Love Apptually Part 2: Clowns and Pirates and Fishermen oh my!

In Febraury I shared an emotionally crippling tale (cue the dramatics) about my own embarrassing incident with Tinder. But save a 20-minute involvement that turned me off dating apps forever, my experience with any sort of technologically assisted dating has been sporadic and always secondhand.

This doesn’t mean its existence and effect on human relationships doesn’t continuously intrigue me however (this is “Part 2” for a reason).

I majored in Psychology and Criminology in University, so the social sciences have always been my bag. Living in this crazy online world where face-to-face human interaction is becoming more of a choice than a necessity, it’s hard to ignore that little Freudian voice in the back of my mind that wonders what is becoming of the world and what inevitable impact technology will have on the way we relate to one another.

I remember being 19 the first time I encountered the wonder that is Internet dating. Working a summer office gig at the time, I had a 31-year-old male colleague who regaled me with tales of his experiences with Lavalife (for the youth, Lavalife is a washed-up attempt at adult dating that I now believe is entirely reserved for low-end escorts and gigolos who don’t want to advertise in the back of NOW Magazine).

At 19, I was but a wee nugget fresh out of high school and also recently out of her first relationship. The idea of going on a date with someone I didn’t have at least a 2-year personal resume for and 20 mutual friends who could vouch for his character was unfathomable to me.

The notion of meeting said person through a computer was absurd. At at the time it took me at least two hours bi-weekly to come up with a sassy and hilarious new MSN name, and here was someone telling me to put up an entire profile? For other people to actually see?!?

I quickly shelved Lavalife to the back of my brain as reserved for the very old and highly desperate.

Fast-forward 11 years and everyone and their grandmothers are partaking in online dating of some kind. There is a dating website for every genre and sub-genre of human.

Pirate looking for love? Sure, there’s a website for that.

Fisherman in search of a Fisherlady? Check.

And in case you’re looking, these also exist:

  • Equestrian Cupid: For those passionate cowboys just looking for someone to ride bareback with.
  • Amish Dating: Perfect for those who value hard work and candlelit dinners.
  • Clown Dating: If you’re down for being constantly fucking TERRIFIED because why clowns WHY!?!
  • Gluten-free Singles: So you can tell each other every single day that you don’t eat wheat and leave the rest of us out of it.
  • Hot Sauce Passions: I cannot tell you enough how into this I am.

So it was only a matter of time until someone thought, “Gee how can we take this huge industry and make it faster, way less personal, completely unauthentic, and ideal for absolute perverts?”

Enter TINDER. We are now at the point where people consider the hour-long eHarmony questionnaire too much of a time dedication to find a partner. I mean, why consider frivolous character attributes like family values, religion and interests when you can cover WAY more ground by swiping left or right based solely on a bikini photo and some strong eyebrow game?

It would be naïve, therefore, to think that this method of romantically relating wouldn’t filter into out expectations and desires in a relationship. We live in a society that respects and values quantity over quality; we are judged by how MUCH of something we have. Online dating in general and Tinder specifically appeals to this propensity; it makes the quantity of potential relationships exponentially higher. And with this it necessarily makes it near impossible for someone to invest any real time or energy into just one relationship.

Quantity up = quality down. It’s called a CORRELATION people. First year stats whaddup?!

And I know what you’re going to say: “Well that’s stupidly naïve Emma. People on Tinder aren’t interested in dating; it’s a hook-up App and who says a healthy sexual appetite is a bad thing?”

It’s not of course. Have an insatiable appetite for hook-ups you little minxes, and more power to you. I just don’t believe that every user on Tinder is there for the same reasons or with the same zero-expectations. I think many of them are there trying to wade through all the sexual innuendos and terrible examples of humanity in search for an authentic connection.

I have never witnessed a world that makes it more possible and feasible to connect with other people socially and yet is paradoxically making us all antisocial, starving us of quality human interaction.

We are not a generation of need but a generation of want. And with this comes the refusal to wait or fight for anything.

No one seems willing to dedicate the time to actively wooing anymore, or to being wooed. We have all become such easily distracted individuals, constantly drawn to the next shiny object with nice abs and a tight ass.

And, as one would expect, this propensity naturally filters into our face-to-face interactions and our expectations for said romantic meetings. I have a guy friend who takes home a lot of females. I mean, a warrants-his-own-personal-STD-PSA amount. And sure, he’s a good-looking dude with adequate sex appeal, but he’s not particularly suave. His method of picking up amounts to a series of grunts and a reliance on spending his limited amount of energy on a girl with just the right ratio of alcohol consumption to daddy issues.

Ladies, I am all for being a strong independent female who wants to get theirs, truly. Go forth into the night you self-assured, beautiful, toned ladies and give your nether regions a good meal at the 3am buffet! But at least make the guy utter enough full sentences to ensure he is both English speaking and has an IQ above borderline deficiency. Don’t let this weird technological world force you to forget that you are worth some goddamn full sentences!

And don’t mistake this for some feminist rant. Yes I think a woman should demand to be pursued. But similarly, I think men should want to have to fight for her a little. I mean gentleman, do you really want the foundation of your relationship to be a series of vodka-infused six-word conversations that only confirm you two are equipped with the right anatomy to roll around together for an evening?

…. Ugh, I KNOW!… the answer to that question is always a resounding YES.

I really don’t have an issue with online dating or even Tinder. Treat it as entertainment, or as a distraction so you don’t drunk-text your ex, but don’t treat it as a true microcosm of the dating world.

Mostly because in the unfortunate circumstance that I ever find myself single again, I can’t accept that a 5’4” 24-year old accountant intern who offers to slap me with an avocado as his go-to pick-up line is all the dating world has to offer.

And fellas, the next time you get a female’s number, do the unexpected and actually CALL her. Don’t text, don’t Facebook, and definitely don’t send her a direct message on Instagram (I just found out this was a thing).

A phone call. I swear she’ll be so shocked her pants may literally just fall off.

You’re welcome.

E.

Love Apptually: A Tinderella Story

Love Apptually: A Tinderella Story

Once upon a time in a land far far away, sat a princess in her castle, carefully setting up the timer app on her iPhone camera. Once considered the fairest in all the land, long ago a fairy, fed up with the princess’ new-age vanity, cursed her with the inability to take a good selfie.

Banished to the land of poor lighting and double chin angles, only by finding true love (despite many an #instagramfail) could the curse be broken.

And so she sat, in the highest tower, of the tallest castle, on the largest hill in all the land, methodically swiping right on Tinder, hoping and wishing that her Prince Charming would see through her crossed eyes and duck face, and that he too, would swipe right….

…Ok, so a little dramatic sure, but tell me that isn’t a little bit more relatable than leaving behind a glass slipper or having to let down your long golden hair?

Dating in 2015 is a strange little monster isn’t it? In my last post I covered how I think the dating scene changes as you move from your 20s to 30s. But regardless of age, technology has entirely changed the way in which we find, forge and maintain relationships.

For obvious reasons I’m not on Tinder myself, nor have I ever been; I imagine my relationship would be a little less stable if I were constantly on my phone perusing half-naked bathroom mirror selfies of bachelors within a 2km radius of me.

Ok, part of that was a lie.

I was on Tinder once.

For 20 minutes.

And it scarred me emotionally.

It was two years ago, when Tinder was but a wee babe fresh out of the Silicon Valley womb. It was one of those, “let’s go out for one drink” kind-of evenings with a girlfriend that had quickly morphed into 3 hours and 2.5 bottles of wine.

Following numerous in-depth conversations on world news, Canadian politics and the state of Syria, our conversation pivoted to men.

Translation: we had been talking about men since glass one.

After a lengthy summary of her most recent escapades and a synopsis of my at-the-time battle with deciding whether to opt for monogamy or singlehood, she starts telling me about this hilarious new dating application that is, in her words, “Essentially a combination of Hot or Not, but with a location based component.”

I mean, how could I not be curious enough to check it out?

So I download Tinder, and her and I sat beside each other shadowing each others right and left swipes, until we ended up in a conversation with the same two guys, laughing as they fed us both the exact same cheesy pick-up lines.

For those who don’t know, part of the joy of Tinder is depending on how close a location parameter you set, you know if who you’re talking to is within a 10km radius of you, a 5km, a 2km, etc. It took about 6 minutes for both guys to begin vying for an in-person meet and greet with both of us, having no idea we knew each other.

That was about the time that the red wine buzz started to wear off, I became acutely aware that I was speaking to real humans somewhere within a 2km radius of me, both of whom I had mutual friends with on Facebook. I immediately deleted the application, curiosity satisfied and only mildly creeped out by the entire system.

Fast forward a mere TWO DAYS after said interaction, and I am with one of my best guy friends, watching a concert at the Rivoli. I turn and look at the door, and Tinder Guy #1 walks through…

…Followed directly by Tinder Guy #2.

Let me repeat, the only two people I have ever spoken to on Tinder, walk into the incredibly small, packed bar TOGETHER.

Now, despite only having had engaged in a 10-minute discourse with both of them, and having none of these messages include even the mildest undertones of the sexting or inappropriateness, I FREAKED OUT.

Looking back, I assume anyone who saw my next movements must have assumed I had lost complete control of my limbs, or was suffering an epileptic seizure.

Upon seeing both these men, I hurled my entire body down under the crowd, and crouched on the floor with my hands over my head mumbling various obscenities and threats to God.

My friend, standing beside me, was of course generally confused by my insane person behavior. I barely had time to hear him say, “What the balls are you doing?” because I was too busy forward crab walking, still below the crowd, to the bar’s washroom.

There I sat alone in a stall for 10 minutes, texting the friend who introduced me to Tinder various overly dramatic rants about how I will never EVER drink red wine again, how I plan on lighting my phone on fire and how I can now understand the plight of people who live in war-torn countries because isn’t this basically the same thing?

Her supportive reaction of course, “This is the best story ever, I want to marry your current situation and have its babies” and an equally supportive, “Well good luck, let me know how it works out. I remember the brunette being hotter if that helps.”

Some would call my frantic ground crawl and bathroom stall stay an irrational overreaction; others would call it a ridiculously irrational overreaction.

In retrospect, of course I realize it all sounds very illogical and over-the-top; like someone caught me white girl dancing to Alanis Morissette so I threw myself in front of a car. But as I said, I grew up in this city. My world already feels so exponentially small and I do everything I can to not to make it feel smaller.

And this made it so small I felt like I was wearing a parka in a phone booth.

I felt like I had just rolled over first thing in the morning, faced not with just one but two bad decisions from the night before lying beside me, and I wanted to chew my arm off rather than wake the beasts.

In short, Tinder made me feel like I had been part of a threesome gone wrong and I was traumatized.

Let’s also remember that Tinder was still so new at this point. There was no cushion of, “Well everyone’s doing it.” Walking back through that crowd, forced to make eye contact with my two Tinder BFs, I could only assume they were thinking, “Oh, how nice of her to leave the comfort of her home, her collection of stamps and 42 cats to come out for an evening.”

It didn’t matter that to know I was on Tinder they had to also be on Tinder. My brain at the time was not processing basic reason and deduction.

In short, I am chalk full of vanity and was just hugely embarrassed.

As it turns out, I think way too highly of myself, or the memorability of said 20-minute interaction because when I walked through the crowd- in what I imagined to be slow motion- the theme song to The Walking Dead playing on loop in my brain, they looked up, took me in, paused for about three-tenths of a second, and then turned back to each other and continued their conversation with ZERO semblance of recognition.

That’s right… I was the member of the threesome that no one even remembered being in the room.

It looks like they weren’t on Tinder some good banter and solid use of puns. Colour me shocked.

And although I was momentarily so outraged at my text game not making a lasting impact that I thought about walking up, licking both their faces and saying “How’s THAT for a right swipe?!” I realized the value of anonymity was too good and rare to pass up.

APOCALYPSE AVOIDED.

I know this is a relatively PG story. I’m sure reading the title you thought you were going to get a way more risqué tale, like, I don’t know, an actual threesome.

But I never really got to delve into the full gamut of what I hear Tinder has to offer. No one has ever offered to drink my bath water, told me about the toy hat that fits on his penis, or inquired about my desire to have them sit on my face. I’ve never gone on a Tinder “date” at 3am or had to stumble across the profiles of all of my exes on a particularly lonely night at home.

But for one brief moment in time, I got to be Tinderella in a not-so-Prince Charming sandwich.

To those still fighting the good fight, swiping right in the hopes of finding someone you’d gladly have sit on your face, I wish you a most sincere Appily Ever After.

The End

E.

The Single Games: May the odds be forever in your favor

The Single Games: May the odds be forever in your favor

Right, so I have to pretense this with the following:

I am not currently a participant in the single games.

I think my post on couple’s cohabitation made it clear that I am in a relationship that teeters in favor of being very functional and successful 90% of the time (save a few chewing habits).

But this is all new to me. Two years ago I thought the ideal long-term relationship would involve separately owning two different houses on the same block, and participating in adult sleepovers three times a week. In short, I was horribly commitment phobic and REALLY liked my space.

Now I live in a condo the size of most people’s living rooms and only have internal freak outs about it once every 3 months or so. That folks, is what we call PROGRESS. This boy of mine I tell ya; he really Mr. Miyagi’d me.

This is not to say that I was previously unlucky in love. Prior to my current live-in life partner, I participated in some all around fairly fantastic past relationships. And although not right for either party in the long run, I shared these relationships with some really fantastic dudes. I don’t think breaking up and moving on necessarily requires slamming the exes; failing to obtain that elusive happily ever after doesn’t negate the high caliber of these individuals or the journey we took with one another. I only am who I am in a relationship because of everything I learned from them, and for that I will always be thankful.

Yet between those five great humans I would ever think to title with the word “boyfriend,” I too spent many a year treading the field of landmines that is being a single in Toronto.

And, to condense these years into one summary sentence: I LOVED IT.

Cue all my single friends shaking their fists at yelling obscenities at me.

I had a lot of fun when I was single. And I’m not talking the, “Stumble out of a stranger’s bed” kind of fun. I hold no judgment against those who enjoy a little roll in the proverbial hay with someone whose name they don’t know, but being a born and raised Torontonian my world in this city is so obscenely small that one-night stands were never in the cards for me. The way my world works, said stranger would have turned out to be my ex-boyfriend’s cousin’s best friend, they all would have shared a detailed account of my naked bod over a toast at a Jewish wedding, and I would have had to move to Uzbekistan to escape it all.

No, I reveled in singlehood not for the naked dance parties, but because I believed inherently in the importance of becoming a fully developed person with a keen sense of self before I attempted to coexist with another human.

Selfishness is so often given a bad reputation. Yet for most of us, our 20s is the last time in our lives we will get to choose exactly what we want to do and when without having to take the considerations of another person into account; sometimes it’s ok to be a little selfish.

When you’re single any experiences are uniquely yours. All the mistakes are yours to make, the serendipitous discoveries are yours to enjoy and the insights are only yours to savor. I think it’s pivotal to get fully behind the “I” before you attempt to develop the “We.”

Plus, as a girl who just recently got hugely excited to quit her job with no plans of what to do afterward, it’s clear I like not knowing where each day is going to take me. There’s something thrilling about that little corner of your brain that gets to wake up every day thinking, “Who knows, maybe today lighting will strike.”

But then again, this keen sense of optimism comes from someone who hasn’t actually had to navigate the single world in two years. It also comes from someone whose bulk of singlehood was in their early to mid-twenties; a time when you’re either too drunk or too distracted to realize someone is attempting to play games, or to care if you do notice. These are the years that you’re so new and full of unjaded enthusiasm, still operating under the misguided belief that world is full of good men and women and that respect and chivalry is alive and well.

Navigating the single world in your 20s is a breeze. Very few people are seriously contemplating their future at that point, we are all the best looking and most carefree version ourselves that we’ll ever be, and why hunt for a soulmate when there is an overflow of good-for-right-now’s?

Dating within the large and diverse dating pool of your 20s is akin to a game of Candyland where everyone is skipping merrily along Rainbow Trail on the way to Gumdrop Pass; it’s an age and a time in life where relationships are easily won and lost, careers are giant question marks and everyone you meet offers new experiences and lessons learned.

Then people hit 30 and Shit.Gets.Real.

The common consensus from my adult friends navigating those same singlehood landmines in their 30s is a resounding, ”You have GOT to be freakin’ kidding me!”

The game of Candyland has been swapped for Battleship, with everyone exhausted from learning and relearning the same tired lessons. Those first dates and first texts that were once enjoyed and laughed at are now forensically combed through for any trace of douchebag or evidence of a girlfriend/boyfriend/family/recent divorce.

My idea of singlehood being “fun” is now met with eye rolls or death threats, and the common consensus – both male and female – is that my friends would rather slowly impale themselves on a tree branch than subject themselves to another first date.

Much like a slow death by unstripped wood, other metaphors for adult dating I’ve heard in recent months include:

  1. “Trying to date in Toronto is like searching for a steak at an all-you-can-eat salad buffet.”
  2. “You know that feeling you get when you sit too close to a bonfire and smoke and ash gets in your eye and for a second you are in such excruciating pain that you forget anything good in the world exists and all of you can think is that this pain will never ever subside?… Ya, dating is a lot like that.”
  3. “First dates are comparable to 3 hours of repeatedly stubbing your toe. Dating is the raised floor board in the big toe that is my life.”
  4. “Dating is lot like that movie Jurassic Park. You think you’re going to an amusement park but instead you get eaten alive by a bloodthirsty prehistoric animal with a small… arms.”
  5. “I feel like I am stuck inside an endless loop of job interviews for a job I don’t actually want, but at least it looks good on a resume, you know?”
  6. “Is this a SICK JOKE?!”

I feel like my friends are continuously drowning in a pool of low expectations. One of my best girlfriends used to have such incredibly high standards for men. There was a time she said she would only marry a doctor that looked like 2001’s Paul Walker and who would gladly agree to sell his car to buy her a completely unaffordable rock of an engagement ring.

Last week this same friend went on a first date, and when I text messaged her to ask how it was going, she said:

“Dude, he helped me put on my jacket. I think I’m in love.”

Screw a medical degree and a personality. As long as he doesn’t have a secret other family and seems to fulfill the basic human function of replying to a text message within 3 days you best LOCK THAT DOWN.

The bar has been set so low for the male population I think to be declared husband worthy you just have to follow these steps:

  1. Walk in a straight line;
  2. Have the ability to walk and talk at the same time;
  3. Do not introduce yourself to a girl by sending her a picture of your penis over any form of social media;
  4. Remember her name;
  5. Open a door. Literally any door. Just once. Extra points if you hold it while she walks through it. Or, I don’t know, crack a fucking window and she’ll probably be impressed.

Similarly, for girls,

  1. Don’t be batshit crazy;
  2. Repeat step 1 for at least 3 months.

Listen, I am not negating the struggle of being single, or valuing the difficult experience of one gender over the other. Just because I happen to be in a relationship now doesn’t mean I don’t empathize with how sadistic the world can seem and how difficult it can be to find someone you genuinely connect with. Male or female or somewhere in between, times are tough out there.

But I also happen to think all of my friends and most of my non-crazy acquaintances are huge bloody rockstars who should never again settle for one of the good-for-right-now’s. The road of relationships is a long one, and those people who seem ahead of the love curve now may be miles behind in two years. Life has a way of blindsiding you at the precise moments that you think you have it all figured out.

By that I mean, to all those single people surrounded by smug friends with fiancées, husbands, wives and live-in-partners: Statistically speaking, for every two weddings you go to this year that someone patronizingly says, “Why are you still single?” one will end in a fiery pit of hate and despair.

There…feel better?

E.