Very recently I've been trying out chatting online. I've had little experience with this a few years ago, nothing since. Awhile ago I joined a couple of sites to try to connect with someone.
Frankly at first I've felt a bit overwhelmed: there are a lot of people looking to connect out there. Ideally, of course you hope to connect with someone geographically near you, but it doesn't always work out that way.
Last night I had a surprise. I won't say unexpected surprise because a surprise is supposed to be inherently unexpected.
Anyway around 12:30 AM I was just perusing who was online from around the world on Mate1.com. I saw this cute girl and checked out her profile. I was about to click away when completely on impulse I sent her an invitation to chat. She replied yes, and like to strangers we began the cautious dance of little questions and answers that led to exchanging points-of-view and longer responses. This led to exchanging thoughts and feelings about so many things. Next thing I know it's 5:30 AM!
Now I know communicating online even after you've exchanged pictures (which we did) can create a false sense of connection and emotional intimacy. Your imagination is filling in gaps in that person's character and how they behave and how they express themselves because you're not face-to-face.
Even so I felt something. I did my best to be open and honest with her in regard to many of the things she asked me and I feel she reciprocated. We shared some pretty personal feelings, things you quite likely might not say face-to-face unless you felt that connection.
We've made a virtual date for this afternoon. She is five hours ahead of me in Europe and when I go online at 3 or 4PM here it'll be mid evening for her.
I went to bed distracted after we stopped talking. And since I've gotten up I'm still distracted. I keep thinking about the long odds of connecting with someone from a first simple impulse. I admit I look forward to speaking with her again and I may even be a little anxious. If this pans out then I'm going to try hooking up a webcam and speaker/microphone system on this end and hopefully she could do the same.
I can't stop wondering about her own little mannerisms and how she must speak and what her voice could sound like. I do know that today something is different, different in the thought that maybe there could be someone out there thinking about me unlike the days before.
It's weird and wonderful and I'm not sure what to make of it.
It can be argued, however, that these two options are mutually exclusive.You can fall in love, and live quite happily.
Absolutely. You can fall in love, and live quite happily.
It think the internet is quite a limited communication channel, and mostly because we're interacting with one another through text rather than our full range of senses.
It think the internet is quite a limited communication channel, and mostly because we're interacting with one another through text rather than our full range of senses.
You can't touch or smell the person, but you can video chat and have the opportunity to speak to them, to see them and hear them. It's not limited to text.
It think the internet is quite a limited communication channel, and mostly because we're interacting with one another through text rather than our full range of senses. And while we can inject our personalities into that text, I am reminded me of the old adage of a picture speaking a thousand words. We only see a small part of a person -- the part that is considered and deliberate. Real life communicates a lot more, and is a lot more spontaneous than text.
I feel that many of the impressions we form about people online are tainted by our imaginations, which is invariably love guided. The areas we don't see are the areas where we incorrectly assume compatibility and nurture a passive fondness.
So although one can feel love, we should ask what is it love for. How much of your love is for the real person, and how much is love for something in your imagination, that you're projecting onto that person?![]()
You can't touch or smell the person, but you can video chat and have the opportunity to speak to them, to see them and hear them. It's not limited to text.
I agree that video and audio do create a more complete experience of a person, and the first of these more so than the second, but it still lacks the soul and subtlety of a physical tangible presence. So much so that falling in love over the internet seems to me like quite a sad way to feel love.
Sad why? That the manner itself is sad, or it's sad to be separated like that from the person you love?
poor choice of words on my part.
That without the soul and subtlety of a physical tangible presence, it isn't true love for the person, but love for something in one's own imagination.
To call the feelings of an internet relationship "love" is sad because it is lacking these important parts of love. It's a expression used by a person who either doesn't really know what love is, or who craves the idea of being in love so much, that this approximation they choose to believe is equal in merit and credibility to true love.
Oh, I see. Well, I disagree completely. It's possible that either of the scenarios you present could be true, but I don't believe that's always the case. And of course there's the fact that "love" is subjective and not really something we can define for others (though that doesn't seem to stop people).
True. Online, I appear to be an intelligent and dignified person, prone to brilliant philosophical insights. In real life, I'm more like a Don Martin cartoon. Splortch.I agree that video and audio do create a more complete experience of a person, and the first of these more so than the second, but it still lacks the soul and subtlety of a physical tangible presence.
As RJDiogenes puts it nicely, internet relationships are really no different to the old tradition of pen friends, only without ink, paper and stamps, and with added speed and flexibility. It's another form of communication, no less valid than talking over the telephone or sending pictures to another.
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