Mar12
As Valuable As Your Options
A piece in today’s Happen Magazine brings up a topic familiar to most online daters - the concept of being geographically desirable.
Writes the author, Bob Strauss: “Did we live a continent away from each other? Not at all—she hailed from the upper west side of Manhattan, while I lived on a less fashionable part of the east side, perhaps a twenty-minute ride by bus or subway. Was she telling me the truth? That’s a more difficult question. On the one hand, perhaps she genuinely thought her life was so busy that she couldn’t afford to date someone who lived more than a few blocks away. On the other hand, maybe she wasn’t really that interested or was a neighborhood snob and was looking for a way to let me down gently.
“Geographic undesirability” is merely a shorthand way of saying that you are only as valuable as your options. The world’s perfect man - tall, dark, handsome, wealthy, kind - might just be residing in a palace three hours outside Nome, Alaska - and if he wrote to you on Match.com, you’d still dismiss him as geographically undesirable - PRESUMING that you have some potential local options. This is the hardest thing for geographically undesirable people to fathom. They figure that if THEY’RE willing to fly cross-country to go on a date (because there’s not many Hispanics in rural Pennsylvania), then any woman in Los Angeles would be willing to do the same. But why would she? She’s surrounded by a 50% Hispanic population. She doesn’t NEED rural Pennsylvania.
The people at the top of the dating totem pole are women in their late 20’s/early 30’s - as they are coveted by men from 25-60. An attractive woman this age, in a densely populated area, has hundreds if not THOUSANDS of men writing to her, all of whom feel they have a reasonable shot at her. What these men haven’t necessarily considered is that she has so many options that she can choose a man who fits all of her criteria. In other words, she’s got no incentive to date a wealthy older man fifty miles away when she can date a wealthy man her age who can deliver her latest gift from Tiffany’s to her doorstep in ten minutes. And since most men get really caught up in writing to hot, young woman, I feel it’s my duty to report that the odds are long BECAUSE of the number of choices she has. Find that same sexy 27-year-old in a more remote area, you may have a better shot at getting a reply. Same thing goes for women contacting men. If you’re a woman who lives outside a major city, you can assume that any attractive, articulate, successful man has the option of dating other amazing women who don’t require him to gas up his car. And you can’t be too surprised or upset when he exercises that option.
People without tons of options need to be more flexible. People with tons of options can afford to be choosy. As long as they have the perception of choice, they’re going to choose to trade up for someone a little bit cuter, a little bit richer, a little bit closer. It’s not fair, it’s not right, it just is.
You can’t change anybody else, nor can you change what they desire. All you can do is attract a catch with better essays, better email technique, and a better approach to dating.
And if you want to do that, you know where to find me:
Filed Under Dating Tips & Advice
Read More...
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- Should I Write to Someone Online Even If I Don’t Meet His Search Preferences?
- Best of Evan Marc Katz’s Advice From a Single Dating Expert
- Should You Send a Follow-up Email to Someone To Hasn’t Written You Back?
- How Do You Know If It’s Worth It To Try a Long Distance Relationship?




Loverville Mar 30th 2007 at 05:01 pm 1
I can absolutely agree — and as a Manhattanite, it’s not just about convenience: it’s just a fact that a New Jersey or a Long Island guy will tend to have a different vibe and different interests than a guy who lives in the East Village.
I know what I like — and just as I prefer to date guys who are into traveling and food, I just find that I have more in common with someone who also lives in Manhattan. (preferably downtown, but I’m not *that* picky)
Becky Apr 9th 2007 at 05:42 pm 2
The other point is how do you sustain a relationship, especially when neither of you can drop your lives to go nor live somewhere else or even spend significant periods of time there? I have tried the long distance thing, with people who moved away (e.g. literally to the other side of the world), and after a while, I find that everything begins to fall apart. This is magnified when you work in a job that means that you are in different countries all the time. It’s tough…