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Anyone else fed up of dating apps?

16781012

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    You had a 5' 11" beard?

    XD I wish! It's about 9 inches at this stage I reckon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,034 ✭✭✭Ficheall


    Potential-Monke, I hope your messages on Tinder are shorter than those on here - some women are very conscious of their biological clock.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Ficheall wrote: »
    Potential-Monke, I hope your messages on Tinder are shorter than those on here - some women are very conscious of their biological clock.

    I've tried short, long, one liners, jokes, memes, pictures, you name it! But in general, short. And I usually post short, but posting short on this topic would leave out information and lead to, well, the last few pages. And I held back on them!


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    You had a 5' 11" beard?
    :D:D:D:D Feck off PM! :P:)

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Ficheall wrote: »
    Potential-Monke, I hope your messages on Tinder are shorter than those on here - some women are very conscious of their biological clock.

    I reckon they would prefer that to yet another dick pic.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    I reckon they would prefer that to yet another dick pic.

    The one thing I haven't sent... Hmmmm...


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 20,366 Mod ✭✭✭✭RacoonQueen


    Potential-Monke - you read like confidence is a major issue for you. You've had 3 long term relationships so you can't be all that repulsive to women.
    Why do people have such a problem with 'rejection' - you meet someone you are interested in, tell them, if they reject you, so be it. You can move on rather than wondering if they are interested or not, if that was a signal or not etc

    Personally, I've always had a thing for red heads, plenty of women do. Being honest though, the living with the parents thing would be offputting for me - would depend on the reason but I've been with someone in mid 30s who lived at home and it was just because he wasn't arsed fending for himself accommodation wise/paying his way/saving for his own place as soon as I realised that, I completely lost interest. Was literally waiting for his mother to pop her clogs so he could have the house. Incredibly unattractive.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,463 ✭✭✭✭BorneTobyWilde


    Just join Seeking Arrangement, where every girl replies lol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    I reckon the lack of confidence comes from being bullied at school (small, red hair, kinda gets under your skin after a while), and having a long term relationship nearly one after another, so missing out on what one of my mates called the 'sexual formative' years. And when I get rejected, as much as I don't want to, my brain races trying to figure out why, what I could have done differently, was it something I said or did. I over analyse the rejection and come up with nothing, and it gets me down. Working on that, but just avoiding it altogether is easier.

    And yeah, I honestly don't think there is anything wrong with me, but as you said, 36 and living at home is not the most attractive of outlooks, regardless of the reason. Even if someone was ok with me living at home as I'm helping my parents out in their golden years, it's still an issue that can't be avoided. Especially on the likes of dating Apps (where it's not mentioned, but would have to be mentioned at some stage should I get a match), where there's most likely a shopping list of guys for the ladies to chose from, i'd be automatically at the bottom for that 1 reason. Add in 5'6", which is 2" below what most consider the min height for a guy (serious amount of taller ladies on dating sites I've noticed lately). Beard, hair colour, looks, activities, personality and everything else will take a back seat to living arrangements. Just look at the adults living at home thread for views on that.

    I'm typing too much again...


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Potential-Monke - you read like confidence is a major issue for you. You've had 3 long term relationships so you can't be all that repulsive to women.
    Why do people have such a problem with 'rejection' - you meet someone you are interested in, tell them, if they reject you, so be it. You can move on rather than wondering if they are interested or not, if that was a signal or not etc

    Personally, I've always had a thing for red heads, plenty of women do. Being honest though, the living with the parents thing would be offputting for me - would depend on the reason but I've been with someone in mid 30s who lived at home and it was just because he wasn't arsed fending for himself accommodation wise/paying his way/saving for his own place as soon as I realised that, I completely lost interest. Was literally waiting for his mother to pop her clogs so he could have the house. Incredibly unattractive.



    This.

    People get rejected all the time, people get rejected for jobs for example, certain college places... it happens.

    It's a fear thing, which is normal, but you are going to get rejected in all aspects of life. A lot.

    What matters most is that you don't let that bother you. So what if she/he isn't interested.

    There's loads of other single people out there, try to keep moving forward in life and it will come good in the end.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,021 ✭✭✭✭anewme


    You are being way too harsh on yourself.

    What are your positives?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    There's loads of other single people out there, keep moving forward in life and it will come good in the end.

    I'm patiently waiting!

    Oh, one last factor that goes against me, don't want kids. And about 95% of profiles on these dating apps they say they eventually want them. The ones that don't want kids are most likely in a relationship already.

    Anyway, as you said, and as my mother always said, what's meant for you won't pass you by, but I could stick an arm out and stop one every now and then just to see! The wedding recently gave me a slight boost, i'm heading to a gig next Thursday in, as Ivory Tower News puts it, fckin Dublin, and there's some social events with the new job coming up soon, so I may be lucky! I'll update this thread if/when it happens! :D
    anewme wrote: »
    You are being way too harsh on yourself.

    What are your positives?

    Loyal, dependable, good listener, will never cheat (turned down a 4 some with 3 women previously... yeah, i'm that monogamous, and that will never happen again, at least until I'm in another relationship, when it is most likely to happen), I like to think i'm funny/humorous, laughing is something I do a lot and like to make my partner laugh too, up for nearly anything, ah.... It's like i'm trying to fill out my POF profile again!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,714 ✭✭✭✭Earthhorse


    Why do people have such a problem with 'rejection' - you meet someone you are interested in, tell them, if they reject you, so be it. You can move on rather than wondering if they are interested or not, if that was a signal or not etc.
    This.

    People get rejected all the time, people get rejected for jobs for example, certain collage places... it happens.

    It's a fear thing, which is normal, but you are going to get rejected in all aspects of life. A lot.

    What matters most is that you don't let that bother you. So what if she/he isn't interested.

    There's loads of other single people out there, keep moving forward in life and it will come good in the end.

    This is very philosophical. In the real world most people do not simply shrug off rejection, especially repeated rejection, so easily a lot of the time anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,309 ✭✭✭✭Purple Mountain


    You can't be that ugly if 3 women wanted a triste with you!

    To thine own self be true



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    You can't be that ugly if 3 women wanted a triste with you!

    Which baffles me more! All the female friends throughout the years have said similar things, the right one will come along, etc, but never them. My friendzoned 'bff' for about 9 years literally described me when telling me about her perfect man...

    Anyway, there must be something about me that makes me initially unattractive but attractive enough once in a relationship. It's that step that's getting me! :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Earthhorse wrote: »
    This is very philosophical. In the real world most people do not simply shrug off rejection, especially repeated rejection, so easily a lot of the time anyway.

    But rejection is a part of the real world, like it or not.

    It only matters as much as you want it too, which frankly, is energy wasted.

    Move on to the next opportunity and never look back.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 20,366 Mod ✭✭✭✭RacoonQueen


    Earthhorse wrote: »
    This is very philosophical. In the real world most people do not simply shrug off rejection, especially repeated rejection, so easily a lot of the time anyway.

    Practice makes perfect and all that. By being more forward and putting yourself in those positions, you get better used to it and not taking it too badly. Of course it stings when someone you are really intersted in rejects you - but you get over it and you move on. It's far better than looking for signs, looking for openings, constantly hoping something will just happen and pining for them when they never give you a second thought.

    Tell them you're interested.
    Ask them casually to do something with you sometime that is a shared hobby (whatever that may be cycling, hill walking, antique hunting...whatever) see how they react...if they like you and want to get to know you better, they'll surely jump at the chance to spend time with you. No?
    Unfortunately, Irish men are useless :pac: going by some I know and these types of threads, even sometimes if they 'reject' you it doesn't mean they are not interested, they still might be really interested but they rejected you because they don't really believe you're interested or think you're winding them up because you know they like you or some rubbish :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Ok Chad. For the rest of us it helps though.

    Hi again.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,714 ✭✭✭✭Earthhorse


    But rejection is a part of the real world, like it or not.

    It only matters as much as you want it too, which frankly, is energy wasted.

    Move on to the next opportunity and never look back.

    Not saying it’s not. But most people don’t live their lives this way.
    Practice makes perfect and all that. By being more forward and putting yourself in those positions, you get better used to it and not taking it too badly. Of course it stings when someone you are really intersted in rejects you - but you get over it and you move on. It's far better than looking for signs, looking for openings, constantly hoping something will just happen and pining for them when they never give you a second thought.

    I don’t get the feeling he’s not doing that. Given that he’s saying he’s tired of rejection he is putting himself out there.
    Unfortunately, Irish men are useless :pac: going by some I know and these types of threads, even sometimes if they 'reject' you it doesn't mean they are not interested, they still might be really interested but they rejected you because they don't really believe you're interested or think you're winding them up because you know they like you or some rubbish :rolleyes:

    I can’t follow who "they" is in this paragraph so don’t really get you, sorry.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Wtf?? How does something like even happen? And you are the ugly ginger guy?!

    Seriously, I struggle with the idea of even one woman finding me attractive. It's like everyone got invited to the party except me.

    It was a very rare occurrence I can never see happening again. Happened while I was a Garda, had 2 injured parties from the same rented house, 2 college girls (I was 28 at the time, they were 22/23) having issues with their fellas, criminal damage involved. Did all that needed to be done, and a few months later met them on a night out with their 3rd house mate. Drinks were had, dances were danced, and they invited me back to theirs (my missus at the time was working nights). About 20 minutes later, I was sitting on their couch, and quite suddenly found one sitting on each knee and the third kneeling in front of me. Now, maybe I read the entire situation wrong, what with not being able to read/understand signals, but it felt like it was going one way, so I put a drunken stop to it... Think I might have cried at that stage too, both for my courage to say no, and my courage to say no...
    Unfortunately, Irish men are useless :pac: going by some I know and these types of threads, even sometimes if they 'reject' you it doesn't mean they are not interested, they still might be really interested but they rejected you because they don't really believe you're interested or think you're winding them up because you know they like you or some rubbish :rolleyes:

    I did used to put myself out there, but as mentioned the rejection does get to me. And to cover it, I didn't only chance the odd one, I did put myself out there, but the fish were not interested in taking it to the next stage - nearly always managed to become friends with them though... I did christen myself Captain Friendzone for a while!

    Anyway, the part I quoted, this is why I find it hard to understand. I ask, they reject, but they may be interested anyway?! WTF? How am I supposed to understand that from a rejection? Men may be useless, but these women don't help! I could see my lady friend playing these games, and I never understood it. Maybe I have some sort of autism or something, it apparently runs in the family. Completed an online test just there to see, and I may be on the spectrum. I have enough labels already thanks!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    You almost achieved something that 99.9% of men will never experience. You should have gone for it.

    I know, thinking back I keep saying I should have, but I know myself if I'm in a relationship and it happens again, I'll still say no, just the type of guy I am. While single, the opportunity will not present itself.

    As an aside, why does that happen? Why do you start getting more attention once you're in a relationship? Is it a case of the other party wanting what they shouldn't have?


  • Posts: 26,052 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I know, thinking back I keep saying I should have, but I know myself if I'm in a relationship and it happens again, I'll still say no, just the type of guy I am. While single, the opportunity will not present itself.

    As an aside, why does that happen? Why do you start getting more attention once you're in a relationship? Is it a case of the other party wanting what they shouldn't have?

    If you had, then you'd be the guy that close to 100% of women don't want to be in a relationship with: a cheater.

    I think the theory is that a man in a relationship has proved his worth because someone else has found him attractive as a partner, a single man doesn't come with that pre-approval so is less attractive. In reality, it's hard to know but it's probably a little bit of the solid track record thing, and little bit of the forbidden fruit. For some, anyway.

    It's also true the other way round, in my experience.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Candie wrote: »
    If you had, then you'd be the guy that close to 100% of women don't want to be in a relationship with: a cheater.

    And that's exactly why I didn't. I've been cheated on, it's horrible. I'm sure she wouldn't have been impressed with 2 girls sitting on my legs and another kneeling in between, but there was no need to tell her as nothing happened. But yeah, if it's one thing I'm not, it's a cheater.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,194 ✭✭✭✭Strazdas


    joeguevara wrote: »
    I don't think people should compare rejection on dating apps with real life. In reality it's much more similar to Skilling at someone in a bar and they don't engage. Usually on a dating app it's only a picture and maybe a short text. Its not rejection in it's real sense.

    I'd agree. Being rejected online would hardly count as a rejection at all. Being rejected face to face would feel a lot more real.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Strazdas wrote: »
    I'd agree. Being rejected online would hardly count as a rejection at all. Being rejected face to face would feel a lot more real.

    It still stings a little, and if it's happening 99.9% of the time on the dating apps, you begin to question yourself, and the downward spiral begins. Unfortunately, not everyone has the mental fortitude to react to every rejection positively. The joys of individuality!

    Update: I joined Bumble the other night, never heard of it before but the 'she makes the first move' is interesting. I've just got my first match. Now we play the waiting game, as she has 24 hours to contact me. Maybe I could turn this into my romantic escapades thread!


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 20,366 Mod ✭✭✭✭RacoonQueen


    Earthhorse wrote: »

    I can’t follow who "they" is in this paragraph so don’t really get you, sorry.

    The paragraph starts by specifying 'Irish men' - I then go into saying going by some I know and the ones on these types of threads...would it not be obvious then that the 'they' is the Irish man that is rejecting a woman?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,723 ✭✭✭seenitall


    Ah a man with a grounded sense of self and a stable character is soooo attractive. It's kinda funny that you usually only have the opportunity to observe that in a guy because you've rejected him. If he stays a decent, pleasant human being after a rejection, my appreciation of him shoots up immediately. This is what is meant by the saying that confidence is attractive. Not some show-off posturing, or passive-aggressive "slagging" which hides a bruised and fragile ego.

    To a well-adjusted person, rejection is nothing, really. Just a normal part of life, which doesn't reflect on one's worth as a person, or on the ones who reject, either. I have been rejected many, many, maaaaany times in my life (yes, I'm a dinosaur, mid-forties), especially romantically (because I am proactive about it all, I've no patience once I know I like someone, I'll do something about it.) It really is a sort of a test of personality, so much can be gleaned about someone from how they deal with rejection. You have to be able to take it in your stride and move on, unencumbered and unembittered, otherwise the type of person with a healthy self esteem will run from you.

    Last year I had a false start with a younger guy who went psycho on me once I cancelled a late night "date". It wasn't pretty, and the more he lashed out in pain, the more turned off I was, and the more relieved that something made me cancel it at the last minute. Then after he calmed down, he came back apologising, acting all nice as pie and still expecting something might be salvaged. No way, Jose. I've seen the real You now. You simply have to be able to absorb your rejections and your losses in life, it is vital, otherwise you'll be signalling your emotional instability and emitting bitterness all over the shop, and no one worth having will want to be near ya. It's called maturity.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,854 ✭✭✭✭MetzgerMeister


    seenitall wrote: »
    Ah a man with a grounded sense of self and a stable character is soooo attractive. It's kinda funny that you usually only have the opportunity to observe that in a guy because you've rejected him. If he stays a decent, pleasant human being after a rejection, my appreciation of him shoots up immediately.

    So instead of not rejecting him and going on a date to find out about his grounded sense of self, you only find out when you've rejected him and it's too late?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,714 ✭✭✭✭Earthhorse


    The paragraph starts by specifying 'Irish men' - I then go into saying going by some I know and the ones on these types of threads...would it not be obvious then that the 'they' is the Irish man that is rejecting a woman?

    No, because for the last few pages of the thread and the preceding paragraph of your post we've been talking about men asking women out and getting rejected. I'm also not familiar with men rejecting women even though they do actually want them; I guess just the classic "hard to get" phenomenon revisited, so I was confused.

    Thanks for clarifying.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,723 ✭✭✭seenitall


    So instead of not rejecting him and going on a date to find out about his grounded sense of self, you only find out when you've rejected him and it's too late?

    Like I said, rejection is a part of life. If you're in any way a socially active (on-and-off single) woman, you will not only have a lot of rejection to deal with throughout life, but unfortunately also a lot of rejection to hand out. Sometimes I won't be attracted to someone at first, but this can grow through seeing him regularly in social situations and just getting to know a person in a non pressurised social environment. (i have to say, this has evolved a small bit as well, I used to be way more impulsive when younger, it would have been just a "yay" or "nay" practically on first sight, and not a second thought given thereafter. Things change as people, ahem, mature.)

    By a non-pressurised social environment, I mean anything but a "date", essentially. I even loathe the word, but that's just me. The whole concept just feels so frickin American and artificial. (I'm not Irish, I'm from EE, so may have something to do with it.) It's just hanging out with someone, this time without other friends around. This thing of going to a specific appointment to specifically gauge another person's romantic potential is so cold, contrived, unromantic. (So you can imagine how well the dating sites worked for me in the first place. Abandoned a long time ago.)

    Ok, I've really digressed there, but the original point was that opinions and feelings can and do change, and it doesn't even have to be in some long time frame. Attraction works in mysterious ways. This is why I think that as long as you are being yourself, and as long as yourself isn't an insufferable, angry or mentally ill pirck/btich/headmelt, you can hold your head high within the vagaries of romantic life and keep on truckin' through, with the knowledge that you are a worthwhile human being and you are doing your best. No regrets. I have no regrets because I put myself on the line when something matters to me, every time. Even when I have changed my mind and have to do a u-turn. With the type of guy I change my mind about, it will rarely be too late :)

    (By the way, the above u-turn scenario is pretty much the main plot twist of the two of the most acclaimed Jane Austen novels; in other words, a romantic lit trope - but in real life it doesn't really happen that often!! :D)


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    seenitall wrote: »
    By a non-pressurised social environment, I mean anything but a "date", essentially. I even loathe the word, but that's just me. The whole concept just feels so frickin American and artificial. (I'm not Irish, I'm from EE, so may have something to do with it.) It's just hanging out with someone, this time without other friends around. This thing of going to a specific appointment to specifically gauge another person's romantic potential is so cold, contrived, unromantic.
    +1000. Can't abide this imported "dating culture" myself either. I've gone on a few organised "dates" and with the exception of one they were boring as hell or downright irritating TBH, including the ones with the twenty questions from some Cosmo checklist, a few minutes after "hello" and not to be too unkind, they weren't exactly in the position to be asking too many questions with such apparent vigour. The exception was we both early on saw the daftness and the lack of any spark in that direction and just had a bit of craic.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,177 ✭✭✭Wompa1


    One of my wife's friends is into online dating. She was over visiting from the US and it was like a hobby. Take out the phone and look at what the local men were like. She travelled for work so it was something she'd do everywhere she went. He default position seemed to be that all of the men were below her and every story of dates she went on made the guys sound like losers.

    I consider myself lucky that online dating wasn't a thing for most of my young life. I feel like for women it must be like me looking for a new laptop online. I'd spend 2 years looking and never committing and buying one because I'd think I'd regret it right away and a newer model will come out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,479 ✭✭✭✭Thelonious Monk


    Wompa1 wrote: »
    One of my wife's friends is into online dating. She was over visiting from the US and it was like a hobby. Take out the phone and look at what the local men were like. She travelled for work so it was something she'd do everywhere she went. He default position seemed to be that all of the men were below her and every story of dates she went on made the guys sound like losers.

    I consider myself lucky that online dating wasn't a thing for most of my young life. I feel like for women it must be like me looking for a new laptop online. I'd spend 2 years looking and never committing and buying one because I'd think I'd regret it right away and a newer model will come out.

    As a man I think it's pretty great overall. As you get older you're less likely to be out as much meeting people etc, so the apps are perfect for meeting people. Plus there are so many in Dublin that the choices are endless, and if you keep at it you'll probably meet someone you really like.
    And yes like your friend when you're abroad you can fire up an app and check out the local talent, this has served me well a couple of times when travelling alone, even if just to hang out with someone.
    What a time to be alive, imo!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,723 ✭✭✭seenitall


    Wibbs wrote: »
    +1000. Can't abide this imported "dating culture" myself either. I've gone on a few organised "dates" and with the exception of one they were boring as hell or downright irritating TBH, including the ones with the twenty questions from some Cosmo checklist, a few minutes after "hello" and not to be too unkind, they weren't exactly in the position to be asking too many questions with such apparent vigour. The exception was we both early on saw the daftness and the lack of any spark in that direction and just had a bit of craic.

    Yeah agreed. With me, I think it's the combo of being from a culture where these things happen in a more fluid way, a cafe (Communist/post Communist) culture where young people/students had a lot of time on their hands to sit outside the cafe with an interminable cappuccino in front of them, watching the world go by and chattering with their mates, male and female alike. Things evolve organically then, "friend of a friend" type situations abound. And of the fact that I am a very informal sort of character anyway. Seeing people in business suits is almost rash-inducing! (No matter that I'm also obliged to look the part from time to time.)


  • Posts: 0 CMod ✭✭✭✭ Brenna Fit Suit


    i found dating grand - i did have a laid back approach and just meeting new people for a chat mindset. had good times just chatting away, met a few weirdos, the usual


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,417 ✭✭✭ToddyDoody


    The dating apps themselves are fine, its the people that are sh*te.


  • Registered Users Posts: 939 ✭✭✭bitofabind


    I think most people get jaded / disgruntled really quickly with the apps and the crappy behaviour they seem to encourage. Ghosting, disappearing, dating 5 people at a time and never committing etc. Either that or they act like kids in a candy shop and serial date multiple people for years in that effort to find their "perfect 10 out of 10" and get really picky about things that in the real world don't tend to have a bearing on compatibility in the long run. Kinda par for the course when you're swiping on people's faces and the search for a partner feels more like ordering a pizza online.

    I think you need a pretty tough skin and robust sense of self-confidence if you're going to play the online game because disappointment and rejection is 100% guaranteed for everyone. Not just for men. My experience was either of meeting a rake of "nice but not for me" guys or really feeling like I had connected with someone only to be old news within a handful of dates.

    If you're prone to taking things personally, your self-esteem will disintegrate fairly lively.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,549 ✭✭✭✭Leg End Reject


    It still stings a little, and if it's happening 99.9% of the time on the dating apps, you begin to question yourself, and the downward spiral begins. Unfortunately, not everyone has the mental fortitude to react to every rejection positively. The joys of individuality!

    Update: I joined Bumble the other night, never heard of it before but the 'she makes the first move' is interesting. I've just got my first match. Now we play the waiting game, as she has 24 hours to contact me. Maybe I could turn this into my romantic escapades thread!

    For all the negatives you've posted about yourself, your self awareness and humour shine through. You've answered people honestly and haven't once gotten irritated.

    The HUGE plus for you though is that there isn't even a hint of bitterness, nor any of the "all women are ..." from any of your posts. I hope all goes well for you and you do meet someone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,915 ✭✭✭Greyfox


    bluewolf wrote: »
    i found dating grand - i did have a laid back approach and just meeting new people for a chat mindset. had good times just chatting away, met a few weirdos, the usual

    I think this attitude is a must. You need to treat it like your meeting this person for a chat that way if it's a nice chat and leads to nothing more you just carry on to the next chat.. the nice to meet you but your not the one for me is part of the course with od which is why you should be multi dating. Multi dating can be extra time consuming but it helps to stop you from lingering on the ones that ghost you.. and everyone gets ghosted


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    For all the negatives you've posted about yourself, your self awareness and humour shine through. You've answered people honestly and haven't once gotten irritated.

    The HUGE plus for you though is that there isn't even a hint of bitterness, nor any of the "all women are ..." from any of your posts. I hope all goes well for you and you do meet someone.

    I agree. I think people are being a bit harsh. I agree that going to Japan and thinking it's going to be so different there is probably the wrong approach but he seems like a good guy overall.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    Maybe you shouldn't have messed the guy around and he wouldn't have been annoyed?

    Who said she was 'messing him around'? Life happens, people get sick, people's relatives get sick, people get called into work. Or sometimes you just get a weird vibe from someone and change your mind. It doesn't matter. Only an entitled d1ckhead gets abusive and angry because a stranger they have never met cancels a date.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    Greyfox wrote: »
    I think this attitude is a must. You need to treat it like your meeting this person for a chat that way if it's a nice chat and leads to nothing more you just carry on to the next chat.. the nice to meet you but your not the one for me is part of the course with od which is why you should be multi dating. Multi dating can be extra time consuming but it helps to stop you from lingering on the ones that ghost you.. and everyone gets ghosted

    Could not disagree more re multi dating.

    This 'stay cool and detached and date around' approach is IMO largely why so many people are incapable of forming proper bonds and starting real relationships these days. You're supposed to get a bit carried away, not be cold and clinical and making sure you have a back-up plan. How can you give anything a proper chance when your attention is so divided?


  • Posts: 0 CMod ✭✭✭✭ Brenna Fit Suit


    Could not disagree more re multi dating.

    This 'stay cool and detached and date around' approach is IMO largely why so many people are incapable of forming proper bonds and starting real relationships these days. You're supposed to get a bit carried away, not be cold and clinical and making sure you have a back-up plan. How can you give anything a proper chance when your attention is so divided?

    i think it depends on the person.
    some people are ok with it, and some aren't, and both are ok imo.

    i suppose the idea is that there are just an awful lot of people out there, you don't know them at all, and you shouldn't be attached to the first person you meet.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,315 ✭✭✭nthclare


    Dating apps are ok if you're not sensitive and your only expectations is to be responsible, respectful and use common sense.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    Well I hope she had a genuine reason because flaking on someone at the last minute is a ****ty thing to do.

    How fecking entitled are you?? A stranger from an app owes you literally nothing. I had men flake on me the odd time when I was using apps...no idea whether the reasons they gave were true or not, but who cares? A plan to meet for a drink isn't some binding contract. Personally speaking, any time I cancelled a date it was because I started to get weird or entitled vibes from the guy.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    It's not about entitlement, its about having respect for the other person. Standing people up was always considered a ****ty thing to do but now we because we have this internet dating culture suddenly it's ok?


    OK fine, but don't complain when the guy you really likes ghosts you.

    I could be wrong here, but I reckon if that chap was OK with that poster cancelling (because, y'know, this is life and stuff happens so why wouldn't he be) and played it cool, be understanding and just left it to that poster to let him know when she would be free again, he would have got a date in the end.

    Neither gender likes a potentially clingy/controlling love interest.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,912 ✭✭✭ArchXStanton


    Wibbs wrote: »
    +1000. Can't abide this imported "dating culture" myself either. I've gone on a few organised "dates" and with the exception of one they were boring as hell or downright irritating TBH, including the ones with the twenty questions from some Cosmo checklist, a few minutes after "hello" and not to be too unkind, they weren't exactly in the position to be asking too many questions with such apparent vigour. The exception was we both early on saw the daftness and the lack of any spark in that direction and just had a bit of craic.

    I was at a social event recently and was put sitting beside this one as a matchmaking thing by a friend who's event it was, I think we both knew it, but immediately she started in with the questions what do you work at? Do you have children etc. At some point I went out for a smoke and my mate who was sitting across from us came out and she says fcuk me you're getting some interrogation off yer woman, what's that about?

    I said I know right, I'm here going over my answers.. It felt more like machine gun fire, completely off putting and not natural at all, like she was trying to work out were to put me in the pecking order, men can sense that sh*t a mile a way.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    It's not about entitlement, its about having respect for the other person. Standing people up was always considered a ****ty thing to do but now we because we have this internet dating culture suddenly it's ok?


    Ok fine, but don't complain when the guy you really likes ghosts you.

    Cancelling a date isn't standing someone up. It's not ghosting, either.

    It's not ideal but there are plenty of reasons someone might need to cancel a plan, whether romantic or otherwise. It's happened to me several times that a man I'd arranged to meet has cancelled on me on the same day. Bit annoying, yes, but I suppose I'm not an overly entitled weirdo who thinks I'm so incredibly important that I should be prioritised over everything else going on in someone's life or that I'm owed an explanation.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    I was at a social event recently and was put sitting beside this one as a matchmaking thing by a friend who's event it was, I think we both knew it, but immediately she started in with the questions what do you work at? Do you have children etc. At some point I went out for a smoke and my mate who was sitting across from us came out and she says fcuk me you're getting some interrogation off yer woman, what's that about?

    I said I know right, I'm here going over my answers.. It felt more like machine gun fire, completely off putting and not natural at all, like she was trying to work out were to put me in the pecking order, men can sense that sh*t a mile a way.

    That kind of craic never works. It's too contrived.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,912 ✭✭✭ArchXStanton


    That kind of craic never works. It's too contrived.

    Yeah, the gestapo questioning didn't help either, makes people very guarded... Obviously I didn't cut the mustard


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