Daily Mail

You CAN find lasting love online (...you just have to be a bit less fussy!)

Thought dating apps were only good for casual hook-ups? A new book by a Harvard-trained psychologi­st is packed with advice that means whatever your age...

- By Logan Ury

AS FAR as love goes, the pandemic has proved paradoxica­l. On the one hand, lockdown has put huge stress on existing relationsh­ips. On the other, it has shown us what it is to be lonely and made us yearn for a significan­t other more than ever.

Whichever way you look at it, there are bound to be a lot of new people looking for a date this year — and all confined to online, of course.

The figures prove it already. Dating app Hinge reports that downloads are up 82 per cent year-on-year. and that’s especially significan­t because Hinge is the app for those seeking long-term relationsh­ips and not a casual fling.

launched in 2013 as the antithesis of Tinder, the app that kick- started the swipe left or right hook-up culture, Hinge has now match-made thousands of longterm partnershi­ps and marriages.

The fact that wholesome Hinge is setting up a date every three seconds means more people than ever are looking for lasting love. and who better to help you navigate this new landscape, bursting with potential dates, than Hinge’s own director of relationsh­ip science logan Ury, a behavioura­l expert who studied psychology at Harvard University.

Ury is the perfect person to hold your hand as you step out of your comfort zone and into the world of online profiles, playful selfies and dates on Zoom. Her new book, based on years of experience

and research in the field, is full of top tips to make online dating work for you — even in a pandemic.

here is her guide to digital dating, 2021-style . . .

HOW SCIENCE CAN HELP YOU SUCCEED

ArE you facing the first months of 2021 alone? perhaps you are already dating but have only encountere­d people who haven’t brought out the best in you. or maybe you’re newly single and back in the dating game after years away.

You know deep down that you want to find someone, but somehow you are stuck repeating the same bad patterns over and over.

here’s the thing. While love may be a natural instinct, dating isn’t. We are not born knowing how to choose the right partner.

selecting a suitable mate is an incredibly daunting task, and it’s one that is weighed down with cultural baggage, bad advice and pressure from families and society.

The field of behavioura­l science — the study of how we make decisions — can help. understand­ing why we behave the way we do, and what we can do to change, are the missing pieces that can help us take control of our love lives.

Yes, you can find love online. But first you will need to ask yourself some searching questions and challenge the assumption­s you hold.

DON’T BE PUT OFF BY DATING APPS

WE ArE experienci­ng a seismic shift in dating culture. online dating started in 1994 with Kiss.com, shortly followed by Match.com a year later. And we have been swiping for love on our mobile phones for less than a decade.

If it feels as if we are in the middle of a gigantic cultural experiment, it’s because we are. Apps have introduced millions of happy couples who might not have met otherwise. And dating apps have been especially meaningful for singles in so- called thin markets, including daters over the age of 50.

We are no longer limited to the single people we know from work or our friends-of-friends. Now we can swipe through hundreds of potential partners in a single sitting.

so how on earth do we navigate this new dating landscape and make the apps work for us?

TRY ADJUSTING YOUR FILTERS

dECAdEs of relationsh­ip science have revealed what matters for long- term relationsh­ip success — things such as emotional stability, kindness, loyalty and how that person makes us feel. Yet modern daters often focus on the wrong things, such as how much money someone makes, how tall they are or whether you and they have enough hobbies in common.

daters also often make the mistake of arriving at dates with a checklist. Must be over 6ft tall. Must make a six-figure income. Must dress well.

But the truth is, most of us have no idea what kind of partner will fulfil us in the long term. The qualities we think we want are often not the qualities possessed by the person we actually fall in love with. And unlike in real life, where you meet all sorts of people, dating apps never give you the chance to be proved wrong — because you can weed out the people you think are not your ‘type’ before you ever meet anyone.

so my top tip to make those dating apps work? Adjust your filters. right now.

Take out your phone and update your settings. Could you be more flexible on age, either way? And would you really not date a great person outside your stated required height range?

Also think about the nonnumeric­al requiremen­ts you were asked to specify when you signed up, such as ‘must have a university degree’. Those simple yes/no switches probably represent preference­s for deeper values — intellectu­al curiosity, say — that dating apps have difficulty capturing.

CHALLENGE YOUR ASSUMPTION­S

oNCE, I observed a client making her way through an app. We came across a guy who was good-looking and had a funny biography.

she rejected him. I asked her why and she said: ‘he was a consultant, and consultant­s are boring.’ What? All consultant­s? Every single one?

Instead of approachin­g dating apps as an exercise in discoverin­g what is wrong with people, look for reasons to say yes. Go on dates with people you don’t necessaril­y think are a perfect fit.

That’s the only way you can find out what you actually like, rather than assuming that you already know.

BE SMART WITH YOUR PHOTOS

hINGE has done so much research on which photos get the most likes. so here are my top tips:

doN’T play guessing games. You don’t want to make someone wonder what you really look like or whether you are truly single. That means no sunglasses, no cute filters and no pictures with people who could be confused for significan­t others.

do INCludE photos of yourself doing things you love. This gives people a glimpse into who you are and what brings you joy.

doN’T post bathroom selfies, gym selfies or smoking selfies. You know what, just skip the selfies.

do include at least one picture where you are with friends or family. This shows your date that you have a healthy social life.

NO MORE EMAILS, CUT TO THE CHASE

GET to the actual date as quickly as possible. The point of the apps is to meet people face- to- face — whether in person or on video chat — not to gain a pen pal.

I have seen time and again the negative consequenc­es of messaging too much before a date. When people text or email each other non- stop beforehand, they end up creating a fantasy of each other

in their minds. Even if they would otherwise have been a good match, they end up disappoint­ed when they meet because the other person is inevitably different from the fantasy they built.

TRY TO DATE AND NOT ‘EVALUDATE’

YEs, dating requires work but it doesn’t have to mimic what you do at work. This is not a networking meeting or a job interview. If you go into a date with a preconceiv­ed agenda or a checklist, it is sure to quash any sexuality that might enter the equation.

The point of the first date is not to decide whether you want to marry someone. It’s to see if you want to go on a second date. And the best way to do that is to pay attention to how you feel around the person, what side of you they bring out, whether you are curious to learn more about them.

SKIP THE POLITE, DULL SMALL TALK

I AdvIsE clients to enter the date in medias res, Latin for ‘in the middle of things’. so instead of starting with ‘ How’s your day going?’ or ‘ Where do you live?’, jump right in: ‘You’ll never guess what happened to me today!’ or ‘I just got off the phone with my sister. she’s battling with her neighbour over the recycling bins . . .’

By skipping the getting-to-knowyou small talk and diving directly into the type of conversati­on that friends (or lovers) might have, you take a short cut to intimacy.

Of course, you’ll eventually cover where you live and so on. But at least you’ll have dipped a toe into the waters of real conversati­on.

BE SURE TO END UP ON A HIGH NOTE

THE psychologi­cal principle of ‘the peak- end rule’ says people tend to judge an experience based on how they felt at the most intense moment of it, and at the end. Their memory isn’t an average of their minute-by-minute experience. If you want someone to remember the date positively, give them a meaningful compliment before you part ways.

MAKE USE OF THE POST-DATE EIGHT

AfTEr your date, try asking yourself these questions: 1. What side of me did the other person bring out? 2. How did my body feel during the date? stiff, relaxed or something in between? 3. do I now feel more energised or de-energised than before? 4. Is there something about them that makes me curious? 5. did they make me laugh? 6. did I feel heard? 7. did I feel attractive in their presence? 8. did I feel captivated, bored or something in between?

Just knowing you’ll have to answer these questions makes you pay more attention on the date.

A SECOND DATE MUST BE THE DEFAULT

IT’s a myth that when you meet the right person you will feel instant fireworks. In a survey of more than 400 people, only 11 per cent claimed they felt ‘love at first sight’ when asked how they fell in love with their romantic partners.

In fact, sometimes the presence of a spark is more an indication of how charming someone is, or how narcissist­ic, than a sign of a shared connection. Often the right person is more of a slow burn, someone who is not particular­ly charming on your first meeting but would make a great long-term partner.

stop focusing only on that initial intoxicati­on and look instead for traits such as loyalty and kindness. I advise clients to assume they will go on a second date as a default, unless something dramatic happens to dissuade them. Give that slow burn a chance to warm up. It’s worth the wait.

AdApted by Alison Roberts from How to Not die Alone, by Logan Ury (£14.99, piatkus), out on February 2 © Logan Ury 2021. to order a copy for £13.19 go to mailshop.co.uk/books or call 020 3308 9193. delivery charges may apply. Offer price valid for a limited time only.

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 ?? Picture: MEG SMITH ?? It’s a match: Logan Ury and husband Scott at their wedding
Picture: MEG SMITH It’s a match: Logan Ury and husband Scott at their wedding

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