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The One?

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Do you believe in soulmates? Are you on the hunt for the elusive “one” for you?

Do you nitpick your dates to convince yourself he/she is completely wrong for you? Or do you want to be part of a couple so badly you look beyond his irritating habit of picking his teeth during dinner or her neurotic tendencies…

Signs your date isn’t The One lists a few ways to put your problems and differences into perspective and decide whether or not you’re being met with a dealbreaker.

Who we meet…

Thursday, September 20th, 2007

Show of hands, get ready–random poll!– Who has seen the movie/read the book, “The 5 people you meet in Heaven?”…….. okay, good… well, this really has nothing to do with that other than the fact that the article is called,
The 6 people you meet in bars“…and I found it to be hilarious.

If you’re a frequent bar-goer, be on the lookout for these six who are guaranteed to either make or break your happy hour experience.

And remember, if you don’t meet any of them, chances are you’re one of them… which one are you?

I’m curious…

Pick up Artist part II

Friday, September 14th, 2007

A few weeks ago I touched on how “picking up” is considered an art? Well apparently there’s a little bit of depth to the theory.

If you’re dating inept or are like me and just curious in how these “artists” think, perform and exhibit their art, I recommend checking out How to win over any woman.

Being on the other side (ahem, that is, being a woman), I think there is a lot of value in the responses to both
“What’s the biggest mistake guys make when they’re approaching a woman?” and
“What’s an easy way for guys to be more attractive to women?”

These tips seem like no-brainers, but I’m telling you–they’re priceless! And yet worth every penny-but ha! here’s the really great thing–they’re free. So go to the site and read up. You might just learn something you could put into action this weekend. Maybe even tonight? ;)

Dating in the new

Monday, September 10th, 2007

Okay so I thought “Quiet Parties,” were the new and crazy thing in dating…shows just how out of the loop I am.

Silly Sandy. Looking in all the wrong places.

Apparently there’s a whole slew of random dating action occurring and it’s all right at your fingertips. I recommend checking out New Mating Rituals
So, the Quiet Party is just the beginning. They’ve even hooked technology into it–mobile to mobile compatibility alerts are making their way into the dating realm. Who’d a thunk?

Hallelujah!

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

I know I posted already, but I’m in a good mood. And hey, it’s the weekend and I’ll be in Vegas… indulge with me, will you? I could not have typed this better myself… To read the original version, go to the following link:
http://msn.match.com/msn/article.aspx?articleid=6937&TrackingID=516311&BannerID=544657&menuid=6&GT1=10287

Do you keep falling for jerks?
By Evan Marc Katz and Linda Holmes

Repeat this to yourself one thousand times:
Screwed-up people are not more interesting than people with their heads together. Baggage is not fascinating, romantic, or exciting. It is very, very tiring. Men who are polite and emotionally mature are hot. Learn it, love it, live by it.

Linda
I have no idea whom to blame for the romantic mythology surrounding brooding, emotionally limited, narcissistic yahoos. I’m tempted to chalk it up to movies, where most men who start out as selfish jerks are eventually revealed to be wounded birds of some sort. Or it might be the uglier side of the therapy culture, which tempts you with the idea that these jerks might be amenable to solution, like crossword puzzles.

For whatever reason, there are a surprising number of women who are attracted to guys who can’t commit, who can’t relate, who can’t get along with anyone, who can’t tell the truth… these guys get a lot of action.

It’s not that women really want jerks, exactly. I think it’s a matter of mistaking emotional clutter for emotional complexity. Here’s an analogy: Imagine a messy apartment. You walk in, you survey your surroundings, and there’s an incredible quantity of stuff lying around. Books in tall stacks, Chinese food containers in the corners, DVDs in and out of boxes scattered around the TV… the place is in chaos. And while you wouldn’t really want to live there, there might be some part of you that would look around and grudgingly admit, “There’s a lot going on here.� Now, imagine the same apartment, once somebody has managed to get it cleaned up. The books are on the shelves, the trash is thrown away, the DVDs are alphabetized. This is a much nicer place to live. But it’s a little… you know, boring. And that’s in spite of the fact that the same books are being read, the same food is being eaten, and the same DVDs are being watched. You’re just in the presence of a person who knows how to clean up after himself.

I think that for a lot of women, guys in turmoil seem strangely fascinating, as if they are, by definition, more interesting than everyone else. There’s more of that clutter, so there’s more going on, and there’s more to sink your teeth into, and there’s maybe even more emotional depth to such a person.

Let me tell you something about the guys I know who are emotionally mature. The ranks of the healthy and rational include plenty of guys who have been in rehab, or been divorced, or seen their parents’ marriages end horribly, or had their own dreams thwarted in some ugly way—all the things that creeps are fond of waving around as explanations for why they lie or cheat on you or generally continue to be creeps.

The difference is that the healthy and rational people have at least undertaken the process of digesting all of that stuff and placing it in some sort of perspective so that it doesn’t have to become your problem. They know from suffering, just as much as the ones who sit around brooding into their beers and writing free verse and dragging everyone else into their little theater of agony. The sane ones are still working on their crap, too—who isn’t? The difference is that they’re not fetishizing their own misery or asking you to embrace it. And that’s a benefit to you, because the only thing you can guarantee yourself about that kind of hair-pulling drama is that if you cuddle up next to it, it’ll get on you.

You’re going to get plenty of emotional complications from anyone. Even people who have their lives very well pulled together are going to give you lots of opportunities to practice patience and understanding. There’s no point in starting out with someone who isn’t even trying.

Evan
According to Linda, many intelligent women prefer men with emotional complexities, even if it means that he can be verbally abusive, inaccessible, and generally loonier than Courtney Love on a bender. Now, I can’t speak for all men, but while I may have tolerated similar behavior, I can’t say I’ve ever preferred it. Any time I found myself dating a woman who was an emotional roller-coaster, the only reasons I stuck with her were because a) I was lonely and her presence in my life helped to fill a void or b) I was getting the best sex of my life. Lame, but true.

Put another way: Could you ever picture a man saying out loud, “There’s something that’s just so mysterious about her. Sometimes I look in her eyes and I feel like she totally understands me, and other times, I have no idea what she’s thinking. She runs really hot and cold but I can’t get enough of her. I think I’m going to stick around until I can crack her shell. One day she’ll learn to be more emotionally available and loving.� Tolerance for female ambivalence is not a stereotypically male attribute.

This isn’t at all to castigate women, as much as it is to acknowledge that women see more nuance in every scenario, so it’s no surprise that they give undeserving men the benefit of the doubt. But what for? Hasn’t every woman since the beginning of time had a thing for jerks and realized at some point that jerks were always going to be jerks?

I was the nice guy in high school who enjoyed being friends with cute girls who wouldn’t go out with me in a million years. I figured, “If that’s as close as I can get, I’ll take it. Maybe one day they’ll realize what I’m worth.� I would listen to boy problems galore — essentially, nice girls being treated badly by jerks — and not once did any of these girls ever say: “Hmm, Evan’s a great guy with a really kick-ass mullet. I’ll bet he’d be a wonderful boyfriend.�

But it’s not simply the rejection of the nice guy that’s keeping so many women single. It’s the acceptance of the screwed-up guy. Because screwed-up guys draw screwed-up women into a whole Misery Loves Company episode of Love Connection—where both parties are brought together not by the audience but by their insecurities and inadequacies.

All that “You can’t love anyone until you love yourself� stuff? So true. And if you’re choosing to date guys with major issues, you’re just as guilty as he is. Yes, everybody’s got issues, but not necessarily deal-breaker-type issues. Which is why women often say they’re seeking men who can fit their baggage in a carry-on. Unfortunately, there are lot of men who try to sneak a 75-pound trunk onto the plane and protest that it has wheels so it’s technically a carry-on. Women with issues are the ones who choose these guys.

Women who have their act together simply don’t have the patience. Admittedly, there are a few people who probably enjoy the histrionics and the moods and the make-up sex that come with dating drama kings and queens. But I’d bet that most are just willing to tolerate the drama, because, thus far, that drama comes attached to the “best� person they could find. Essentially, they’re saying, “Yeah, he’s inconsistent, selfish, and distant, but he’s all mine.� Just realize that every second you’re spending with the wrong guy is a second that you’re not out looking for the right one — the guy who gives, the guy who listens, the guy who learns.

Excerpted from WHY YOU’RE STILL SINGLE by Evan Marc Katz and Linda Holmes. Reprinted by arrangement with Plume, a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. Copyright (c) Evan Marc Katz and Linda Holmes, 2006.

Love vs Infatuation

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I pulled this article from an Ann Landers column I’ve had for probably over a decade… I thought I’d share it with you. I think anyone who has ever been romantically involved with someone can relate to this… we all have times when we need to be brought back down to earth. Enjoy!

xx

Sandy

Love or Infatuation?

Infatuation is instant desire. It is one set of glands calling to another. Love is friendship that has caught fire. It takes root and grows - one day at a time.

Infatuation is marked by a feeling of insecurity. You are excited and eager but not genuinely happy. There are nagging doubts, unanswered questions, little bits and pieces about your beloved that you would just as soon not examine too closely. It might spoil the dream.

Love is quiet understanding and the mature acceptance of imperfection. It is real. It gives you strength and grows beyond you - to bolster your beloved. You are warmed by his presence, even when he is away. Miles do not separate you. You want him nearer. But near or far, you know he is yours and you can wait.

Infatuation says “We must get married right away. I can’t risk losing him.” Love says, “Be patient. Don’t panic. Plan your future with confidence.”

Infatuation has an element of sexual excitement. If you are honest, you will admit it is difficult to be in one another’s company unless you are sure it will end in intimacy. Love is the maturation of friendship. You must be friends before you can be lovers.

Infatuation lacks confidence. When he’s away, you wonder if he’s cheating. Sometimes you check.

Love means trust. You are calm, secure and unthreatened. He feels that trust, and it makes him even more trustworthy.

Infatuation might lead you to do things you’ll regret later, but love never will.

Love is an upper. It makes you look up. It makes you think up. It makes you a better person than you were before.

How to Date

Monday, May 21st, 2007

The internet is great. Where else can you get an easy access how-to manual on how to date right at your fingertips?

Howtodate.wetpaint.com touches on subjects some other sites might shy away from such as the lowdown on dating coaches (what exactly is speed dating?), dating horror stories (we’ve all been there and we can all relate …or lament), and even gives advice on how to break-up the “rightâ€? way. It is filled with commentary from “realâ€? people in the dating scene who weigh in on controversial topics like sex on the first date or how to decide who pays at the end of the date—thankfully, paying for sex on the first date is not one of those topics…

This site is definitely worth checking out – Howtodate.wetpaint.com
Enjoy!

xx

Sandy

First Dates Do’s & Don’ts

Monday, March 5th, 2007

I haven’t been on a “real” date in years. I haven’t had someone ask me to dinner, pick me up, take me out, take me to the movies, and then drop me off afterwards yet. All this, and I’m already nervous about a “potential” first date. In order to prepare myself for this first date, I enlisted the Internet’s help and was completely overwhelemd by the number of first date “do’s & don’ts” that there are. The two that were my favorite were both written by college newspapers - and as a recent college grad (2004) I felt more comfortable reading these ones than the ones written by 45-year-old divorcee’s.

So, without further ado, I have pulled the 10 first date do’s & don’ts from Gretchen Ross & Jeremy Plezer of University of Illinois at Springfield! (My notes are in bold after their “rules.”)

1. Don’t dress like you just woke up or like you are attending church. Okay, so no pajama-dates and no Sunday-morning church dates. I can handle showering and looking decent but still feeling comfortable.

2. Don’t let the conversation be one-sided with awkward pauses. I talk too much. I know I talk too much. This could end up leaving my date on the one-sided awkward pause date. There are heaps & piles of “safe” things to talk about, college sports (the only real sports I know anything about), jobs, the town we live in, mutual friends. I’ll bring a roll of duct tape in my purse just in case I get verbal diahhrea. The authors of this article say to avoid bringing up sex, politics & religion, but I had a great conversation with a guy last night about religion, so if you’re comfortable, I say go for it!

3. Don’t remained glued to the cell phone the entire date. Who talks on their cell phone on a date? Seriously, I think that’s just weird. I don’t even talk on the cell phone for long periods of time when I’m with friends. It’s rude!

4. Don’t bring up past relationships. I agreee. On this first date, your new date doesn’t need to know all about your past. I wouldn’t shy away from mentioning that I was divorced, if I was asked about my past, but I’m not going to be offering up any details on why I’m no longer married on this first date! “Enjoy the moment of spending time with someone new.”

5. If you are at a meal, don’t order for the other person. Did you hear that, potential first date guy? Don’t order for me! I think this is just a strange custom. I have never been with friends who have even ordered for me and would be bothered if a guy started picking out my food. I am an adult, you don’t have to do this for me.

6. Don’t overdo the PDA. What? On the first date? You mean I can’t keep my hand in your back pocket all night long? Who does this stuff on a FIRST date? I’ll respect your space and I assume that you’ll respect mine! As if the entire night weren’t awkward enough as it is, back off unless you ask first and I okay it!

7. Don’t ask or assume that because you are on the first date that you are automatically in a relationship. “A first date is like an audtion for a play or a job interview.” You are looking at potential here, not immediately husband (or wife) material. One date does not constitute a relationship!

8. Don’t set extremely high goals for the date. Your number one priority on your first date should be to get to know the person you’re out with more than you did before. Most of the time this will be easy - but you don’t have to plan everything down to the last milliseconds to have fun and get to know someone. “Hang out … get to know the person” and have fun with it.

9. Don’t be late. Number 9. Oh, why isn’t this number 1? I am a stickler with time. If I were a super-hero, my name would be “Perpetually Early Girl.” I hate being late and I hate it when people are late if they’re meeting me for something. Being on time shows a person that they are important to you - and who doesn’t like to be made to feel important? (especially on a first date) If you have to, set your clocks ahead so you’re early, even! Impress me, be there before me!

10. Don’t be fake. Be. Yourself. You were probably acting just like your own self when your date asked you out, and they want to get to know that person, not your “cool alter ego.” Your true personality will make an appearance even if you don’t want it to, so why bother faking it? I am much more attracted to a man who is confident in himself (yet still modest) and who he is, rather than someone trying to put on a front towards me. If you’re afraid that your sarcasm or your honesty might be too brutal at time, just tone down your personality; it’s still your personality that’s coming out, just not as strong!

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Don’t want to seem desperate? Be picky!

Monday, February 26th, 2007

What happens when you speed date and decide that most of the potential partners you meet are date-able? According to a research student from Northwestern University (of 156 college students), you look desperate! “If you are unselective in your approach, people are going to be able to tell and are not going to like it,” said Eli J. Finkel, a co-author of the study, due to be published in the April issue of Psychological Science.

For simply platonic relationships, experts have said all you need to do to get someone to like you, is to like them. However, within romantic relationships, this newest study suggest that the “what a friendly guy” or the “what a nice girl” tone doesn’t work - it seems more desperate and even that hint of despair may be unappealing.

During this speed-dating study, potential “matches” (between 9 and 13 members of the opposite-sex) spoke for four minutes. After the meeting questions were answered about sexual attraction & likability of the prospective partners. Partners received contact information from others with a mutual “yes” answer. After this information was released, Paul Eastwick, a Northwestern graduate student (as well as the study’s lead author) said; “we know that to the extent you liked everyone, you tend not to be liked,” Selectivity worked, however. “If you go speed dating, and you like one [date] more than the other dates, that person is more likely to like you back,” he said. According to Eastwick, the study underscores “the importance of making a date feel unique or special even in the first four minutes.”

While the study shows that selectivity can work, there is no solid evidence as to what “cues” work best on helping couples “click.” Susan Sprecher, a professor of sociology and psychology at Illinois State University cited other research that found that playing hard to get with everyone didn’t always work. “But playing selectively hard to get does work,” she said. This could mean that by playing hard to get you can make your potential partner believe that it’ll be easy for him or her to “get” you while it makes everyone else struggle.

So, overall what does this mean? Two major things stand out for me:
- make your date feel special in four minutes … (we’ll have to figure out how to do this in a future blog)
- it’s okay to be picky - if you don’t like him (or her), you don’t have to feel guilty!

(It Pays to Be Picky in Love by Kathleen Doheny )

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Dating after Divorce

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

Hi! I’m Sarah, newly divorced (it’s been final & legal for a week now) and getting back out on a dating scene. I was with Ex for 10 years - all through high school & college - which means I missed out on a lot of dating. I’ve been slowly introducing myself to the dating world and at 24, the fact that I’ve never been on a date with anyone besides Ex is absurd to most people. Rather than putting myself out there on a dating site, doing speed dating, or finding a CraigsList guy, I have been hanging out with my friends who have been introducing me to their guy friends. This has lead to a couple of phone number requests and an increase in self-confidence all while being comfortable … enough that I know I’m ready to date now.

(I also write for Mental & Emotional Health and so when I saw that this blog was looking for a writer, I figured that there was enough material from my life to come up with five posts a week - and let’s hope that it’s entertaining!)

In the past 8 months I’ve been doing a lot of reading on how to date. Some of the articles crack me up, and this MSN dating article was among them. I love to read personal “stories” about what to do and what not to do, and with 10 mini-stories, this article fit my entertainment requirements perfectly!

Rule #6: Don’t put all your cards on the table
“I guess it had been so long since I’d dated, I wasn’t sure how to act. Within the first five minutes of my first date, I explained my whole history, laid out exactly the type of person I was looking for, and explained that I wanted to remarry. My date was clearly freaked out. Now I know that a date isn’t a job interview. Take it slow and let your story unfold as time goes on.�
–Shelley-Ann Poole, 33, Hartford, CT”

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About Dating Outlook

What's not to like about dating? Plenty. The awkwardness, the drama and starting all over again (and again...) until we find that special someone. However, there are some pretty great things about dating and if nothing else, hopefully you meet some great people along the way. Stick around for some not so humble opinions, reflections and thoughts about the good, the bad and the downright ridiculous woes of dating.

Dating Outlook Author(s)
    » Sandy

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