DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: I keep hearing you and other people say that “the bar for men is in Hell”, but I can’t believe that’s the case. I’ve got my s--t together, I’ve got my own home, a good job, I’m educated, I treat people nicely and I never get a date.
Every time I talk to women, things never go anywhere. I match with women on Hinge and I meet all the standards they say they want and I get ghosted. Meanwhile, guys who’ve cheated on every girlfriend they ever had and gaslight every woman around them are getting laid and having a great time.
If the standards are so easy to clear, why the hell are guys like me still single?
Clear The Bar
DEAR CLEAR THE BAR: You’re misunderstanding what “the bar is so low” actually means, CTB.
Let’s start with the fact that the metaphorical height is a measure of not just expectation but also of experience.
When we talk about “a high bar to clear”, it’s about recognizing the difficulty – and thus importance or significance – of what’s being asked and the standard to which someone is being held. If you want to become a doctor, for example, you have a high bar to clear – years of training and study in med school, interning and residency at hospitals and so on. The standards to get your medical license are understandably high for what should be obvious reasons, and not everybody is going to be able to meet them. It doesn’t mean that someone who clears those standards is a good doctor or is competent or is going to be guaranteed a private practice and six figure salary. It just means that we expect our doctors to reach certain minimum standards, and we set those standards high because we want people to be at least able to reach that standard if they’re going to be healing the sick and tending to the wounded.
On the other hand, when we talk about “a low bar”, it’s usually in the context of having lowered one’s expectations because of past disappointment. If I say “A power grid that doesn’t s--t itself and die and plunge the state into a blackout is a low bar to clear”, what I’m saying is that “I want more from this than ‘didn’t actively make life worse’”. The fact that ERCOT didn’t completely collapse this time doesn’t mean that they’ve succeeded and we’re happy with them, it just means that they’ve accomplished the bare minimum of “I didn’t spend a week without power in the freezing cold because our jank-ass power grid didn’t fail again” … a not-unreasonable expectation. It’s a bitter acknowledgement that we’ve had to revise our expectations downward repeatedly, and for once they actually managed to meet them.
So it is with dating and relationships. When women about how “the bar for men is so low/in hell/in the core of the Earth”, they’re not talking about how if you hit those marks, you’re going to get a girlfriend or relationship. What they’re talking about is “we want more from you, but experience has taught that this is about the most we can expect, it’s incredibly little, and people are still not reaching this level.”
The frustration comes from the experience of women who date men trying to find partners and relationships and how often they’re disappointed by the lack of effort or care their partners put in, and how that disappointment has lowered their expectations for potential dates. I have dated women who were pleasantly shocked that I read for pleasure or that I owned my own suit – things they saw as lacking in previous partners and had, in some ways, resigned themselves to as the cost of entry to a relationship.
When women say “the bar is in hell”, what they’re ultimately saying is that they’re asking men to meet qualifications that women feel should be coming standard as just part of being a person, and then men fail to do even that… and often proceed to complain that women are asking for even that much. It’s a little like car companies being upset that they’re being asked to make cars that have functioning brakes and don’t lock you in when the car is on fire and complaining that nobody’s buying their murder coffins.
(I’d make a joke about how it’s like asking for food that isn’t actively contaminated by e-coli or rat feces, except the number of FDA recalls this year suggests that this is asking for too much.)
Just as importantly, you – like a lot of other men – are missing what the bar actually is. Once again, this is a case of men listening to other men about what women want, while dismissing women’s stated desires and standards as being incorrect or self-delusional, if they’re not outright accusing women of lying. This leads to guys complaining about how they’re supposedly clearing the bar and yet somehow women are not only not dating them but asking for more.
The bar isn’t having a job or your own apartment. The bar isn’t about how you dress or how much money you make. The bar is being able to say “yes” to questions like “are you a grown-ass adult and decent human being who treats other people like people?”, “do you actually ask questions on a date instead of just talking about yourself?” “are you looking for a partner and not a bang-maid/mommy figure?” and “do you have any emotional intelligence at all?”.
And just to be clear: managing to get over the bar isn’t how you get a partner. That’s what gets you in the running in the first place. It’s the prerequisite for being in the game. You’re still going to have to be able to talk to women, connect with them and be an overall likable person. You’re going to have to be the sort of person that women are going to want to share their time and their lives with, and those qualities are the sort of soft skills that a lot of guys actively disdain while insisting that women actually want entirely different things that nobody is actually asking for.��(And yes, actually listening to women is one more reason why the bar is in hell)
If you don’t clear that bar, you’re not even in consideration. And this is precisely why people sound so very frustrated when they say the bar is in hell; because it shouldn’t be that hard to reach those standards. And once the bar is in hell… there’s no incentive or reason to bother lowering it any further because what even is the point?
It’s great that you’ve got a nice job and apartment my guy, but how about working on those personal skills? Because that is the part you seem to not be getting… and you’re not likely to be getting a date until you actually figure that out.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com