Hey Everyone,
This is something I've run into constantly during my time on chats, forums, and dating sites -- how do you know how much to say without crossing moral (and Christian) boundaries?
For instance, I'd been thinking of rejoining a popular Christian dating site, but found out it eliminated its chat rooms, and so I decided against it. Why? Because in my experience, the chat rooms were the one place where I could get a good feel for people's personalities in real time, and, almost as a side effect, find out some crucial (and possibly heart-saving) information.
At one point, there was a gentleman in the chat room I would have been interested in talking to further. However, I was spending a lot of time there and would strike up conversations with a lot of the girls. Without me ever saying a word about this gentleman, the other girls told me plenty about him--because he was talking to all of them--and I decided against trying to talk to him myself.
It wasn't just because he was talking to a lot of girls (though of course that was part of it), but also because these girls all told me the same things that are classic red flags--he would never answer their direct questions; he posted a lot of model-quality pictures that (I can't explain it) just didn't seem to match his personality; and when they would ask for verifications of the things he told them, he was vague and always dodged their questions.
Although I'm a personal fan of our new chat system, it brings about all the same issues.
If a member with a name like LoveStruck4U (this is just a made-up username--I hope it doesn't actually exist here!) messages you and says, "God led me here and I'm sure He did so that I could meet you because He wants us to be together!!!", and your friend messages you and says, "Hey, this person named LoveStruck4U just wrote me and said God made me especially for him," what would you do?
I find this kind of thing happening all the time--not just here, but in any online situation. For people who are happily single, not looking, in a relationship, or married, it should be an easy answer.
But for us singles who are sincerely hoping to find someone special, what can we do?
* If someone messages us and wants to get too close too soon or is throwing out generic pick-up lines (whether worldly or "Godly"-sounding), would you check with your friends to see if they're getting the same messages from the same person?
* If you had a friend who was excited about meeting and talking to someone, but you know the person they like is talking to several other people, would you tell them?
* If you have a friend whom you think is falling for a catfish (someone who is claiming to be something or someone they're not), would you try to warn them?
You might notice that I am keeping this in context of friends and/or people we are close to and talk regularly with on the forum. I'm not talking about publicly calling someone out, because from what I know (and of course, the administration is free to correct me), that's not what we're supposed to do. Rather, we are supposed to report anything that is abusive or goes against forum rules directly to the administration.
But when we are among friends, where is the limit between trying to look out for each other, and just plain talking about someone's business?
I think this is an important topic for us singles to discuss because many of us are probably being approached by many of the same people here.
I would love to hear your thoughts on how you would or do handle it yourself, or if it should happen to you or a friend.
This is something I've run into constantly during my time on chats, forums, and dating sites -- how do you know how much to say without crossing moral (and Christian) boundaries?
For instance, I'd been thinking of rejoining a popular Christian dating site, but found out it eliminated its chat rooms, and so I decided against it. Why? Because in my experience, the chat rooms were the one place where I could get a good feel for people's personalities in real time, and, almost as a side effect, find out some crucial (and possibly heart-saving) information.
At one point, there was a gentleman in the chat room I would have been interested in talking to further. However, I was spending a lot of time there and would strike up conversations with a lot of the girls. Without me ever saying a word about this gentleman, the other girls told me plenty about him--because he was talking to all of them--and I decided against trying to talk to him myself.
It wasn't just because he was talking to a lot of girls (though of course that was part of it), but also because these girls all told me the same things that are classic red flags--he would never answer their direct questions; he posted a lot of model-quality pictures that (I can't explain it) just didn't seem to match his personality; and when they would ask for verifications of the things he told them, he was vague and always dodged their questions.
Although I'm a personal fan of our new chat system, it brings about all the same issues.
If a member with a name like LoveStruck4U (this is just a made-up username--I hope it doesn't actually exist here!) messages you and says, "God led me here and I'm sure He did so that I could meet you because He wants us to be together!!!", and your friend messages you and says, "Hey, this person named LoveStruck4U just wrote me and said God made me especially for him," what would you do?
I find this kind of thing happening all the time--not just here, but in any online situation. For people who are happily single, not looking, in a relationship, or married, it should be an easy answer.
But for us singles who are sincerely hoping to find someone special, what can we do?
* If someone messages us and wants to get too close too soon or is throwing out generic pick-up lines (whether worldly or "Godly"-sounding), would you check with your friends to see if they're getting the same messages from the same person?
* If you had a friend who was excited about meeting and talking to someone, but you know the person they like is talking to several other people, would you tell them?
* If you have a friend whom you think is falling for a catfish (someone who is claiming to be something or someone they're not), would you try to warn them?
You might notice that I am keeping this in context of friends and/or people we are close to and talk regularly with on the forum. I'm not talking about publicly calling someone out, because from what I know (and of course, the administration is free to correct me), that's not what we're supposed to do. Rather, we are supposed to report anything that is abusive or goes against forum rules directly to the administration.
But when we are among friends, where is the limit between trying to look out for each other, and just plain talking about someone's business?
I think this is an important topic for us singles to discuss because many of us are probably being approached by many of the same people here.
I would love to hear your thoughts on how you would or do handle it yourself, or if it should happen to you or a friend.
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