Monday, August 18, 2014

I can't be your facebook lover



I am pretty open to meeting new people, online and off. On social media, it’s pretty easy to cut someone off if they turn out to be fundamentalists, gun-toting rednecks, or just average creeps. It’s been my experience that periodically one of my online guy friends will feel the need to initiate a flirtation.  Actually, flirtation may not be the right word. Flirting is smiling at someone over the edge of your wineglass. Flirting is looking at him while you toss your scarf over your shoulder just so. It may be that there is an online version of that, but I haven’t seen it. Instead, out of the blue you’ll receive a message that is some version of “I really want to be with you right now.” 

Since a response of “Yeah, me too!” would be neither honest nor useful, my general approach is more like, “Thanks but I’m only looking for friendship.” Although radio silence conveys the same message, and I’ll resort to that if I’m just too busy to deal with it. I don’t have anything against flirtation in a general way. I’m as fond of the opposite sex, friendly banter, and admiration as anyone else, no matter what their relationship status. Humans are humans, after all. But I just don’t have the time or energy to play make-believe with someone I may not have even met face-to-face.  

I’ve gone through a variety of theories about the internet come-on. One is that there are just a lot of lonely, unfulfilled people in the world. Another is that my online personality (outspoken activist? adoring mother? successful professional? sort-of blonde?) is particularly appealing to some men. However, I’ve come around to the theory that testing the water with female acquaintances is just a thing that guys do, which sort of takes any flattery out of the equation.

Often, the next thing I know, I’ve been unfriended by the guy in question. A friendship that I thought could be lasting and real evaporates in a moment. Some guys can laugh it off and stick around. More and more, I’m finding that my male friends are gay, significantly older or younger than I am, or married to a good friend. All of my life, I’ve tended to have about equal numbers of male and female friends, but that balance is changing, and it bothers me. 

I’m tempted to regularly post an online disclaimer. How does this sound? 

“Dear men - I am busy raising a family, holding down a job, remodeling a house, and trying to rid the world of misogyny and injustice. I am way too busy to exchange online fantasies with you. I cannot engage in long chat sessions with you during work, and I will not send you photographs of any part of my unclothed body. My favorite people in the world are my family, and they get most of my time and attention. But if you’d like to talk about sports, politics, cars, the weather, pets, quantum physics, or power tools, please feel free to send me a friend request. Ammosexuals, tea-partiers, and forced-birthers need not apply.”

Think it would help?