It started to become clear the previous April, when a man who had been pursuing me canceled a dinner at the last minute. There was a scheduling mix-up with his son’s game. I understood. I’m a hockey mom; I get it. Still, I went. I wore what I would have worn anyway. I took the table. I ordered well. And I watched the room.

Only two tables nearby seemed to hold actual dates. The rest were groups of women, or women alone, each one occupying her space with quiet confidence. No shrinking. No waiting. No apologizing.

That night marked something. Not a heartbreak, but an unveiling. A sense that what I’d been experiencing wasn’t just personal misalignment. It was something broader. Cultural. A slow vanishing of presence.


I’m 54. I’ve been dating since the mid-80s, been married, been a mother, gotten divorced, had many relationships long and short. I remember when part of heterosexual male culture involved showing up with a woman to signal something — status, success, desirability. Women were once signifiers of value, even to other men. It wasn’t always healthy, but it meant that men had to show up and put in some effort.

That dynamic has quietly collapsed. We have moved into an era where many men no longer seek women to impress other men or to connect across difference. They perform elsewhere. Alone. They’ve filtered us out.

I recently experienced a flicker of possibility. With James. We met on Raya, the dating app. There was something mutual from the start — wordplay, emotional precision, a tone that felt attuned. It was brief, but it caught light. I remember saying to him, “Even fleeting connections matter, when they’re mutual and lit from the inside.” I meant it.

There was just enough spark to wonder what might unfold. Enough curiosity to imagine a doorway. But he didn’t step through it. Not with a plan. Not with presence. He hovered — flirting, retreating, offering warmth but no direction.

  • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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    13 hours ago

    I think a lot of it is just that it is one manifestation of the collapse of every type of interpersonal obligation and performance responsibility in the modern American world.

    Bear with me for a second here: There is this story about a guy who cut holes in the ceiling to spy on people’s private moments in rooms in his hotel. It was incredibly wrong, and eventually he was caught, but one of the things that makes the entire story fascinating was his disgusted observation of just how careless, ugly, and apathetic people are to each other in private moments. Not just in sexual context, they’re just not that aware or caring across the board, to this shocking degree, when you think about how short life is and how much the people around you and your impact on them matter.

    I won’t try to summarize the whole thing. It is fascinating. I don’t think every culture is like this. But I definitely think American culture is like this.

    • three_trains_in_a_trenchcoat@piefed.social
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      7 hours ago

      I think this is a really insightful comment that adds more depth to the conversation than the original article does. It definitely feels like we’re living in a society where all subconsciously agreed, to some extent or another, that we owe each other nothing. That doesn’t seem like a sustainable way for a society to be.