Don’t hold it in. Spit out your deepest desires on Feeld—a dating app for the curious. In this space, you can show up as yourself and make meaningful connections with people who get you. Meet via the app, or find your people IRL at our events —a place where spitting your truth is highly encouraged. Download Feeld now to explore yourself through exploring others.
Don’t hold it in. Spit out your deepest desires on Feeld—a dating app for the curious. In this space, you can show up as yourself and make meaningful connections with people who get you. Meet via the app, or find your people IRL at our events —a place where spitting your truth is highly encouraged. Download Feeld to explore yourself and others.
Feeld is a dating app for the curious; those open to experiencing people and relationships in new ways. Polyamory, consensual non-monogamy, homo- and heteroflexibility, pansexuality, asexuality, aromanticism, voyeurism, and kink are just a few of the sexual identities and desires that make up the Feeld community.
We’re on a mission to elevate the human experience of sexuality and relationships.
Imogen Heap tells Feeld about finding her first-ever muse, her new music project, and the joy of living an open, truthful, adventurous life.
♾️ Curious? Download Feeld
Welcome to a new era of Feeld, co-created with you.
In the summer of 2023, we gathered a group of Feeld members to join us for two days. At the start, the only thing they had in common was Feeld; by the end what they had in common was their connection—moments defined by intimacy, joy and curiosity. Most of all, it captures the feeling that underpins all Feeld experiences: the personal transformation we undergo through connecting with others.
This is the Feeld effect: the experience of finding yourself changed and changing through vivid encounters with others.
One of my favorite ways to show love, platonically and romantically, is to cook. This is not an original sentiment. It’s also, perhaps, not as selfless as it might first appear. Recently, as my meals for those I care for get larger and more elaborate, I have been wondering about my motives. Is it as simple as following a nurturing impulse, or are there other less purely altruistic dynamics at play? Am I overthinking my desire to just create a lovely and (yes, admittedly) impressive spread now and then?
This is not to do myself down. I love to nourish as much as the next person. I love to feed the people I love, to commit to a tangible act of care. Perhaps it is something about the aforementioned tangibility. To cook a meal is to perform a task that is visible, and that has an immediate effect. It solves a problem as well as giving pleasure, to those I cook for, I hope, and to me, and there can be a relief in this. Sometimes I think that the steps in a recipe can be as near as love might get to a formula. When so many ways of caring can be invisible, misconstrued, or take time to bear fruit, there’s a comfort in doing something that you can feel, smell, taste right away.
Sophie Mackintosh considers a love found in the kitchen.
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Buried in the classifieds section in the back of a newspaper or magazine, personal ads were where readers flocked to see who was asking for what. If you were a lonely queer in the 1970s looking for love—or friendship, or sex, or something else entirely—the personals were a place for you. From booty calls to marriage proposals, the personals paved the way for love to transcend the boundaries of convention and, eventually, enter another dimension: the internet. Much like dating app profiles today, personal ads followed a formula, listing details like menu items: age, gender, hobbies, features, etcetera. Abbreviations like “NSA” (no strings attached), “GBM” (gay Black male), “D” (divorced), and “ALA” (all letters answered) made up a coded language of letters. It wasn’t necessarily secret–anyone familiar with classifieds would be able to decipher the acronyms–but it was discrete, and concise.