"This is how we date", a post form a young writer Jamie Varon could not express better how I feel people nowadays look into the "dating scene". And then I think of you... how we met in such a chaotic night downtown Lisbon. How I ended up loosing a plane and staying with you in London for extra days was perfection. How insane and romantic was bumping into each other downtown London during your lunch break - I did not even know you worked there. And how I am starting to feel like we lost our momentum... How I think of you and my heart doesn't race anymore, because my efforts seem bigger than yours to keep this going.
We don’t commit now. We don’t see the point. They’ve always said
there are so many fish in the sea, but never before has that sea of fish
been right at our fingertips on OkCupid, Tinder, Grindr, Dattch, take
your pick. We can order up a human being in the same way we can order up
pad thai on Seamless. We think intimacy lies in a perfectly-executed
string of emoji. We think effort is a “good morning” text. We say
romance is dead, because maybe it is, but maybe we just need to reinvent
it. Maybe romance in our modern age is putting the phone down long
enough to look in each others eyes at dinner. Maybe romance is deleting
Tinder off your phone after an incredible first date with someone.
Maybe romance is still there, we just don’t know what it looks like now.
We soothe ourselves and distract ourselves and, if we can’t even face
the demons inside our own brain, how can we be expected to stick
something out, to love someone even when it’s not easy to love them? We
bail. We leave. We see a limitless world in a way that no generation
before us has seen. We can open up a new tab, look at pictures of
Portugal, pull out a Visa, and book a plane ticket. We don’t do this,
but we can. The point is that we know we can, even if we don’t have the
resources to do so. There are always other tantalizing options. Open up
Instagram and see the lives of others, the life we could have. See the
places we’re not traveling to. See the lives we’re not living. See the
people we’re not dating. We bombard ourselves with stimuli, input,
input, input, and we wonder why we’re miserable. We wonder why we’re
dissatisfied. We wonder why nothing lasts and everything feels a little
hopeless. Because, we have no idea how to see our lives for what they
are, instead of what they aren’t.
Then, we see these other happy, shiny couples and we compare. We are
The Emoji Generation. Choice Culture. The Comparison Generation.
Measuring up. Good enough. The best. Never before have we had such an
incredible cornucopia of markers for what it looks like to live the Best
Life Possible. We input, input, input and soon find ourselves in
despair. We’ll never be good enough, because what we’re trying to
measure up to just does not fucking exist. These lives do not exist.
These relationships do not exist. Yet, we can’t believe it. We see it
with our own eyes. And, we want it. And, we will make ourselves
miserable until we get it.
So, we break up. We break up because we’re not good enough, our lives
aren’t good enough, our relationship isn’t good enough. We swipe,
swipe, swipe, just a bit more on Tinder. We order someone up to our door
just like a pizza. And, the cycle starts again. Emoji. “Good morning”
text. Intimacy. Put down the phone. Couple selfie. Shiny, happy couple.
Compare. Compare. Compare. The inevitable creeping in of latent, subtle
dissatisfaction. The fights. “Something is wrong, but I don’t know what
it is.” “This isn’t working.” “I need something more.” And, we break up.
Another love lost. Another graveyard of shiny, happy couple selfies.
On to the next. Searching for the elusive more. The next fix. The
next gratification. The next quick hit. Living our lives in 140
characters, 5 second snaps, frozen filtered images, four minute movies,
attention here, attention there. More as an illusion. We worry about
settling, all the while making ourselves suffer thinking that anything
less than the shiny, happy filtered life we’ve been accustomed to is
settling. What is settling? We don’t know, but we fucking don’t want it.
If it’s not perfect, it’s settling. If it’s not glittery filtered love,
settling. If it’s not Pinterest-worthy, settling.
We realize that this more we want is a lie. We want phone calls. We
want to see a face we love absent of the blue dim of a phone screen. We
want slowness. We want simplicity. We want a life that does not need the
validation of likes, favorites, comments, upvotes. We may not know yet
that we want this, but we do. We want connection, true connection. We
want a love that builds, not a love that gets discarded for the next
hit. We want to come home to people. We want to lay down our heads at
the end of our lives and know we lived well, we lived the fuck out of
our lives. This is what we want even if we don’t know it yet.
Yet, this is not how we date now. This is not how we love now.
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