Dating 101

10 toxic things you really shouldn’t say on your dating profile

The dating arena is second only to its Roman gladiatorial cousin when it comes to viciousness. But rather than fleeing knife-wielding savages, daters find themselves fighting off the advances of unwelcome, pot-bellied irritants or, more commonly, trying their best to seem attractive to those who probably wouldn’t urinate on them if they were ablaze.

Your dating profile, be it on a reputable dating site or a seedy phone app, is your storefront. It’s your singleton SOS to the slew of eligible bachelor rescue ships bobbing up and down in an ocean of GSOH, WLTM and, occasionally, NSA. So it’s important to get it right, because when you get it wrong, another dot on the radar goes out.

Here are just ten examples of when dating bios go bad.

1. Using song lyrics instead of actual sentences
Sing me something new – don’t quote song lyrics in your bio. Especially Madonna ones. “I’m breaking all the rules I didn’t make” indeed.

You may think that jotting down a couple of lines from your favourite song or what you perceive to be an empowering anthem makes you look fun, or will help to strike a chord with a fellow fan, but in fact it does little more than expose your lack of imagination. Not to mention that the song you choose can date you massively.

Potential dates don’t care that you can quote Lady Gaga or Lana del Rey at them; they just want to know what kind of person you are. Quoting lyrics certainly tells them that, I guess, but probably not in the way you’d have hoped.

2. What’s your sign? Nobody cares – that’s not a thing
If there’s one way to alienate a potential suitor it’s saying you’re a ‘typical Libra’ in your bio. Your average star-crossed lover won’t know what it means, and certainly won’t bother Googling to find out. You’ve lost them.

If you must rely on listing your personality traits like a bunch of coordinates, at least make yourself sound interesting. You can’t explain away your dullness by blaming it on your star sign.

But maybe I’m just being a typical Capricorn there. (I’m not, because it’s all bollocks. Just to be clear.)

3. Hold up on the sass straight off
Using ‘diva’ or messageboard-sassy language like “Bitch, PLEASE” & “I can’t EVEN…” is an absolute no-no. It’s massively unappealing. Unless you are RuPaul, a Real Housewife from Wherever, or hoping to attract one of them.

Do you want them to fall in love with you or spend the next 10 years sending you GIFs? Most potential dates don’t want to spend the entire evening trading reality TV show trash-talk with you. It’s really tiring, super-fast, and quips should never replace proper conversation. There’s a place for it, but in-jokes should come as your relationship develops; don’t try to force it and intimidate a potential match.

4. Nobody cares about how hard your bio was to write
“Don’t know what to write – not very good at talking about myself” as a lead-in to a profile bio is catastrophically negative. You are signposting – in fifty-foot high neon – that the date is going to be a disaster.

If you can’t hurriedly compile three short sentences about yourself without agonising over it and saying how bad you are at it, what the hell are you going to be like in the live environment? Here’s a clue: awful.

5. Bonnie seeks Clyde for mediocre adventures
Don’t use the drab cliché “Looking for a partner in crime”. This is only OK if you are recruiting for a villainous double act. And if you are, you’re looking in the wrong place.

6.  Auditioning for straight-actors
“If I can tell you’re gay when we meet, you’re probably not for me” Seriously? I actually did read this on a profile once. It makes one wonder how, if you were too successful at suppressing your jazz hands, you’d know you were on a date. When is the right time to bring it up – as it’s going in?

If this is an issue for you, may I suggest dating women, or getting your straight friends drunk and sticking your hand down their trousers while they’re asleep? (Don’t do this.)

7. Fake humility is worse than a big ego
Ah, humble, adorable you! Dating profiles are chock-full of self-deprecating drivel peddled by those wanting to look ‘cute’ or ‘adorable’. “I’m quite boring really”, “Love curling up on the sofa with a DVD, don’t all rush at once” and other dreary, milquetoast statements aren’t going to get anybody’s juices flowing.

Be playfully confident; experiment with exciting. Lie.

8. Your vital statistics do not need to be part of the conversation 
“I’ve been told I’m a big boy, if you know what I mean.” Of course we know what you mean.

If you really have to refer to the magnitude of your junk in an attempt to ensnare a date then I fear meeting you is an intellectual starvation I am not willing to risk. Looks like you got all tooled up for nothing.

9. Showing you’re a tightwad who won’t subscribe
No win, no fee, no thanks! Attempting to circumvent the paywall of dating sites doesn’t make you look impressive – it presents you as miserly. “Haven’t paid for subscription so mail me on cheapbastard [at] mail-that-is-hot” says to me that you’ll never buy a drink.

Or, crucially, that you’ll be equally stingy when it comes to doling out the goodies underneath the duvet.

10. Look me in the eye and tell me you’re six-feet tall
I can’t think of any way to say this more clearly, gentlemen. If you claim to be a certain height on a dating website, it is probably a good idea to either:
a) be that height, or
b) hope and pray that the person you’re meeting has no spatial awareness or is ignorant of imperial measurements or is just as big a fantasist as you.

Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

More like this:
Decoding dumb clichés from dating bios
10 terrible opening lines for your dating profile

6 Comments

  1. I hate writer’s block profiles.

    Most of the dates I went on seemed to be honest about their heights, unless I have no spatial awareness, which is possible. I’m awful with that, and guessing a person’s age.

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