NYTimes
IF finding true love were an exact science, we wouldn’t need matchmakers, singles bars or, of course, online dating services.
Like job seekers who take the Myers-Briggs personality test to help steer them to suitable professions, we’d simply take a relationship test, whose results would identify our most compatible types of mates and rule out the frogs. Problem solved.[...]
IF finding true love were an exact science, we wouldn’t need matchmakers, singles bars or, of course, online dating services.
Like job seekers who take the Myers-Briggs personality test to help steer them to suitable professions, we’d simply take a relationship test, whose results would identify our most compatible types of mates and rule out the frogs. Problem solved.[...]
The services are less expensive and more insightful than the services provided by a shadchan. That business which requires no investment, expertise or experience.
ReplyDeleteWhich is why you can expect shadchanim to fight tooth and nail against the 'goyishe' notions (like psychological/emotional testing) that might infringe on their income earning potential.
If all goes well, the shadchanim are the heroes. If things collapse, the individuals are at fault.
What a business!