R
Rubato
Guest
As I was getting out of class today I was really ripping on myself hard for the way things have turned out with the girl I have oneitis for. Placing the blame on her for not being interested in me isn't going to help me grow. After all, if I'm right, she wasn't attracted TO ME. That only leaves for 2 possibilities. There is something wrong with her because I was very attractive. Or she's perfectly fine and I wasn't attractive.
She can find time to make dinner plans with her girlfriends, despite working ridiculous hours at this restaurant and being a senior chemistry student in good academic standing. She can find time to do other things too. But not to see me. And so I've been asking myself why.
And more importantly, why would someone want to spend time with me?
To put it in more PUA specific language, what value am I adding?
These are tough questions to ask yourself honestly, especially if you can't come up with an answer.
You're a fun guy. Other people are fun. Are you the most fun guy? Does it matter?
You're a funny guy - see the logic progression above.
Do this for any trait. Confidence, arrogance, dominance, masculinity, intelligence, creativity.
And while all of that is interesting, I don't really think it's the point. If Matt Redman made anything clear in his book Conquer your Campus it was to
BE THE MAN YOU WANT TO BE AROUND
Every failure is an opportunity to learn something. I wish it didn't work that way because I've lost out on a lot of things I've really cared about (even beyond the scope of women) because I didn't have a piece of knowledge necessary to hold on to it. And sometimes it really doesn't feel like that despite what they say, that if you want to dramatically increase your success rate, double your failure rate, it still doesn't feel like I'm making any forward progress.
And so that's why I've stepped back and am trying to be introspective about this.
Obviously, if I could choose anyone in the world to spend my time with, it wouldn't be some dude who was lamenting and introspecting about his inability to attract a girl.
What I think this is ultimately going to come down to is what I titled the post. Would you spend time with yourself, voluntarily? Would I spend time with myself? Sometimes I would. Sometimes I wouldn't.
Some of this feels like it should go in my journal and some of it feels like it's relevant to the thread. I'm having hard time distinguishing between the two.
But I know one thing, I need to get out of this relationship pattern I established sometime in elementary school where I am attracted to a girl and then suddenly feel inadequate about it. She becomes pedestalled immediately. Like. I remember the first time I hung out with this oneitis girl and we were cuddling on the couch, I remember thinking to myself how fortunate and LUCKY I was being in that position with such a beautiful awesome girl.
It's no wonder this didn't work. If that was how I felt, it certainly had to come out in some way through my actions. And I can think of several ways it did just offhand. What that did was turn me in to a guy I wouldn't want to spend my time with.
I need to go and don't really feel like writing anymore. You guys get the idea.
She can find time to make dinner plans with her girlfriends, despite working ridiculous hours at this restaurant and being a senior chemistry student in good academic standing. She can find time to do other things too. But not to see me. And so I've been asking myself why.
And more importantly, why would someone want to spend time with me?
To put it in more PUA specific language, what value am I adding?
These are tough questions to ask yourself honestly, especially if you can't come up with an answer.
You're a fun guy. Other people are fun. Are you the most fun guy? Does it matter?
You're a funny guy - see the logic progression above.
Do this for any trait. Confidence, arrogance, dominance, masculinity, intelligence, creativity.
And while all of that is interesting, I don't really think it's the point. If Matt Redman made anything clear in his book Conquer your Campus it was to
BE THE MAN YOU WANT TO BE AROUND
Every failure is an opportunity to learn something. I wish it didn't work that way because I've lost out on a lot of things I've really cared about (even beyond the scope of women) because I didn't have a piece of knowledge necessary to hold on to it. And sometimes it really doesn't feel like that despite what they say, that if you want to dramatically increase your success rate, double your failure rate, it still doesn't feel like I'm making any forward progress.
And so that's why I've stepped back and am trying to be introspective about this.
Obviously, if I could choose anyone in the world to spend my time with, it wouldn't be some dude who was lamenting and introspecting about his inability to attract a girl.
What I think this is ultimately going to come down to is what I titled the post. Would you spend time with yourself, voluntarily? Would I spend time with myself? Sometimes I would. Sometimes I wouldn't.
Some of this feels like it should go in my journal and some of it feels like it's relevant to the thread. I'm having hard time distinguishing between the two.
But I know one thing, I need to get out of this relationship pattern I established sometime in elementary school where I am attracted to a girl and then suddenly feel inadequate about it. She becomes pedestalled immediately. Like. I remember the first time I hung out with this oneitis girl and we were cuddling on the couch, I remember thinking to myself how fortunate and LUCKY I was being in that position with such a beautiful awesome girl.
It's no wonder this didn't work. If that was how I felt, it certainly had to come out in some way through my actions. And I can think of several ways it did just offhand. What that did was turn me in to a guy I wouldn't want to spend my time with.
I need to go and don't really feel like writing anymore. You guys get the idea.