The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Try a smarter, slicker approach

- ELLIE TESHER ellie@thestar.ca @ellieadvic­e

Q– I’m 33, single and facing the most depressing day in the most depressing year I’ve ever known – Valentine’s Day during COVID-19!

It’s bad enough that I had to leave the workplace I loved and co-workers who were also my friends, to work from home alone in a small condo, while isolating from parents/friends other than for a distanced outdoor walk (in winter!).

Almost a year later, I’m still alone, having had no luck at finding a partner through online dating. The guys whose profiles I liked or matched didn’t respon, or wanted to meet in person right away, which felt too risky.

Before this nightmare, my workmates and I would’ve made a fuss about Valentine’s Day and brought enough chocolates to the office to perk up everyone’s libido, especially during the times when I had a boyfriend to be with after work.

Now, Feb. 14 is a bust for singles like me – just another reason to feel miserable.

Bah, Humbug!

A– It’s a self-imposed bust you can turn around. The date isn’t anywhere as meaningful as Christmas with its layers of family and spiritual traditions through centuries. It’s also not akin to New Year’s Day, with its renewed incentive for making positive changes in your life.

The Valentine’s Day you mourn is a commercial construct, not the Feast Day of Saint Valentine. Like countless romance-seekers, you’ve bought into the modern tradition of sending cards for a Hallmark-hyped day of love.

“It’s only one day,” says New York-based Meredith Golden, a dating coach with the bona fides of a profession­al psychother­apist. “This year, during COVID, everyone should be kinder to themselves.”

She adds, if singles are negative or have dating fatigue, they should take a short break from dating.

But she believes dating online is the only way to start dating during a pandemic. And her practicali­ty about the ups and downs of the process is very different from dating app promotions.

She’ll say to a client, “So you had two for two of the guys you liked ghost you? Look at the positives... what if you had six guys online... you’d now be ahead with four of them!”

I’m bringing Golden’s approach to my readers because of her updated take on how phone dating apps now workbest. After some 20 years of internet dating becoming commonplac­e, she realized she was good at it and sells her expertise to clients as their ghostwrite­r on the apps. Here are some free tips: Your first photo is what gets you your match. So, don’t wear a hat and sunglasses.

The descriptio­n of yourself is to open a conversati­on, e.g. “I love tennis” moves the chat forward. Selling yourself, does not.

Messaging is only a screening tool, not a connection for dating.

Being on the app with someone is not dating. It’s just to connect. After three to four days, convert to video chat. Youíll get more informatio­n about someone in 10 minutes about whether you want to meet them in person (and feel safe), than in four months of writing.

With video chat, if you feel doubts, chat 10 minutes then find a reason to end it. If itís going well, 30 minutes is long enough. You can next meet in person if you wish. Discuss whatís necessary for you re: masks and distancing.

To Bah, Humbug - You have a lifetime of Valentine’s Days ahead. There’s still time now to celebrate the people you love – your best friend, colleagues, family, on FaceTime.

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