Tagged: rachael
when the urgency strikes you, you better not lose your nerve
As of yesterday I’ve now met 34 women off the internet since December 2012.
Though it’s possible to overthink things and see patterns where none exist, there’s two kinda counterintuitive conclusions I’ve drawn from my experiences.
One is that I have struck out with every woman who I’ve met for a first date that I initially found highly attractive, and the other is that the women I’ve ultimately found most compelling and affecting – Kristina, Elle, Rachael, Kyla – are women who I wasn’t initially sure I was that physically attracted to. Those four caused me way more heartache than the beautiful women I met and missed out on after merely one date.
Let’s talk about the first phenomenon: the women who were stunning at first glance who never end up liking me. Regrettably that’s happened to me at least five or six times. The simplest explanation for this would just be that maybe the super hot women have really high standards and that I didn’t measure up to their expectations. I’m sure this was true to an extent for some of them, but I don’t think it’s fully persuasive because my profile had and has a lot of pictures of me, including both facial closeups and full body shots. If I wasn’t even in the ballpark of attractiveness for them, presumably they wouldn’t have agreed to meet in the first place. (First time users may make the mistake of rolling the dice by agreeing to meet people who are “maybes” from a physical perspective, but I get the distinct sense from my own experience and talking to power-dating friends that just about everyone who’s taken a couple laps around the internet love block gets more and more particular about risking their precious dating energies on people that may show up looking closer in proximity to negative numbers than double digits on the ol’ 10 point scale, if they (the lap-takers) can possibly help it.)
At first I responded to setbacks with the hyperbeautiful by trying to hit the gym, improving my wardrobe, and reflecting upon the style of hair on my head or on my face. Now though, I think addressing the issue is trickier than just getting to be the hottest I could possibly be.
I’m convinced now that I unwittingly treat women I’m really attracted to in ways that make me unappealing. In The Pale King, David Foster Wallace described the effect a beautiful woman had on the men around her and his analysis rings true – that extreme beauty “raises the stakes” and makes it hard to be yourself, be engaging, just be human to the person you’re meeting. This is, of course, super self-defeating.
Without question I did this on the date I had with Grace, the first women I met off the internet. In her profile pictures she’d been heart-rendingly pretty and she lived up to that description in the flesh. Carried away with my own good fortune and desire to impress, I talked a mile a minute and told her about a wide variety of the many facets of the gem that is my personality and as you can imagine, I came off as needy and self-absorbed – a combination few people hammer out on the keyboard in response to the “What I’m Looking For:” prompt on the dating sites.
Conversely, the four women I’ve met out of 34 that I feel most fondly toward – each of whom I’d jump at the chance to date again – all were cute but not initially incredibly gorgeous to me. My first date with Kristina lasted 6 hours of unbroken conversation in one coffee shop, Elle 17 hours at four different locations followed by spending the night at her place, Rachael 8 hours that concluded when we made out in front of her house, and Kyla 5 hours, three of which consisted of sitting on one park bench sharing pretty intimate confidences about love and loss. And all agreed to second dates. Though ironically, it’s only now in retrospect that my desire for each of them is strong. At the time I was up for a second date, but I wasn’t gunning hard to get with any of them.
I was hoping that the process of writing this post would shed some light on how to succeed in dating people you’re really interested in, but I don’t think I’ve succeeded. Since the realization that how I behave around powerfully attractive women makes me less likely to connect with them, I’ve tried to harness that knowledge and adjust my attitude when I find myself getting carried away, but thinking to myself “don’t think of how hot this person is” ends up tending to psyche me out rather than bolster the self-assured well-adjusted demeanor that would be truly beneficial.
Oh well.
each person is an independent event
After a hiatus of a few months while I dated Rachael (#22) exclusively, I’m now back in the OkCupid saddle (trenches?) again.
While I enjoyed myself in my relationship with Rachael, I did miss the habit forming, compulsive aspects of online dating – namely the steady trickle of prospective new lovers to sort through and pursue, as well as the constant roll of the dice excitement of checking my email for news of new messages or contacts through the site.
The grass always being greener of course, it hasn’t turned out to be a thrill a minute since things ended with Rachael earlier this month.
One of the iron laws of online dating that I formulated in my first spin around the block from December 2012 to April 2013 was that one must not attempt to message people from a psychic standpoint of sadness, loneliness, or desperation. I’m not referring to how a lonely person might message people at 2 am Saturday night thus sending the wrong signal, or how the desperate might cast a wider net out of grim determination to find someone, anyone at all.
I’ve had emotional ups and downs over my stints, and I’ve messaged women while in moods good, fair, and foul. I’d like to think that my messages are uniformly good-natured, effortlessly charming, and appropriately thoughtful and engaging, but my results tell me otherwise.
In the wake of my breakup with Rachael I went on a binge, reactivating my profile within the day and scouting out all the women I’d missed out on who’d joined the site since I’d quit. I found a bunch that were suitably attractive and shared enough with me in interests and life outlook, so with a bit of swagger and a desire to stick it to an ex with a quick turnaround, I messaged 10 or 11 women.
Replies? Zero.
A bit of a hit to the ego. I compared notes with one of my best friends on the site and he said he’d been striking out a lot lately as well and that he was taking a break to reassess and that he was bummed out from the results he’d had so far.
It’s easy to envision people of the opposite sex on OkCupid as a bit of a monolith – akin to how all the women at the bar watching a poor sap strike out as he makes his move mark him off as a failure for the rest of the night. Psychologically, it can certainly be difficult to pick yourself up after sending a graceful, thought out message to a woman with whom you’re confident you share quite a bit of compatibility and hitting a wall of silence.
Don’t get bummed! It seems so obvious as to be banal, but every person you message is an independent event in terms of probabilities. Maybe one was annoyed you didn’t capitalize your sentences while the next might view perfect syntax and grammar as hallmarks of an uptight bore. Maybe you dissed her favorite book, maybe you like uncool music – there’s a million reasons to fall in love with someone or to rule someone out as a suitor and it’s important to realize that unless you or your profile has changed drastically, hot and cold streaks don’t really exist and that rejection or success from each person you contact has little bearing on those you approach going forward.
For what it’s worth, for tonight, tomorrow night, and Friday night I’ve got dates with three different women lined up off OkCupid. So I’m glad I didn’t let the whiff fest from three weeks ago get me down.

