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As a new year dawns, I — like many others — feel obliged to sign up to dating apps with the promise of a shiny new year offering romantic hope for the singles out there.
But this year, even the mere thought of rejoining them fills me with apathy; it just seems like we've collectively hit a wall with dating apps (and tech in general), yearning for those IRL connections of yesteryear. Or maybe just in conversation that extends past the awful salutation 'hey, how are you?' to a complete stranger you have little interest in or knowledge of yet, followed by trying to drag a two-way conversation out of people. Honestly, it's EXHAUSTING.
I'm extra reluctant to rejoin them because of my feelings about technology itself. In theory, dating apps should increase our chances of matching with people we wouldn't ordinarily meet, but I know that's not what's happening.
How? I've experienced it first-hand in a sort of accidental experiment.
Watch: How to learn that you are in a toxic dating situation. Post continues after video.
A few years ago, a (white) friend and I both joined a dating app at the same time. We're the same age, have similar jobs, and we even did our profiles together and put in relatively similar answers. The next day, we compared our matches; she'd received over 30 matches on her first day on the app. In contrast, I'd had just two, who were, without wanting to disparage them, totally unsuitable (one proudly wielding a fish as his sole (LOL) picture. The other was at least 20 years older than his reported 38.)