Saturday, July 30, 2011

"if it wasn't for disappointment, I wouldn't have any appointments"

The most disappointing thing as I've aged has been coming to grips with reality.
Every day, it seems less and less likely that I will suddenly be surprised by a mysterious voice booming out of nowhere that unleashing a powerful gust of wind that throws open my bedroom window, and gives me a pair of earrings that control holograms that enable me to start a rock band.
I tire of following a clear path in life to the proper end point. I want to be walking down the street, and have a handsome billionaire fall in love with me immediately. Not for want of a handsome billionaire, but because it would be a non-threatening pleasing anomaly creating new and exciting possibilities.
Life is go to school, get job, do same thing day in and day out, until you at some point, no longer do that job. None of my jobs ever involve anything unexpected that would entertain me, such as, while in the middle of going through paperwork on my desk- having my boss rush over and tell me I need to design and bake a 5 layer cake immediately. Again, I don't want to design a 5 layer cake, I just want something entirely different from the thing I have to keep doing repeatedly.
Alas, I won't be working out at the gym, and then suddenly be told I have an opportunity to become the lead star in a multimillion dollar swashbuckling pirate motion picture epic.
These are the kinds of things that my mind wants. This is why I find everyday life so boring.

If you need me, I'll be over here, in Delusionland.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Why I hate online dating

I'm still single at 27. While it may not seem like my life is over yet, this also means I've gone an embarrassingly long length of time without establishing a traditional human romantic relationship.
Maybe part of my problem is that I describe the entire ordeal as if I am an alien observer watching from my UFO. However, without applicable proper participation in such events, how else am I supposed to envision it all?
Within the past year, I decided to embark on some adventures in online dating. These obviously did not go very well, since it has been a year and I am still single.
I find the entire process demeaning in every way. First, I am supposed to work to lure someone in while making my personality seem as attractive as possible. This usually ends up with me trying to downplay anything that makes me "different" - or as I would describe it, interesting. I've dulled my personality down into a new form of bland and pleasing for the masses.
After I do this, and browse other profiles- it becomes clear that I'm still not qualified. Whereas I'm looking for a general someone with a mind fascinating enough to want to include in my everyday life and activities, it becomes clear other people have a longer list than I of what they want in a mate. I haven't even met these people, and I've already been rejected. First I'm reading a profile and things seem great, until I find that they are angry about vegetarians (I am one). Or immediately, they want someone with a college education or higher... I dropped out of college, and have never had any desire to define myself by my career, or work long hours. I'm not a deadbeat, I have an office job, I do it well, I'm self-sufficient, but I am not the least bit passionate about my work, nor is my job title particularly impressive-sounding. I don't desire to have a career that stresses me. This automatically negates the rest of my personality to a large chunk of people I would have been interested in.
I always thought that human relationships were more complicated. That the entire process of falling in love involved overlooking, or immediately still being interested in someone despite flaws in the beginning stages. The entire process of online dating, to me, seems like people envisioning exactly what they are looking for, and searching for it to a T.
Maybe this works for some people, but it hasn't worked for me. I assumed the entire process of two people coming together into the bond of a relationship and staying together had to do with emotional compatibility, support, rapport, and attraction. Apparently this is wrong.
I've basically just decided to give up on all online dating all together. The entire charade of trying to impress a stranger on a date, like a job interview, has become more than I want to put up with at this point.
I only ever made it past one date with two people. The first saw me again, just to tell me he didn't want to see me anymore. The second acted like he was tremendously in love with me, flew off to another city to work on something, then proceeded to barely contact me via e-mail, until he somehow seemed to forget I existed all together.
I hadn't been that interested in either of them that much anyway. I was trying to think that maybe, even though I hadn't felt an instant spark, a connection would develop over time and more interaction. I was wrong again.
Oh well.