eHarmony
USA
Canada
After failing to make a connection on some other dating sites, I moved on to
eHarmony, the great white whale of online dating sites. eHarmony.com is different in so many ways
that it was a little intimidating, because no matter what you're used to, it's going to push you out of your
comfort zone a bit. For one thing, you can't browse other peoples' profiles. Instead, after filling out a lengthy
(really! more than 250 questions, though they're almost entirely multiple choice and quick) questionnaire, the
service looks at your answers, looks at certain preferences you can set (how far away your matches can be, whether
you care about race, whether you care if they have children, et cetera), and gives you a list of people the
computer says you should be compatible with. Click to receive a FREE Personality Profile 
It has to be a little weird, right, talking to somebody a computer has already determined could be your
perfect match. Matching Based on Christian Principles 
I'm one of those people who always want to challenge the phrasing of the question - this was true in school too.
Yes, I will complain that there aren't enough options even when "none of the above" is one of them. I always want
to explain my answer. I want to narrate. I was good at essays, and especially term papers. Multiple-choice tests
just frustrated me, because I was always sure they'd been written badly. (Later in life, I was a teacher for a few
years, and I'll let you in on a secret: many of those multiple-choice tests ARE written badly.) Give the Gift of Love! eHarmony Gift Subscription 
In the self-description sections of eHarmony lengthy questionnaire, I kept running into that
problem. These are the questions where they ask whether a certain statement or description of you is true or false,
and HOW true, HOW false. Does "dominant" generally describe me, on a scale of 1 to 7? Well, the answer in the
bedroom isn't the same as the answer on the street, you know? Am I frugal? I drive a car with good gas mileage and
I make almost all my food from scratch, but I own more than 400 DVDs. I wanted to narrate. I wanted to write
essays. But you can't have a system like this unless it's working with quantifiable data.
Other questions were very simple to answer, though - yes, it's important for me to spend time creating things;
yes, I enjoy meeting and talking to new people. There were enough clear-cut questions that I kept going.
Now, eHarmony has prepared for my difficulty, sort of. If your answers are too inconsistent,
they will reject you. That's right. They get the most press for refusing to match same-sex couples -
eHarmony is an explicitly marriage-minded service that was designed to reduce the divorce rate by
creating stronger marriages, between people who won't get sick of each other after two years, and its founder
Dr. Neil Clark Warren is an evangelical Christian who used to be a dean at a
seminary school. Warren claims his theories, his math, just doesn't take homosexuality into account, and that no
moral judgment is being made. Me … well, I'm straight, so I decided not to worry about it at the moment.
But eHarmony will reject you for other reasons: for being under 21, for being already married
(I assume this only matters because of people with open marriages and people who are separated but not yet
divorced), and for having been divorced more than twice. Each of those sort of makes some sense. I'm sure that
divorce one pisses some people off, but this isn't a personalized service: if you've been divorced three times and
you're back on the dance floor looking for love and need a boost like this to help you, maybe there's a problem
that goes beyond what algorithms can do for you. Maybe there isn't, but it doesn't seem any worse than my car
insurance going down just because I had a birthday. Stats are stats - Geico's banking on my unlikelihood of being
in an accident, and eHarmony is banking on their ability to find me a woman.
Once you're in - and most people do get in, from what I understand - you fill out a few more things ("Must
Haves"/"Can't Stands") and then you get your matches. I'll get to mine in a minute. You can't get more matches as
long as you have unexamined ones sitting in your metaphorical inbox, so from time to time someone will "close
communication" with you even though you haven't started communication yet - they're just kicking you off the desk
so they can see who's next on eHarmony list for them. Give eHarmony a
try and fine someone special today. eHarmony
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