mintymint
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2010
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Sci-Fi said:Tinder is a hookup app, most people use it for that, it was created for the college crowd. Most just go on and flirt and find someone to get laid. There are very few who use it for more than that. This looks like one of those who probably gets their kicks out of doing what that person did, lead someone on regardless of how quickly someone falls into it. I bet there are way more people who troll Tinder doing exactly what this person did than any other actual dating site. And you can bet there are a lot of people who ask to meet up within seconds of talking to a person. It's Tinder. There was a sexual harassment lawsuit made by one of the founders against another founder of the app for sending sexually explicit material. The people who created it were allegedly using it for less than upstanding behavior.
Even if it's a hookup app, it doesn't mean people are going to automatically hookup with you just because they chatted with you for a few minutes or flirted with you. If anything, they're probably trying to get a better feel for who you are and whether or not you're acceptable to them or feel comfortable to them. Even when looking for a hookup, many people are particular about who it's with. They can vet you as much as they want. Even if a girl gives out her number and meets up with someone in person, she might be put off by something that happens during that interaction and for whatever reason choose to not go forward with things. That's ENTIRELY her right. She owes that person nothing and they aren't entitled to anything from her. She isn't being nasty or malicious by taking that course of action.
Also, with Tinder being a hookup app, you and everyone else on there is rapidly judged and discarded based on the personal preference of many, many other users. Even if someone thought you seemed interesting, a better pick could just as easily come down the line in a split second. It's that kind of place; it involves rejection en masse. And that rejection can come at any stage. It's not entirely dissimilar from dating in general, only streamlined. It's not always an easy aspect to handle, but it's a reality.
You can't go on Tinder or anywhere with a sense of entitlement—that you automatically deserve something because of an interaction. Looking at things through that lens has led many down a road of bitterness and worse. When people start saying things like maybe they should treat women poorly as a policy because of experiences like this, it's a dangerous mindset to begin to fall into. It's not a logical reaction, it's wrong to treat people that way, and you shouldn't treat the whole sex poorly for what a few members of it may have done to you. It may sound like an overreaction, but there is a disturbing prevalence of such attitudes, and I've seen many women suffering from it as a result. I feel that kind of thinking is misguided and really needs to be nipped in the bud.
There's lots of girls out there. There's lots of ways to meet them. There's lots of ways to communicate who you are to them and form a connection. You have to keep an open mind and a positive attitude. Don't let rejection discourage you or turn you bitter. Rejection and failure are fixtures in life, but they aren't as much personal attacks as they are obstacles. You can learn to take them better, learn from them, and let go of them. It's better to control your expectations and take things as they come—try not to get too far ahead of yourself. And remember, just as there are bad people out there, like the ones you dealt with in your past, there are good ones as well. There are girls out there who will like you. There are girls who will love you. And yes, there are girls who will want to hookup with you. Don't make the people in your future pay for the mistakes of the people in your past. They don't deserve it. And you could be sabotaging a lot of potential.