Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Tel Aviv school teaches singles how to date

Israel 21C and Jerusalem Post, Daily; April 11, 2007

Click here for original

Michal's story of dating frustration is undoubtedly common among singles in Israel.

"I'd often go out on dates and meet guys, hoping to create a relationship. I'm good-looking, smart, fun, communicative, but I'd end up alone," the 44-year old divorcee explained. "Then I noticed something in the system that didn't work. I wasn't doing something right."

The practitioner of Chinese medicine decided that she needed a little education in dating. This led her to Date School, the only psychotherapy-based dating program in Israel - and perhaps the world - which teaches people how to be more effective, self-aware, and informed daters.

Date School was developed by the Sexuality Center in Tel Aviv - a psychosexological clinic that treats couples and individuals with difficulties developing and maintaining healthy sexual relationships. The set of weekly workshops is conducted by center director Dr. Ilan Biran and cognitive-behavioral therapist Vered Merzer-Sapir, and it combines discussions and exercises that implement the center's cognitive-behavioral approach.

The 10-week pilot course opened last month to nine participants, who, throughout the course, are each assigned 'professional daters' - psychotherapists who simulate dates with the participants so that they can determine and study behaviors and actions that may contribute to their dating failure.

"There are many attempts to teach people how to date," Biran told ISRAEL21c from the couch-lined room where the workshops are held. "These efforts fail because... what works for one may not work for another."

Biran explained that the workshops teach that dating is an art, which first and foremost involves identifying the good in oneself and knowing how to market those assets.

"This can only be done with individual treatment. Second, there is no effective learning without practice and feedback, which is achieved best by dating a 'professional dater.'"

Prospective participants consist of professional, educated and intelligent singles who encounter problems in dating due to social anxiety, past experience, or plain bad luck.

Michal, the only female workshop participant, pinpoints her failures in part to her approach: she would always judge men based on superficial qualities, particularly appearance.

"I'm gaining the ability to get to know the soul of a man who can be a person of great quality, but who I wouldn't normally choose because he's bald, has a big nose, or a pot belly," she told ISRAEL21c.

She also discovered that, in part because of her free-flowing personality, she opens up excessively on the first date, often intimidating men with an overflow of information. "I've learned to limit myself on the first meeting, and open myself more at later dates."

Biran and Merzer-Sapir don't think there are any magic formulas or tips they can offer frustrated daters, but they point to common pitfalls and misconceptions.

"Many people, especially those who come to us, have a big dream about what they seek to find in a date," explains Biran. "Mainly, they come with the vision that they will find the love of their life. On the first date, he is already asking if this person will be the mother of his children. Even trying to do that will necessarily harm your behavior and/or your decision making...Concomitant with that is a lot of pressure to find happiness and love without compromising. I think it's a problem that only gets worse - they are in stress when they go out on dates to find their love, and it doesn't work."

Irena Netanel, a psychotherapist and one of the workshop's professional daters, slams another myth: "Many dates fail because they decide right away that it doesn't work because there is no chemistry."

A date, the professionals emphasize, is about getting to know another person - and oneself.

Michal has recently begun dating someone she met online whom she would have normally rejected prior to attending the workshop.

"When you give a chance and don't disqualify a guy who isn't so good looking, but who...is funny, smart, fun to be with and makes you feel good - then, you see something else, the other side of the soul. You can fall in love with a person like that."

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