Tagged: the ex

tinder: or how it is to be fungible

Image

I’ve previously discussed some of the ins and outs of “traditional” online dating, such as thoughtful profile construction, assembling an array of photographs, the right frame of mind to be in when sending out messages, and some techniques for not only selling yourself truthfully yet convincingly, but also thinking critically about what you truly might be looking for in a match.

If it sounds to you like there’s a lot of work that goes into this shit, then yeah, you’re right.

So because I’ve grown a bit weary in what’s now month fifteen of my soulmate sojourn (or whatever) I’ve started to look for easy ways out and to cut corners where I can. Tinder it is!

Like a lot of people probably did (and do), at first I thought Tinder was a pretty stupid concept. Your “profile” consists almost entirely of just a few photos of yourself. There’s no search function since the app solicits nearly no information from users that could form the basis of a search. Instead Tinder presents you with a (seemingly) limitless number of people, served up one at a time and you just say yes or no to their photographs. (“Thumbs down, he’s holding a dead deer carcass…thumbs up, he looks good in a suit…thumbs down, she’s got a kid…a vigorous thumbs up, she’s giving a liquor bottle a blowjob…”)

Now I’m increasingly convinced that the Tinder people are really on to something.

It’s not just that the people on Tinder are, on average (as you’d expect from a photo-driven service), more physically attractive, but the effort involved in setting up a traditional online dating profile is staggering. It’s particularly burdensome when you’re picking yourself up from a failed former fling. With Tinder, all you do is open an app, pick some decent photos of yourself, and begin swiping. Elegant in its simplicity. So low-commitment that seemingly vast numbers of people have signed up (or at least it seems vast when you have to swipe one by one).

A reasonable person might object: “Sure, there’s a lot of attractive people on there, but that’s not all there is to a successful match! What about the dimensions of compatibility??!?!

I dunno man. Water seeks its own level, or whatever. So far I’ve met the same caliber of women off Tinder as I met off of other sites – professionally employed, grad degree-holding/seeking, ambitious, etc. After investing some time into getting myself a decent main profile pic and boiling down my In Search of Lost Time-length OkCupid profile down to a much shorter (I dig Margaret Atwood’s short story from that link) 30 words, I’ve been getting more intelligent, attractive women willing to meet up with me than I have evenings free to spend with them.

Lest this sound like I’m just taking the opportunity to brag, I realize the same mechanism that’s bringing these women into my life is also bringing a bunch of super hot dudes into their lives, which is to say when Tinder delivers up an unending stream of interesting, attractive people, the inescapable implication of the way it shapes my perspective on dating is that it’s doing the same for the women on the other end. I’m not breaking ground here by observing that online dating can lead to embarrassment of riches type-dilemmas, but Tinder feels like some next level shit – a hyperreal expansion of possibilities and reduction of difficulty in meeting people. Imagine a slot machine where each pull is free – all it costs is the time you spend sitting there yanking the arm. How much do you have to win before you’re willing to walk away?

The ease with which you can meet people, I think, makes it harder to recognize your endless matches as individual human beings with unique perspective and experiences – and feelings. Unless you make conscious efforts to step back from the addictive game of aimless swiping right and left in your free time, it’s seductively easy to view any single person as entirely disposable. For any reason, or no reason at all, abandon your current contacts, open the app back up and make some new matches.

FUN REAL LIFE EXAMPLE! I “matched” with Julia, 24. We exchanged a few messages about this and that and agreed to meet at a neighborhood coffee shop. Then she cancelled and we rescheduled. Then she cancelled on the day of, and we rescheduled. Then she cancelled on the day of, told me “I promise I’m not really fickle, I’m just sick,” and we rescheduled. Then she cancelled on the day of and said she did not want to reschedule.

Which, being real for a sec, is it possible for any one person to be indispensable? For any of us with a lot of options, when is good good enough? And when good is good enough, will the other person agree?

After a break up one of my good friends told me, “It sounds like [ex’s name] had a lot of really great qualities, but you’ll find other people who have great qualities. They won’t have the same qualities as [ex’s name], but they’ll be wonderful in their own ways.” And time’s proven him right – I’ve met lots of people who are extraordinary in ways I never predicted and couldn’t have guessed in advance that I’d appreciate anyhow. Women with qualities I didn’t know I’d want to look for before I met women who possessed them.

All of this is to say I’m becoming a skeptic that the concept of “what I want” is something knowable – something I can access and work off of to achieve the goal of forming something meaningful and lasting with someone. My favorite author in my favorite novel wrote that “almost nothing important that ever happens to you happens because you engineer it.” So if it’s hard enough to sift through thousands of women’s profiles to identify promising prospects if I have criteria I know are what I’m looking for, think of how adrift I am browsing through Match.com or OkCupid profiles when I’ve lost faith in my judgments about who might be a good fit for me. And what if all the other compulsive swipers out there are coming to the same realizations I’m having?

Ah well. Got another Tinder match while writing this post. Time to figure out what to say to another hot woman I know nothing about.

new beginnings

87653189_f870b4d946_z

I had a long walk back to the light rail station from Grace’s house in early December.

After a fresh and heavy snowfall in this mid-tier American city, I had to traverse a lot of sidewalks that were halfheartedly shoveled, or shoveled not at all. The still air and inconsistent street lighting would usually make a walk at this time of night in this part of town eerie, but my step was uptempo and my spirits were buoyant. When I got on the empty train home, I stood gripping a pole and felt like dancing; I smiled like I’d found Jesus.

Grace and I met up at a hip little joint on the south side. I got there first, even though I was late myself, and when she walked in the door she was every bit as cute as her photos on OkCupid suggested she would be. Her subtle smile she flashed me when I flagged her down told me that she thought I wasn’t half bad looking myself.

Conversation flowed effortlessly for the next three or four hours. She was a recent grad from a nearby liberal arts college who wants to be a doctor and she had the MCAT scores to do it. We found out we did the same dorky activity in high school. We talked politics, religion, swapped stories from the developing country we’d both spent serious time in. I kept her laughing at the stories I told. When I leaned in to the table to be closer to her, she leaned in closer for whatever reason she felt like leaning in closer. I told her she was my first date off the website, and she said I was only her second – and she’d been on there for 8 months.

I’d been on the site for a week.

Flash back some pages on the calendar..

The ex was dropping me off after she had made her feelings clear. I sat in mostly stunned silence as I began the arduous journey of trying to process what the fuck had happened to make the woman I thought I could spend my life with decide she wanted out. When the car stopped, I patted her leg lightly to say goodbye and reached for the door handle.

It was oppressively sunny. My sunglasses came off but hers stayed on. They didn’t catch the tear or two she was shedding; I don’t think this was easy for her either. My naked eyes didn’t conceal any emotion.

She said a pat on the leg was a miserable way to wrap this up and she embraced me with both of her arms. I hugged her tightly too, despite the pain and humiliation I felt. I stammered something stupid about how I shouldn’t feel sad for what I’m losing but should appreciate what I had gotten when I had it – blah, blah, blah. She gave me a surprisingly tender kiss on the forehead, I said goodbye, and I stepped out of the car and out of her life.

The trauma of that day receded into the background as the tap beers flowed that night in December with Grace. This gal was unbelievably cute, had a lot to say, and was doing great work with a non-profit. And she was in the bar with me.

While browsing the singles on OkCupid she’d stood out by virtue of her unreasonably attractive photo. (When I showed the horny old men at the office, their eyes bulged) I scanned her profile, whipped up a couple inane things to message her about, and sent them off. In her reply she said she wanted to skip the internet chit chat and just get together soon; she stressed she wasn’t a serial killer.

I wouldn’t have been super concerned if she were.

As the night wrapped up I offered to walk her back to her place nearby and off we went. When we arrived, she gave me a big hug and we both said we had a lot of fun. I walked off into the night thinking filling the gaping void my ex left wouldn’t be so hard after all.

Of course, if things with Grace had ended up happily ever after there wouldn’t be much great material for one guy’s blog about online dating in the 2010s, would there?

After 31 dates (and counting) with 19 women over three months, I’ve learned a lot. I’ve got some good things going for me, but I’m no model and I’m not a born player. I’ve been fortunate enough to be involved with a series of inspiring, brilliant, and beautiful women – and insomuch as I can help others find love, I’m going to share what I know on this blog.

Follow along on my journey as I try to get back to having merely 99 problems.