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Master Don Juan
That's how I feel! I think both sides are right. Everybody hates it when that happens...typical said:Then go for it bro, they will break up sooner or later anyway, so do you want to be the next guy or be the good friend that was always there to support her while she was trying to cut ties with her long distance boyfriend.
But on the other hand man tonnes of single girls out there why waste time on one thats taken when you could just as easily get a single girl.
Ok, understood.I aint talking about your specific case. I'm talking about dealing with women with boyfriends in general.
You're right it's not my responsability to find out if she has a bf. But see what girls do (and when you meet some, you'll see), they say "I have a bf" and then they give you their time, all alone. They want me to be the badguy for them, so that they can say "well it just happened" "I kissed him by accident" and all sorts of other irresponsible absurdities.It isn't your responsibility to find out if every girl you flirt with has a BF before you even say a word to her. It's her responsibility to brush you off, since it's HER relationship.
But I must agree with another bit of your "amazing advice" It's HER responsability to brush me off. I'm a man, after all, and men are typical. I'll just make a move on her, she'd better just say no.
This reminds me of a scene in Don Quixote (which is hilarious, one of the best books I've ever read!), the parable of the man with the ill-advised curiosity. It's about a rich and handsome husband who tests the virtue of his beautiful and loving wife by having his best friend make advances on her. The husband does this only to test her true quality. At first the friend (Anselmo I believe) refuses to take part in such foolishness, but after a while, being shamed into it and his loyalty in question, he does so. The friend suddenly falls madly in love with the woman and likewise the wife madly in love with the friend. They have a secret affair, all the while pretending that the wife was angrily rejecting the friend's advances. Thus the more the friend makes advances on the wife, the more the husband lauds him for his efforts, and his wife for her "fidelity." Meanwhile, with every advance, the wife falls more and more in love with her husband's best friend.
One day, the husband catches a maid and confidente of the wife having an unrelated affair. He reacts angrily but the maid says, "Don't be angry at me. If you are forgiving I will tell you something even worse about your wife, but only in the morning." He angrily locks her in the room. The wife catches wind that the maid is about to tell her husband something. After the husband falls asleep, she takes all the jewelry in the house and dashes off to her lover, her husband's best friend. She hurridly tells him that their affair is about to be exposed, and begs him to elope with her. He agrees, with sadness in his heart and they take off.
The husband wakes up the next morning. So impatient is he to interrogate the maid he doesn't even notice his wife's disappearance. He immediately goes and unlocks the door, only to find that the maid had escaped using a bedsheet made into a rope hanging out the window. The husband goes to find his wife to ask her what is amiss, and finds her also missing. Such is his sudden distress that he rides quickly to the house of his best friend, only to find that he too has fled during the night. Suddenly he finds himself friendless, divorced, alone, and penniless.
According to de Cervantes, the moral of the story, besides not being unwantonly curious, is that one should never test a woman, for she will surely fail. Women need protection to be truly virtuous.
I don't think de Cervantes would believe in the wisdom of long distance relationships. Neither do I.
Looks like I'm about to make a regular Anselmo out of myself.