If you’re new to dating again, you need to relearn some skills. It will come back to you quickly, but only if you’re out there practicing. You’ll remember how to make a date or break one politely, what kind of first date suits your style, the appropriate conversational level for getting to know a member of the opposite sex, and early warning signals of a disaster. If you remember without fantasy, it wasn’t easy the first time around either. Frustration and quiet determination are part of it.
The Internet offers a way to extend your reach. There are many reasons why people use Internet dating. You may be in a remote location with few dating prospects, you may prefer to know something about someone before you ask them out, or you may spend a lot of time on the computer and find it a natural way to meet people.
How to begin? Take a look at some of the different sites: www.eharmony,com, www.match.com, www.bigchurch.com, www.seniorcircle.com, and www.seniorscircle.com and get a feel for them. Particularly pay attention to how the profiles are set up. Here are some things you’ll want to make sure of:
1. The profile tells you the kind of things about someone you need to know
2. Your anonymity is protected
3. A photo is available
4. There is way to block or permanently end contact with someone
5. They attempt to screen undesirables. No guarantee but at least, for instance, they say they forbid married people, felons, pornography, hate, erotica.
You have to use your common sense. There are plenty of midlife singles looking for real dating opportunities for long-term commitment and marriage and you will find them! One hopes people with other desires in mind will find the sites designed for those purpose, of which there are many, and leave the rest of us alone.
Here are some warning clues.
1. Someone who refuses to share a photo.
2. Any inappropriate language – sexual, hate, profanity.
3. Anyone who asks for money.
4. Someone who moves to fast, wanting to skip normal getting to know you stages, asks inappropriate questions (for instance about your sex life) or fails to disclose information at the appropriate time (where you live, how many kids you have)
5. Emphasis on sex.
6. Someone who becomes domineering, giving you orders.
7. Pay attention to the ‘name’ the person uses. Do you want “Slick&Quick”? Do you want “SexTrain”? Often enough people who are nuts don’t have the sense to hide it, and it will be right there in the suggestive, inappropriate or offensive name they choose.
8. Any signs of being desperate or needy.
The best rule of thumb is that anything that feels bad probably is. You begin with email correspondence, so take your time.
You can be a 55 year old female and get a “wink” from a man who says he’s 40 and wants to date women 20-60. Of course you eliminate them.
Do people lie on their profiles? Probably about as much as they do in person, and probably men do more than women (just as they do in real life). Let’s say they fantasize or exaggerate. In the best of cases, it’s what they meant at the time – “Let’s live in a villa in Italy” when they’re a car salesman in Dubuque; or “We’ll travel the world” when they are living on social security. Listen for terms of exaggeration, putting together what you know (or believe) about them with how they’re presenting themselves.
Men tell me that women “lie” with their photos. This is tricky. Take a look at any person’s 4 photos and they can look very different in each one. Also, as you know, some people are photogenic, and some are not. Men, who seem particularly interested in the appearance of the woman, are furious when they meet the woman and find out the photo was 5 years old. If you’ve changed your hairstyle, gained or lost poundage, you can explain this at some point. Personally I would eliminate any man who’s too hung up on appearance. It isn’t a lasting thing, and may be an indication of someone who’s after a sexual affair only.