Not a personal incident, I just thought this would be an interesting topic for discussion/debate.
I'm more familiar with LDRs being given the term "online dating", and I suppose that's my age speaking for me. My first encounter with them was back when I was 11 and chat rooms were all the rage for not only AOL but sites catering to younger people. I'd see people asking others out without ever getting to know them based solely on the icon/avatar they were using or their screenname. (this being the era of those lovely screennames such as "sexyboi13" and "hottie69" which instantly got you attention) It seemed trivial to me, and it was, because exactly how are you dating when you're only meeting in a chatroom and calling each other 'hot' and 'cute' all the time and not getting to know each other?
I still am active on sites designed for teenagers and college students and going into some sections I still see this sort of behavior. Take the avatar forums where you dress up pixel dolls to represent 'you'. There are people running about asking each other out based on those pixels and within virtually minutes of meeting they're proclaiming love.
It's also probably common knowledge to everyone here the general opinion on LDRs that get started via internet, and that's because of how the media portrays them. They're taking the teenagers who meet on some site and spew how much they love each other but they don't ever get to know one another and it's almost like a game. My favorite are those who believe dating someone online isn't 'real dating' so they have a string of online boyfriends/girlfriends while dating someone CD. I've also witnessed first hand LDR relationships through my best friend and they've all been pretty bad.
So to me, LDRs have gotten a bad reputation that truly is not deserved, at least not for those who are in real ones and looking to bridge the gap no matter how long it takes. There's always a downside to everything, but it simply seems because most of these are internet-based or reliant on some other form of long-distance communication that they're automatically defunct in society, the person on the other end of the communication line is a fraud, and you're a loser. It's hard to be taken seriously when you say your SO is elsewhere because some people take it as the infamous "my girlfriend who lives in canada" line that you're making up to hide your apparent lack of ability to get a date.
And I'm not going to lie, I didn't support them for years, I thought they were stupid because to me it was all a dead end. You're in two different places. Even after my best friend's latest, who she ended up breaking up with two years ago after they were together two years, when he tried twice to fly from Scotland to see her, it seemed there was no point. My opinion was saturated by what I'd grown up witnessing and the many nights I was on the phone with my best friend (who lives an hour away) listening to her cry because she was lonely or the guy had hurt her in some form. Being on the other end now, I feel silly using the same lines I've heard others use for years, knowing I mean them more than they may have. I also see how hard it is to try and sway the opinion of a die-hard "internet relationships must die" person. It's very weird.
Perhaps I'm merely far too pessimistic and see things from the wrong end here.
What was your opinion of LDRs before you were in one?
Do you encounter more people in genuine LDRs outside of this forum or more people who treat them like games?
What's your opinion on the media's portrayal of LDRs/what have you seen?
Do people harass you when you say your SO isn't in the same state/country as you?
What, in your opinion, defines a REAL LDR?
Let me know if you think a question should be added.
I'm more familiar with LDRs being given the term "online dating", and I suppose that's my age speaking for me. My first encounter with them was back when I was 11 and chat rooms were all the rage for not only AOL but sites catering to younger people. I'd see people asking others out without ever getting to know them based solely on the icon/avatar they were using or their screenname. (this being the era of those lovely screennames such as "sexyboi13" and "hottie69" which instantly got you attention) It seemed trivial to me, and it was, because exactly how are you dating when you're only meeting in a chatroom and calling each other 'hot' and 'cute' all the time and not getting to know each other?
I still am active on sites designed for teenagers and college students and going into some sections I still see this sort of behavior. Take the avatar forums where you dress up pixel dolls to represent 'you'. There are people running about asking each other out based on those pixels and within virtually minutes of meeting they're proclaiming love.
It's also probably common knowledge to everyone here the general opinion on LDRs that get started via internet, and that's because of how the media portrays them. They're taking the teenagers who meet on some site and spew how much they love each other but they don't ever get to know one another and it's almost like a game. My favorite are those who believe dating someone online isn't 'real dating' so they have a string of online boyfriends/girlfriends while dating someone CD. I've also witnessed first hand LDR relationships through my best friend and they've all been pretty bad.
So to me, LDRs have gotten a bad reputation that truly is not deserved, at least not for those who are in real ones and looking to bridge the gap no matter how long it takes. There's always a downside to everything, but it simply seems because most of these are internet-based or reliant on some other form of long-distance communication that they're automatically defunct in society, the person on the other end of the communication line is a fraud, and you're a loser. It's hard to be taken seriously when you say your SO is elsewhere because some people take it as the infamous "my girlfriend who lives in canada" line that you're making up to hide your apparent lack of ability to get a date.
And I'm not going to lie, I didn't support them for years, I thought they were stupid because to me it was all a dead end. You're in two different places. Even after my best friend's latest, who she ended up breaking up with two years ago after they were together two years, when he tried twice to fly from Scotland to see her, it seemed there was no point. My opinion was saturated by what I'd grown up witnessing and the many nights I was on the phone with my best friend (who lives an hour away) listening to her cry because she was lonely or the guy had hurt her in some form. Being on the other end now, I feel silly using the same lines I've heard others use for years, knowing I mean them more than they may have. I also see how hard it is to try and sway the opinion of a die-hard "internet relationships must die" person. It's very weird.
Perhaps I'm merely far too pessimistic and see things from the wrong end here.
What was your opinion of LDRs before you were in one?
Do you encounter more people in genuine LDRs outside of this forum or more people who treat them like games?
What's your opinion on the media's portrayal of LDRs/what have you seen?
Do people harass you when you say your SO isn't in the same state/country as you?
What, in your opinion, defines a REAL LDR?
Let me know if you think a question should be added.
Comment