BADGER HERALD — Nov 18 — Well, after clicking 75 little (eHarmony) bubbles ranking characteristics – warm, arrogant, impulsive, attractive, perfectionist and uncomplicated – from one to seven and only being 17% complete with the profile, I gave up. F-you eHarmony. That’s not fun. On to Match.com. I’m going to take a stand against Internet dating. It’s just another way to become impersonal and lazy, just like text messaging or when people abuse the Facebook for stalking purposes. FULL ARTICLE @ BADGER HERALD
Mark Brooks: What’s the #1 most important decision you will make in your lifetime? (Ans: Who you decide to marry). You can answer/ask questions 6 months into a relationship, or you can take the online dating approach and answer/ask them for your profile. This is what the likes of eHarmony, TRUE, PerfectMatch, Match, Tickle, Yahoo etc provide. These questions are surely worth a few hours of consideration…if you’re serious about being serious.

As she said in the article, she was looking for “immediate gratification!”, and not for compatible real persons.
Perhaps a chocolate bar and buying new clothes will better fit her needs, and not investing time and effort looking for someone to build a relationship with future in mind.
Kindest Regards,
Fernando Ardenghi
Buenos Aires.
Argentina.
ardenghifer@gmail.com
I think she was on deadline. I think in general the personality profiles tend to play more to the female sentiment, don’t you think? Guys would tend to not have the patience for them unless they are really motivated and ready for a serious relationship…which plays nicely into the whole point of the relationship sites eHarmony, TRUE and Perfectmatch.
Mark Brooks
Editor/Blogger
onlinepersonalswatch.com
Media Relations
Internet Dating Convention
idate2006.com
mark@courtlandbrooks.com
I think it’s easier to meet people in real life.