Tag Archives: women

Fairy-tales and myths part II: The shackles of Gender

In this blogpost, I tackle the biggest myth of all: the myth of freedom, and expose the reality of shackles that we live in.

The delusion of “Freedom”

Sometimes I feel like I might have an underlying Tourette syndrome-type problem. Especially when I’m bored stiff in a meeting or group interaction, I toy with the idea of saying something crazy, to shake people up, see how they would react. But so far at least, I haven’t said it.

The point is we are all in shackles. There is no free speech. There’s not even fully free thought. No one has full freedom. When I think of the word “freedom”, I think of America. A century of slogans of liberty, life, pursuit of happiness has brainwashed everyone. And the opposite of freedom makes me think of countries where you can’t wear whatever, do whatever. But the reality is no one is really free, not even the people you think are free are free.

Wait, why are you writing about freedom? Don’t you blog about dating? 
What inspired this post was a glass of wine, and a copy of Men’s health which was left in my hotel room at the W (I guess they thought I was a guy?).  Also, I haven’t been on a date in six months (wah wah) so can’t really write about dating any more.


The shackles of men

I wonder what men read I thought as I enthusiastically started to flick through Men’s health…

Most boring magazine ever.

This particular one didn’t even have an article on sex. The articles were mostly about exercise, and full of serious, slightly angry looking men. The color scheme was strictly masculine (read: strictly boring) and the fonts very straight-edged, harsh.

This is masculine culture as the world has defined it: harsh, straight-edged, lacking warmth, tenderness, joy, appreciation, gratitude, depth, complexity, bitter-sweetness, emotion, indecision and all the other things that make humans 3-dimensional. Men are flat in this world. They’re just meant to wear suits and expensive watches and go to ‘business meetings’ or go shirtless with six packs, and have a few girls around them, who they sleep with but don’t have particular attachment to. That’s marketing’s view of masculinity.

I find it preposterous that for the longest time men weren’t meant to use certain products. Take moisturizers as an example, as if only women needed moisturizer. Or to groom their eyebrows, as if only women need to interfere with nature. And if you look at cosmetic products today for men, it’s just ridiculous how blue and grey they are and how much effort companies have to go to to make them look boring and ‘manly’ enough to be accepted, and how they always have to be labelled as ‘For men’. Have you ever seen a cosmetic product labelled ‘For women’?

My perusal of Men’s health got me thinking about the other ways in which men are shackled. Some of these are counter-intuitive and I deep-dive into the ones I feel most worthy of editorial exploration:

  • They can’t like anything that’s not black or blue or grey
  • They must have masculine hobbies like watching sports, doing sports. Straight men can’t say they like doing embroidery or going to art galleries 
  • They can’t cry during movies
  • They need to be stronger than women even when they’re sick/tired
  • They can’t say ‘no’ to sex even when they don’t want it
  • They can’t seem to want sex too much
  • They have to pretend that monogamy is normal and that they only want to sleep with their wives/girlfriends
  • They can’t text more than one line at a time, or use punctuation (Ok, I’m not sure why this is, but men consistently are sparse and lack attention to detail in written communication versus women in my experience)

Let’s talk more about the meatiest shackles….

Shackle: Men must have masculine hobbies like watching sports, doing sports. They can’t say they like doing embroidery or going to art galleries

Or doing anything that a girl like me who likes poetry and art might actually be able to relate to!

I have many female friends who I can have endlessly long conversations with that traverse many topics, because many of my female friends share the same interests as me: photography, nature, art, poetry, reading, movies, travelling, observing and philosophizing on social phenomena.

And conversations with men? Honestly, I struggle sometimes. The men that are good conversationalists usually are those that have a broad range of interests, and these men are rare. I’ve come across a higher proportion of guys than girls who have just one or two hobbies that I find unrelatable (like playing pool, or watching football). It makes me wonder: is it that they were raised that way?  Is it that they weren’t encouraged to love whatever caught their interest freely, because certain activities are considered more ‘female’ than others. May be it’s not that they were explicitly told that they couldn’t pursue art, but that our society is still pretty gender-segregated from birth to death and so you tend to do what your social group likes doing.

Are many men who pursue stereo-typically masculine interests truly free?

A friend pointed out, however, that in many ways men to get to still have the best of most fields. For example, even if it is relatively less common to come across men who are into art versus women, many of the world’s most renowned artists are men. Similarly with chefs.

Shackle: Men can’t seem to want sex too much

This is a fairly recent phenomenon that I have observed in future-forward cities like San Francisco. Because it’s so widely known that men want sex, many men have taken upon themselves a new shackle of pretending they don’t want sex that much. It has actually made some aspects of dating even more frustrating for girls.

“It’s been date 5 and he hasn’t even kissed me yet, I just feel like he doesn’t want me” – Anonymous girlfriend

I did go on a Tinder date many months back in San Francisco, and was enthusiastically expecting light-hearted banter and flirting, and was disappointed when the guy outstretched his hand and said ‘Nice to meet you’ upon arrival as if it was a business meeting and then proceeded to ask lots of fact-based questions about my life as if he was actually interested in me as a person. Ughh dude, this isn’t Co-founders lab, it’s Tinder. Also, if you’re an Indian girl, 99.9% of people just automatically assume you are boring and a prude. 0.01% have the imagination to treat you like an individual.

Shackle: Men have to pretend that monogamy is normal and that they only want to sleep with their wives/girlfriends

 “When men cheat, it’s not necessarily because they don’t love the woman. Sometimes, it’s just the thrill of it. When women cheat, it’s because they’re unhappy with the man, because they’re not getting what they need” – wise SF guy friend

The more I’ve seen, experienced and talked to men, and read about these mystical creatures, the more I’ve come to believe that monogamy is not their nature, but a constraint forced on them by society. They can love someone and sleep with someone else, in a way that a higher proportion of women would struggle with.

The shackle of monogamy is a tough one to enforce on many men as it runs so very counter to their instinctive nature. So it takes a lot of cultural reinforcement to keep it in place. We see this in the media and in our society all the time with the glorification of people who make positive statements about their marriage. I’m not necessarily saying it’s a bad thing, I’m just observing with curious ambivalence at this point.

When we had business speeches at Oxford by CxOs, some CxOs would randomly bring in that marrying their wife was the best decision they ever made, and this statement would be met by approval from the audience. Was it really Mr CEO? Is that why you barely spend any time with your token wife?  

“Thursday is date night with my wife” say some, which is met by approving nods from everyone around the table. Even though you know they are bored as hell on date night listening to the same drab conversation, but they have to make it look fun and fulfilling to the outside world, and they have to contribute to maintaining the group norm that monogamy is a desirable state, and that one person can be the most fascinating person in your life for 60-70 years straight.


Concluding thoughts

The interesting aspect of shackles is that they work in several opposing directions. Some shackles bring men and women closer together by pretending that and making us behave as if we are more similar than we actually are. Some shackles bring us further apart by pretending that we are so different and want such different things when we don’t actually. What I hope for is a world with more freedom where people can gravitate to what truly interests them without as much worry about what is ‘masculine’ or ‘feminine’. And selfishly, for men to become more interesting. Please.


Disclaimer/Note: What I write is based on my perspectives, and is highly generalized. It’s also written from a heterosexual perspective. I do not intend to cause offence, nor to assert my views as ‘correct’, but intend to bring up topics to inspire interesting thought and conversations among my readers.

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Women, feelings, and recipes for drama

“Through all the drama – whether damned or not –

Love gilds the scene, and women guide the plot”

– Richard Brinsley Sheridan (Irish satirist, playwright, poet)

Prelude

Since moving to the US, some of my girl-friends and I were on a frenzied search for ‘one of the ones’. There are guys who have been searching too. But recently a male friend pointed out to me that the genders liked to conduct the search in rather different fashions…

What do women want but drama

It was a weekday night and I was plotting my Coffee meets Bagel strategy to conquer some guy with a promising profile. ‘This time I don’t want you to go crazy and pretend that you are in love with him’ advised my wise male friend. If you’ve read my previous blog-post (Theory X and Y) you will recall I wrote about a guy as ‘Prince Charming’. At the time, I had texted him for a week, and never met him in person. When the spell wore off, I realized I had been drawn to an image of him which I’d built up in my mind. I barely knew the guy behind that image, nor would I have been particularly willing to learn, because when the image is so strong and attractive, who wants to peel back the layer and check what’s actually there. (Furthermore, if Prince Charming is honest and makes clear to you he doesn’t like you in that way, you should back down, which I should have done earlier).

But anyways, this time I was meant to show some maturity and level-headed-ness characteristic of a woman of my age. It was all going well. I was rational. I was calm…Then in the dark of the night, I started day-dreaming about the CMB guy, imagining what our children would look like. We both have round faces so our kids would be so cute, thought I. And then imagining our MBA degrees hung up on the wall next to each other. And then the shame set in in dark waves. I had NEVER even said hello to this guy in person. I had NEVER heard his voice, and I had exchanged but a few messages on CMB.  And I felt so excited about him, I should have been checked into an insane asylum. “Failure is the mother of all success” says Pitbull. Sometimes, all it takes is another rejection to set you straight…

…Fast forward a week, the excitement was gone, as were all the dating apps from my phone. I stood in the hotel pool with my friend, looking at her beautiful skin and silky hair, and savoring her deep insights. We had been through a lot together. Synchronized stories of high highs and low lows, and then the calming realization that large parts of this drama was self-created and self-imposed, and created and imposed on women by other women.

In the Jacuzzi, that incubator of great philosophical ideas, one question came floating to the top of my mind: “Why do we women keep being so pathetic and desperate?”

Why? Why was the over-priced Harvard Alumni Cheese & Wine Singles mixer for 33-55 year olds full of women, with very few men? (I heard. I wasn’t there to be clear. Like really, I wasn’t).  “No guy would pay $150 to meet women” observed my friend. And yet women do,  in the hopeless hope that they will meet the man of their dreams at some canapéd event.

Why are we the ones who want to be friends after a fling when the guy can just walk away? Why do we want to know if his Launch Day was a success? Or how his trip abroad was? Why do we care so much?

Sure, some of us are unattractive (it’s just the truth), but there are other girls who are beautiful, intelligent, strong, healthy, funny, charming, all the good qualities…and yet searching for a relationship and obsessing over strangers as if their life depends on it. They are reading books on how to improve themselves when they could be writing these books themselves. They are going for expensive facials when their skin has a natural glow that anyone with eyes would appreciate. When nothing is wrong with them, and everything is wrong with the endless pool of sub-par men out there, women are still the ones hell-bent on ‘fixing’ themselves. Another guy-friend very accurately observed on his gender: ‘We think we’re The Shit, when really we’re just shit’.

Some of these women are searching so hard, that they don’t even see the mediocre guy in front of them and fall in love with some image of him. Eventually the rose tint fades off your glasses and you realize you are sleeping next to someone who is not particularly intelligent, has barely inspired you to do anything great besides watching some new YouTube video, who complains about doing a meager amount of work around the house, and who is always putting his needs first whilst eating up your time and mental energy. And sometimes you put up with it for months at a time because you so desperately want a relationship.

One of my favorite quotes, as I justified all the time I wasted on dating these past few months, used to be: ‘Something is better than nothing’. I’d say this to my friends, to my sister, to anyone who dared question why I was begrudgingly going for drinks with someone who I didn’t really like (“I want to give him a chance”), or why I was still texting someone who texted me in two-day intervals when he had nothing better to do. Now I confess: Nothing is sometimes better than something.

Women have the most to lose from a relationship or even interactions with someone who is not right for them, yet we are the ones chasing it, and guys are the ones being like ‘Omg I value my freedom. I can’t be tied down’.

Why do we do it to ourselves? I believe there are 3 main reasons and then 1 little one (I’m a consultant, there has to be 3):

  1. We have a biological clock — Thank you Nature for this (sarcasm). But here I would like to invite some debate: perhaps the biological clock difference is not actually as great as perceived to be? Whilst post-35 is medically considered a ‘geriatric pregnancy’, you and I can both think of many women who have had healthy children post-35. In fact, my grandmother had her only child – my father – at 36. With the newest technology, and the option of adoption, we shouldn’t be as spooked as we are. But geez, women and men love to scare the hell out of women with this ‘tick tock tick tock’ talk which starts when you’re 26. Seriously.
  2. We are creatures of deep feeling and want to love. When I was 15, I scandalously read ‘Shanghai Baby’ (It’s not that good. Mostly indecent. It is banned in China for being pretty sexual). I don’t remember most of it, but one quote that I remember even today: “The men were like envelopes for my love.” It’s true. The women I hang out with are women of feeling and thought. And that energy has to go somewhere. With our busy lives, we can’t give it to the causes that truly deserve it: animal rights, environmentalism, championing minorities, healing the sick. Our activism is mostly limited to sharing links on Facebook with some angry comment. And then you’re left with this beating heart that still needs to love and it wants to attach to something, anything. I understand these women, because I’m a feeler myself. When I told a few guys how I felt or how my female friends felt, they came back with reactions like ‘Why are you overthinking it?’, ‘Just don’t think so much’. Classic.
  3. There are real societal penalties for ageing — ‘It’s all in your head’ is also not fair to say about most women’s issues. There is increasingly greater evidence to back up what we all intuitively knew. For example, women don’t negotiate in the work-place not because they don’t want to, but because they actually get punished for it. Similarly, women get punished for ageing way harsher than men. And so in our heads, it’s not just tick-tock-baby-clock but tick-tock-wrinkle-clock.  What can I say? As a society, we need to progress to caring less about women’s looks. I do my part for this cause by always looking shitty 🙂

And lastly, there may be a little, just a little, element of women loving drama and poetry — so even when there is no basis for it, we have to create it. This reason I find somewhat permissible. I’m Punjabi. I’m a woman. And that combination means I love drama more than anyone. But every now and again, I realize I have to take a step back and realize I can’t get caught up in the drama that I created, and actually start living in the air-castles I built up.


In my next blog-post, I look at the air-castles that society and Disney built up for us right from the start…your jaded Stiletto muse is baaccckkkk and it’s time to get real again!drama queen.jpg

 

 

Dating at business school: the myths and the realities

“Wonder how it came to be
Things with me and you
How we lost the way to love
How we got so blue”

–“And It’s Supposed to be Love”, Ayo

“Dating at HBS is shitty”

— Several HBS students so far on separate occasions

Welcome to Stiletto muse! My first blog-post is on dating from my perspective.  I wish to offend no one, but to tell my story as an ethnic minority woman studying in an elite business school in Boston, USA. So often the voice of the ethnic minority woman is undocumented. We are the ones a few PhD anthropologists write about in tribal settings. We are rarely the ones writing about our views. For this reason, though this is a difficult blog-post to write, and makes me vulnerable to personal judgment from others, I hit ‘publish’ and you’re reading this.

People in the outside world glamorize what it is like to be a 20-something in business school. They think it must be like ‘Sex and The City’: endless romantic options, a magic carpet-ride. Indeed, there are endless parties, but romantic options are far scarcer than anyone likes to admit. We glam up and go on nights out with jokes and aspirations of ‘getting lucky’. At the end of the night, we’re mostly in the same Uber heading back together.

What are the barriers, the hurdles, the reasons for this? I outline 7 below and look forward to your comments, questions and discussion.

Dating is hard – why?

1. The numbers are not in your favor

Myth: “Going to business school with a partner is like going to a buffet with packed sandwiches”

Reality: “Going to business school single, is like going to a picnic where everyone brought their sandwiches, with no food”

The first thing to know about business school is that the average age is around 27 and that the majority of people are in relationships by this point. A lot of people are married, some have children and most are in long-term relationships. A student-led survey showed that approximately 70% of people are in relationships, although the number ‘feels’ even higher at times. Interestingly, “all the good ones are taken” seems to be a common view among both men and women who I spoke to.

2.  The abundance of mistrust, disengagement & fear in our social networks

“I’ve been dropped by so many girls for not fitting their agenda, that I don’t even feel I owe them the truth any more”

— HBS guy

“It’s unbelievable how much mistrust there is in dating in America. I feel like I have to overcome a preconceived notion that I’m a douchebag when I meet a girl”

— European HBS guy on dating in the US

Poison is contagious, and there’s a lot of a poison in the dating/hooking-up/seeing circuits these days. Here’s how it starts: you start of cautiously optimistic. Then someone misleads/lies/mistreats/hurts you. Then you start expecting that others might do the same. So before they can do it to you, you do it to them, or you just avoid relationships altogether. This is one driver of the not-calling-back effect that is so prevalent these days – why pursue something when you fear it’ll end in humiliation or pain for yourself?

Where does some of this mistrust come from? I have heard numerous accusations from both genders.

Girls say…

“Girls would appreciate honesty. If you want just a hook-up, don’t pretend that you’re actually interested in me as a person”

–HBS girl

Mistrust is compounded and perpetuated by the number of guys who actively mislead girls.

Guys say…

“If you don’t fit their agenda you get dropped from the calendar”

“Girls these days are too practical”

–HBS guys

I think their complaint is that women don’t love them for them, but love them for various boxes they tick on their checklist…

3. Risk aversion – let’s not even try

“How much encouragement do guys need?!”

— HBS girl

Apparently a lot. In the age of Netflix, it seems that a considerable number of guys would rather binge-watch Netflix all day than actually arrange to meet another human in a romantic context. People are terrified of even asking someone out for an exploratory date for fear that even a request for one date may be seen as ‘you’re the love of my life, I want to marry you’ or may lead to entrapment in a relationship that might be less than ideal. Written out like this, you can see the ridiculousness of such fears.

The new paradigm shift that is occurring is that girls have to ask guys out. I know many couples where the woman took the initiative to make the relationship happen.

I don’t think this is a bad thing at all. But what does annoy me is that it is not reflected in our cultural lexicon. Wedding speeches or tales of how people met still feature fairy-tale-like stories of man wooing woman. Wooing?! Who does wooing any more?! “I begged her and then she finally agreed to marry me” Men still say. I’m listening thinking Oh come on, tell it like it is. She had to weave a whole net around you to get you to agree to marry.

In this new paradigm, women who were brought up with a preference for being pursued rather than pursuing (a rather large proportion of women) are disadvantaged.

4. High standards & emphasis on Physical Attractiveness above other characteristics

“The bar is simply too high”

-– HBS guy

It’s a well-observed phenomenon that even if one looks like Rowan Atkinson oneself, one wants to date Charlize Theron. This is particularly true at business school. Both men and women are guilty of it, myself included.

The other issue is that what is desirable is not necessarily what all girls want to work on. Not all women like dolling up, are particularly interested in fashion or want to spend an hour straightening their hair when they could be reading The Economist instead. Rather unfortunately, women are penalized for cultivating other areas of their life if they don’t look ‘well put-together’.

I was watching this incredibly endearing viral video recently:

It reminded me of how I used to be as a child – concerned only with the art-form, with being better at what I was doing, not worried about how I looked. Then it all changed of course when I became older and started receiving advice like:

‘You need to dress more feminine’
‘Wear heels’
‘Get your nails done’
‘Put at least one bikini photo on Hinge’ (Hinge is a dating app).

Not only are superficial characteristics highly desired in women, but characteristics I admire in women like strength, resilience, intellectual smarts, critical thinking are actually considered undesirable by some men (not all men).

Some HBS men complain that HBS women are too ambitious, too aggressive and too uncompromising. They wouldn’t want to curb back their career for him. In the women’s circles, we exchange horror stories of women who counted too much on a relationship that didn’t last. An investment banker who left his eight-months pregnant wife following an affair with an intern. A man who left his wife and two toddler children with the explanation “This happened way too fast. I liked you but I wasn’t ready for the kids”. These are all women we know, who we hear of, and we don’t want to be these women. Moreover, more than our own financial security and emotional independence, women have dreams and real contributions to make to society. I don’t fault them for giving their career importance. It’d be a loss to the world if they didn’t.

So do I fault the HBS men who explicitly search yonder for women at other schools, at the Design School, at the Ed school, at the School of Public Health, and at other Boston schools for a woman who is ‘softer’? I think it’s misguided, not least because it’s a stupid suggestion to think that someone from the Ed School isn’t ambitious and doesn’t want to lead education reform, but also because the underlying thinking is a perpetuation of sexist and backward attitudes that have persisted for generations. That rather than have an intellectual equal who will challenge you and cause you to think, you’d rather have someone who is like “Omg you work in investment banking with all those numbers, I don’t even know exactly what you do because it’s so beyond me, you must be really smart, my rich and amazing husband, now let me worship you”.

5. Texting – the most ineffective way of communication with someone you’ve just met

Texting is BAD when you have just met someone, yet it continues to be one of the many stupid cultural practices we stick to because we hate talking to people we might want to date (weird, right?). Many a time, people have come to me with their text messages asking ‘What does this mean?’. I’ve gone to others to ask ‘What should I text back?’

The scope for misinterpretation and simply not conveying what you want is so high with text messages. I was complaining to a male friend ‘He texts back like the shortest replies ever. It’s so rude. It’s like he thinks I’m a disgusting creature he wants to minimize contact with’. My friend said ‘That’s your assumption. He also texts back straightaway which means he could be in the middle of a meeting but he still feels he needs to reply so he texts you a short text promptly’.

Although in this case, I was right, the point is that a text can be interpreted in so many ways…..see below.

6. Biases against ethnic women

“Wow, we’re like irrelevant”

— Indian girlfriend in a club in the UK

“I’ve never felt so boring in my life. Am I really that boring?”

— Indian girl at HBS who recently moved over from India

Dating is especially hard for ethnic women living in Western societies, due to the cultural and aesthetic biases against non-white women. Most ethnic minority women know this, just from being us. We grew up on a diet of Disney and Hollywood movies watching ‘beautiful’ women that look nothing like us (though Thank God for Princess Jasmine and Pocohontas, right?). I sometimes wonder if other ethnic women notice this as much as me and admire their ability to just accept things as they are. For me, I’ll be honest, the older I’ve gotten the more exhausting it’s gotten that there are so few relatable Indian female characters in movies, books, TV.

OKCupid, an online dating site, has done some interesting research which has added data to this feeling of racial biases we intuitively knew.

DatingPreferences

As you can see, white people had the strongest preference for dating someone of their ethnicity, whilst other races were more open-minded to others.

There was also analysis of the response rates of different ethnic groups from others. The results have been summarized widely as:

Men
Non-black men applied a penalty to black women
While black men showed little racial preference either way

Women

All women preferred men of their own race
But they otherwise penalized both Asian and black men

As  a writer on The Abstract Factory put it “although diversity of aesthetic preferences, including preference for racially marked features, may be a simple personal choice, systematic statistical skew in aesthetic preferences across a large population strongly indicates socialization to racially biased standards of attractiveness”

If you’re interested in the details, see the matrices below from OkCupid 2009 data. Green highlights a higher than average response rate, yellow a neutral/lower one and red a very low response rate relative to average. The numbers on the perimeter of the table are the weighted average rates for each column/row.

 

7. The culture of ‘casual’ & break-ups

“You can plan a pretty picnic but you can’t predict the weather’

-– Outkast, Ms Jackson

Break-ups are so prevalent these days that even if you ‘find’ someone, it’s in the back of your mind that this probably won’t last. And the readily available option of a break-up in the face of any difficult situation makes it all the more likely.

The footloose and global nature of our lives is another factor: we’re constantly moving geographies, and we don’t know where we’ll be in a few years from now.

This has led to an increasing prevalence of casual making out and casual sex, which disadvantages the people who don’t want to play that game. “You have to make the guy wait. Otherwise why would he invest in you or marry you” said a married woman to me. I was surprised how she (a complete babe) could generalize what worked for her in small-town America to me, in Boston. The fact is I’ve been replaceable in all romantic interactions – and easily so – due to the ready availability of women willing to hook-up casually.

Women should completely own their own bodies and make their own decisions in pursuit of their own happiness, so no judgment when they do — but the real question is: how much of the hooking up is actually women doing what they want as a first-best option and how much is women being forced by systemic forces to hook up because of the dim possibility of the loving relationship they really want and have been denied for so long? I can’t help but wonder…Have women been liberated or are we just in a new renovated prison?

_____________________________________________________

Closing thoughts: where from here?

“Who knows what the end will be?
It ain’t over yet”

— “It’s Supposed to be Love”, Ayo

In the end, the world is a big place. There are many dissatisfied couples who got married because it was the thing to do, but there are also many genuinely blissful couples.

Whilst it’s totally legitimate to search for romantic love, I don’t think we should make people feel inadequate or incomplete for not being in a relationship either. With our romance-obsessed society, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that there are so many types and sources of love in the world. As the ancient Greeks identified, in addition to eros (romantic & sexual love), there is phileo (friendships), storge (familial and affectionate love) and agape (spiritual love & charity). And I’d argue despite the glorification of romantic love, I don’t actually think it’s the ‘best’ type. The gold standard of love is when we think beyond ourselves for others and want absolutely nothing in return: agape.

As a society, we are changing. The single woman who won’t settle for second-best, and would rather be single than with  Mr ‘someone-is-better-than-noone’, will need to become more accepted, because she’s here in the world in ever-increasing numbers. And we will have to shift our pie-chart of joy sources to allow greater emphasis on other sources of love, affection, renewal than just “the special” him or her.

_____________________________________________________

References

http://blog.okcupid.com/index.php/race-attraction-2009-2014/

http://abstractfactory.blogspot.com/2009/10/online-dating-and-race-at-okcupid.html

http://blog.okcupid.com/index.php/your-race-affects-whether-people-write-you-back/

http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/the-ancient-greeks-6-words-for-love-and-why-knowing-them-can-change-your-life