Singles post flyers looking for love in a pandemic: 'I don't want to wait for a vaccine to date again'

"This lockdown was just bad timing for me, and I know there must be some high-quality women in Manhattan in the same situation, so I created this flyer to find one of them,” says one man. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)
"This lockdown was just bad timing for me, and I know there must be some high-quality women in Manhattan in the same situation, so I created this flyer to find one of them,” says one man. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)

The coronavirus pandemic may have put a damper on dating due to social distancing, some singles in New York City have posted flyers seeking quarantine mates.

One man, who asked Yahoo Life to only refer to him as Brad, posted 25 flyers along a popular running route in Central Park that reads: “Seeking Girlfriend for Coronavirus – and Beyond.” He blurred out his face in a photo, but included his requirements: be healthy, fit and clean.

Brad says he was single when the lockdown began and social distancing has made it near impossible to meet women. “This lockdown was just bad timing for me, and I know there must be some high-quality women in Manhattan in the same situation, so I created this flyer to find one of them,” he says. “I don't want to wait for a vaccine to date again.”

Two New York City singles posted flyers in Central Park looking for quarantine mates. "If somehow I found that special someone this way, that’s just an added bonus.  It would also be an epic ‘how we met’ story,” says one woman. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)
Two New York City singles posted flyers in Central Park looking for quarantine mates. "If somehow I found that special someone this way, that’s just an added bonus. It would also be an epic ‘how we met’ story,” says one woman. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)

Another woman, who asked to be referred to as “Steady Woman,” says a friend told her about Brad’s flyer in Central Park and convinced her to post her own flyers. “With enough persuading, plus a couple of virtual happy hours, ‘Steady Woman’ was born,” she says.

“Steady Woman” says the primary intent of the flyer was to have some fun and to bring a smile to people’s faces during a difficult period. “ But hey, I am single,” she says. “So if somehow I found that special someone this way, that’s just an added bonus. It would also be an epic ‘how we met’ story.”

She too blurred out her photo, used a similar email alias and included a long list of characteristics she is looking for including: being over 6 feet tall, hilarious and “not being named Chad or Brad.”

“What these times have called for in this social isolation, and that's just not a normal thing for humans to do,” says Kory Floyd, author of The Loneliness Cure: Six Strategies for Finding Real Connections in Your Life and a professor of both communication and psychology at the University of Arizona. “So, if you are somebody without a relationship already... the inability to see people is pretty problematic for a species that is as social as we are.”

“Steady Woman” says she’s gotten about 25 emails since she posted 8 flyers in Central Park this weekend, including a man boasting both his credit score and his resting heart rate.

“I have to say I’ve had some really impressive responses,” she says. “Some guys have created their own versions of the flyer. Some have written poems, one of which has evolved to a full-blown poetry battle. I’ve gotten some fantastic dad jokes. Some have just sent very sweet, simple messages. The effort going into these responses is 1000 times better than what I’ve ever seen on the dating apps!”

This poem was written for a woman in response to a flyer she posted in Central Park over the weekend, looking for a quarantine boyfriend. She says she's now engaged in a "full blown poetry battle" with one respondent. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)
This poem was written for a woman in response to a flyer she posted in Central Park over the weekend, looking for a quarantine boyfriend. She says she's now engaged in a "full-blown poetry battle" with one respondent. (Design: Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Lifestyle)

“I think what that highlights is that technology gets us only so far in terms of meeting our needs for connection,” says Floyd. “And so it's heightening our awareness of both the affordances of technologically-mediated contact and also the limitations of it. Also, it leaves us still wanting.”

Brad says he’s received over 100 emails so far and has responded to almost all of them. “The post has gone viral and I have spoken to women from all over the world in the past week,” he says. “It's been interesting and fun, but of course I can only date someone who lives in New York City during this lockdown.”

He acknowledges that being under lockdown alone can get lonely.

“I think many people right now are feeling the awareness that they're doing the best they can to maintain social connection in their lives and an awareness of it not being ideal,” says Floyd. “For some people that probably will evolve into a state of loneliness and for others, it will simply be a reminder that we're going to be happier once this is over. And perhaps a reminder that we don't take our relationships for granted.”

“Steady Woman” identified less with loneliness but did acknowledge that it would be nice to have the right person by her side right now. “Most of the ‘criteria’ on the flyer is meant to represent what a lot of single females are feeling right now, in a tongue in cheek, somewhat superficial way,” she says. “Of course we’d love to have some company during this time, but being quarantined with a person that’s not ‘the one’ also sounds like a nightmare.”

She adds: “And yes, Steady Man and Steady Woman have officially chatted! Unfortunately, sparks weren’t flying.”

Both “Steady Woman” and Brad say they aren’t jumping into a relationship just because they’re single and looking for love during a pandemic. Brad says he’s looking for a monogamous relationship that would last past the lockdown.

And for “Steady Woman,” she says there are a few responses that have caught her eye.

“Next step is a virtual date. Don’t worry there will be no physical meeting until after quarantine is over!”

For the latest coronavirus news and updates, follow along at https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus. According to experts, people over 60 and those who are immunocompromised continue to be the most at risk. If you have questions, please reference the CDC and WHO’s resource guides.

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