Tips for successful vegetarian dating (ha!)
By Mark Warren Reinhardt
Many, many years ago in this very space I wrote a column called The Great
Vegetarian Dating Game, in which I bemoaned my experiences dating meat-eaters,
semi-vegetarians, and even fellow vegetarians. I concluded that one might
be able to find the perfect mate from any of these groups.
On the other hand, there were plenty of good reasons why one might not.
Since writing that first column a lot has happened to me. I married a wonderful vegetarian
woman, had a sadly less-than-wonderful marriage, and then found myself single again—this
time in a strange new century! Now that I’m older and wiser (alright, I’m
just older) I figure it’s time to bemoan again, and to update my original column
with advice for those who might be dating in the new millennium. Here’s what
I’ve learned so far in my brief foray into this modern world of
romance . . .
Everyone is Online!
Without a doubt, the biggest change in the dating world in the last several hundred years must
be the fact that it’s all done online now. This isn’t just another option that people
have for finding someone—it’s the only option. Everyone, it seems, is
too busy to go out on real dates anymore.
With the computer, single people can accumulate multiple paramours (one woman
proudly confided to me that she had vast numbers of "strategically placed men")
and keep them happy indefinitely with form-letter emails. Of course you can’t
gage "chemistry" over the computer, but that doesn’t really matter. Nobody ever
actually meets anyone. And of course virtual dating has many advantages over the
traditional method. It’s easy to lie about your qualities (I know a guy who
digitally doctors his pictures before sending them out), you never get weird
diseases, and dumping a person is as easy as hitting the delete key.
For vegetarians, online dating is especially exciting. First, we can go to the big
dating sites, where we can instantly search a huge database of potential mates
for the word "vegetarian." That will reveal to us that, out of millions of single
people with computers around the world, three of them share our dietary preferences (while an
additional 87 say that they are specifically not interested in vegetarians). A similar
search on the word "vegan" reveals that there are 518 people in the database from Las Vegas!
Dating sites that specifically cater to vegetarians are perhaps more promising.
Here, as a friend of mine puts it, the odds are good, but unfortunately the
goods may tend to be a bit odd. Good luck.
The Universal Experience
As bad as dating on the Internet is, it can be even worse in the real world. The
first thing I notice when I take my search for a potential mate off-line is
the universal experience shared by all single people over 30: "I can’t meet
anyone!"
It doesn’t seem to matter whether you are male or female, straight or gay,
veggie or meat-addicted, the perception is always the same: anyone you come
across who might otherwise be the slightest bit appropriate is already taken. I
can’t tell you how many parties I’ve been to where I end up with a group of men standing
around the kitchen, grousing about the lack of single women. When I got divorced my friend Ray
(also recently divorced, so he knows about these things) gave me a bottle of
malt liquor and a paper cutout of a Barbie doll with "…for those lonely nights"
written across it. How right he was.
The Power of Dogs?
People I respect a lot tell me that the way around the "I can’t meet anyone"
problem is to get a dog. Dogs are "chick magnets" my friends say. Having a
dog at your side not only makes you seem instantly likable (ax murderers don’t
have pets?), but dogs can also be trained to "accidentally" slip out of your grip and
run over to people you find attractive. Most importantly, when you eventually strike out, dogs
are always there to make you feel less like a loser.
I don’t really want a dog, but I would like to check out this phenomenon. If I
can borrow your basset hound sometime for a spin around the park, let me
know.
Fatal Flaws (of the dietary variety)
People are always asking me if I could ever date a meat-eater. "Sure," I tell
them, "but only if we otherwise had a lot in common." It’s true too. But
then again, I suppose if we had a lot of other things in common I wouldn’t
expect her to be a meat-eater for long. Maybe that’s just my fantasy of a way to save
the world: one date at a time.
My father constantly tells me I’ll never get anyone interested in me as long as
I’m a vegetarian. He’s probably right. As strange as it seems, I think it’s
much more difficult for a meat-eater to be happy with a vegetarian than the
other way around. I don’t blame them a bit. If you’re addicted to meat and dairy
products and want to use those things on a regular basis, it must be a real drag
to hang around with someone who finds that behavior unhealthy, gross and/or immoral. One
woman I met told me outright that she had no intention of giving up meat,
and that she considered my vegetarianism to be a fatal flaw that would prevent us
from ever having any kind of a romantic relationship. Oh well — at least she was
honest!
Finding a great relationship is tough for just about everyone. I think maybe
it’s especially difficult for us vegetarians. I keep telling myself not to despair
though. Even if we never find anyone the least bit appropriate, we still have
one thing going for us. Heck, we’re vegetarians!
Mark Warren Reinhardt writes a humorous column for each issue of Vegetarian Living.