By Terri Arnold
Don't make these mistakes when searching for love online!
"I spent my life searching for the perfect woman. I finally found her but alas, she was searching for the perfect man."
Anonymous
I was a professional matchmaker for several years - trying to help
singles meet others with whom they shared common interests and
complementary personality traits. I met with my clients in person and
they were screened to ascertain their real names, addresses, education,
marital status. Most importantly, I tried to help them determine the
type of person they were really seeking and that's where most of the
problems arose.
Even though my clients verbalized that they were happy to be matched
based upon compatibility, this was not true! The major problems I
encountered were:
1) A number of clients were seeking others mainly based on appearance.
I would show each new client photos of existing clients based on their
characteristics as well as their appearance. Unattractive people
sometimes became offended when I matched them with their physical
counterparts. A dowdy sixtyish woman asked me, "Is that what you think
of me?" when I attempted to match her with men in her age and looks
category. Many clients seemed to be totally unaware of how they looked
to others and wanted matches that were highly inappropriate. With these
people, compatibility had no bearing on their matches. They wanted the
best looking people in my book!
2) Some clients refused to compromise - even when matched with someone they liked!
I matched two extremely overweight people who liked each other
immediately and went out on several dates. Before their last meeting
for a Sunday movie date, the woman asked to meet at 7:00 pm instead of
the 5:30 show. The man became annoyed, broke the date, and immediately
ended their budding relationship. He, who was a part-time telemarketer,
told me he needed time on Sunday evenings "to get ready for his work on
Monday." Because she needed to reschedule their date, he was totally
turned off to her regardless of his prior interest and their
compatibility.
3) Others had a Wish List for their Perfect Person and expected me to find the person on that list for them.
One divorced man in his late 30's expressed a desire for a woman who
had a specific type of nose. (Really!) A never-married woman in her
early 30's with pale blonde hair and very light skin wanted a man with
very, very dark skin (but not an African-American), who earned at
minimum $75,000 per year, was not in Sales, had never been married and
had no children. I had twelve men who matched her description in my
data base but she found something wrong with each one and refused to go
out with any of them. She then complained about my service and was
upset because she 'had not had even one date'. AARRGGHH!!! An Indian
medical student saw her photo and was instantly smitten.
They had many things in common and each was what the other was seeking.
He was very excited about meeting her; however, before they met, he
wanted a guarantee of a successful relationship which I of course could
not give him. They never met and as far as I know, both are still
single and searching.....
My advice: Don't shoot yourself in the foot! If you are meeting a lot
of people and just can't seem to connect, ask yourself if you really
want a relationship. Are you ready and willing to be close with another
person? If you constantly find fault with others, ask yourself these
questions and be a bit more tolerant. Don't expect to find your perfect
person because he or she does not exist. Be happy if you find Ms. or
Mr. Almost-Perfect. Good luck!
About The Author
Terri Arnold (Spicy Grandma) has an MS in Counseling and has been a
Psychotherapist for over twenty years. She also owned and
operated a brick and mortar dating service for several years.
Terri now invites you to visit her popular interactive and personalized
50+ dating community at http://www.spicy-senior-singles.com
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
|