'Slow Burn' Is Trending On Dating Profiles Right Now — But It Might Not Mean What You Think
It's a bit different from the more obvious intentions that were popular five years ago, like 'looking for a partner in crime' or a 'friends with benefits, only' situation. In some ways, the 'slow burn' feels like a mashup of the two: someone looking for a real relationship — albeit slow-going — that will most likely involve the benefits of a relationship, like sex, eventually (or sooner rather than later).
That was my experience earlier this year with a guy I met on Bumble. He was a military doctor who lived in a different city. He was busy. A lot. We texted frequently, but meetups were few and far between. I figured it was a slow burn — we were taking our time getting to know each other. We weren't rushing; we were pacing.
According to Laurel House, relationship expert and dating coach at eharmony, a slow burn romance is one that takes time to grow. 'Initially, daters might say they don't feel chemistry but might sense a potential for a connection or even a 'just friends' vibe. That is all OK, as long as they don't discard the potential after one date,' she explains.
As the connection grows, House said, the slow burn feelings 'are simultaneously beginning to root into the hearts and minds of the new budding couple (or even just new friends). It's actually a good thing chemistry isn't initially felt within a slow burn build, because chemistry — like fireworks — hits hard and fades fast. Slow burn, on the other hand, creates the environment for true intimacy: emotional intimacy.' That intimacy is built through 'confidently vulnerable conversation' where both people open up emotionally.
'When you open up and have those hard conversations, in which you showcase your vulnerability and share your stories, you are opening your heart,' she said. 'When the other person opens up and shares as well, you are two people with open hearts and the possibility of true connection.'
It's what happened for Railey Molinario who met her husband Erik online during the pandemic on a dating site.
'Because of lockdown, we couldn't meet up right away, so we just talked on the phone every day for three months straight,' she said. 'No pressure, no rushing. Just long conversations about life, our pasts, our goals, and what we really wanted in a relationship. By the time we finally met in person, it felt natural, like we already knew each other. There were no games or guesswork. We built trust before anything physical ever happened.'
Why More People Are Feeling The 'Burn'
Relationship coach Whitney Kobrinbelieves slow burn romances are increasingly popular because they counteract the burnout from love-bombing and app culture.
'When I met my current fiancé, it took us three months to go on our first three dates. A week would go by without a text. But I didn't panic,' she said. 'I was in 'trust the universe' mode and didn't try to force it or exit prematurely. I'm so glad our initial stage was a slow burn, as it gave us both time to date other people, gain clarity, and make rational (not hormonal) decisions that have led us to a happy, healthy, lasting relationship, going on seven years!'
For Kobrin, who once had an anxious attachment style, going slow became a healing, strategic move when it came to finding the right match. 'If you have a pattern of jumping all in and flaming out quickly, it's strategic and intelligent to take your time getting to know someone over multiple dates and conversations.'
The Benefits Of Slowing Down
Kobrin outlines three major benefits to slow burn dating:
It allows time to see someone's true character beyond their highlight reel.
It encourages being present and enjoying small moments instead of rushing into future fantasies.
It prevents physical intimacy from clouding your judgment too early.
'When you take your time getting to know someone, letting it burn slowly and naturally, your commitment is even stronger,' she said.
House adds that slow burn dating can actually produce more enduring love. 'Slow burn romance can be created from dating apps, exes reconnecting, or friends turning into lovers. Regardless of how it starts, slow burn is the best way to activate and root a deeply enduring love,' she said.
As Molinario puts it: 'We realized how rare that kind of connection was, and we both wanted to protect it. It taught me that slowing down actually speeds up clarity. We knew we had something real before the first date.'
When You See 'Slow Burn' In Someone's Profile...
Even in the fast-paced world of dating apps, House insists slow burn is achievable ― if not highly desirable.
'Slow burn is certainly coming on the heels of love-bombing and shoppable dating. These fast-fading dating trends burned themselves out, and daters are no longer interested in dating games,' she shares. 'Daters are looking for something real and enduring — they want to truly feel — and they want to rise into love (not fall into it).'
House's advice: Start with six to eight substantive messages on the app, where you ask real questions and share a few interesting details and stories about yourself. Once you get to know each other well enough, she then recommends scheduling a phone date when you are both able to physically and emotionally focus on each other and talk for 30-60 minutes.
'This process helps prequalify and disqualify matches,' she said. 'By the time you meet in person, you know if it's worth your time.'
House encourages daters to go on three dates (even if you're not feeling 'it' right away) and to use the 3H strategy: head, then heart, then hormones. That means starting with curiosity and conversation, then building emotional and physical intimacy over time.
'By dating head-first, you're allowing curiosity to be activated, creating opportunities for connective conversations — and within these conversations, the slow burn begins,' House said. 'You are now interested to learn more, so you go on a second date.'
On the second date, she recommends connecting on numerous levels to help the slow burn continue — such as breaking the touch barrier to physically connect through an extended hug or maybe even a kiss. By the third date, she said you should start to feel 'something that continues to make you want more... and if you don't by then, I recommend you move on.'
'Slow Burns' Come With Red Flags, Too
But not every slow-moving romance is a slow burn. Sometimes it can mask emotional unavailability. Like in my case, my slow burn went on for six months until it flamed out after physical intimacy.
'Some people use 'slow burn' as a scapegoat to string someone along when they're not truly interested,' House said. 'Others genuinely take longer to open up, but it's important to recognize when someone is avoidant or not ready for connection,' she adds.
The difference? Progress. 'Every date and conversation should be building. If it stalls with no growth, it may be time to move on.' That was my biggest indicator that what I was experiencing was in fact, not, a slow burn. There were more stops than starts; our conversations started to dwindle. There were no talks of future meetups. I wondered if it was because he was really taking things slow, or if there was something else amiss.
Which is why if you or the other person is slowing the pace, it's key to communicate that you want to take things slow, House adds, as well as to ask questions, so there's no confusion about your intentions.
'It's important to let your match know you are interested in them and that you are interested in slowly learning about each other,' she said. 'It's too easy to quickly make assumptions and jump to your own conclusions when you don't have enough information. A lack of information activates the other person's imagination to fill in the blanks. They might assume you are not interested, or that you only want a pen pal, if you aren't immediately going on a date. Let them know you would love to get to know them a little bit more on the app before taking the next step of having a phone date and then an in-person date.'
So...Does It Actually Work?
Yes, all three experts agree that this does work — but it works best when both people are aligned in what they want.
'When you take your time getting to know someone, letting it burn slowly and naturally, your commitment is even stronger,' Kobrin said.
For Molinario, going slow led to a thriving marriage. 'Taking it slow gave [me and my partner] a solid foundation. We built our connection on honesty and emotional safety from the beginning. That made everything else easier later on.'
Related...
I'm A 39-Year-Old Divorced Woman, And There's 1 Infuriating Phrase I Keep Seeing On Dating Apps
I Ditched The Apps To Go Speed Dating — And Scored In the Most Unexpected Way
Every Man On Dating Apps Is Suddenly Adding These 2 Words To Their Profile — And It Might Not Be A Good Thing
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Yahoo
25-07-2025
- Yahoo
'Slow Burn' Is Trending On Dating Profiles Right Now — But It Might Not Mean What You Think
There's a new phenomenon hitting dating apps in recent months: People are now explicitly looking for a 'slow burn.' It's a bit different from the more obvious intentions that were popular five years ago, like 'looking for a partner in crime' or a 'friends with benefits, only' situation. In some ways, the 'slow burn' feels like a mashup of the two: someone looking for a real relationship — albeit slow-going — that will most likely involve the benefits of a relationship, like sex, eventually (or sooner rather than later). That was my experience earlier this year with a guy I met on Bumble. He was a military doctor who lived in a different city. He was busy. A lot. We texted frequently, but meetups were few and far between. I figured it was a slow burn — we were taking our time getting to know each other. We weren't rushing; we were pacing. According to Laurel House, relationship expert and dating coach at eharmony, a slow burn romance is one that takes time to grow. 'Initially, daters might say they don't feel chemistry but might sense a potential for a connection or even a 'just friends' vibe. That is all OK, as long as they don't discard the potential after one date,' she explains. As the connection grows, House said, the slow burn feelings 'are simultaneously beginning to root into the hearts and minds of the new budding couple (or even just new friends). It's actually a good thing chemistry isn't initially felt within a slow burn build, because chemistry — like fireworks — hits hard and fades fast. Slow burn, on the other hand, creates the environment for true intimacy: emotional intimacy.' That intimacy is built through 'confidently vulnerable conversation' where both people open up emotionally. 'When you open up and have those hard conversations, in which you showcase your vulnerability and share your stories, you are opening your heart,' she said. 'When the other person opens up and shares as well, you are two people with open hearts and the possibility of true connection.' It's what happened for Railey Molinario who met her husband Erik online during the pandemic on a dating site. 'Because of lockdown, we couldn't meet up right away, so we just talked on the phone every day for three months straight,' she said. 'No pressure, no rushing. Just long conversations about life, our pasts, our goals, and what we really wanted in a relationship. By the time we finally met in person, it felt natural, like we already knew each other. There were no games or guesswork. We built trust before anything physical ever happened.' Why More People Are Feeling The 'Burn' Relationship coach Whitney Kobrinbelieves slow burn romances are increasingly popular because they counteract the burnout from love-bombing and app culture. 'When I met my current fiancé, it took us three months to go on our first three dates. A week would go by without a text. But I didn't panic,' she said. 'I was in 'trust the universe' mode and didn't try to force it or exit prematurely. I'm so glad our initial stage was a slow burn, as it gave us both time to date other people, gain clarity, and make rational (not hormonal) decisions that have led us to a happy, healthy, lasting relationship, going on seven years!' For Kobrin, who once had an anxious attachment style, going slow became a healing, strategic move when it came to finding the right match. 'If you have a pattern of jumping all in and flaming out quickly, it's strategic and intelligent to take your time getting to know someone over multiple dates and conversations.' The Benefits Of Slowing Down Kobrin outlines three major benefits to slow burn dating: It allows time to see someone's true character beyond their highlight reel. It encourages being present and enjoying small moments instead of rushing into future fantasies. It prevents physical intimacy from clouding your judgment too early. 'When you take your time getting to know someone, letting it burn slowly and naturally, your commitment is even stronger,' she said. House adds that slow burn dating can actually produce more enduring love. 'Slow burn romance can be created from dating apps, exes reconnecting, or friends turning into lovers. Regardless of how it starts, slow burn is the best way to activate and root a deeply enduring love,' she said. As Molinario puts it: 'We realized how rare that kind of connection was, and we both wanted to protect it. It taught me that slowing down actually speeds up clarity. We knew we had something real before the first date.' When You See 'Slow Burn' In Someone's Profile... Even in the fast-paced world of dating apps, House insists slow burn is achievable ― if not highly desirable. 'Slow burn is certainly coming on the heels of love-bombing and shoppable dating. These fast-fading dating trends burned themselves out, and daters are no longer interested in dating games,' she shares. 'Daters are looking for something real and enduring — they want to truly feel — and they want to rise into love (not fall into it).' House's advice: Start with six to eight substantive messages on the app, where you ask real questions and share a few interesting details and stories about yourself. Once you get to know each other well enough, she then recommends scheduling a phone date when you are both able to physically and emotionally focus on each other and talk for 30-60 minutes. 'This process helps prequalify and disqualify matches,' she said. 'By the time you meet in person, you know if it's worth your time.' House encourages daters to go on three dates (even if you're not feeling 'it' right away) and to use the 3H strategy: head, then heart, then hormones. That means starting with curiosity and conversation, then building emotional and physical intimacy over time. 'By dating head-first, you're allowing curiosity to be activated, creating opportunities for connective conversations — and within these conversations, the slow burn begins,' House said. 'You are now interested to learn more, so you go on a second date.' On the second date, she recommends connecting on numerous levels to help the slow burn continue — such as breaking the touch barrier to physically connect through an extended hug or maybe even a kiss. By the third date, she said you should start to feel 'something that continues to make you want more... and if you don't by then, I recommend you move on.' 'Slow Burns' Come With Red Flags, Too But not every slow-moving romance is a slow burn. Sometimes it can mask emotional unavailability. Like in my case, my slow burn went on for six months until it flamed out after physical intimacy. 'Some people use 'slow burn' as a scapegoat to string someone along when they're not truly interested,' House said. 'Others genuinely take longer to open up, but it's important to recognize when someone is avoidant or not ready for connection,' she adds. The difference? Progress. 'Every date and conversation should be building. If it stalls with no growth, it may be time to move on.' That was my biggest indicator that what I was experiencing was in fact, not, a slow burn. There were more stops than starts; our conversations started to dwindle. There were no talks of future meetups. I wondered if it was because he was really taking things slow, or if there was something else amiss. Which is why if you or the other person is slowing the pace, it's key to communicate that you want to take things slow, House adds, as well as to ask questions, so there's no confusion about your intentions. 'It's important to let your match know you are interested in them and that you are interested in slowly learning about each other,' she said. 'It's too easy to quickly make assumptions and jump to your own conclusions when you don't have enough information. A lack of information activates the other person's imagination to fill in the blanks. They might assume you are not interested, or that you only want a pen pal, if you aren't immediately going on a date. Let them know you would love to get to know them a little bit more on the app before taking the next step of having a phone date and then an in-person date.' It Actually Work? Yes, all three experts agree that this does work — but it works best when both people are aligned in what they want. 'When you take your time getting to know someone, letting it burn slowly and naturally, your commitment is even stronger,' Kobrin said. For Molinario, going slow led to a thriving marriage. 'Taking it slow gave [me and my partner] a solid foundation. We built our connection on honesty and emotional safety from the beginning. That made everything else easier later on.' Related... I'm A 39-Year-Old Divorced Woman, And There's 1 Infuriating Phrase I Keep Seeing On Dating Apps I Ditched The Apps To Go Speed Dating — And Scored In the Most Unexpected Way Every Man On Dating Apps Is Suddenly Adding These 2 Words To Their Profile — And It Might Not Be A Good Thing Solve the daily Crossword


Cosmopolitan
25-07-2025
- Cosmopolitan
'Are your dating apps encouraging sexual racism? I went up against the algorithm to find out'
When my long-term relationship came to an end last year, I was morbidly curious to see what dating apps were like. I knew things weren't good out there — I'd been reassured that I'd effectively got the last chopper out of 'Nam by getting into a relationship before dating apps really went to the dogs — but a small part of me wondered: how bad can it really be? Very bad, it turns out. I received vanishingly few matches after setting up a new Hinge profile — hardly any, in fact. Suspicious, I decided to try something I'd seen other women of colour do online: I changed my own ethnicity from 'other' (I'm half South Asian, half white) to 'white'. Almost instantly, I began to see — and receive likes from — people who seemed better matches for me (by which I mean: people who had at least some pictures with friends, people who didn't make misogynistic jokes on their profiles, etc). It was hard not to wonder: was Hinge hiding these profiles from me before? I'd heard rumblings that dating apps' algorithms could be racist, but with so much mystery surrounding how they actually work, could that be the case? Or was something else at play? How exactly do the algorithms choose whose profiles you are shown? Other women of colour have had similar experiences. Natasha, 22, also believes that her experience of using Hinge has been impacted by her ethnicity. 'I've found that my white friends find it a lot easier to get matches and go on dates [through Hinge],' she says. She adds that she rarely matches with people who aren't desi like her – something I also noticed during my brief stint on Hinge. 'I haven't set my preferences to show my profiles from a certain race, but I definitely do get more matches with desi people,' Natasha continues. 'Even the majority of the 'most compatible' profiles I see are desi.' Like me, Natasha has a sneaking suspicion that Hinge's algorithm tries to match you with people who are the same race as you. 'These algorithms make it harder for people to find partners, especially if what you're looking for is different to how you appear on the app,' she says, making the point that 'Hinge already lets you filter by race and religion if it's a non-negotiable for you.' What's going on here? It's difficult to tell, given that dating apps are often maddeningly opaque about how their algorithms work. 'Hinge is built on creating love and meaningful connections for everyone [...] We show you who you are most likely to match with based on predicting mutual compatibility,' a Hinge spokesperson tells Cosmopolitan UK, adding that they try to match users who meet each other's preferences on 'age range, distance, family plans, vices, and more'. Similarly, a Bumble spokesperson stresses that their algorithm 'does not use a member's race or ethnicity to match them with other members', and instead uses 'a range of factors, including interests and characteristics a member has shared with Bumble, and the way they interact with the app, and the profiles that are shown to them'. So far, so vague. Still, it is possible to make reasonable assumptions about the nitty-gritty of how dating apps operate. Dr Luke Brunning, a lecturer in applied ethics at the University of Leeds and co-director of the university's Centre for Love, Sex, and Relationships, points to work by Dr Apryl Williams, author of Not My Type: Automating Sexual Racism in Online Dating, which suggests that algorithms often attempt to match similar profiles together. 'There is some evidence from studying patent applications of dating app companies [including Match Group, which owns Tinder and Hinge] that their algorithms might [automatically adjust match selection] on racial grounds,' he says. Of course, the ways in which dating apps could be exacerbating racism and colourism in the dating pool has been a longstanding problem. But it's an issue that's only growing more urgent, as online dating apps are continuing to monopolise the business of finding love in unprecedented ways. According to researchers at Stanford University, 61% of all couples now meet online — a sizeable leap from 33% in 2015. It's a huge cause for concern if more and more people are finding love via an algorithm that could be racially biased; some have even suggested that it's time for governments to scrutinise dating app algorithms more closely, given how much they can shape the future of our societies. Dr Natasha McKeever, also a lecturer in applied ethics at the University of Leeds and co-director of the university's Centre for Love, Sex, and Relationships alongside Brunning, says that if apps 'make us even more likely to date people who are similar to us in race, class, social background, and so on, then this could increase social divisions'. There's evidence this is already happening, with some research suggesting that dating apps could be contributing to inequality by encouraging homophily (that is, the tendency of individuals to be attracted to people who are similar to themselves). Further research from Cornell has found that dating app algorithms can 'reinforce racial divisions and biases'. Moreover, it's unlikely the cold logic of algorithms like these is really conducive to lasting, mutual love (2024 research found that couples who meet on dating apps have less stable marriages). It's also been widely reported that dating apps' popularity has nosedived in recent years, with millions of users deleting their apps; and it's likely women of colour, thwarted in their attempts to find romantic partners, make up a sizeable proportion of those dipping out of online dating for good (personally, I permanently deleted my apps on account of how pessimistic they made me feel about my romantic prospects). Brunning believes that greater transparency surrounding how their algorithms work could help quell the 'doubt and cynicism' which permeates people's perception of dating apps. Granted, there are some setbacks to offering transparency. Brunning points out that finding out that a dating app's algorithm ranks you as unattractive or undesirable could result in a 'range of negative mental health implications'. It's a valid point — I worry about how self-professed incels would react to having access to this kind of information. Brunning also highlights that increased transparency could 'make it easier for people to explicitly try to 'game' the system'. Still, he stresses that 'the reasons in favour of transparency outweigh the negatives'. Breeze, the dating app du jour (if you're unfamiliar, users on Breeze are banned from chatting to each other ahead of their first date, which the app organises for you), is one platform trying to be open about the shortcomings of their algorithm. 'Our algorithm might be portraying discriminatory behaviour,' the app's matchmaking researcher Thomas Crul candidly told the audience at a tech conference in Amsterdam in 2024. Worse still: their algorithm, Crul suggested, could even be exacerbating existing biases. 'Users of dating apps in Europe are biased towards profiles of 'European ethnicity', and we have evidence that we predominantly have users of European ethnicity on Breeze,' Crul explains to Cosmopolitan UK. 'This means that our userbase is strongly biased towards itself, and any user of non-European ethnicity therefore won't be liked very much.' While he admits Breeze is yet to resolve the issue, he stresses that the team are working to fix it using an 'innovative approach'. It's worth acknowledging, of course, that this isn't an issue that begins and ends with algorithms either. As McKeever highlights: 'Research has shown that Black people are much more likely to initiate conversations on dating apps with white people than white people are with Black people, and white people are much more likely than Black people to state a preference for a same race partner.' It's possible that algorithms are trying to push same-race partnerships because, unfortunately, that's what a lot of people want (or think they want, at least). While sexual racism like this isn't something that can be stamped out overnight, dating apps have a unique power to help combat it by ensuring their algorithms don't make the problem worse. 'I think that the least that can be expected of dating apps is to not strengthen existing racial prejudices,' Crul surmises. 'We believe that society at large can benefit if algorithmic discrimination is mitigated in general.' For McKeever, the real tragedy is that algorithms which encourage homophily can result in us '[missing] out on opportunities to meet people that we might have had a great relationship with'. After all, no app or algorithm will never be able to predict or understand logic-defying, head-scrambling chemistry — the kind that can take you completely by surprise. Serena Smith is deputy editor at Dazed and freelance writer for publications including Cosmopolitan UK, Grazia, The Guardian, and more. She writes about society, lifestyle, and culture, with a particular interest in sex and relationships, dating culture, and gender politics. She also extensively covers youth culture and Gen Z trends, and in 2022 she wrote a column for Prospect Magazine on life as a young person in the UK. She's currently a Senior Fellow for the John Schofield Trust. In 2021, she was shortlisted for a Freelance Writing Award in the News and Investigations category and highly commended in the Fashion and Beauty category. You can follow her on X here.
Yahoo
22-07-2025
- Yahoo
SFA suspends 4 coffeeshops in Balestier, Geylang, Pioneer & Toa Payoh on the same day
It's a sad day for coffeeshop goers as SFA announces the suspension of four establishments' licences in Pioneer, Balestier, Toa Payoh and Geylang. These coffeeshops have accumulated 12 demerits in 12 months, leading to fines and a 1-day suspension on 18 Jul. Shi Kou Seafood in Balestier has been fined S$1,300 for an inability to keep toilets 'clean and in good repair'. This persisted over 3 different checks from SFA, and 4 demerits were given each time. According to the SFA, '12 or more demerit points during a 12-month period may have their licence suspended for a period of either one day, two days or three days'. Located in Toa Payoh, Po Si Tan Eating House has also received an S$1,100 fine for a failure to maintain the cleanliness and working conditions of sanitary fittings and toilets. The former was found to be below standard twice during the 12-month period. Sungei Kadut Eating House has been fined S$900 for not having its sanitary fittings and toilets in good condition, as well as allowing an unlicensed hawker to sell food in their establishment. The SFA reminds establishments to engage 'only registered food handlers' and ensure 'upkeep and maintenance of licensed premises'. The final coffeeshop to receive a suspension was 68 Choices, The Food Shop at Geylang Bahru. For the failure to maintain a good working condition for their sanitary fittings and toilets, they have been fined S$1100 on top of the suspension. The dilapidated state of coffeeshop toilets is a common joke among Singaporeans, but the presence of unhygienic restrooms shouldn't be normalised. Of course, I have nothing against visiting these coffeeshops after they've rectified the issues they've come under fire for. As someone who dines out often, I'd prefer having peace of mind when I eat, knowing that everything bought is prepared in a safe and conducive environment. Wouldn't it be great if we could be greeted by a clean, properly furnished washroom after every meal? Il Piccolo Pizzeria: Restaurant-quality Italian cuisine in humble Toa Payoh coffeeshop with gnocchi & pizza from $5.50 The post SFA suspends 4 coffeeshops in Balestier, Geylang, Pioneer & Toa Payoh on the same day appeared first on