Anonymous wrote:Well, I don't quite see the Darwinian appeal of dating sites and bars. What's wrong with meeting someone at work or through work? That's how I did it.
Anonymous wrote:I work in an ES and there are maybe half a dozen men who work here. They are either married or gay. ?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a 38 year old single mom and I haven't had any issues meeting single guys and dating. I'm also a bit career focused and have a fat belly to boot.
I met a lot of guys through my meetup group - that I started - so that sort of naturally made me a magnet for people to talk to. And I met a lot of nice guys online.
I think the trick is your approach. I gave pretty much most guys a shot if they contacted me (and the contact wasn't creepy or overtly sexual). I didn't have a big list of expectations other than they had a job and if they had kids, they were involved. The guys I met were all college educated, in a professional career, and nice. Tall, short, small, fat -- whatever. I went into the first meeting just looking to meet a new person -- not to see if this guy was 'the one'. I think guys can smell that and it freaks them out. I wanted to get to know them and go from there. I ended up meeting a great guy online and we've been together for 10 months.
Tell your friends to give people a chance, lower their guard, and just look at it as an opportunity to meet someone new. If it clicks, great. If not, no big deal...it's one evening or coffee date in a life time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The idea of meeting someone when you least expect it has some validity though. I think it has more to do about your own frame of mind/attitude when you're "least expecting it" precisely because of the stuff other PPs have said about getting too excited too fast and scaring people off. You're more likely to be your natural self and not scary needy/desperate/too-excited when you aren't really looking for or expecting a relationship with someone...when the relationship kind of sneaks up on you.
+1
This was true for me but I did meet THE ONE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "the one". A lot of falling in love is about timing and serendipity. Sorry.
The Galfinakis poster is on a tear...such great cartoons! Another haxnut here.
There is no "one" for sure, totally agree.
The idea of meeting someone when you least expect it has some validity though. I think it has more to do about your own frame of mind/attitude when you're "least expecting it" precisely because of the stuff other PPs have said about getting too excited too fast and scaring people off. You're more likely to be your natural self and not scary needy/desperate/too-excited when you aren't really looking for or expecting a relationship with someone...when the relationship kind of sneaks up on you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, I don't quite see the Darwinian appeal of dating sites and bars. What's wrong with meeting someone at work or through work? That's how I did it.
My older brother's only dating advice for me was "Don't shit where you eat."
Anonymous wrote:I'm a 38 year old single mom and I haven't had any issues meeting single guys and dating. I'm also a bit career focused and have a fat belly to boot.
I met a lot of guys through my meetup group - that I started - so that sort of naturally made me a magnet for people to talk to. And I met a lot of nice guys online.
I think the trick is your approach. I gave pretty much most guys a shot if they contacted me (and the contact wasn't creepy or overtly sexual). I didn't have a big list of expectations other than they had a job and if they had kids, they were involved. The guys I met were all college educated, in a professional career, and nice. Tall, short, small, fat -- whatever. I went into the first meeting just looking to meet a new person -- not to see if this guy was 'the one'. I think guys can smell that and it freaks them out. I wanted to get to know them and go from there. I ended up meeting a great guy online and we've been together for 10 months.
Tell your friends to give people a chance, lower their guard, and just look at it as an opportunity to meet someone new. If it clicks, great. If not, no big deal...it's one evening or coffee date in a life time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "the one". A lot of falling in love is about timing and serendipity. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:There is no "the one". A lot of falling in love is about timing and serendipity. Sorry.

Anonymous wrote:I think that a lot of the time, women AND men who have trouble are extremely emotional and it turns potential partners off. I've seen it time and again with people I know who struggle in the dating scene - they get overly excited about the relationship potential of every new person who comes along, they get really attached really fast, they often have sex right away, they're really open about their intense feelings and hopes, and they scare the other person away.
I think the abilities to control your emotions, play it cool, give things time and space to play out naturally, and not push too hard are ESSENTIAL. Unfortunately, the older people get, the more anxious they get and the more they try to rush things, and it all backfires. And the cycle keeps repeating.
Anonymous wrote:Month 4 or 5 is when everyone's crazy begins to show. Co-workers at a new job. New neighbors. Hell, that's when babies start letting it all hang out.