I'm an expert
Formerly worldrevolution. The only reason I am nice to anyone else is to avoid being banned.
You were at a party, having a good time, and your "friends" had an issue with it? Was this party being thrown by the cockblockers club?
If they are intently reading a book or have their headphones/earbuds on while on their computer don't bother them. Go for a girl that is kind of looking around and surveying their surroundings.
Also, it's probably best to go to a coffee shop that is somewhat busy that way you're kind of "forced" to share a table with someone.
And then open with something lighthearted and casual:
"Hi, mind if I sit down and chat with you for a bit? "
If they say no it's no biggie. Just say "Okay then. No problem." and sit somewhere else.
If they say yes be cool and maintain a friendly vibe. "Oh thanks. So anything exciting going on with you?" or whatever. Don't say something that is canned or rehearsed. You just have to flow into this stuff as naturally as possible.
I feel conflicted.
I was at a party tonight and got into a situation with three girls who were sitting on me and talking to me, and eventually it dwindled down to one. We sat there talking for a while before we started making out.
There are a couple of problems. First, it was making a lot of the people at the party uncomfortable, and I had never met this girl before and I feel bad for subjecting my friends to that. Second, I'm not really interested in this girl. I wanted to cut things off early on, but I'm pretty starved for female attention so I went along with it.
I know that I personally am comfortable with other people making out and such in front of me, but a lot of my friends were not, and I feel like I've damaged my reputation somewhat because of it. What's worse was that it was something I didn't want to do but did anyway because I've been single for so damn long.
Part of me says to blow it off because it was nonetheless a positive interaction with a girl, but I really hate doing something that could potentially be negatively mentioned within my social circle for a while. I feel bad.
Absolutely. Go do what makes you happiest, that way nothing will be forced. HOWEVER, its always good to try things that you may not like; operating out of your comfort zone is important (something I need to work on).Yeah I need to work on the friend part. However, shouldn't I join what interest me like cooking and outdoor groups?
I feel conflicted.
I was at a party tonight and got into a situation with three girls who were sitting on me and talking to me, and eventually it dwindled down to one. We sat there talking for a while before we started making out.
There are a couple of problems. First, it was making a lot of the people at the party uncomfortable, and I had never met this girl before and I feel bad for subjecting my friends to that. Second, I'm not really interested in this girl. I wanted to cut things off early on, but I'm pretty starved for female attention so I went along with it.
I know that I personally am comfortable with other people making out and such in front of me, but a lot of my friends were not, and I feel like I've damaged my reputation somewhat because of it. What's worse was that it was something I didn't want to do but did anyway because I've been single for so damn long.
Part of me says to blow it off because it was nonetheless a positive interaction with a girl, but I really hate doing something that could potentially be negatively mentioned within my social circle for a while. I feel bad.
I feel conflicted.
I was at a party tonight and got into a situation with three girls who were sitting on me and talking to me, and eventually it dwindled down to one. We sat there talking for a while before we started making out.
There are a couple of problems. First, it was making a lot of the people at the party uncomfortable, and I had never met this girl before and I feel bad for subjecting my friends to that. Second, I'm not really interested in this girl. I wanted to cut things off early on, but I'm pretty starved for female attention so I went along with it.
I know that I personally am comfortable with other people making out and such in front of me, but a lot of my friends were not, and I feel like I've damaged my reputation somewhat because of it. What's worse was that it was something I didn't want to do but did anyway because I've been single for so damn long.
Part of me says to blow it off because it was nonetheless a positive interaction with a girl, but I really hate doing something that could potentially be negatively mentioned within my social circle for a while. I feel bad.
You were at a party, having a good time, and your "friends" had an issue with it? Was this party being thrown by the cockblockers club?
Fuck 'em. If they seriously are bothered by this and start talking shit about you, they are jealous and insecure fucks that you need to distance yourself from.I feel conflicted.
Yeah what kind of party was this? Was it extremely small? When I was in college 3/4 of the dance floor was making out and most of them were probably random strangers.
Fuck 'em. If they seriously are bothered by this and start talking shit about you, they are jealous and insecure fucks that you need to distance yourself from.
Not judging or anything, I'm pretty young myself, but how old are you and your friends?
So since I finished with my girlfriend last week I've been feeling really shitty and I can't seem to get myself out of it. The situation is a nightmare in the fact that we work together, directly, every day (yeah i know, should never have got together in the first place) and the fact that we're having to go on a holiday in 3 weeks time that we can't cancel at the risk of losing all the money we both paid for it.
On the one side of things, I don't want her to think she's got to me that bad, makes me look less needy and all that which I understand. On the other side of things I don;t want her to think that what she did was cool and let her brush it off without any responsibilty like she does with everything in her life.
I'm in the process of trying to get a new job as soon as possible (something I was trying to do before we split anyway) and we are being civil at work but its very hard for me to do that and I know as soon as she gets another boyfriend, it's gonna hurt a lot. I would rather I never had to talk to her again but I can't with all of the other situations involved at this point in time.
Any advice or anything would be appreciated.
Unrelated to the above post: I have a question primarily for the guys on dating-age. Background: I'm a 23-year-old straight woman. My three-and-a-half-year relationship with my previous boyfriend ended a few months ago, and I'm not prepared just yet to enter the dating pool.
I met a male friend-of-a-friend at a party a few weeks ago; the party was full of science grad students who knew each other, so it wasn't exactly a crowd looking for hookups. We talked for a while and he gave me his business card, and I contacted him by e-mail to get involved in a group hiking trip that he'd mentioned that he was planning. During the exchange, he asked me out for drinks, and I accepted. Naively, I assumed the invite was platonic. A few of my friends hid their eye-rolls long enough to tell me to assume that one-on-one guy/girl meetups for coffee, drinks, etc. are never proposed platonically, so I shouldn't accept if I'm not interested in the dude. Before I get accused of being a cocktease playing dumb about guys' intentions, I should add that although I guess you could call me reasonably attractive, I don't dress or make up my face like a slut and I'm unmistakably un-flirtatious (although hopefully I still seem friendly!).
So, guys, my questions: for a girl in my situation, is there any polite, honest way to permanently decline an ambiguous maybe-date after having accepted? Obviously, an initial, honest "no thanks" is best. (I get that I was naive for having accepted in the first place, so you can skip the mockery re: that part.) Can an invite from a guy to a girl for coffee/drinks/whatever ever be perceived as platonic, at least in your early-to mid-20s?
I know the situation isn't all that interesting, but I figured it was worth asking about anyway.
GAF, how do I get the mind set where I don't constantly think my girlfriend is flirting or cheating on me?
- Long distance relationship
- She cheated on me two months ago
- I was a "loner" in high school, land this amazing girl and she quickly becomes my best friend, and now girlfriend (Think this may be part of the problem, never had a sense of comradeship with anyone in my life and she has had one prior boyfriend)
I love her, but I can't help myself to have these thoughts.
Don't need "drop her" "let the chick go" comments, just anything besides that please. This thread helps immensely and I always follow.
Yeah, you do need those comments, because you will never stop thinking that once she's done it.GAF, how do I get the mind set where I don't constantly think my girlfriend is flirting or cheating on me?
- Long distance relationship
- She cheated on me two months ago
- I was a "loner" in high school, land this amazing girl and she quickly becomes my best friend, and now girlfriend (Think this may be part of the problem, never had a sense of comradeship with anyone in my life and she has had one prior boyfriend)
I love her, but I can't help myself to have these thoughts.
Don't need "drop her" "let the chick go" comments, just anything besides that please. This thread helps immensely and I always follow.
Unrelated to the above post: I have a question primarily for the guys on dating-age. Background: I'm a 23-year-old straight woman. My three-and-a-half-year relationship with my previous boyfriend ended a few months ago, and I'm not prepared just yet to enter the dating pool.
I met a male friend-of-a-friend at a party a few weeks ago; the party was full of science grad students who knew each other, so it wasn't exactly a crowd looking for hookups. We talked for a while and he gave me his business card, and I contacted him by e-mail to get involved in a group hiking trip that he'd mentioned that he was planning. During the exchange, he asked me out for drinks, and I accepted. Naively, I assumed the invite was platonic. A few of my friends hid their eye-rolls long enough to tell me to assume that one-on-one guy/girl meetups for coffee, drinks, etc. are never proposed platonically, so I shouldn't accept if I'm not interested in the dude. Before I get accused of being a cocktease playing dumb about guys' intentions, I should add that although I guess you could call me reasonably attractive, I don't dress or make up my face like a slut and I'm unmistakably un-flirtatious (although hopefully I still seem friendly!).
So, guys, my questions: for a girl in my situation, is there any polite, honest way to permanently decline an ambiguous maybe-date after having accepted? Obviously, an initial, honest "no thanks" is best. (I get that I was naive for having accepted in the first place, so you can skip the mockery re: that part.) Can an invite from a guy to a girl for coffee/drinks/whatever ever be perceived as platonic, at least in your early-to mid-20s?
I know the situation isn't all that interesting, but I figured it was worth asking about anyway.
Yeah, you do need those comments, because you will never stop thinking that once she's done it.
I don't doubt that you love her, but I also bet that you're more afraid to be alone and that's why you're still with her.
We've all been there. Multiple times. It's the worst. It triggers the same things in our bodies and mind as the death of someone close.That could be it. Being alone was all I had ever known, so it was endurable - but come into play, life with my girlfriend, experiencing comradeship, sex, relationship, someone to share feelings with and so on, a return back to loneliness would be extremely painful and devastating.
We've all been there. Multiple times. It's the worst. It triggers the same things in our bodies and mind as the death of someone close.
But it's better to deal with that and find someone that respects you and that you'll never have to be suspicious of than to stick around with a cheater because you like getting their attention. You'll make it through.
That could be it. Being alone was all I had ever known, so it was endurable - but come into play, life with my girlfriend, experiencing comradeship, sex, relationship, someone to share feelings with and so on, a return back to loneliness would be extremely painful and devastating.
I appreciate your advice and it'd be awkward to PM you out of nowhere but I'm pretty sure you remember me and I've had a lot of relationship issues so can I bitch to you?We've all been there. Multiple times. It's the worst. It triggers the same things in our bodies and mind as the death of someone close.
But it's better to deal with that and find someone that respects you and that you'll never have to be suspicious of than to stick around with a cheater because you like getting their attention. You'll make it through.
You have to ask yourself if her company is worth the constant doubt in your mind about whether she's staying faithful. I doubt it is worth it in most cases but a bunch of people manage to do it.
So, I've got some good news about this girl. If you read on from that post (for a few pages), you'll see most of GAF telling me to forget her and move on. I'm so glad that I ignored GAF. We've been on 3 dates and they've been amazingSo, I'm back again with some good news this timeSo, literally the afternoon after my date (that resulted in there not being a 2nd date) another girl on OkCupid responded to my message. We chatted back and forth for a few hours, and a bunch today. She then gave me her # so that we could text. Here's one of her last messages
"Yeahhh living at home is probably always quieter than living in a dorm lol. Well so far I like Springfield, although I'm only taking part time classes. But I enjoy them and I like the people that are in my classesThat's great that you enjoy Hartford so much! You make it sound pretty great
Also it's great to have people around who you can talk to forever about what you love to do lol. I like talking to you
I'm going to get off here and get ready for bed, although it's tempting not to
"
My response
"That's awesome that you like SpringfieldYeah, [college name redacted] is pretty awesome. Yeah, I agree, it's nice to have that
I really like talking to you too
Nah, don't log off. Stay online a bit more
"
Her response
"How about we compromise and I get off here, but give you my phone number so that we can text instead"
We then texted back and forth for over an hour![]()
Great success!
I get a text about 10 minutes before we are supposed to meet, saying that she thinks her car was stolen and that we'd have to reschedule. I was sad, but I've been bailed on before, so I figured if it was just an excuse to get out of the date, then so be it. However, about 30 minutes later, it turned out she had actually parked it in a totally different place than she usually does, and she asked me if I was still willing to meet.
We meet at Starbucks and stay for about an hour, at which point they close. We stand around outside, because we're not ready for the date to end, and finally decide to go to a restaurant nearby. We have some food and still aren't ready to go home, so we walk around, sit down and talk for another 2-3 hours. She's just as fun to talk to in person as in text, and we are really enjoying each other. We do some kissing at her car and agree to end the date, as long as we see each other tomorrow night.
I had school work to do tonight, but that went out the window. Oh well!
guys guys guys
this is working out pretty well
We spent the next 2 nights together hanging out until 2am or later. I am really quite happy right now. Since my big breakup last summer, I had "lowered my standards" in a way, trying to expand my horizons past what my ex was and not looking for the perfect match in every girl. In many ways that was a great idea, and it really helped me be less desperate for what went missing after a 3.5 year relationship... but this girl is the real deal.
I am trying not to get disproportionately invested or move too quickly, but she is enjoying me as much as I do her and responding at the same level emotionally as me, which is amazing. Yes, it's early, but I'm super excited about where this is going.
And I wouldn't have had the confidence to be myself on that first date (and beyond) if it weren't for all the progress I've made, thanks in large part to this thread. When I think about where I was a year ago, it amazes me how much things have changed.
The situation is a bad one, I sypmathize. I would lie if I said I knew what would make it better, and saying things like "go hang out with your buddies and drink the sadness away" or "bang a hot chick" might not do the trick in this case (or would it?).
On the other hand I have a question about the bolded:
Do you seriously HAVE to go on that trip with her?
Is losing that money worse than going through a potential emotional torture?
Have you perhaps considered offering the ticketaccomodation to someone else, like selling it with a discount to a friend or maybe even someone else entirely?
Unrelated to the above post: I have a question primarily for the guys on dating-age. Background: I'm a 23-year-old straight woman. My three-and-a-half-year relationship with my previous boyfriend ended a few months ago, and I'm not prepared just yet to enter the dating pool.
I met a male friend-of-a-friend at a party a few weeks ago; the party was full of science grad students who knew each other, so it wasn't exactly a crowd looking for hookups. We talked for a while and he gave me his business card, and I contacted him by e-mail to get involved in a group hiking trip that he'd mentioned that he was planning. During the exchange, he asked me out for drinks, and I accepted. Naively, I assumed the invite was platonic. A few of my friends hid their eye-rolls long enough to tell me to assume that one-on-one guy/girl meetups for coffee, drinks, etc. are never proposed platonically, so I shouldn't accept if I'm not interested in the dude. Before I get accused of being a cocktease playing dumb about guys' intentions, I should add that although I guess you could call me reasonably attractive, I don't dress or make up my face like a slut and I'm unmistakably un-flirtatious (although hopefully I still seem friendly!).
So, guys, my questions: for a girl in my situation, is there any polite, honest way to permanently decline an ambiguous maybe-date after having accepted? Obviously, an initial, honest "no thanks" is best. (I get that I was naive for having accepted in the first place, so you can skip the mockery re: that part.) Can an invite from a guy to a girl for coffee/drinks/whatever ever be perceived as platonic, at least in your early-to mid-20s?
I know the situation isn't all that interesting, but I figured it was worth asking about anyway.
Question.
So I split with my ex of 3 years about 5ish months ago. I've pretty much known that one of her friends crushed on me and and she knew it. I ran into her randomly about a week ago and had an awkwardish conversation. It ended with her saying she would message me her number on Facebook. Well. Never got that message. I'll be a bit honest, she definitely is my type but I have the feeling she feels weird about the situation. Something I should do or just leave it alone?
We've all been there. Multiple times. It's the worst. It triggers the same things in our bodies and mind as the death of someone close.
But it's better to deal with that and find someone that respects you and that you'll never have to be suspicious of than to stick around with a cheater because you like getting their attention. You'll make it through.
And after two years I'm single again. I guess its not as bad as the previous relationship, where she cheated on my after 9 years. But its still not fun. Meh.
Sorry to hear that man. I ended my 3 year's with my Ex back in June. Hopefully you guys ended it on decent terms. Mine were (and still remain) absolutely horrible.
There were probably around 30-40 people hanging out at a friend's house.
I'm 21 and my friends are all college aged.
How I find a girl thats a loner like me?
lol
GAF, how do I get the mind set where I don't constantly think my girlfriend is flirting or cheating on me?
- Long distance relationship
- She cheated on me two months ago
- I was a "loner" in high school, land this amazing girl and she quickly becomes my best friend, and now girlfriend (Think this may be part of the problem, never had a sense of comradeship with anyone in my life and she has had one prior boyfriend)
I love her, but I can't help myself to have these thoughts.
Don't need "drop her" "let the chick go" comments, just anything besides that please. This thread helps immensely and I always follow.
Words of wisdom from you and the rest of GAF, as always.
I keep telling myself that once I eliminate the long distance part, and remain optimistic everything will be alright. GAF helps also.
It won't be alright. My ex broke up with me last year. A month or so later, we got back together. But it drove me CRAZY and made me really INSECURE. I questioned her love every other day. It got to the point where my expectations and pressure got so high I became emotionally abusive. Insecurity will drive a huge rift between you guys and the only way it will ever go away is if you change yourself. In a case like this, is it worth pushing through to change yourself for someone who cheated on you? She CHEATED on you dude. It isn't hard to keep yourself away from other people. You do it. I've done it. My ex has done it. Everyone has done it. It happens.Words of wisdom from you and the rest of GAF, as always.
I keep telling myself that once I eliminate the long distance part, and remain optimistic everything will be alright. GAF helps also.
GAF, how do I get the mind set where I don't constantly think my girlfriend is flirting or cheating on me?
- Long distance relationship
- She cheated on me two months ago
- I was a "loner" in high school, land this amazing girl and she quickly becomes my best friend, and now girlfriend (Think this may be part of the problem, never had a sense of comradeship with anyone in my life and she has had one prior boyfriend)
I love her, but I can't help myself to have these thoughts.
Don't need "drop her" "let the chick go" comments, just anything besides that please. This thread helps immensely and I always follow.
So, guys, my questions: for a girl in my situation, is there any polite, honest way to permanently decline an ambiguous maybe-date after having accepted? Obviously, an initial, honest "no thanks" is best. (I get that I was naive for having accepted in the first place, so you can skip the mockery re: that part.) Can an invite from a guy to a girl for coffee/drinks/whatever ever be perceived as platonic, at least in your early-to mid-20s?
I know the situation isn't all that interesting, but I figured it was worth asking about anyway.
So a week ago, I had three dates lined up from OKCupid, and none of them actually happened.
So since I finished with my girlfriend last week I've been feeling really shitty and I can't seem to get myself out of it. The situation is a nightmare in the fact that we work together, directly, every day (yeah i know, should never have got together in the first place) and the fact that we're having to go on a holiday in 3 weeks time that we can't cancel at the risk of losing all the money we both paid for it.
On the one side of things, I don't want her to think she's got to me that bad, makes me look less needy and all that which I understand. On the other side of things I don;t want her to think that what she did was cool and let her brush it off without any responsibilty like she does with everything in her life.
I'm in the process of trying to get a new job as soon as possible (something I was trying to do before we split anyway) and we are being civil at work but its very hard for me to do that and I know as soon as she gets another boyfriend, it's gonna hurt a lot. I would rather I never had to talk to her again but I can't with all of the other situations involved at this point in time.
Any advice or anything would be appreciated.
I still love her and having to break up was one of the worst things I've ever had to do. My inclination is to just give her space until she moves on, but on the other hand I want to be there for her as she's a friend who is in pain.
Don't know what to tell you about the holiday coming up. :/
You're not alone in this. I was talking back and forth with around 10 girls (most of them very young women) during the summer and I had good report and interesting conversations with maybe half of them and now I not talking to a single one of them without ever meeting up. It happens. Being 200 kilometers away for about two months made meeting up difficult. One of them texted me the other day though, but the conversation died out very fast. This is a perfect example of a crossroads where you can either choose to be bitter, annoyed or depressed about the facts. Or you can choose to not let it bother you (it shouldn't).So a week ago, I had three dates lined up from OKCupid, and none of them actually happened.
I feel like the flakiness has just been ramping up more and more and I'm giving less and less of a care about meeting people online at this point. If they don't want to take it with at least some sense of seriousness, then they're really not people I want to associate with.
On the plus side, It's gotten me to be a bit more productive lately. School just started, so there's new people to meet and things to do, and I've been been doing a personal re-branding to prepare for graduation and entering the workforce. Just finished designing my personal business card and I'm taking that and using it to redo my resume and website.
For anyone here who are still having trouble with online dating, take a bit of a breather and work on yourself. Refocus on what things you're good at and rebuild your confidence in them, it's pretty helpful, and you end up doing something productive.
She'll get over that pain as soon as she finds another guy.
Anyone have any luck staying friends after breaking up with someone? I just ended it yesterday because after two years we weren't progressing any further and I didn't want to waste her time as I knew she wanted it to be more serious. I was preventing us from getting more serious because she was my first relationship and I really couldn't be fully committed without knowing what else was out there.
I still love her and having to break up was one of the worst things I've ever had to do. My inclination is to just give her space until she moves on, but on the other hand I want to be there for her as she's a friend who is in pain.
Sunk cost. Don't go.
Here's how kaze should think about it: if someone right now offered him a free holiday, but to get it he'd have to go with his ex-gf, would he accept it? Because if the money's already gone, that's the actual choice he's making.
you're not her therapist
Fair point. So just leave her alone for the foreseeable future?
Leave her alone dude. If you care about her at all you absolutely need to give her as much space as aboslutely possible. To give her "hope" is plain mean.Anyone have any luck staying friends after breaking up with someone? I just ended it yesterday because after two years we weren't progressing any further and I didn't want to waste her time as I knew she wanted it to be more serious. I was preventing us from getting more serious because she was my first relationship and I really couldn't be fully committed without knowing what else was out there.
I still love her and having to break up was one of the worst things I've ever had to do. My inclination is to just give her space until she moves on, but on the other hand I want to be there for her as she's a friend who is in pain.