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  • Dating brings us close to a particular strand of philosophy that, the rest of the time,

  • might not seem particularly relevant to our lives: existentialism. One of the movement’s

  • major proponentsJean-Paul Sartredeveloped a set of ideas that help explain, and give

  • dignity to, the anxiety, excitement and at points vertigo we may experience as we go

  • through the dating ritual. A key concept of Existentialism is expressed in Sartre’s

  • somewhat obscure but useful phrase: “Being precedes essence”. What Sartre meant by

  • beingare the bits of our life that we are free to choose for ourselves: how we

  • live, what job we do, how we conceive of what happens to us. And byessence’, he refers

  • to things that lie outside our command: our biological nature, the flow of history, the

  • position of the starsWhat Sartre wished to point out to us, in a spirit of wanting

  • to liberate us from certain rigidities of mind, is thatbeingshould ultimately

  • be thought of as more important thanessence’. However much we sometimes like to tell ourselves

  • that things have to be the way they are, there are in fact many radically different possible

  • versions of ourselves available to us; we can choose to an extraordinary extent how

  • things might be for us. But much of the time, Sartre felt, we don’t give this open-ended

  • aspect of our identities enough space in our minds. We assert that the way we live is inevitable

  • and fixed, and imply that we have no agency over our stories. But Sartre argues that this

  • is an illusion: the kind of person we are right now developed as a result of all sorts

  • of small and large decisions: it could have been very different, and may be different

  • again in the future according to the way we exercise of our will upon the raw material

  • of life. Surprisingly enough, it is dating that can bring home some of the richness of

  • this dramatic existential insight. It is in our dating years that we feel, perhaps more

  • than at any point before or since, how much our future is undefined, how little is preordained,

  • how many options there really are; how frighteningly free and fluid things can be. With each date

  • were sketchingeven if very lightly – a possible future. If our date on Wednesday

  • goes well, we could conceivably be looking at (for instance) a life in which we have

  • relatives in the highlands of Scotland, in which a lot of the people we spend time with

  • are in the technology sector and in which well probably move country several times;

  • we might in time also have a child called Hamish or Flora. Alternatively, if our date

  • on Friday evening goes very well, we could be edging towards a life in which well

  • be spending a lot of time in Amsterdam; well get drawn into the theatre world; if we have

  • a child they might be called Maartje or Rem and theyll have a former cycling champion

  • as a grandfather and an Indonesian grandmother.

  • Once we make our choice, things may well start to seem as if they always had to be, that

  • there was some essence that we were always moving towards, that we had to end up with

  • little Maartje or sweet Flora crawling on the carpet towards us. But in the dating period,

  • we are closer to a grander and more visceral truth: that there is no single script. Sartre’s

  • second big point is that properly recognising our freedom can lead us to a state of huge

  • but inevitable and in a way salutary anxiety. Conscious of our real liberty, we take on

  • board that we have to make decisions and yet, at the same time, that we will never have

  • the correct and full information upon which to base them with the sort of perfect wisdom

  • and foresight we might desire. We are steering largely blind, forced to make choices that

  • ideally we’d leave to the Gods but that in a secular world, we have no option but

  • to take on for ourselves. As we date, we may wonder: who should we settle for? For how

  • long do we keep going? How can we tell whether this one or that one is right? Sartre’s

  • answer is that we can never properly know but that we are never more properly alive

  • and authentic than when we are turning over such enquiries: the fluidity of our destinies

  • is then palpable, with all the strangeness and wonder this implies. Too often, the sense

  • of fluidity is lost. We assume that what is had to be and that we have no further choices

  • left open to us. The dating years defy such views. No wonder if they feel like high stakes.

  • Sartre wished to embolden us for the sort of challenges they present to us. Dating pushes

  • aside the veil of our normal complacency and reveals the sublime, terrifying and, at the

  • same time, thrilling uncertainty of existence. We should, with a host of existential challenges

  • before us, at the very least, not be too bored.

  • To learn more about love try our set of cards that help answer that essensial question; "Who Should I Be With?"

Dating brings us close to a particular strand of philosophy that, the rest of the time,

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