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Dating in the digital age has become increasingly fraught. To date or not to date is no longer the question. Instead, it is to date or not date online. I am old enough to remember eHarmony ads on TV, but young enough to know more people on dating apps than not.
Others are caught in a vicious cycle of download, delete, re-download, repeat. And then there are those who tried it once, or not at all, and are determined to steer clear altogether. This is not a love story or a tale of the moment I knew. Because even with connection at our fingertips more than ever, it feels pretty hard to meet people today. Our relationship with dating apps has become complicated. Last year we marked 10 years of Tinder , but a growing number of people are still rejecting the apps in favour of meeting people in real life β in the office, through friends, in pubs and at the age-old meeting place, weddings.
Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning. For all the horror stories out there, there are success stories online too. They are no less romantic, long-lasting or less valued. I know of several. But for those who have abandoned all hope of an online romance, our use of technology sometimes feels like it prevents old-school encounters and curtails opportunities to strike up conversation.
But it does feel as though these kind of meet-cutes have become rare, even if dating apps like Happn claim to be able to engineer a brush with the One. So why does doing it online feel so different? Surely swiping left or right would involve the same degree of chance as bumping into someone? I see the same five people at the bus stop each day no candidates , but at a bus stop across the city there could be a spark.
The apps can take me to that bus stop in a way my commute never can. Dating in the digital age is fraught enough. With partners, flings or friends, young people can be eaten up by cryptic text messages or lack thereof.