Anonymous wrote:OP and I’m back to tell others that eHarmony was not worth the money. Quality of matches was not terrible, but very few gay women on there, and quite spread out geographically.
I’ve quit the apps for now, since I’ve accepted that I have more post-breakup healing to do before I try dating again.
If I come back, I’m gonna try Bumble.
I met my last on Her. Yeah fine I’ll probably do that one again too.
Anonymous wrote:Since you're older and looking for a partner, not a hookup, I'd suggest one of the more traditional dating sites like eHarmony. Might also try something like Hinge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to find a love match, you gotta open your heart to other people's strengths and the things that make them special. Being in a state of contempt for most of the people around you and saying they're "riff raff" who don't have anything going for them is a poisonous mentality that's going to sabotage your attempts to meet people who you want to build relationships with, and to connect with those people when you do. You need to adjust your mindset, not your dating app. You're not going to find love by complaining that you can't afford the quality service with quality people but everyone else in your income bracket is a loser.
You may also need to figure out what keywords you should be using to filter your results (is "do not take care of themselves" code for "420 friendly" or something else?). There's nothing wrong with being a square and the queer dating sites I've been on are full of women who are attractive and have successful careers, don't make drugs a central part of their lives, and aren't part of any countercultures. Having boundaries and standards isn't the same thing as going into dating thinking of most of your peer group as trash.
What I’m saying is that I’m not seeing a lot of my peer group. I’m gainfully employed and really believe in my work and that it is important.
I’ve found there is a difference between occasional users (which I might be were it not for my job clearance requirements) and “420 friendly”
“420 friendly” is usually someone for whom it is a central part of life.
Anonymous wrote:Tinder probably worked best for me. Although no long term dating prospects have come out of it for me, there were plenty of other kind of boring, nerdy queers there. There is definitely a square queer/lesbian community in DC but finding them can be a challenge sometimes. I also would recommend joining queer meetup groups for activities you like, etc.
Anonymous wrote:If you want to find a love match, you gotta open your heart to other people's strengths and the things that make them special. Being in a state of contempt for most of the people around you and saying they're "riff raff" who don't have anything going for them is a poisonous mentality that's going to sabotage your attempts to meet people who you want to build relationships with, and to connect with those people when you do. You need to adjust your mindset, not your dating app. You're not going to find love by complaining that you can't afford the quality service with quality people but everyone else in your income bracket is a loser.
You may also need to figure out what keywords you should be using to filter your results (is "do not take care of themselves" code for "420 friendly" or something else?). There's nothing wrong with being a square and the queer dating sites I've been on are full of women who are attractive and have successful careers, don't make drugs a central part of their lives, and aren't part of any countercultures. Having boundaries and standards isn't the same thing as going into dating thinking of most of your peer group as trash.
Anonymous wrote:If you want to find a love match, you gotta open your heart to other people's strengths and the things that make them special. Being in a state of contempt for most of the people around you and saying they're "riff raff" who don't have anything going for them is a poisonous mentality that's going to sabotage your attempts to meet people who you want to build relationships with, and to connect with those people when you do. You need to adjust your mindset, not your dating app. You're not going to find love by complaining that you can't afford the quality service with quality people but everyone else in your income bracket is a loser.
You may also need to figure out what keywords you should be using to filter your results (is "do not take care of themselves" code for "420 friendly" or something else?). There's nothing wrong with being a square and the queer dating sites I've been on are full of women who are attractive and have successful careers, don't make drugs a central part of their lives, and aren't part of any countercultures. Having boundaries and standards isn't the same thing as going into dating thinking of most of your peer group as trash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not 420 friendly, ENM, poly, etc etc etc.
I’m a single gay woman in 40s.
I have a solid career and I take pretty good care of myself.
I’d like to find a partner who is similar in those ways.
What are the best apps for this? I’m currently on Her and OKCupid, swiping left through a lot of people who clearly do not take care of themselves or seem to have much going for themselves. I realized I am getting to the bottom of the bucket when I’m reading a profile that I would swipe right on and then see they last updated it in 2020.
I’m willing to pay for an app would weed out a lot of the riff raff, but I can’t afford Tawkify levels.
i’m getting asexual vibes from op. for what it’s worth i’m an attractive, successful lesbian and met my attractive, successful wife on okcupid.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not 420 friendly, ENM, poly, etc etc etc.
I’m a single gay woman in 40s.
I have a solid career and I take pretty good care of myself.
I’d like to find a partner who is similar in those ways.
What are the best apps for this? I’m currently on Her and OKCupid, swiping left through a lot of people who clearly do not take care of themselves or seem to have much going for themselves. I realized I am getting to the bottom of the bucket when I’m reading a profile that I would swipe right on and then see they last updated it in 2020.
I’m willing to pay for an app would weed out a lot of the riff raff, but I can’t afford Tawkify levels.