Just like the bright-eyed teen staring in the mirror, fastidiously moving a strand of hair until it's in the exact right place, dating as a senior can be just as nerve-racking as it is steaming with potential.
"Whatever your age is, finding the person of your dreams has never been easy," said Pepper Schwartz, University of Washington sociology professor and AARP's national sex and relationship expert.
The 67-year-old author explored her own time as an unattached older woman in "Prime: Adventures and Advice on Sex, Love, and the Sensual Years." She's now engaged to a man she met on a dating website, an increasingly common resource for senior singles.
For most, the need for companionship is just as strong when your skin is smooth as when it's wrinkled.
"It's really very critical at any age," Schwartz said.
Finding a match well into your adult years brings its own set of daunting hurdles.
There might be emotional baggage, habits, health issues, children, a shrinking pool of wooers. As you age even more, there could be added concerns over body odor, incontinence, memory loss, fatigue, death.
Take the nervous feeling in your stomach after spotting a big zit on the tip of your nose on prom night and multiply it by a lifetime.
Despite the potential pitfalls of dating as a senior, Schwartz said there are positives too.
For one, it can be liberating to embrace the freedom of being single. Also, older people have most certainly learned a few things in their long lives; talents or knowledge that can intrigue a date. And after many decades, they probably know themselves well enough to radiate a confidence that might not have been there in their 20s.
When a person is young, sociologists say life tends to be about building -- a family, a savings account, a healthy body. But in the later years, as life gets closer to its end than its beginning, the distractions of youth begin to fade away.
"We're more planning for loss than gain," said Gail Haskett, gerontologist and president of Aging Resources Inc. in Vancouver.
The drive then tends to focus around foundations, creating a stability to help ensure the senior years are fulfilling and worry free. Of course in the current economic climate, that's not always the reality.