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"Friends Not Liable: The Unsettling Truth About Being Set Up"
In a world where online dating has become the norm for singles, one person is fed up with their coupled friends refusing to play cupid. The writer, who has been set up just once and has since resorted to swiping through apps, took to social media to air their grievances.
It's not that they're looking for handouts or expecting their friends to do all the legwork – it's simply a matter of fairness. They've conducted a poll among their single friends, and the results are telling: most believe that couples have abandoned their responsibility to set up their singleton pals.
"I've considered the possibility that I'm the problem," they admit, "but the consensus is clear: this lack of effort is de rigueur, not personal." And it's not just about the initial matchmaking; it's also about maintaining a healthy social circle and sharing in the joys (and struggles) of single life.
The resurgence of professional matchmaking services might suggest that singles are at their wit's end with swiping through endless profiles. However, the writer argues that their friends – the ones who claim to be "coupled up" but never put themselves out for others – are also guilty of this lack of initiative.
"Couples, come on now," they say. "It's time to get off your love seat and set us up." It's not about expecting grand gestures or instant matches; it's simply about being willing to put in a bit of effort to help someone find love (or at least a decent date).
As the writer so aptly puts it, "Sharing your outrage over your partner's seemingly endless domestic failures? That's no walk in the park either." By not stepping up and setting each other up, couples are essentially giving singles a free pass to navigate the often-try-hard world of online dating alone.
Who knows what could have been if these friends simply returned the favour? Perhaps we'll see a shift in social norms, with singles no longer expected to fend for themselves. Until then, it's time for us all to step up and set each other up – or at least show some basic human decency towards those of us who are flying solo.
In a world where online dating has become the norm for singles, one person is fed up with their coupled friends refusing to play cupid. The writer, who has been set up just once and has since resorted to swiping through apps, took to social media to air their grievances.
It's not that they're looking for handouts or expecting their friends to do all the legwork – it's simply a matter of fairness. They've conducted a poll among their single friends, and the results are telling: most believe that couples have abandoned their responsibility to set up their singleton pals.
"I've considered the possibility that I'm the problem," they admit, "but the consensus is clear: this lack of effort is de rigueur, not personal." And it's not just about the initial matchmaking; it's also about maintaining a healthy social circle and sharing in the joys (and struggles) of single life.
The resurgence of professional matchmaking services might suggest that singles are at their wit's end with swiping through endless profiles. However, the writer argues that their friends – the ones who claim to be "coupled up" but never put themselves out for others – are also guilty of this lack of initiative.
"Couples, come on now," they say. "It's time to get off your love seat and set us up." It's not about expecting grand gestures or instant matches; it's simply about being willing to put in a bit of effort to help someone find love (or at least a decent date).
As the writer so aptly puts it, "Sharing your outrage over your partner's seemingly endless domestic failures? That's no walk in the park either." By not stepping up and setting each other up, couples are essentially giving singles a free pass to navigate the often-try-hard world of online dating alone.
Who knows what could have been if these friends simply returned the favour? Perhaps we'll see a shift in social norms, with singles no longer expected to fend for themselves. Until then, it's time for us all to step up and set each other up – or at least show some basic human decency towards those of us who are flying solo.