MysteryMuchacho
Don Juan
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2022
- Messages
- 22
- Reaction score
- 2
- Age
- 45
Anyone who frequents a gym has one of these.
Some simply don't want to crap where they eat.
Some are in a never ending game of exchanging glancing looks.
Some move in for the kill or at least break the seal.
After months of being being unable to get myself out of the "exchanging looks" phase - I finally broke the seal last week. It was one of those rare days my brain was on auto-pilot, once again she was in my general vicinity too many times to ignore, and I just said f' it. I have a social theory about that which I deem "The Law of Proximity".
The conversation started great. Big smiles. She asked me for my name (twice actually), mentioned how I'm one of her "3pm regulars" and we had some good laughs. Found out the dude she almost always works out with is just a friend (or so she says). But if I'm going to be honest the conversation ending could've been smoother - maybe it was just the starvation and build up from waiting so long. I also didn't rip cord out of there first and she was the one to politely end it. Instead of feeling good that I had done it, the rest of the day I was too fixated on that ending.
Yesterday as I was staring at the clock, as I turned my head I noticed she had walked by me without saying anything. She'd end up walking by me again later on and shot this "what's up" at me that didn't seem anything special nor did she stop to chat. So today I decided to keep to myself, no looks exchanged, no nothing. Noticed towards the end she was still there even after the workout dude left (something she NEVER does).
To be quite honest, I hate when I pull this crap. It's this obsessive, almost pathogenic desire to avoid ever being thought of by any female I meet as the "over-eager guy." I've been told that it makes me appear standoffish or not interested. Then again I broke the silence with her first, figured OK let's see if she reciprocates (I'm huge on that) - but I have no idea what she's thinking.
Is this mindset familiar? How did you overcome it? It's a needy thought process and I'm exhausted from the crutch it has become.
Some simply don't want to crap where they eat.
Some are in a never ending game of exchanging glancing looks.
Some move in for the kill or at least break the seal.
After months of being being unable to get myself out of the "exchanging looks" phase - I finally broke the seal last week. It was one of those rare days my brain was on auto-pilot, once again she was in my general vicinity too many times to ignore, and I just said f' it. I have a social theory about that which I deem "The Law of Proximity".
The conversation started great. Big smiles. She asked me for my name (twice actually), mentioned how I'm one of her "3pm regulars" and we had some good laughs. Found out the dude she almost always works out with is just a friend (or so she says). But if I'm going to be honest the conversation ending could've been smoother - maybe it was just the starvation and build up from waiting so long. I also didn't rip cord out of there first and she was the one to politely end it. Instead of feeling good that I had done it, the rest of the day I was too fixated on that ending.
Yesterday as I was staring at the clock, as I turned my head I noticed she had walked by me without saying anything. She'd end up walking by me again later on and shot this "what's up" at me that didn't seem anything special nor did she stop to chat. So today I decided to keep to myself, no looks exchanged, no nothing. Noticed towards the end she was still there even after the workout dude left (something she NEVER does).
To be quite honest, I hate when I pull this crap. It's this obsessive, almost pathogenic desire to avoid ever being thought of by any female I meet as the "over-eager guy." I've been told that it makes me appear standoffish or not interested. Then again I broke the silence with her first, figured OK let's see if she reciprocates (I'm huge on that) - but I have no idea what she's thinking.
Is this mindset familiar? How did you overcome it? It's a needy thought process and I'm exhausted from the crutch it has become.