People who aren't in the dating world right now really just can't grasp how fucked up it often is.
Seriously, the only vicarious trauma I have as a therapist is hearing about contemporary dating fuckery. I can hear stories that are so horrifying that they would peel paint off the walls and be fine, but when I hear the just fucking twisted interpersonal dynamics that have become "normal" in the dating world, my skin feels like it's covered in bugs.
Dating now is a lot like politics now. The veneer of rules and decorum and expectations have been stripped away, and naked, unabashed toxicity abound with people expertly equipped with narratives that bat away personal accountability. ETA, that's not to say that those former rules weren't toxic as fuck in their own right, just that things are VERY different in terms of trying to navigate.
It's fucking wild.
You keep mentioning this, and it sounds horrifying. How would one prepare their offspring for future dating in a cesspool like this?
No to speak for Metalcat, but I can give some insight into current dating:
- If you're a single person of dating age, the norm is to have a profile on one app or on various apps.
- Being on the apps is the norm, the same way that everyone had facebook at some point and everyone has a mobile phone nowadays. Which means not being on the apps already requires a thought out, voluntary effort. It requires justifying to yourself and possibly to your friends why you are not on the apps.
- Being on multiple apps is also the norm. Which means it will take time, focus and effort to look at profiles, send and answer messages.
- When people create their profile, you have the people who put zero effort and who will get zero in return. And you have the majority of people who will try to portray best version of themselves. This means most profiles will be made to be appealing which can lead to disppointment. Like this:
This person looks great in all these aspects!
They don't match with you.
They might not even be opening their app.
You create mini hopes and expectations for nothing.If you match, they don't give the same good vibes as on their profile.
You create mini hopes and expectations for nothing.If you match, the conversation might go well but a lot of times, they don't invite you to a date or don't agree to actual in person date plans.
You create mini hopes and expectations for nothing.If you match, the conversation go well and you meet up, people are still going to be very different from their profile. I know the joke is for photos to be deceiving. In my experience, that hasn't been the case. It's more that on their profile, people are fun and confident and then in person, the are... well.. human with more nuances.
By now you have created bigger hopes and expectatios. - Since the majority of single people are on the apps, you get everyone. Which means you don't really get useful info from their profile. Are they looking for something casual? Are they looking for something serious? Are they even looking for anything?! There is the joke that dating apps are only openened while the person is in the toilet so they can look at beautiful people fo the gender they're interested in.
- There is this homogenisation of profiles and behaviours to conform to our society. Which means:
Everyone will expect guys to initiate talking and inviting out etc.
Guys will act as confident and women will act chaste/uninterested.
Which means... more apps will be created for specific groups of interest, not necessarily a good thing but more time and energy!
What does it means in terms of lived experience of someone doing online dating (my perspective is that of a woman but I'll try to add what my male friends have said):
- While the pressure to meet someone is still the same as pre-mobiles phones, the expectation is that you will act on it much more often. Instead of meeting someone new via your friends or even chatting on dating forums, now you can swipe all day, everyday. Which means when you're still single, you feel like you're failing even harder. And feel extra lonely.
- The apps bring a distance and anonimity. It's so much easier for people to be less nice when they don't know you in real life, when they can come in and disappear out of your life in an instant. This lack of other social bonds also create a dissonance in our heads, I dated that guy for two months, then puff, never to be seen again after a rejection text.
- When all goes well and you meet the person face to face, this can entail various things:
You will take time out of your evening or weekend to get ready, leave the house, travel to the meet up place. Remeber it's easy to put pressure on yourself to go serial dating and try to go on multiple dates a week.
You are still meeting a stranger without any social buffer of other friends, a course or work environment.
- If meeting people is easier and more frequent, being rejected or meeting someone you don't find suitable for you will also be easier and more frequent. So more heartbreak.
How to better handle this dating dynamic?
* Take your time. Spend less time on the apps and speak to fewer people even though it's tempting to play the numbers game. Talk to one person at the time until it dies out or you move on to meeting up.
* Avoid the temptation to be like everyone else and speak more truthfully of yourself. (In my case, I'm a fairly confident woman. Do you know how hard is it not to succumb to being passive? I also wanted a gentle, soft hearted man. I know there are plenty out there, I've met them, but it's easier for guys to be steriotypical as well)
* Meeting strangers in person can be super stressfull.
* Meeting someone, then fancing that someone only to be rejected is stressfull and actually traumatising.
* The two points above tie back to "take it slow". Being rejected so bluntly (even if politely and warmly) is awful. I remember coming back from a date with a guy who was clearly interested in me and whom I found zero appealing and calling my friend, asking her if I could come to her place and then sitting on her sofa in a fetal position trying to comfort myself.
I remember coming back from a date where I liked the guy, damn he seemed so good, only to be rejected afterwards. I curled up under a blanket and took time to recover.
* Understand yourself and your limits/boundaries. Meet up somewhere in Central London that will take me one hour to get there? No. Meet up when it will take time away from my friends or my rest? No. Talk to someone for ages and let that expectation grow? No.
* Understand that life can happen outside the apps. It's very hard to go against this norm. But you can. You may feel like you should just keep trying, after all, it's a numbers game. But you can allow yourself to not be on the apps. Or to be on the apps on your own terms.
* Read or listen to Shani Silver, read feminist stuff, question gender roles and gender expectations.
PEOPLE DON'T UNDERSTAND HOW HARD IT IS! Coupled up people keep telling us to get on the app, give it a try, ok this guy didn't work, how about another one? Dating at the speed that dating apps allow it can be very harmful.
In simple terms, it's like going to many jobs interviews a month, for many years, and still not having a job.