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Dallas Matchmaker
 

Are you looking for a meaningful relationship in Dallas? If so, look no further than Master Matchmakers. We've been helping upscale singles find their match in The DFW since 2009, and are now the go-to source for successful singles seeking lasting relationships in The Lone Star State. 

Whether you're located in Westlake, Westover Hills or Highland Park – or even if your search takes you out of town to Amarillo, Lubbock or Midland – we can help identify exceptional matches where chemistry and compatibility come first. Our team of dedicated matchmakers proudly represent Dallas and Fort Worth singles who are serious about finding someone to share their lives with.  

Our goal is to make sure that all our clients get what they want from us: a chance at true love. So whether your ideal partner is right around the corner from where you live now, or slightly farther away on the map (but still within Texas), we'll do everything possible to ensure that person finds his/her way into your life soon enough. Don't let another day slip by without us on your side. Contact us today and be one step closer to meeting “the one”.

To find love in The Lone Star State complete our Get Started form or call us toll free at (800) 734-9230.

 

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Ready to take the first step towards finding your match? Fill out our classified "Get Started" form now! A representative will be in touch to hear all about your criteria and show you what our supreme matching services can do for you. So, what are you waiting for? Your new beginning is one click away.

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Speak with a coordinator to determine the right level of service for you. Each experience is customized to suit a client's needs and budget. Prices will be discussed on the call. To qualify for matchmaking you must prove your identity, verify your age and photos and pass a background check.

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To assist our clients in finding, forming and maintaining the ideal relationship we offer professional dating and relationship coaching as a complement to or substitute for matchmaking. You will meet your coach face-to-face to identify patterns, break habits, learn best practices and plan ahead.

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We present your photos and profile to prospective matches and vice versa. We do our best to advocate for you and create interest. If you both accept the match we exchange numbers and expect you to get acquainted before you meet. Your feedback continuously improves the process.

Breaking Up Isn't Hard to Do

Saturday, December 26, 2015


The N.Y. Times was kind enough to report today on a new niche in the online dating industry, digital breakups. Well, it's official people, the hookup culture has come full circle. Considering today is the day couples are least likely to break up (according to Facebook) I thought I'd opine for a bit on the subject of social media, dating, relationships and break ups.

Mobile matchmaking is a global phenomenon no longer reserved just for romance. Algorithms for determining compatibility are being used everywhere from gaming and gambling to transportation and genealogy, movies, music and more. Think World of Warcraft, DraftKings, Uber, 23andme, Netflix, and Pandora just to name a few.

Now that you can instantly meet a potential paramour anywhere, anytime, within walking distance, and without any verbal conversation or known associations whatsoever, romantic relationships have become as ephemeral and disposable as Snapchats. 

Thanks to this ease at which singles can now meet other singles, men and women simply don't invest as much emotional equity into their relationships as they once did. However, this hasn't stopped people from publicly displaying play-by-play updates of their love lives...almost always to a fault. 

Studies have shown that what, when, where and how you publicly display affection online greatly impacts people's perceptions of you, and oddly, it is almost always negative. Posting too little, not posting at all, or posting things that may contradict what you've said IRL (in real life) will make people think less of you and your relationship. Posting too often, incessantly or what may seem particularly uninteresting or banal to others will also make people think less of you and your relationship. In a post on the blog of Psychology Today, Gwendolyn Seidman, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychology at Albright College, who studies relationships and cyberpsychology said of one recent study, "Those with low self-esteem were more likely to post updates about their romantic partner and to use Facebook as a means of self-expression (rather than validation)."

So where is the happy medium? It's hard to say. To each his own. However, overtures and accolades should be as infrequent as anniversaries. A good rule of thumb is to limit these to special occasions; holidays, birthdays, anniversaries and travels. Sweet nothings and other generally uninteresting remarks couples make to each other should not be posted publicly. Journaling the progress of your relationship with photos and commemorations is socially acceptable and updates or posts that involve more than just the two of you is generally considered appropriate as well. The ultimate litmus test is this, "are there at least three other people I'm friends with who will truly give a damn about what I'm about to post?" Using the number of likes or comments on your post is often not the best barometer. If you have 1,000 friends and less than 10, (or 1%) like/comment/share the post, it wasn't update worthy. And what happens when you breakup? I've seen many people look the fool when their seemingly perfect relationship suddenly stops dead in its tracks and everyone who has digested their posts by either visiting their page or merely opening their own news feed are left questioning this person's judgement. 

For years I've been telling my clients that your Facebook Wall is no different than the wall of your home. If you can imagine someone came into your home and your walls were covered in so many photos and clippings of someone else it looked like you are obsessed, you've clearly gone overboard. 



If you break up with someone and start dating again you need to purge and take down of your walls pertaining to you and your ex. You don't need to trash them, but you at least need to hide them. This used to be a difficult and painstaking process depending on how long the relationship lasted, how vocal you were about it on social media and other considerations like your careers, mutual friends and more. But thanks to the Compassion Team at Facebook, their Breakup Flow now makes this easier than ever before.


However, there is a catch. This feature only works when you have been "Facebook Official" with someone, meaning, that it only works for couples, not ordinary friends. I would expect this feature will soon be extended to other relationships that you want to end, including the ubiquitous "friendship" you have with anyone you're connected to including employers, family, ex best friends, etc.

Learn social media best practices and the opinions people form of you online will match the opinions those same people would form of you offline.

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*Our Guarantee. The information we provide regarding other individuals is reliable to the best of our knowledge. Everyone has their identity, age and photos verified and is subject to public record background checks. If information we provide is found to be inaccurate we discount the match and try again. We cannot guarantee or promise a certain outcome or result from matchmaking or coaching. Nothing we say or do can be construed as a guarantee about the outcome of your experience. Our past or future comments about the outcome of your experience, potential matches, estimates of fees and time frames or our opinions are not guarantees. Actual fees and time frames may vary from the estimates given.