tvercettiinnocentman
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- Joined
- Oct 21, 2014
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Long-time lurker, first-time poster. I'm hoping the DJ community can help me with a systemic issue in my game that I have noticed recently.
Long story short, I've always had trouble with women. In elementary, junior high, and high school, I was practically a leper. I was friendzoned just slightly less often than I was outright rejected because I was "gross," "had a pencil ****" (don't know where that came from she didn't see it and I'm average size), and the topper -- "Who would ever go out with [tvercettiinnocentman]?"
I went to college 500 miles away from my hometown to get away from the negativity. Things were better in college, but only slightly. I got my first real girlfriends, but two of them cheated on me, one of them wanted an open relationship so she had to go, and the fourth bailed because I was too beta. After college, I started reading a lot of DJ posts and that helped fix the problem. My game improved, I was able to get dates with ease, and I was the one running the show in my relationships instead of the other way around. It was life-changing.
Flash forward seven years. I moved to a southern state that is very poor for graduate school, I got my degree, and now I work in a prestigious job that pays me 3x the median income for my state.
I also lost a lot of weight and am currently 6'1" and 185 pounds with a muscular build. I would say I'm high on the looks scale, thanks to eating healthy and working out. I usually catch attractive women checking me out on the street, so I take that as a sign that I look good but I've always personally felt that I was ugly. Maybe it's because of my past or something else, but I push past it to maintain frame. I think if a good number of girls give you the up-and-down look you must be doing something right.
Due to my income, I also dress well. Not hard to do where I live because fashion isn't anywhere near #1 on the list of priorities, but I know it's passing muster because girls will ask me if I'm gay because of the way I dress.
Basically I'm getting all the signals you guys say are positive indicators that you are putting on the proper external appearance to get attention from women.
Here's the problem:
Whereas before women found me to be repulsive, now the common theme I'm getting is that I'm "intimidating."
For example, I went on a semi-blind date with a girl on Friday, set up by a coworker. She's 21 and very attractive. She was interested from the get-go after my coworker showed her pictures of me from FB. But, once on the date, she shut it down. Her strong eye contact betrayed her interest, but she said very little, kept her head down, her arms crossed, and muttered one-word answers. She would initiate very light kino, then immediately thereafter look every bit the picture of someone who expected to be punched in the face. I thought it was because I came across too serious, but I was laughing and joking with her and with the group we were with.
This very exact same scenario happened with my best friend's girlfriend's friend who asked to be set up with me by name. My buddy's gf talked me up a lot before the date. I'm thinking this has to be a slam dunk. Nope. Once I get on the date she is not talkative, closed body language, and keeps her head down. I tried being fun and gregarious, but it didn't work. I left the date without asking for the number.
This has started to become very common. I'll get a girl's phone number, exchange a few texts, go on the date, and then they shut it down. I'm usually so bored with the conversation or didn't feel enough chemistry so I don't ask for the second date. Sometimes the date will go well, but then the girl starts playing way too many games and trying her hardest to get me to chase her. I'll next those girls because I'm not interested in playing their games. I don't know what the problem is all the time, but in instances where I have mutual friends with the target, the feedback is always the same: "He's intimidating."
I'm not an intimidating presence. I'm a natural extrovert. And I love to encourage people. I try to be gregarious and charming, especially on a date. Mostly, I just want the girl to have fun and I want to make her feel good without coming across as beta or needy.
I'm really hoping the DJ community can give me some pointers on how to fix this systemic problem. I've experienced it with women of all races, all age groups, and all income levels. It doesn't matter, the response is always the same: "He's intimidating."
I haven't had a girlfriend in two years and I haven't had sex in 18 months because of this issue. It's getting very lonely around my house because it's only my dog and me. Furthermore, I'm starting to become depressed because I feel this situation is hopeless and does not stand any chance of getting better. I'm hoping the Mature Man community can help me, especially because I'm sure many of you are successful and are used to dating younger women. Where I live, women get married by the time they're 25. I can only date someone my age if she's divorced and has kids, and I'm not interested in going down that road.
Thank you all so much in advance.
Long story short, I've always had trouble with women. In elementary, junior high, and high school, I was practically a leper. I was friendzoned just slightly less often than I was outright rejected because I was "gross," "had a pencil ****" (don't know where that came from she didn't see it and I'm average size), and the topper -- "Who would ever go out with [tvercettiinnocentman]?"
I went to college 500 miles away from my hometown to get away from the negativity. Things were better in college, but only slightly. I got my first real girlfriends, but two of them cheated on me, one of them wanted an open relationship so she had to go, and the fourth bailed because I was too beta. After college, I started reading a lot of DJ posts and that helped fix the problem. My game improved, I was able to get dates with ease, and I was the one running the show in my relationships instead of the other way around. It was life-changing.
Flash forward seven years. I moved to a southern state that is very poor for graduate school, I got my degree, and now I work in a prestigious job that pays me 3x the median income for my state.
I also lost a lot of weight and am currently 6'1" and 185 pounds with a muscular build. I would say I'm high on the looks scale, thanks to eating healthy and working out. I usually catch attractive women checking me out on the street, so I take that as a sign that I look good but I've always personally felt that I was ugly. Maybe it's because of my past or something else, but I push past it to maintain frame. I think if a good number of girls give you the up-and-down look you must be doing something right.
Due to my income, I also dress well. Not hard to do where I live because fashion isn't anywhere near #1 on the list of priorities, but I know it's passing muster because girls will ask me if I'm gay because of the way I dress.
Basically I'm getting all the signals you guys say are positive indicators that you are putting on the proper external appearance to get attention from women.
Here's the problem:
Whereas before women found me to be repulsive, now the common theme I'm getting is that I'm "intimidating."
For example, I went on a semi-blind date with a girl on Friday, set up by a coworker. She's 21 and very attractive. She was interested from the get-go after my coworker showed her pictures of me from FB. But, once on the date, she shut it down. Her strong eye contact betrayed her interest, but she said very little, kept her head down, her arms crossed, and muttered one-word answers. She would initiate very light kino, then immediately thereafter look every bit the picture of someone who expected to be punched in the face. I thought it was because I came across too serious, but I was laughing and joking with her and with the group we were with.
This very exact same scenario happened with my best friend's girlfriend's friend who asked to be set up with me by name. My buddy's gf talked me up a lot before the date. I'm thinking this has to be a slam dunk. Nope. Once I get on the date she is not talkative, closed body language, and keeps her head down. I tried being fun and gregarious, but it didn't work. I left the date without asking for the number.
This has started to become very common. I'll get a girl's phone number, exchange a few texts, go on the date, and then they shut it down. I'm usually so bored with the conversation or didn't feel enough chemistry so I don't ask for the second date. Sometimes the date will go well, but then the girl starts playing way too many games and trying her hardest to get me to chase her. I'll next those girls because I'm not interested in playing their games. I don't know what the problem is all the time, but in instances where I have mutual friends with the target, the feedback is always the same: "He's intimidating."
I'm not an intimidating presence. I'm a natural extrovert. And I love to encourage people. I try to be gregarious and charming, especially on a date. Mostly, I just want the girl to have fun and I want to make her feel good without coming across as beta or needy.
I'm really hoping the DJ community can give me some pointers on how to fix this systemic problem. I've experienced it with women of all races, all age groups, and all income levels. It doesn't matter, the response is always the same: "He's intimidating."
I haven't had a girlfriend in two years and I haven't had sex in 18 months because of this issue. It's getting very lonely around my house because it's only my dog and me. Furthermore, I'm starting to become depressed because I feel this situation is hopeless and does not stand any chance of getting better. I'm hoping the Mature Man community can help me, especially because I'm sure many of you are successful and are used to dating younger women. Where I live, women get married by the time they're 25. I can only date someone my age if she's divorced and has kids, and I'm not interested in going down that road.
Thank you all so much in advance.