Reading Lark After Dark would like to welcome author, Lisa Becker, to the Dark Nest today. Lisa is the author of Click: An Online Love Story.
Online Dating Inspired Click: An Online Love Story
By Lisa Becker
I first met my husband while wearing my pajamas. Really! No, we weren't at some kinky
singles party. I was sitting comfortably in my apartment and he was hanging out in his. But, I
will never forget his email introduction via an online dating service, which invited me to check
out his profile. It was sweet, endearing and intriguing enough for me to log on to learn more
about him. After a week of emails, followed by a week of phone calls, we met for our first
date - a traditional dinner and movie outing. Even before I opened the door to greet him, I
knew he was "the one." Considering he lived 30 miles away, I'm not certain our paths would
have typically crossed. But after 11 years together - including 9 years of marriage (which in Los
Angeles is apparently no small feat!) and two beautiful daughters, I have no doubt he is my soul
mate.
After my now-husband and I met online, I was recalling some of the hilarious experiences that
I had during the whole online dating experience. How could I forget the guy who started every
story (no joke!) with “My buddies and I were out drinking one night.” I decided to capture
some of them in writing and, from there and based loosely on my own experiences, my novel
Click: An Online Love Story emerged. The entire story is told in emails between our heroine,
Renee Greene, her three best friends and the gentlemen suitors she meets online. The format
felt like a modern way to tell the story that fit the topic, and allowed readers to develop an
intimate relationship with the characters.
Clearly, I’m a big fan of online dating and find it to be a useful tool for young professionals who
are busy working and finding it difficult to make the right connection at the gym, bar, coffee
shop or grocery aisle. I say, people today are “married” to their cell phones and laptops, so why
not use that technology to really get married, right?
While Click doesn’t end with a wedding (sorry for the spoiler!), during Renee’s road to
happiness, we find many advantages to online dating. My five favorite are:
•
On Your Own Terms – Online dating provides a relaxed, anytime and on your own terms
experience. Share as little or as much information as you want. Avoid people you are
not interested in. Communicate at your convenience. But, don’t send a message at
2:30 am. Nothing smacks more of desperation than an email from someone trolling the
Internet for a date in the wee hours of the morning.
•
Multi-Tasking Enabled – Flirt while filing your taxes. Chat and trim your nails. Meet
a mate while making breakfast. It’s a well-known fact that women are great multi-
taskers. Take full advantage of that skill. As Shelley, the over-sexed character in Click
says to the about-to-try-online-dating Renee, “A whole host of hot and horny single men
that I can review, chat with, judge and mock – all while sitting in my office looking very
busy. Maybe I should give it a try myself.”
•
Trade the “Meat Market” for the “Meet Market” – Now you can avoid the “meat
market” scene of bars and clubs and instead enjoy a “meet market” – an international
bazaar (but let’s hope not too bizarre) of prospective mates. The Internet allows you
to make an online introduction to thousands if not millions of people around the world.
So, if you want to meet someone in Katmandu, well then, can do!
•
Save Time, Money and Energy – Let’s face it. Dating isn’t cheap. It takes time, money
and, likely your most valuable and scarce resource, energy. With the “try before you
buy” environment of online dating, you don’t have to meet for a drink, grab a coffee
or sit through a long dinner only to discover there’s no physical attraction, you have
nothing in common, conversation is lacking, etc.
•
Rejection Made Easy – In Click, Renee gets an email from someone halfway across the
world looking to meet someone willing to move for him. After sending a polite and
diplomatic “thanks but no thanks” email message, she proclaims to her friend, “It’s so
much easier to reject someone over that Internet than in real life. Score one for online
dating!” While rejection is easier for both parties when done online, it’s important to
remember that people still have feelings.
As I've said many times before, if it happened for me, there's hope for you. So log on and take
a chance. To purchase Click, please click here. To follow updates on Click and share your
stories about online dating, visit the Click Facebook fan page.
Thanks so much for your support of Click. I hope some of your followers will check it out and find it to be a fun and breezy read. Happy summer!
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