Free Online Dating
“Tell me whom you love and I will tell you who you are,” said
Houssaye. Who we are, yes, is tied to others. We get
our connections made, our hearts filled, and our identities
established with the relationships we carry out. Maybe this
accounts for the popularity of free online dating
services: they are the conduit or the catalyst for our
connecting with others. They are the systems that are
designed based on the knowledge that we humans—social creatures,
for the most part—require some support and guidance in creating
love, creating relationships, and in the process establishing an
identity, a self that is loved and that loves.
Besides offering up-to-date, useful tools to access the greatest
number of potential mates, too, free online dating services
typically provide suggestions in guides for finding, meeting,
dating, and developing quality relationships with others.
These guides are filled with helpful how-to tips—some seemingly
part of common sense, some seemingly obvious, but all intended to
make your free online dating process and experience a positive
one.
So while you may already follow common sense methods or are
always more than cautious, it might be good to reinforce, remind,
or just revisit the caveats of courtship—especially when using a
free online dating site as your matchmaker.
KEEP ALERT and AWARE: at many free online dating sites there are
separate sections for friendship, dating, serious
relationship/marriage, or alternative encounters. Know your
own category; know what you want, and stay on the lookout for those
with like minds, hearts, and goals.
That is, if you want sex, say so; and communicate with others
who want the same. If you want a long-term commitment, be
honest about it, and interact with only those who are also looking
for the same; It is pretty easy to figure out the fakers (players)
from the romantics, or the hit-and-run lovers from the ones who
latch on quickly and easily. It is also easy to avoid getting
hurt by avoiding the Casanova when you want marriage or saying “No,
thank you” to the devotee of monogamous marriage when you just
wanna have some good ol’ homeboy fun. Don’t get hurt and
don’t hurt anyone. Simple as that.
KEEP to the TRUTH : Gee, doesn’t this sound like the blurb
you just read? Okay, okay. It is, sort of, but it is
also a more specific suggestion—to be realistic when it comes to
the finer character traits, those which are more specific to an
individual than which relationship category he or she fits
into.
For example, if you want to find someone who has no problem with
your eating straight from a pan, has no opinion on your relaxed
housekeeping habits one way or the other, or accepts your being a
two-pack-a-day smoker and a five-whiskey-a-night drinker, then you
had better check the smoking box and answer more honestly the “How
much do you drink?” question than with an answer like, “I’m a
social drinker.” That is, you will be found out within weeks,
anyway; you wouldn’t want to discover such “secrets” in another
person withholding such important specifics; and you wouldn’t want
someone you were starting to care deeply about nagging to change
this and that about you…. And if you start out with
deceptions, you will create a relationship that is fake and
confusing and destructive.
As one of my at-risk students (of whom all are the ballsiest and
most candid people I know) once wrote in his English journal, “In
order to expose the real I’ma be real myself….” We can take a
hint from this kid, who seems to get that to find the real thing,
one needs to be the real thing.
KEEP GOOD and INTERESTING IM HABITS:
Numerous people I know who use free dating sites wherein you can
instant message (IM) back and forth often comment on the lack of
substance of the online encounters…or of some of the people
online. If you approach a potential mate, friend, or other
online, in an IM or an email, scribbling off a vapid "Hey" is
a bit vague. So is "Tell me more about yourself." You
don't need to recite renaissance and pastoral poetry, but a back
and forth of "heys" is as fun as, well...it's not.
KEEP YOUR HEAD: Don’t, for God’s sake, worry so much about your
appearance that you either discourage every suitor with ugly
anecdotes and exaggerated flaws that instantly suggest you don’t
believe you have any redeeming qualities to offer to the very
person in whom you seek redeeming qualities.
If you have seen the popular talk shows (later turned ambush
realty TV) of the 90s, you know that there are women who love hairy
chests, or small feet; there as many men who have a thing for
gapped-teeth or big bellies. Just realize, too, that you
can’t have Nicolas Cage or Lindsay Lohan—even if you set your goals
on the like—if you don’t bathe, don’t work, do pick your nose, and
do insist on taking your mother on your dates with you (yes, I know
someone like this). In other words, you should avoid telling
the woman with the Master's Degree and six writing awards who is
thirty pounds overweight that she is just not good enough for you
to take out in public—when you have yet mastered reading in
general.
This brings us to the final hints:
KEEP in MIND the FEELINGS of the OTHER: It is possible to be
real, to be honest, without being cruel. Just because the web
offers anonymity (until you change that), not one of us yet has the
license to make people hurt. I watched one friend break down
and cry when, after investing days of email exchange, she was told
she needed a bra with under wires. I have seen grown men turn
pale when told the only thing they’d be good for would be opening
doors and his wallet. On the flip side, I have I have been
rejected by men with such a superb internet acumen (manners) that I
wanted to help the guys find their soulmates...that's how human
they were.

It’s okay to decline an invitation. It’s acceptable to
suggest you both keep looking. It’s perfectly fine to admit
you don’t feel the connection you hoped to feel. Not only can
they (normally) not argue with the kind and personal response, but
will likely agree…or at least thank you for being humane.
KEEP an “OPEN” MIND: If you don't want to climb the Sears
tower or eat pickled pigs' feet, fine. But he does.
Maybe his dead wife ate them while scaling the stairs and he now
does it to keep a spiritual connection with her. You don't
have to like it, but you do have to accept it as existing.
Politely move on, refraining from attacking everyone as freaks.
KEEP TRYING: Just as it’s important to be decent to those
you encounter online, it’s imperative you are kind to
yourself. Yes, you will have a fuller self, etc., with a
partner, but you will start by bringing a self to the computer.
One of the smartest tips I ever read was this: be the
person you want to be with. Then you’ll surely reflect the
other, as Houssaye purports.
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