The Old-Fashioned Way for some of our parents, but mostly our grandparents and beyond was not going to the mega grocery store and having the balls to hit on the girl at the produce section.....The girl with the air pods at Kroger or jogging at the park probably has 3 vacations planned out in the span of 2 months, her weekend schedule is full by Monday morning, two dogs, and a boyfriend. This is nowhere close to being old fashioned compared to our grandparents.
I like this as I could relate to this. Over the years, I have been the guy looking at approach at places like Kroger or Whole Foods.
Airpods/earbuds/headphones are more common outdoors or at the gym than at Kroger.
Your comment about 2 dogs is a big change as compared to past generations. In past generations, people only got dogs after they got married or a bought a house. Since the 2000s, when Millennials entered their 20s, it has been far more common for people (mostly women) to get their dogs prior to having a steady partner. Also, a larger percentage of the population has dogs too. Millennials have been the most pet obsessed generation in hundreds of years, possibly all time.
It's difficult for an early stage relationship to develop properly when a woman has pre-planned vacations. Dogs often interfere with the development of a relationship too. A lot of time, a woman can't be very spontaneous on dates because of her dogs needing attention. A woman's dog responsibilities are almost on the same level as her being a single parent. This topic is rarely discussed on SoSuave but probably needs to be discussed more frequently.
For Millennials, our parents (Baby Boomers) or our grandparents (GI Generation -- 1910s-early 1920s births) weren't dealing with "dog moms".
In general, grocery store stranger approaching has always been a bit of a niche activity.
Their environment was much more enclosed, tough, and localized, and they knew it. It was social circle game but on Godzilla mode. The girl at the local church was probably going to go home and do chores for the rest of the day, so meeting an exciting new man would've made her day. Props, if you go to the same church as her too.
A lot of social circle type stuff has been displaced primarily by tech-based means of arranging dates.
Church participation has fallen off since Millennials entered adulthood.
High school formed relationships were more common for the Silent Generation (late 1920s - 1945 births) and early Baby Boomers. Those have fallen off. College formed relationships grew from the 1970s - 2000 (mainly from Boomers and Gen X) but longevity of college formed relationships have fallen off since Millennials started entering college in the early 2000s.
Social circles are still valuable today so I'm not entirely discrediting them. The problem is that fewer men have viable social circles as compared to GI, Silent, Boomer, and Gen X'er men.
Even today, social circle introductions are the best option for a normie range guy. Most men are normie range.
Social circle is great for getting a girlfriend. Pay close attention to the words "a girlfriend". That means one girlfriend. If you're looking for an extended relationship (2-5 years or more), your best bet for getting that with the least amount of grief and frustration is social circle.