Tag Archives: dating advice
Camila Cabello opens up on her relationship with British dating expert
Camila Cabello has opened up on her relationship with British dating expert Matthew Hussey and said: “He makes me the happiest I’ve ever been in my life.”
The Cuban-American singer, 21, has reportedly been dating Essex-born Hussey, 31, since February.
He is known for his books on dating and often appears on US television to give relationship advice. The couple met on the set of Today.
Speaking to Marie Claire magazine, Cabello admitted she is “in love” with Hussey and said she gets butterflies when he watches her perform.
Cuban-American popstar Camila Cabello found fame as part of girl group Fifth Harmony (PA)
She said: “Any time he’s there, I get super nervous. I stutter or my hands are shaky.
“He’s so similar to me. In person, we’re just weird and silly and stupid together. He makes me the happiest I’ve ever been in my life.”
Cabello found fame after appearing on the US version of X Factor as part of girl group Fifth Harmony in 2012.
She decided to go solo in December 2016 and has achieved worldwide success with hits including Never Be The Same and Havana.
Cabello, who won both artist of the year and video of the year at the MTV Video Music Awards in August, said her on-stage persona is different to who she is everyday.
She said: “Basically, there’s the me that I really am, on the inside, which is the nerdy one – the kind of introverted, shy one – and then there’s the sexy, overly confident one, doing great dance moves and being super sassy.”
Press Association
'Why I stopped 'stalking' my Tinder dates'
We’ve all done it.
You know what I’m talking about: Spent whole hours sprawled across your couch as you make your way back through someone’s tagged posts on Instagram or Facebook uploads. You scroll and you scroll, the moon waxing and waning through your window until you reach the last image, an over-saturated digital camera snap from an underage disco to which they have definitely smuggled alcohol in a water bottle.
As you pick your way through the detritus of their life – check-ins at nightclubs, all the exhausting holiday uploads, sweet birthday messages from grandparents all in capital letters – you feel like you know this person. You feel like you understand them. You feel like you have a true sense of the fabric of their life.
Which all means that when you finally end up on a date with them (this online stalking invariably comes before a date), you are measuring the real-life grit of this person with the online persona you have come to know so well. You already know about that time they ran the Gold Coast marathon in 2014. You know about the skiing trip to New Zealand in 2011. You know about all their exes. You’ve seen the pictures of every regrettable haircut.
“I insta-stalk a potential date literally every single time,” Rochelle, 28, says. “Honestly I cannot help it. I do financial diligence for a living and this is not dissimilar, whether investing your money or your precious time you want as much information available to you as possible to help you make an informed decision… Straight to the tagged photos, am I right?”
Okay, so maybe your version of raking through your Bumble matches’ social media footprint isn’t as thorough as Rochelle’s or mine, but it’s safe to say that you’ve probably googled and Facebook or Instagram-stalked someone before.
There’s a point to all this scrolling, of course. Looking at someone’s backstory gives us a sense of security about the person we are meeting. It gives us context, but it also makes us feel safe. But there’s a downside, too. How can anyone possibly live up to the picture you craft in your head after poring over their online presence? Once you’ve Insta-stalked someone, you arrive at the date with a preconceived notion of who they are based on their social media presence, which can nip a potential romance right in the bud.
“It’s important to at least have a chance to get to know a potential partner rather than making assumptions about them based on what you can see online,” relationship psychotherapist Kate Moyle explains.
“There is often a gap between the selfs we show of ourselves online and the realistic versions, and not only does it potentially create false expectations about a person, which can give us feelings of disappointment without even offering a partner a chance, there is [also] so much more to a person than their appearance or front. By viewing them on a screen we see them in 2D, and both people and attraction come in 3D, and attraction is something that happens between people.” Not between Instagram accounts, Moyle is saying.
I experienced this firsthand recently when I went on a date with someone whom I met – shockingly – in real life. We met through mutual friends at a dinner party, which makes us sound like a couple of grownups, and made plans to reconnect a few weeks later. In the intervening weeks I managed to steer clear of social media, but as the plans for our date began to take shape I couldn’t help myself. I plugged his name into Facebook, and then Instagram, and then, finally, out of sheer desperation, Twitter.
Nothing. Nada. I could find hardly anything about him online, no prime, juicy bit of information pertaining to Facebook groups he has joined, events he checked into or pictures taken at charity football games. Nothing.
It was strange. I had never been out with someone whose life was a completely mystery, at least online, anyway. I came of age in the era of Myspace and LiveJournals: I’ve lived my adolescence and then my 20s out in glorious technicolour online and everyone I’ve ever dated has been the same.
This is going to sound ridiculous to anyone who dated before the onset of the internet, but all this not-knowing was exciting. Yes, I was a little nervous before the date, but when we finally started talking and telling the much-told story of ourselves it felt like unearthing buried treasure. I forgot how much fun it could be to hear someone tell the story of the time they muddled their way through a marathon, or when they face-planted while skiing in New Zealand, or the terrible haircut they had when they were backpacking through South America. I forgot how much fun it could be to learn about someone from them, and not through all the half-truths we tell about ourselves on social media.
“I’ve been on two unstalkable dates,” Rochelle agrees, “and it really was fun finding out about someone when you know nothing about them. In one instance, it was way more impressive than I could ever have imagined. A good surprise! The other turned out to be deeply into hiking, self-improvement and life-coaching which would have gotten him dinged immediately. I like sleep and Netflix too much to date this guy.”
Yes, there were things I learned on my date that, had I known about them from social media beforehand I might not have wanted to see this guy again. Like his taste in music, for example, which is, in one word, regrettable.
But this is such small fry in the grand scheme of things, just one bit of information that, when stitched together with all the other little bits of information, make up this man. I’m still learning about him and about his life. There are good things and bad things, terrible jokes and great dinners. The point is that without social media to colour the picture, we’re taking our time and we’re doing it on our own. And we’re having such fun doing it, too.
Read more stories like this: The one piece of advice all single women need to hear and Signs you might be dating a narcissist .
Crowdsourced: A new video advice column — but you're giving the advice
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By Anna Brand
We’re trying a new video advice series around everyday dilemmas: friendship, grieving, dating, awkward situations in general, and more. But instead of your typical advice column, we want you to ask the questions and answer them. Hear directly from people around the country who are going through the same thing you are.
So, here’s the first question:
How do you break up with a friend? Someone you used to hang out with, but no longer want in your circle. What have you done that works? Or what did you try that totally went wrong?
Send your advice as a video message to crowdsourced@nbcuni.com or share your thoughts as a written message in the form below.
Dating Unscripted: Ending the Endless Text Conversation
“What are you up to this weekend?” he texted me.
I rattled off a few plans, noting my obvious windows of free time, should he want to meet up: “Dinner with friends on Friday night, relaxing on Saturday, a Baptism for a friend’s child on Sunday in the morning, but relaxing again in the afternoon. What are you up to?”
His response arrived shortly: “Sounds fun! I hope you have a good weekend! I’m just relaxing all weekend.”
Hmmm. Not quite the way I expected this conversation to go.
We had met on a dating app, and after a few weeks of nearly daily texting, we still hadn’t met in person. I had hinted at my openness a few times—“oh, our offices are so close to each other. We’ll have to meet up sometime!” I’d write. That’s about as direct as my old-fashioned dating ways would allow me to be. “Yeah!” he’d exclaim, with absolutely no movement to making it happen. Yet, every single day, he found a reason to text me, and so our conversation would continue.
According to his profile and through our texting, we discovered we shared a lot of values and aspirations for life. We had some similarities in our upbringings, including some cities we once called home before moving to our current city. But I’ve dated enough to know that those checklist details and a connection online are not a barometer for actual compatibility. The elusive spark we call chemistry can really only be determined by meeting in person and seeing if our personalities match, if we find each other actually attractive (instead of just objectively good looking via our profile photos), and so forth.
The longer we texted, the more invested I felt, and yet I also could feel my growing resentment toward him and toward this whole modern dating approach. Here I was, spending time every day considering the right words, phrases, and timing of texts (you know you do it, too), when we could easily establish in one coffee date if this “relationship” is even worth either of our time.
He continued to text over the weekend, and I responded when I was able, which meant longer than normal delays, and not as well thought out texts. Sunday night rolled around, and around 9 pm he texted “I’m bored, lol. You should come out, haha.”
I wasn’t laughing. I was in sweats at home, and planning to head to bed in the next hour. He was supposedly free all weekend, we have never met, and this is how he wants a first meeting to go.
Blame it on my tiredness, and my dear roommate who also fumed with me at the half-hearted invitation, but I texted back what I was really thinking.
“Well, this is unfortunate. I thought I was talking with someone who would be a bit more thoughtful about an invitation to meet for the first time. I’m also not looking to ‘entertain’ anyone, I’m looking to get to know someone. I can’t come out right now, because I’m about to go to bed.”
The text was unusually bold and direct, especially for me and my personality. Some friends wondered, in a supportive way, if I should embrace the casual nature of dating today, and that it wouldn’t have hurt to have taken the opportunity to meet up.
I had few regrets about how I handled it, though, especially when he finally texted back. It was early evening Tuesday, and he wrote:
“I think my text came off the wrong way. I’d like to make it up to you by taking you out for a drink or dinner when you’re free and it’s convenient for you. Let me know.”
Now, that’s what I’m talking about! I wasn’t trying to be mean or play hard to get. I just wanted an opportunity to meet for the first time in a more intentional manner—when I could look nice and be a bit more awake.
A few days later, we met for drinks at a wine bar in between our apartments. The conversation was fun and lighthearted, but it was clear to both of us by the end of the date that we weren’t a match. Yet, I walked away from this encounter with more confidence and a better approach to my dating life, online especially.
Relationships are about give and take, and it’s important that we’re able to communicate with one another what we need and want. This sharing of expectations is part of the process of determining compatibility, too. We don’t have to go with the flow to an unending degree, even in the early stages of dating.
A little directness, properly placed and politely stated, can go a long way in helping to sort out what you desire and deserve, and whether a man is right for you.
Editors’ Note: Submit your own Dating Unscripted story here.