amazingfantasy15
Avenger
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- Oct 18, 2000
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I think chemistry is dependent on animal instincts, passion, eye contact, body language, history, and just a whole host of other things I can't replicate online. Like you I'd rather be alone than simply find someone that just shares my interests. In fact I find my biggest failures all came when I tried to start something with "smart matches". My interests are my interests, not necessarily a list of things my friends and lovers have to enjoy. They can enjoy none of it, they just simply have to enjoy me. In some instances I'd prefer they have their own thing, I enjoy my quiet time.
You think that's lost in online dating? It's not, I met my girlfriend through eHarmony, famous for it's 29 components of compatability or some such nonsense. The summer before we started dating I really put myself out there to find people in both the real world and online. I had plenty of bad dates from eHarmony, not disasters, we just didn't "click", on paper we did, in person we didn't though. After 5 months of being online, I was planning on taking a break, had 3 dates lined up, 2 were duds, the 1 with my girlfriend was amazing, we had that chemistry, spark, whatever, we don't share all the same interests, some, not all, we're in wildly different careers. I never would have met her though without eHarmony, all it did was introduce us, everything else is/was the "animal instincts". The compatability stuff is really just having the same values, views on the future, like if you both want to get marrying, have children one day. I didn't sign up because it was the only way to get dates, it was just another avenue to use.