Apparently, Every Weekend Activity Is Suspicious Now
It was Friday afternoon—the magical hour when everyone in the office is still staring at Excel, but mentally they're already ordering bakso at the weekend market.
I was packing my bag while texting a few friends about a sports session on Sunday.
Nothing romantic.
Nothing mysterious.
Just middle-aged people trying to convince ourselves that exercising once a week can erase five days of sitting in front of laptops.
Then Ranum walked over, glanced at my phone, and smiled.
"Boss..."
"Are you joining a blind date this Sunday?"
I looked at her.
"What?"
She folded her arms.
"Come on. Sunday morning. Nice venue. New people."
"That's textbook blind date."
I laughed.
"Why would I need a blind date? I'm already taken."
Then I pointed at her.
"You should be the one worrying about that."
She answered a little too quickly.
"No, Boss."
After more than twenty years in digital banking, I've learned one thing.
Whenever someone answers that fast...
there's usually an entire PowerPoint presentation hiding behind it.
---------------
When Every Hobby Suddenly Becomes Dating
Ranum sat down and started counting with her fingers.
"Running clubs."
"Coffee walks."
"Tennis."
"Cycling."
"Book clubs."
"Volunteer events."
"Community gatherings."
"Boss, nowadays every activity comes with rumors."
"If two single people stand next to each other for more than five minutes, somebody starts planning their wedding."
I laughed.
But she wasn't entirely wrong.
It isn't that every activity has become a dating event.
It's that people have started seeing communities differently.
-------------
People Aren't Tired of Love. They're Tired of Swiping.
"People are exhausted," Ranum said.
"From work?"
"No."
"Dating apps."
That made sense.
Around the world, researchers and consumer trend analysts have been discussing Dating App Fatigue. People are getting tired of endless swiping, polished profiles, and conversations that disappear faster than free office snacks.
Modern dating feels strangely familiar to banking.
Everything looks promising during onboarding.
Then one morning...
the customer disappears.
No explanation.
No complaint.
No ticket.
Just... inactive.
Banks have incident reports.
Relationships have ghosting.
Not exactly ISO certified.
-----------------------
The Bigger Problem Nobody Talks About
"But if people are leaving dating apps," I asked, "where are they going?"
"They're going outside."
That simple answer hit harder than expected.
Researchers, including those behind the growing discussion about the Loneliness Epidemic, have noticed a strange paradox.
We've never had so many ways to contact people.
WhatsApp.
Instagram.
TikTok.
Video calls.
AI.
Yet many people feel more isolated than ever.
It's like Jakarta traffic.
Millions of vehicles moving together...
yet somehow nobody gets anywhere faster.
Technology solved communication.
It didn't automatically solve connection.
------------------
The Aha Moment
Then Ranum said something I didn't expect to hear from my operations team on a Friday afternoon.
"Boss, have you heard of Third Places?"
Usually my team brings production incidents.
Or budget issues.
Not sociology.
She explained that life used to have three places.
Home.
Work.
And a third place where people simply gathered.
Coffee shops.
Sports clubs.
Neighborhood parks.
Community events.
No agenda.
No KPI.
No quarterly review.
Just people meeting people.
That's when everything clicked.
Maybe people aren't chasing blind dates.
Maybe they're trying to rebuild the Third Place that quietly disappeared while everyone was busy staring at their phones.
The date isn't the destination.
Human connection is.
-------------
The Funniest Business Case Ever
I looked at Ranum.
"So you're telling me nobody wakes up and says..."
"'Today I'll find true love while burning 500 calories?'"
She laughed.
"Exactly."
"Most people just want friends."
"And if they meet someone special..."
"That's a bonus."
That sounded surprisingly familiar.
People join communities.
They become healthier.
They expand their network.
They learn something new.
Sometimes they even find business partners.
Occasionally they find someone to spend the rest of their lives with.
Honestly...
that's probably the best return on investment any weekend activity could ever deliver.
----------------
Maybe We're All Looking for the Same Thing
As I grabbed my bag, Ranum smiled again.
"So..."
"Still insisting it's not a blind date?"
I smiled back.
"I'm going there for the exercise."
She raised one eyebrow.
"And if you meet interesting people?"
I shrugged.
"Then that's just a side effect."
She laughed.
I laughed.
And somewhere between the office door and the elevator, I realized something.
Maybe the biggest trend today isn't dating.
It isn't sports.
It isn't communities.
It's people trying to reconnect with something technology was never meant to replace.
Each other.
Perhaps that's why every weekend activity suddenly looks like a dating app.
Not because everyone is searching for romance.
But because everyone is searching for belonging.
--------------------
Key Takeaways
- The rise of community events reflects a broader shift from digital matching to real-world connection, often called Dating App Fatigue.
- Many activities are becoming modern Third Places where people naturally build friendships, networks, and sometimes relationships.
- The real trend isn't blind dating—it's people rediscovering meaningful human connection in an increasingly digital world.
Disclaimer: This article reflects my personal observations, a Friday afternoon conversation with Ranum, and my own interpretation of current social trends. If your weekend activity is purely about sports, coffee, or fresh air, that's perfectly valid too. Sometimes a running club is just a running club... until your friends say otherwise. 😄
No comments:
Post a Comment