Jennifer Aniston is now ready to date and be in a relationship. The 52-year old actress got candid about her feelings and she is in love life during her appearance on SiriusXM’s lunch with Bruce podcast, and she was open to date again. The actress split with her husband Justin Theroux in 2018. She also told Bruce that she is ready to give love the second shot, It’s been a while she hasn’t met anyone because of pandemic and also she said no one had caught her eye yet.
“No one of importance has hit my radar yet,” she said. “But I think it’s time. I think I’m ready to share myself with another. I didn’t want to for a long time, and I loved really, being my own woman. Without, um, being a part of a couple where I’ve been a part of a couple since I was 20. So, there was something really nice about taking the time. “Aniston noted that she wasn’t a fan of online dating. “No gingers and no Raya please,” she said, referring to the celebrity dating app. “I’m an old school girl.”
“There it is, chemistry, and you see each other from across the room,” she also said about the type of connection she’s looking for. “People don’t come up to people anymore, people don’t do that. It’s weird.” As she was talking about what type of man she liked she mentioned that first kiss is also “very important”. “That, and also the ease at which the conversation flows the first time,” she shared. “That’s kind of a good indicator, confidence, but not a cockiness. Humor, please I beg of you, beg of you. Generous, um, kind to people, you know, it’s just very few necessities.”
“Fitness is important and not just about, like, how you look … I want to be around here for a long time and not be in a wheelchair when I am 80,” she added. She also talked in New York Times hat how emotional it was to watch HBO Max Friends Reunion was for her and her co-stars. “We all had such blissful ignorance going into the reunion,” she shared. “We were thinking, ‘How much fun is this going to be, to go back to Stage 24 exactly the way it was, exactly the way we left it.’ But it was a sucker punch to the heart. It turns out that it’s not so easy to time travel.”
“[When Friends ended in 2004], we were all bright eyed and bushy-tailed, looking toward the future,” she continued. “But there was a lot to come for everyone — hard truths and changes and loss and babies and marriages and divorces and miscarriages. One of the real emotional things for me was the realization was that times were so much simpler then. For one thing, we didn’t have social media the way we have now.”