spongy wrote:
2 Im sorry but it looks more like a resume than a dating profile to me.
That is exactly what I thought when I read it as well. It reads like a curriculum vitae. From reading it, one is left with the impression that you definitely love film-making, and not much else. Films, films, films. We are not told anything about what kind of girl you want, what kind of romantic hopes and dreams you have, or even informed of the fact that you are lonely.
That's fair enough. Most people don't like disclosing the fact that they're lonely on their dating profile, because it makes them look desperate, but don't you think you should include a few sentences saying something like "although I am currently enjoying a successful career, I would like to have somebody to share my life with, and that's why I'm here on OKCupid" or somehing like that? All you talk about is your films. In your other posts here, you have awoken my sympathy and tender feelings when you speak of your great desire for a girlfriend, but we see nothing of that in your profile. All you talk about is your profession.
Now, I'm not criticising you. I'm only trying to help. As a fellow Aspie I sympathise that film-making is your special interest as well as your career, and you want to talk about it all the time. That is only natural. But is it really necessary to start your profile by informing us that you've won an Emmy?
It really, really, really, really, really sounds like boasting. It really does. To me, at least. I know you probably didn't mean it that way, and you are just eager to talk about your love of filmmaking, but it sounds like boasting.
If somebody walks up to me and the very first thing they do is inform me of an important prize that they've just won, I will get the impression that they are a conceited person who does nothing but boast about their achievements all the time. And that is a very great shame - because, actually, reading between the lines, I'd say you're not a conceited person at all. I think that you a very insecure person, who feels that you have nothing much to give except your talent for making films.
Girls don't want to know whether or not you can make good films. They want to know things like are you a good cook? Do you give good massages? Are you good at DIY? Can you drive a car? Do you always put the toilet seat back down? Do you have good personal hygiene? Do you have any pets? Do you remember people's birthdays? Do you spend all day in front of the TV drinking beer and watching football? It's the little things like that that girls want to know, and you have not told them anything about yourself, other than the fact that you make films.
What are the things you actually hope to do with this girlfriend you are looking for?(other than sex). Presumably you do not want to make films of her, so why do you want her? Do you want to go for romantic walks along the beach? Do you want to go on action-packed weekends away, and do things like white-water rafting? Do you want to run a chimpanzee sanctuary together? We do not know. We have no idea. You have not told us!
I suggest you explain what kind of man you are, and explain what kind of girl you are looking for, and then delete most of the references to film-making from the profile, and limit yourself to a few brief sentences about it, saying "I'm a film-maker and have actually managed to become quite successful in my field, but I won't bother talking about that here. If you'd like to know more, get in touch with me and maybe we can discuss it over a glass of wine." That will make the girls curious, because they will want to know who you are. For all they know, they could even be reading the profile of Stephen Spielberg himself!
Currently, informing us that you were the Emmy winner of a certain category of a certain year tells the reader exactly who you are. And that is a very bad idea. If you were to go on a date with a woman who turned out to be a freakish stalker, if you turned her down, you would have given her all the information she needed to stalk you.
A simple Google search will tell anyone who was the winner of the Emmy for that category for that year, so by including that information, not only does it sound like boasting, but you are effectively stating your real name in your profile and giving away your identity to perfect strangers. That is not a safe thing to do online.
(I'm paranoid like that, due to certain experiences of my own).
Anyway I hope it all goes well and you find your perfect other half.