DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: As someone who has observed the social landscape evolve over the years, I find myself grappling with the shifting dynamics, particularly with the emergence of platforms like Tinder and Bumble. It seems that in today’s marketplace, a select group of individuals, often characterized as super attractive, garner the majority of matches and attention. This phenomenon has left many of us wondering about the feasibility of finding genuine connections in such an environment.
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Furthermore, I have noticed a decline in the social acceptability of striking up conversations with strangers, a trend that seems to have intensified over the past decade. Coupled with the effects of lockdowns and a growing societal tendency towards asocial behavior, the prospect of meaningful human connection feels increasingly elusive. This trend is even more pronounced in the younger college aged generation, that I am a part of.
In reflecting on these observations, it appears that society has become increasingly superficial, with physical appearance often dictating one’s social and dating prospects. The rise of social media has only exacerbated this trend, making it challenging to cultivate meaningful platonic relationships, let alone romantic ones, which have always been more or less susceptible to superficial judgments.
I am curious to hear your perspective on navigating the complexities of modern social landscape. How can individuals like myself, who may not fit the mold of conventional attractiveness, foster genuine connections in an environment seemingly dominated by superficiality and asocial tendencies?
I appreciate you taking the time to read through this E-mail.
Warm regards,
A Modern Ape
DEAR A MODERN APE: Funny thing, AMA: making the same complaints about the whole “80/20” meme around dating (especially on dating apps) and difficulties in meeting people doesn’t get any more valid or correct when you dress them up in pseudo-formal language like you’re in the end-stage of losing a fight with someone on Twitter.
In fact, this actually serves as an illustration of why you feel like you’re stuck and struggling. One of the most important parts of dating – or any social relationship, really – is facilitating a connection with other people. The more barriers you put in the way of connection and communication, the more you’re going to struggle. Part of effective and clear communication isn’t adopting a cod-intellectual manner of speaking, it’s communicating with people in the way they understand.
Writing in a florid style like this instead of the vernacular comes off more like a theater kid who doesn’t know how to step away from the Ren Faire persona than someone unique and intelligent. While I’m sure you think of this as an amusing affectation, it’s the sort of thing that people take one look at and decide to go talk to someone else who’s not being performatively weird because they think it makes them interesting.
As Scalzi famously said: “The fail-state of ‘clever’ is ‘asshole’”.
Now as for the rest… once we translate back into plain English, a lot of this can be summed up as “sounds like a skill issue, bro”.
I’ve talked plenty of times about the issues with dating apps in the post-Tinder, post-Match Group world and why they are less useful for actually meeting people and it has nothing to do with “only the most attractive get attention”; it has far more to do with algorithmic matching, monetization strategies and men generally being s--t at dating apps than anything else. There are reasons why I’ve been saying that dating apps should be a supplement to how you meet people, not the primary method.
“Ah,” – I hear you say – “but you have fallen into my clever trap, for have you not noticed where I said that it’s less socially acceptable to approach people for conversation in public?”
No, I caught that. And that, too, is something I’ve long been talking about. It’s still entirely acceptable to strike up conversations with people you don’t know. I do this on the regular, as a matter of fact. The problem isn’t that it isn’t “acceptable”, it’s that there are a s--tload of people – almost exclusively men – who don’t know how to do things like “read the room” or who are trying to have an actual conversation instead of trying to pick up a stranger.
If you actually parse what people are saying when they complain about someone talking to them, it tends to come down to two things, often simultaneously: not respecting someone’s lack of interest and not actually being interested in a conversation. When women complain about guys at the yoga studio or the dance class or trying to talk to them at the coffee shop, they’re not complaining about social niceties. They’re complaining about guys who a) are only there to try to use it as a sex ATM, b) don’t pay attention to or respect the indications of “please do not disturb” and c) just end up making people feel uncomfortable because they think “no”, “not interested” and “please go away” are things that happen to other people.
The guys who go because they want to practice yoga, but who will make small talk with people (not just the most attractive women, people) before and after the class aren’t the ones that people complain about. Those organic interactions are normal and acceptable, and the folks who get that also recognize when someone’s just not in the mood to talk. It’s the dudes who go to yoga classes just because there’re attractive women there are the ones who cause a problem.
Now at the risk of sounding like An Old, especially as I round the last laps towards turning 50, there are issues with social media inhibiting people’s social skills. When we do all of our communication through screens and keyboards, we neglect the skills that we need to communicate in person and those skill sets tend to atrophy. And to be fair, the increasing lack of third spaces makes this much harder; there’re far fewer places for kids and teens to socialize outside of school and home. But that, again, doesn’t mean that people can’t meet folks in the physical world, it just means that they’ve gotten progressively bad at it.
This is one of the reasons why I’ve long said that an important part of meeting people is to understand and respect the social context and to recognize the difference between an inherently social space and one that’s just out in the world.
A bar, a Meet Up, a party, the Student Union at your college campus… these are inherently social spaces – places where the general expectation is that these are places where people go to interact, to meet other people and possibly strike up relationships of all kinds. While not everyone at the bar or what-not is going to be interested in meeting someone new, the understanding is that these are places where talking to strangers and meeting new people is accepted behavior.
Other places aren’t covered by that sort of social contract. That doesn’t mean that you can’t talk to people at, say, the grocery store or on the subway. It just means that this isn’t the point of why people are there. It’s certainly possible to start a conversation with folks in those spaces, even one that leads to trading phone numbers, connecting on messaging apps or even dates. However, doing so requires a higher level of social fluency and social calibration – that is, being able to read the room and respond accordingly.
Women walking down the street, for example, are usually not in the mood to start a conversation with a stranger; they have s--t to do and places to be and they’ve already dealt with men who think that their existing in public means that they’ve consented to whatever interaction those men what to have.
The same applies to someone waiting for the bus or sitting next to you on the train. Some people might be in the mood to talk. Many aren’t, and it’s on the person who wants to initiate a conversation to be able to recognize the difference instead of assuming that there mere presence is implied consent.
I would also point out that “society is getting more superficial” is a complaint that is literally older than steam; much like “nobody wants to work”, the idea that people are becoming more shallow has been something folks have railed against since before Socrates said “hey what was in that drink?” And yet somehow perfectly average people – people who don’t look like superheroes, movie stars beauty influencers and cover models – meet, date and marry all the time. Instagram, YouTube, TikTok etc. may give the illusion that You Need To Be This Hot/Rich/Successful To Exist, but it’s just that: an illusion, and one that’s generated as much by the content that you are interacting with. Strangely, if you close the apps and go outside to touch grass, you see that there’re all sorts of people out living their lives, having relationships and all the rest without looking like they got the MCU glow-up.
Do you want to foster genuine connections with people? Start with being genuine. Want to meet people and start relationships with them? Start by just meeting people and being social, get to know them over time and see if there’s even anything there to begin with. And yes, I do mean over time. Leaving aside that you know little about this person to begin with besides that you find them attractive, what people consider to be attractive changes as they become more familiar with others. The more we get to know people, the more their uniqueness makes them more interesting and more attractive to us.
But like I said at the top: the first step is to lose the performative weirdness that just get in the way of creating those connections. It’s one thing to have an affectation that’s a genuine expression of who you are. It’s another when it’s acting as a substitute for a personality.
Good luck.
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Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com