually went to hospital and had lunch every single day because she wanted to meet a doctor. Sure enough, after two and-a-half months she did meet a doctor. It’s all about pursuing what you want and taking the steps to get it.

5. Get Out There!: Now that we’ve talked about your mindset, had you do some research and even had you make a list, the only thing left to do is to actually get yourself out there and start meeting people. Life is in the field. Life is about enjoying the moment. Nothing happens for those who sit and wait though. So challenge yourself to take action every day. You won’t believe what is waiting out there for you!

Following these five tips will get you well on your way to meeting lots of men. For all of the women who are over 35, there are tons of amazing and available men out there for you to meet. Think abundance and you will find them.

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