Surprise, surprise

2 min read

Interest in blind dating is on the rise. Can it help us to date more mindfully again?

AMID THE RETURN of low-rise jeans and bucket hats to the high street (I had one of the latter in 1999, thank you very much), another Nineties trend is enjoying a revival: blind dates.

Back then, before smartphones and dating apps, you didn’t have to swipe through a sea of prospects to find a match—you relied on your friends to set you up with someone. You’d then show up for that date with an open mind and hope for the best.

In many ways, it was the opposite of how we date today—and that’s precisely why a growing number of Brits are going retro. Folks are fed up with online dating, where you’re flooded with options yet the exchanges you have are often superficial and lead nowhere. Dating app Hinge reports that 61 per cent of their users find modern dating tiring and overwhelming.

On the other hand, in-person events for mixing with eligible strangers have increased by 400 per cent from 2014-2018 in the UK, per ticketing platform Eventbrite. There are now also dedicated apps, like Blindlee and Magnet, that will pair you with someone without showing you their profile.

The idea is that by trying to get to know someone rather than forming a snap judgement from their profile, you’ve got more of a shot at making a meaningful connection. I think there’s some truth to that.

How attracted we are to someone is influenced by looks—some research names physical attractiveness as the strongest predictor of whether we’ll fancy someone—but this isn’t the only factor at play.

Once you spend a bit of time with your date, you take in a whole new suite of information that can make them more or less attractive to you: are they funny? Smart? Giving off positive body language?

In fact, there’s research showing that judging someone based on written or visual information, like their dating profile, doesn’t reflect how attracted to them you’ll feel once you’re on a first date together.

What does predict whether people will fancy each other is having a “gut feeling of connection,” according to a 2021 study of 140 heterosexual singles on blind first dates. This connection, the study authors suggest, is an actual sensation you feel in your body: there’s a theory that the ways we react emotionally to someone correlate with physical signs of arousal, like pupil

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles