BillyPilgrim
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2021
- Messages
- 4,921
- Reaction score
- 3,787
I would assume, as would most reasonable people, that he's asking for constructive advice rather than AA-ism.Then what does it mean?
I would assume, as would most reasonable people, that he's asking for constructive advice rather than AA-ism.Then what does it mean?
It means posters can discuss the topic without resorting to calling me (the man who dared to get his pubes removed in the most painful way possible, and has moved places where he knew no one more than once) a coward just because he's afraid of getting rejected by a woman he'll cross paths with again.Then what does it mean?
It’s either real life real life or fictional fictional, Comparing real life to fictional is apples and oranges.I brought up fictional characters in the context of real life individuals comparing me to said fictional characters.
In which case, the important thing is whether a real live woman finds said characters sexually exciting.
She is saying if you play your cards right you can make out with Penny.When a real live woman compares you to Sheldon or The 40 Year Old Virgin, she's pretty much saying "You have no sex appeal whatsoever."
He got the hottest girls too. Man you are lucky to be compared to him.Oh yeah, Alan from 2 and a Half Men is another TV character I've been compared to who's lacking in sex appeal.
Yet Ivanka is hot and she is not only attracted, she married him and had 2 kids with him,As for why I've only heard the negatives a woman has said about Jared Kushner's appearance, that's because...drumroll...a woman has never indicated to me that she's attracted to Jared Kushner.
You not recognizing jocularity is nothing newAs ironic as this will sound (coming from me), you sound like a pedantic autist.
You know what I meant when I said the cafe girl doesn't look like she has any African admixture.
A Brazilian is way more painful for a man than for a woman.First of all, the things you mention are not really courageous. Women get Brazilian waxes and electrolysis all the time, I wouldn't call pube removal to be courageous. And moving to new places where you don't know anyone is quite normal and not many people become shut-ins like yourself, so it's not like you make a new social circle wherever you go. Being a shut-in in Pennsylvania doesn't require more courage than being a shut-in in Massachusetts. So, if that is your 'proof' for not being a coward, it's not really working.
Second, cowardice regarding rejection doesn't automatically mean you are a coward. It means you're behaving like a coward in this matter. It would be courageous to overcome your fear and stop being so worried about getting rejected. That's why people are encouraging you to take action. If you were a genuine coward, all this encouragement wouldn't work...
I'm not sensitive about the Brazilian thing; men in general are. My waxing technician said a lot of men quit the Brazilian as soon as she pulls the first strip of wax.Or you're just more sensitive than a woman.
I've done plenty of things that 'others say they wouldn't dare to', but that doesn't mean it was courageous.
See, this is your main problem: "I've heard other people legitimise my victimhood!"
You call it a 'phobia' and 'crippling' to validate your sense of how impossible it is for you to overcome.
The thing is, you don't really want help. You'd rather talk here about how much easier for you to tongue wrestle a man than face rejection from a woman, but you're not gay. I think you might be in denial. Everything about you screams closeted homosexual.
That's what I said on Page 1 and thought B was the higher probability answer.I'm not reading 6 pages of this.
Either:
A. She was flirting and interested, but lost interest when you didn't reciprocate enough for her to feel like you were interested in her too.
B. She's a service-industry worker and it's her job to be nice to customers so they come back and/or tip higher.
In either case, this is why I always advocate for being direct. Saves you a lot of time and guesswork.
A Brazilian is way more painful for a man than for a woman.
As for moving to places where you know no one, I've heard others say they wouldn't dare to.
As for the rejection thing, I (a straight man) would rather kiss a man than cross paths with a woman I got rejected by. I really don't think there's any curing a phobia that crippling.
Call it gay if you want.
This needs to be addressed. Get off this site & seek professional help.Call it gay if you want.
I'd say it simply illustrates how much I hate crossing paths with a woman I got rejected by.
Don't always be the one putting yourself out for her. Don't always be the one putting all the effort and work into the relationship. Let her, and expect her, to treat you as well as you treat her, and to improve the quality of your life.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
I mentioned how crippling my phobia of rejection is to my therapist this past summer.This needs to be addressed. Get off this site & seek professional help.
You believe that you can't fix it, so your mind will ensure you can't. So in that regard, you are correctA Brazilian is way more painful for a man than for a woman.
As for moving to places where you know no one, I've heard others say they wouldn't dare to.
As for the rejection thing, I (a straight man) would rather kiss a man than cross paths with a woman I got rejected by. I really don't think there's any curing a phobia that crippling.