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You’ve met a great guy on Grindr, but you just don’t know if you should invest in the relationship. You’re not hesitant about him; you’re hesitant because you met on a sex app. You’re not alone! Do Grindr relationships really have a chance? It’s a great question and certainly one that’s worth asking.
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Grindr (or other sex apps, like Scruff, Jack’d, Growlr) are a really, really common way to meet other gay men. Maybe you’re involved in the Chicago gay bar scene or maybe you haven’t been seen in Boystown, West Lakeview, or Andersonville ever.
Maybe you’re a member of Equality Illinois or maybe your not even certain that you’re gay. Do you spend your time at Center on Halsted galas or the Art Institute of Chicago. It doesn’t matter. Sex apps are widely used and, if you’re reading this, you’ve probably used them.
Let’s consider that it’s 2019 and a huge number of relationships start from online connections. We’re collectively used to creating first contacts with social media and electronic forms.
But, Grindr is different because it’s designed to solicit sex, often anonymously, and often without “strings.” That doesn’t mean that Grindr relationships are impossible – Grindr relationships are certainly possible – but they can face unique difficulties.
First, the mere reality that you’ve met on a platform designed to solicit “no strings attached” sex suggests that you have an implicit contract with the person you met that you will not pursue “strings” (e.g. attachments). Nonetheless, sometimes the hookup creates a bond. This comes because chatting might draw you to the person’s personality.
Further, your brain releases oxytocin (the “love chemical”) in response to the the physical contact during sex, which primes you to perceive connection with your mate. When people hookup, they also allow themselves to be physically vulnerable with a stranger. This vulnerability works to establish a bond.
It’s not surprising that the pursuit of “no strings fun” often leads to bonds. The takeaway is that, when sexual partners decide to pursue partnership, they are changing the implicit, “no strings” contract. This will likely require strong communication to ensure both partners are on board.
Second, Grindr relationships can be difficult because the sexualized app environment encourages users to evaluate other’s worth based heavily on sexual factors (sexual performance, body form, etc.). In less sexualized settings, one might place more focus on the other’s personality or intellect.
The result is a potential narrow evaluation of partners (e.g., only on the quality of the sexual relationship) and minimizing important relationship considerations such as communication skills, similarity of interests, fit with existing lifestyle.
Third, it can be hard to stop using Grindr. The brain’s natural response to Grindr is similar to the response to using heroin or cocaine (activation of the ventral tegmental area and subsequent dopamine release). Further, the way we learn that Grindr use is pleasurable (a specific type of learning called variable reinforcement) is the difficult to “unlearn.”
The result – Grindr use results in a powerful sense of reward and that makes it really hard to stop using, even when you want to. Grindr relationships that choose to be monogamous have to overcome the biological draw to continue using Grindr.
Similarly, external validation feels great and Grindr can be an environment where people seek this validation. For Grindr relationships that choose monogamy, partners have to be willing and able to give up this validation. For those that rely on a compliment from others to pick them up when they feel low, this can be especially difficult.
Fourth, Grindr use can impact sexual functioning and erectile dysfunction which introduces a unique challenge to a new relationship. Novelty at a click can create addictions and erectile dysfunction. If you’re doubtful of this, check out this reading list.
What neuroscience tells us is that the inclusion of “artificial sex” (sexual stimulation that isn’t with another human being) increases the likelihood for erectile dysfunction because of the Coolidge Effect – an evolutionary adaptation in men that results in increased sexual arousal with the introduction of new mates.
Consider the stimulation of Grindr and porn – both of which provide a type of sexual stimulation from multiple partners whether or not “real sex” happens. It’s the norm to be engaged in multiple conversations, exchanging multiple sets of pictures, and having multiple tabs open. The nature of the sexual stimulation (even prior to an actual physical contact) is constantly introducing new “partners.”
Consider that our brains have reward systems to motivate our actions (this is why we have interests in procreation, eating, prosocial behavior, etc). When stimulated, our brains release neurochemicals (primarily dopamine) to encourage us to act and, if possible, act repeatedly (i.e., binge).
However, when our natural reward systems are repeatedly activated (through “artificial sex” with many mates) our brains turn on a molecular switch (known as Delta-FosB). The resulting build up of Delta-FosB promotes a cycle of binging and craving as well as brain changes.
Arguably the most notable brain change is that our response to pleasure is numbed. Everyday pleasures are no longer satisfying. So, the brain of a gay man who continually looks at Grindr will send weaker and weaker signals to his penis.
The brain is plastic and will revert to being aroused by fewer sexual signals, but this may take some time without Grindr or porn. Waiting for the brain to revert to its original state and sexual functioning to improve can be a burden for new, Grindr relationships.
So, when that casual sexual encounter ignites greater attraction and attachment, what do you do? Consider these 5 tips:
Grindr relationships are certainly possible. They face unique challenges, but none that can’t be overcome. After all, there is a reason Grindr added “relationship” to the “looking for” section of users profiles.
CHICAGO (CBS) — It’s just one carjacking after the next. There were two more on the same block in Edgewater late Thursday night, and then another in Irving Park early Friday morning.
CBS 2’s Mugo Odigwe spoke with one of the latest victims.
READ MORE: 4 Dead, 1 Injured In Illinois Route 53 CrashEdwin Inguanzo said he was parked close to his workplace when he was carjacked on the 4300 block of West Cornelia Avenue around 4:50 a.m.
“I was here just waiting for my friend to start working, and a car parked behind me,” he said.
Inguanzo was sitting in his parked Mazda near work, waiting for a friend so they could walk in together. He got out of his Mazda when his friend approached, but that’s also when people in the car parked behind him walked out and cornered him and his friend.
“They pulled guns out and they stole my wallet, his wallet, and the car,” Inguanzo said.
Inguanzo said there were multiple people involved; the two armed guys who approached him and his friend, another guy behind the wheel of the car that had parked behind him, and then he noticed others.
“There was a lady inside the car and one kid, like a 4-year-old,” he said.
Police said, hours before that, around 11:30 p.m. Thursday in Edgewater near Broadway and Thorndale, a 56-year-old man and his 17-year-old son were sitting in a blue Volvo when four guys in a black Honda pulled up, and two of them got out pointing guns, and telling the father and son to get out of their car.
The carjackers took off in the Volvo, but just moments later, they noticed a woman in a BMW at a stop sign on the same block. They got out of the Volvo they had just stolen, pointed a gun at the woman, and then took off in her BMW, along with the Honda they first arrived in.
READ MORE:They left the Volvo behind.
Police eventually found the BMW several miles away, ditched in an alley near 18th and Avers in Lawndale.
None of the victims were hurt, but it’s still a terrifying experience for victims like Inguanzo.
“Oh, I was scared. I’m a little scared,” he said. “People should be careful.”
Police said the suspects in this Edgewater carjackings were likely teenagers.
Top brass have said that seems to be the case in many cases during the surge in carjackings across Chicago in the past several months.
Carjackings in Chicago more than doubled last year, rising from about 600 in 2019 to more than 1,400 in 2020.
So far this year, that trend has only gotten worse, with more than 150 carjackings across the city so far, or more than five per day.
MORE NEWS: Man Arrested After Woman, Two Young Girls Stabbed In Bronzeville ApartmentAlso From CBS Chicago: