Becky's Post-Dating Escapades

I felt like I was packing for Mars. Suiting up for OKCupid, as it were, by inputting my personal stats (“White / 5’4” / Gemini and its fun to think about”) and uploading the best picture of myself I could find. Choosing from a drop-down menu of relationship choices (“I’m looking for new friends, long-term dating, casual sex”) and pondering a bunch of inane “Questions” with terrible seriousness (STALE is to STEAL as 89475 is to… / Does finding a long-term partner give you license to “let yourself go,” ie – lower your standards of personal hygiene or appearance or gain large amounts of weight?)

I was always that girl who swore she would never do online dating. Sigh.

There was no dramatic blastoff. Suddenly there I was! An OKCupid profile-of-a-person like any other. I had decided while filling out said profile that I was going to complete each section with honesty and with the first ideas that came to my mind with conviction. I was going to take it seriously, and I wasn’t going to finesse my profile for anyone (goddammit!).

And that was the first sign I’d entered a new cosmic system.

All the times I’d fallen for guys, pretending to be passionate about their various opinions, hobbies, causes and/or emotional issues (or at least convincing myself that I was passionate about them…) All the times I’d put HIM first and ME second (“relationships take work. love takes sacrifice.”) All the times I’d let my personal pursuits fall by the wayside (in the spirit of the “common good” – “we” don’t have time.)

In my ‘real’ life I was an amorphous body of dark matter – inexplicable, ever-changing, serving some mysterious “higher” purpose. And online? Well, when I said I couldn’t live without the Ara Pacis (among 5 other mind-f*cking pieces of art) – I totally meant it. While indulging in this solipsistic exercise, I had found…myself…more truly and more strange….

So I thought to myself. Ok, Cupid. This is worth a shot.

The following are my thoughts and observations after less than a week engaging (and disengaging) with OKCupid. I’ve never been on another online dating site, so I leave it to you, dear readers, to weigh in on whether my experience applies elsewhere… Maybe I’m doing this right. Maybe I’m doing it wrong. But so far I am definitely feeling that there’s something to be said for taking (at least!) a breather on another planet, far from home. Here goes.

1. The OKCupid romantic process is totally familiar – and less ambiguous – than other kinds of social networking.

OKCupid is just a sketchier Facebook! When I signed up, I was afraid I was going to feel lame having a “dating profile” out there. I was afraid I was going to feel judged-in-abstentia by men all over New York. But actually. Having an OKCupid profile feels exactly the same as having a Facebook profile. Or a Twitter handle. Sure – there are major differences – the main one being that you can see who’s been looking at your profile and they can see if you’ve been looking at theirs. But whatever, since everyone is on the site for a reason (whether that reason is finding their soulmate or finding a good lay), there’s no reason to stress about who is eyeing you – or not. And if anything, having a clear disincentive NOT to stalk the guy who didn’t write you back is a HEALTHY thing.

And it’s great to have less ambiguity. No wondering if that was a platonic poke or not. No stressing over what his friend request means. If you’ve been winked at…that dude is interested. So what do YOU think of HIM? How nice for a gal to have the opportunity to ponder and decide for herself!

2. You CAN truly connect with people (and judge them!) via electronic messages on OKCupid.

On the one hand, DUH. Jess and I have been making the point that techno-romance can be meaningful since we started the WTF?! project. On the other hand, it still came as a surprise to me how quickly I could be intrigued by a guy just by reading his profile. AND how quickly I could tell (from his profile or from his message to me) that we would have no real chemistry. And if it’s a no go, then no need to spare feelings or even write back. You’re so inundated with “messages” and “winks” and “favorites” and “matches” that you don’t really owe a guy anything at all. And you can’t take it personally if he doesn’t get back to you. Pressure’s off! Again, the refreshing point is whether YOU are into HIM. or NOT. I am all about it.

3. OKCupid is an instant gaggle.

Within 24 hours of putting up my profile, I’d been “winked” at, added to “favorites,” propositioned, asked to dinner, asked to drinks and asked to play strip chess (hot!). ’nuff said.

4. You’re still yourself on OKCupid. Maybe even moreso.

As I said, it felt so great to be so honest about who I was and what I was doing – on OKCupid and in life. It was clarifying to put myself out there very openly, freely and explicitly. And it was interesting to ponder how important it was to me how often a potential love interest showered…or whether someone would be surprised going through his (or my!) personal belongings after an untimely death (all real OKCupid questions).

I always loved the Bogart line in Casablanca where he says that Captain Renault is just like any other man only moreso. There’s a heightened quality to every interaction on OKCupid. You get to express yourself however you want. He gets to express himself however he wants. Ironically, the light-year distance between computers seems to distill people’s personalities – not muddle them. Sweet.

5. You are in control on OKCupid. You set the rules.

Like I said, you really don’t owe anyone anything. Who cares? No one’s even using their real names. Are you interested or are you not? The choices are clear, your reactions are sharp and immediate, and you can respond without fear that the gossip is going to get back to your grandmother’s best friend’s cousin who set the two of you up.

By the same token, it’s up to YOU how much you invest in each interaction on the site. Want to dwell on the stream of guys who look at your profile and don’t message or wink? Go ahead. Feel blown off and rejected. But it’s your choice to be scrolling through those guys rather than looking at all the “matches” in your “quiver” or searching for dudes who like the same esoteric book you really like. If you’re determined to feel undesirable, then you’ll feel that way on OKCupid the same way you do in the real world. But it’s up to you.

So Actually:

OKCupid is not that different from my ‘real,’ flesh-and-blood, f*cked up love life.

For the first few days, I was checking in incessantly. Every time I got a message I would read it right away. I felt manic and crazy but it was awesome to be getting so much instant affirmation! But guess what? It wears off. And the desire for true connection remains. So who cares about the guys you feel nothing for. It’s all about engaging with that dude who’s really sexy, or that dude who’s really smart, or that dude who wrote you the sweetest message.

The OKCupid universe is a micro-cosm of my everyday experience, but every interaction is heightened and expedited. There’s definitely an adrenaline rush that accompanies every OKCupid! email that hits your inbox – whereas the gaggle in non-virtual-reality can be slow-moving and subtle – but the fundamental emotions and decisions are the same.

So I’m left to ponder. Where is connection – and love – truly, and strangely, to be found?

Full disclosure. Sometimes galaxies collide. This guy (in my gaggle?) convinced me to try OKCupid. We were taking a walk with my dog (I call it the Bear-non-date) and he was telling me that online dating would be fun and interesting for me even though – of course – I wasn’t “one of those girls who needed it.” Besides, he pointed out. People you connect with can be hard to find, and it feels scary to leave Love and even Friendship up to the vagaries of Fate. “What if you and I had never met?!” he said to me.

He’s a good salesman. He convinced me. I signed up as soon as he left. For the record, we’re a 53% match on OKCupid so I don’t think he’ll be showing up in my quiver any time soon… Even though we’re fast friends and have a gazillion shared obsessions that somehow don’t show up on our profiles.

What the f*ck is up with that?! Will he and I ride off into the sunset as dear friends? Or is there a spark of something more fundamental in our connection? Or will his “Height: 6’2” and “Body Type: Athletic” (and, poorly displayed on OKCupid, baby blues) render him squarely a Hot Sex Prospect in my gaggle?

I guess we’ll never know unless he winks at me.

8 Comments

 
  1. avatar
    Posted by Snaporaz

    99% of guys who do online dating that you would find acceptably attractive are there as an easy way to get laid, period.

    These dating sites are generally 80% male, 20% female. Did I mention they’re all sleezeballs? And did anyone else find it extremely creepy that this guy friend of yours brought up you trying online dating…on the site he uses?

    Apart from being able to write about it for a relationship blog, I see zero reason for a smart, attractive, well-adjusted female who lives in NYC of all places to even dabble in online dating. Can’t you throw a rock out of your window and hit like ten hot guys?

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  2. avatar
    Posted by Enders Game

    Snaporaz I’ve heard this perception about online dating that guys are just looking to get laid. Please let me know how that differs from most guys in the real world. When a guy hops on an online dating website he isn’t going to suddenly transform into Romeo looking for long term love.

    Also where are you getting your facts from? All of the major online dating websites skew female: Chemistry is 72% female, Eharmony 69% female, Match.com 55% female.

    According to a recent story that ran in almost every newspaper, 17% of marriages today meet online: http://tinyurl.com/23hd9rp to the point you actually have a better chance of a marriage in 2010 meeting online than in a bar.

    I’m guessing with the stigma around online dating that this number is even low considering many people would rather lie about meeting online.

    Online dating is exactly like Facebook was when it was first becoming popular. 90% of the world (who wasn’t on facebook at the time) would say things like “I don’t NEED facebook, I have plenty of friends” or “I don’t NEED facebook, that’s for losers who don’t have real life’s”. Online dating doesn’t replace real world dating, it’s just a cool supplement to meeting people in real life. Right now there’s still a huge stigma, but every year that erodes as more people are giving it a shot.

    As to throwing a rock out of a window and hitting ten hot guys, I’m not sure what street you live on. You could roll a boulder down most blocks in NYC and would mostly crush short, out of shape guys who are about as intelligent as yourself.

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  3. Posted by julia

    yay! i’m glad you’re trying this out. for the record, if you don’t want dudes seeing that you’ve looked at their profile, i’m pretty sure you can turn that off. good luck! can’t wait to hear more…

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  4. Posted by B_Mill

    Becky – congrats on trying out the online dating thing! I’m new to it myself (as in w/in the past month joined match). I am fairly pleased so far with what it’s yielded me. I’ve been on a few blah dates but I’ve really taken a liking to 2 others. And Snaporaz, there are definitely guys who join dating sites just for a quick lay but there are also guys who are there for relationships, guys there to network, make friends because they’re new to a city, etc. And just like any guy you’d meet at a bar, the supermarket, through friends, you’ve got to feel out the situation when you meet them in person and determine if you two are actually looking for the same thing or not. If my “lay-dar” goes off when I meet a guy in person, I send a pretty clear signal that I’m not interested in just that. And I completely believe that online dating sites are simply another means of creating new relationships – even if they’re not romantic ones.

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  5. avatar
    Posted by dkalani17

    I stumbled upon this blog after reading an article in the Huffpost. It is exactly the kind of blog I’ve been wanting to write for a long time now, but haven’t put the time or energy into it. Now I don’t have to! Thanks guys!

    Also- OKCupid is just as crazy as all the others. I’ve been on a few over the years, and they can work. I met my ex through POF, and my old roommate met her boyfriend through OKC, as well as a old co-worker, and I just heard a friend from college got engaged through a dude from OKC as well. Can’t wait to hear more stories from the OKC experiment!

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  6. Posted by singlegal

    so fun to read about your online dating experiences, becky. i’ve seen both – friends who met their bfs and gfs online, and friends who were tooootally sketched out by the whole thing. excited to see how you end up feeling about it! good luck!

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  7. avatar
    Posted by JohnK

    On the bright side, you cna always just block people from seeing if you’ve visited them — though that means you can’t see whose eyed your profile.

    AS for your 53% match — answer more questions, see how many you have in common, and see how many questions you and he have answered that line up

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  9. Posted by spstar

    Becky,

    I’ve been on every single dating site, off-and-on, for the last 7 years. Although I’ve been on, probably, over a hundred dates in that course of time, not until this last stint of a year-and-a-half did I meet someone that I dated for a couple of months. I always seemed to form long-term relationships with people from the ‘real world’.

    In any case, it would take an entire guest blog to describe and rate each site’s efficacy, but know that OkCupid is the best you’ll find. Suffice it to say that once you’ve sifted through the creepers, you will never have a shortage of new gaggle-mates. And, you’re right, it’s totally free.

    Unfortunately, there is an inherent flaw to the online dating system.

    Often, it’s the coolest dudes of them all, who find themselves inundated with intelligent, creative, beautiful women…who want to meet them! Over and over, I’ve begun to build an awesome bond/friendship/potential relationship with a lad, only for him to be unable to halt himself from checking ‘what else is out there’. For our cool dudes who have never had so many wonderful women at their fingertips, it is almost impossible to fathom choosing just one to ‘try out’ for awhile.

    Online dating creates an environment that robs men of any desire to go monogamous. It’s not creepy. It’s not sleazy. It’s not mean. It’s just how it is.

    2 months (finally) with a dude from Cupid ended when curiosity got the better of him and he re-enabled his account. The next week, I went on a blind-date (set up by a friend). There was no vibe other than “I cannot WAIT to see this person again” from both sides. Feeling that lack-of-hesitation from a man in expressing his interest was not something I’d experienced in a year and a half. It comes with the consideration of ‘one person at a time’.

    This ‘weighing of options’ for both men and women that comes with online dating augments the inability to form a strong, lasting connection to the point of debilitation. It becomes almost impossible.

    I can’t wait to see what you think about my observations, after you’ve had more time with the online process. Godspeed, You!

    -S

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