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rktho
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11 Mar 2018, 9:28 pm

AngelRho wrote:
rktho wrote:
AngelRho wrote:
rktho wrote:
AngelRho wrote:
Next chance you see her, you gotta pull the trigger on this thing. Doesn’t matter how you do it, just get it done.

Ok...her talking first...this is GOOD. Always start that way. I know, I know, it derails. Let her run her mouth for 5 minutes (roughly...don’t like, keep looking at your watch the whole time). Between the 5-10 minute mark you say, “hey, listen, I want to tell you something.” And then drop the hammer on it. No more waiting. No more excuses. BAM. Done.

That’s what I TRIED to do. It didn’t work. I froze up. I need to strengthen my tack.

Also, she doesn’t run her mouth off. She just asks me questions. How’s school? What classes are you taking? Your favorite subject is writing? I remember, you write novels. Have you been working on those? Are you going to get them published? I finally said, “Well, what about your classes? What are you taking?” and I learned a bit about her for a change. When the lull in the conversation came I took a deep breath and said her name. I was going to tell her. And then for whatever reason I couldn’t force out of myself.

I’ve been thinking about bringing up some kind of segue. Like, “Have you read Harry Potter? Who’s your favorite character?” And after she told me about hers (assuming she’s seen or read Harry Potter) I’d say, “My favorite character is Ginny Weasley, ‘cause she’s nice, athletic, and comes from the best family ever. Kinda reminds me of someone.” I dunno, that’s just a hypothetical segue I could do. I’m thinking a segue subject would really help, but it’d have to funnel straight into what I was trying to tell her.

You’re overthinking it.

Ugh...you’re Mormons...

I know some Mormons. My aunt is Mormon, but I think my cousins got sick of it and aren’t really affiliated with religion much. At least not that I’m aware of. Anyway, not judging here, and my thoughts on that are more for PPR than L&D. So I’ll try to approach it more from your perspective.

The little bit I know from interacting with Mormons as opposed reading up on the religion is that you are perpetually happy, or at least try to make it appear so. I’ve noticed some very New Age-y kinds of behaviors. More charismatic than Catholics, but not nearly so contemplative. More...I dunno, PRACTICAL.

So start with a vision. Your goal is to ask her to be your gf. More or less. You have a crush on her and at the very least you want to go out and just see where this goes. Maybe it goes nowhere, but you want to know. Hopefully, she’ll reciprocate.

How do you do it? Baby steps. You know you’re going to see her at certain times on certain days. There you go. Then you just ask.

Yeah, yeah, you freeze up. I know. So keep trying.

Start with small talk for a few short minutes. Like always. Let her talk a bit, and keep her talking. This is best practice, anyway. Good manners, makes people relax, let’s them know you’re interested, you’re a good listener.

Basically, you’re being nice. You don’t HAVE to be nice, but you are. You are essentially taking out emotional stock you intend to cash out when you need it. Hitting her with couple talk is cashing out.

You are taking a risk, as you well know, and the risk:benefit ratio is appropriate for what you want to do. If she rejects you, you likely also lose a friend. But what does it matter if you can’t date her? You lose, anyway. So really you either stay right where you are and gain nothing or you gain a gf.

After that initial ice breaking moment, and don’t rush it, THEN just hit her with it. No segue. Just drop the hammer. Don’t overthink it. “Oh, you DID pass that math test you were worried about? I’m so glad! That’s so awesome. You are really awesome. Y’know, I’ve really enjoyed getting to know you and I’ve always really liked you. I was kinda wondering if you think, uh...I dunno...maybe we could get to know each other better? Like, maybe as more than just friends?”

That’s it. All you need. Actually, you could simplify it even better than I just did. If you wanna be smooth and segue, that’s as smooth as I’d ever be.

I was far less than any moral ideal. So I went through a brief time that I was just sick of women as a whole. I found myself among women in bad relationships. I could have been, like, “You’re bored and lonely? Hey, guess what! I’m bored and lonely, too! Wanna party?” I’d get the usual “oh, my bf wouldn’t like that,” but sometimes I’d end up taking the girl back to my place.

I’m guessing your intentions are more chaste than mine ever were. My point is that it doesn’t take much. Trying to be perfectly smooth and concentrating on every little detail is gonna make you freeze. So don’t worry so much about delivery.

Just get it done. Quick. Simple.

Visualize it in your head. You can see it like you’re already there. You go up to her just like you have a million times and you talk about ______. And you don’t give it any time, or any more than you have to. Hit her with it. I really like you and _______. Would you like to ______?

Just. Like. That.

Don’t try to control the conversation leading up to it. You’ll freeze. Don’t steer the conversation subtly in that direction. You’ll end up hitting the curve too fast and hit a tree. I want you to drop the hammer and run the car right off the frikken cliff! Go airborne. On purpose, not by accident. You need to visualize this. Doesn’t matter what she talks about at first. Doesn’t matter if you have to forcibly interrupt her at some point. Visualize all kinds of different conversations. You nod your head and say “good. That’s good. Listen, I’ve been meaning to tell you____.” BAM.

Or, “oh, I’m so sorry that happened. If there’s anything I can do to help, please let me know. Listen, I’ve been meaning to tell you something. ________.” BAM.

Get a picture of this in your head. Get a few hundred of these pictures in your head. They all go the same way. Then you go see her and plug in the algorithm. It seems impossible, but it’s really so easy. Visualize. Act.

If you freeze up, that’s ok. Try again. And again. Eventually you won’t freeze up. But do hurry. My guess is you aren’t the only guy interested in her. Be there or be nowhere.

I’m not interested in a girlfriend and she’s not interested in a boyfriend. I just wanted to go on a few dates with her and see if she starts to reciprocate so that maybe we can steady date in the future. If not, I’m cool to be friends. Mormons take platonic friends on dates anyway.

Her bestie has confirmed she already knows how I feel. She’s not attracted to me. I’m not getting a romantic relationship of any kind out of this. She doesn’t want to get involved with anybody. So I just want to be friends. But good friends. Friends that talk to each other more often than once a week, about stuff other than school. And maybe when we see each other after my mission, I’ll see how she feels about trying out a relationship.

I believe in taking platonic relationships on dates. That’s what dating used to be like before the baby boomer generation screwed it up.

At any rate...whatever it is you’re trying to do, the only way you’re going to do it is to just do it. Apply same approach and see what happens.

Best of luck to you.

Thank you.



rktho
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12 Mar 2018, 10:10 am

I’ve emailed her brother and he says it would be better not to say anything. She already knows how I feel and now she knows I know how she feels, so I don’t have anything to clear up with her.

That’s a huge relief, honestly.



kraftiekortie
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12 Mar 2018, 10:34 am

I'm glad you have that sort of communicative ability with her brother. Is he a friend of yours?

I wish I could say that she will "take the next step," but it seems doubtful to me (I could be wrong). I would guess that you'll have to "take the next step."

Are you in email contact with her, too?



rktho
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12 Mar 2018, 11:02 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
I'm glad you have that sort of communicative ability with her brother. Is he a friend of yours?

I wish I could say that she will "take the next step," but it seems doubtful to me (I could be wrong). I would guess that you'll have to "take the next step."

Are you in email contact with her, too?

No. Just her brother. The three of us used to hang out together when we saw each other. Now he’s on his mission. I wish I had her email. Or her number. Especially because she leaves for college in Hawaii in September.



AngelRho
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12 Mar 2018, 12:16 pm

rktho wrote:
I’ve emailed her brother and he says it would be better not to say anything. She already knows how I feel and now she knows I know how she feels, so I don’t have anything to clear up with her.

That’s a huge relief, honestly.

IOW, basically, you punked out. :lol:

And you assume the brother is telling the truth because she confided in him, right?

I’m only half serious, btw. I’d have preferred to be more assertive if I was in your shoes, but perhaps things are better off this way.

I have a similar story. When I was away for my teaching internship, my gf was more serious about our relationship than I was while I was still hung up on my most recent ex.

There was this gas station just down the road from the school that had the best barbecue pork sandwiches I’ve ever had. So I’d eat at this place and there was this gorgeous girl cashier. Very nice, funny as heck. I never could work up the courage to even ask her name, much less ask her out. So it was down to my last week when I finally worked up to slightly deeper smalltalk. I think maybe she was picking up on crush-vibes from me, because she said she was taking a year off from school and about to join the military.

Shot. Down. Before I even got STARTED.

Translation: not interested in going out, PERIOD, especially not with YOU.

Maybe she was honest, maybe she was a liar. Maybe I missed my chance. Maybe I never had a chance to begin with. But I’ll never know for sure, will I?

Anyway, I’m sure you intuitively know yours is not a great situation and moving on is best. I suspect you’ll meet someone nice soon if you aren’t already close friends with someone else who’s dateable.

Some commentary on Mormons and dating: as with any religion, there are those who are more observant than others. There are those who take the more practical wisdom more seriously than others. I’m the same way in my own spiritual life. I love the Bible and I take it seriously. And I think Mormons seem to be more adept at applying those principles to day-to-day life than some others. I enjoy the Catholic mass and the deeper, mystical side of it, though I’m not into a lot of Catholic dogma (I’m not Catholic myself). Catholics can be all peace and love. But they can also be self-righteous. And then there are the usual socially obligated Catholics that you wonder if they’re even Christian at all. I can hang out with the peace and love types all day along with the more chill priests. The rest of them are constantly living at odds with church teachings and scripture. I don’t see any actual APPLICATION of faith to daily life.

Mormons are vastly different. All smiles, all the time. Never a bad day. Down side? No one is exempt from conflict. Miserable people will always try to make you miserable. So I worked with a Mormon lady on a musical. First off, she had no idea what she was doing. She demanded exact precision on stage, toes 90 degrees to audience at all times, etc., and she wasn’t really open to any suggestions from me. Deep down she just wasn’t a very nice or well-intentioned person whilst the typical LDS pattern has a heavy emphasis on character. So when everything appeared so unnatural and the actors weren’t cooperative and I had a hard time following her every whim, the constant smile looked like it was engaging more and more muscle groups to hold up.

Applying wisdom = good. Questionable motivations + spiritual wisdom application = failure + misery.

In dating, as with most all of life, these things work really well, which is why I don’t think you’ll be long in finding someone else to go out with. You have your best practices, and you apply them sincerely. The only advice I can give is take emotion out of the equation. Focus on getting to know women in a general kind of way. Make close friends. Narrow down that circle of friends to those you more obviously share mutual attraction. And if you’re seeing each other exclusively for some 3 months, talk marriage. Avoid indulging crushes because that only makes things worse.

I don’t mean be a heartless robot. Not like Smiling-Mormon Lady. I just mean learn to recognize when something is an emotional response not inline with good judgment. I’ve managed to get in serious relationships with crushes only to learn later on just how horrible these girls actually were. I’ve also gone the other extreme: dating available girls because they crushed on me and I was desperate. Some girls are available for a reason. That’s why I’d choose to stay emotionally reserved, attract the most women I could, see who out there really digs me, and decide from there who scores highest on compatibility. My first question is “Who out there COULD I fall in love with?” My next question is who of those reciprocates? Emotions get involved and make the ultimate choice when there’s not just one woman left.

There’s no one right answer, so you decide what best fits your values. Is she rich? Pretty? Great personality? Cute feet? (Ok, that was me!). I mean, what is it? Everyone has a diff answer from diff values, and that’s entirely emotional. Maybe it’s straight from the heart and there aren’t words for it. Until you reach that point, don’t lose your head.

The easy answer is you only associate with a certain type. Maybe you don’t date outside your race or religion. Maybe you avoid all smokers/drinkers/caffeine addicts. Maybe you only date 6 foot blondes. Whatever. You get the practical, logical part out of the way to set yourself up for success without having to overthink it.

That goes back to the LDS experience, too. Your people had a habit of planning everything all the way to the end. Your church should have failed. Setback after setback. And you learned along the way. Same applies to relationships. Plan. Act.



rktho
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12 Mar 2018, 2:05 pm

AngelRho wrote:
rktho wrote:
I’ve emailed her brother and he says it would be better not to say anything. She already knows how I feel and now she knows I know how she feels, so I don’t have anything to clear up with her.

That’s a huge relief, honestly.

IOW, basically, you punked out. :lol:

And you assume the brother is telling the truth because she confided in him, right?

I’m only half serious, btw. I’d have preferred to be more assertive if I was in your shoes, but perhaps things are better off this way.

I have a similar story. When I was away for my teaching internship, my gf was more serious about our relationship than I was while I was still hung up on my most recent ex.

There was this gas station just down the road from the school that had the best barbecue pork sandwiches I’ve ever had. So I’d eat at this place and there was this gorgeous girl cashier. Very nice, funny as heck. I never could work up the courage to even ask her name, much less ask her out. So it was down to my last week when I finally worked up to slightly deeper smalltalk. I think maybe she was picking up on crush-vibes from me, because she said she was taking a year off from school and about to join the military.

Shot. Down. Before I even got STARTED.

Translation: not interested in going out, PERIOD, especially not with YOU.

Maybe she was honest, maybe she was a liar. Maybe I missed my chance. Maybe I never had a chance to begin with. But I’ll never know for sure, will I?

Anyway, I’m sure you intuitively know yours is not a great situation and moving on is best. I suspect you’ll meet someone nice soon if you aren’t already close friends with someone else who’s dateable.

Some commentary on Mormons and dating: as with any religion, there are those who are more observant than others. There are those who take the more practical wisdom more seriously than others. I’m the same way in my own spiritual life. I love the Bible and I take it seriously. And I think Mormons seem to be more adept at applying those principles to day-to-day life than some others. I enjoy the Catholic mass and the deeper, mystical side of it, though I’m not into a lot of Catholic dogma (I’m not Catholic myself). Catholics can be all peace and love. But they can also be self-righteous. And then there are the usual socially obligated Catholics that you wonder if they’re even Christian at all. I can hang out with the peace and love types all day along with the more chill priests. The rest of them are constantly living at odds with church teachings and scripture. I don’t see any actual APPLICATION of faith to daily life.

Mormons are vastly different. All smiles, all the time. Never a bad day. Down side? No one is exempt from conflict. Miserable people will always try to make you miserable. So I worked with a Mormon lady on a musical. First off, she had no idea what she was doing. She demanded exact precision on stage, toes 90 degrees to audience at all times, etc., and she wasn’t really open to any suggestions from me. Deep down she just wasn’t a very nice or well-intentioned person whilst the typical LDS pattern has a heavy emphasis on character. So when everything appeared so unnatural and the actors weren’t cooperative and I had a hard time following her every whim, the constant smile looked like it was engaging more and more muscle groups to hold up.

Applying wisdom = good. Questionable motivations + spiritual wisdom application = failure + misery.

In dating, as with most all of life, these things work really well, which is why I don’t think you’ll be long in finding someone else to go out with. You have your best practices, and you apply them sincerely. The only advice I can give is take emotion out of the equation. Focus on getting to know women in a general kind of way. Make close friends. Narrow down that circle of friends to those you more obviously share mutual attraction. And if you’re seeing each other exclusively for some 3 months, talk marriage. Avoid indulging crushes because that only makes things worse.

I don’t mean be a heartless robot. Not like Smiling-Mormon Lady. I just mean learn to recognize when something is an emotional response not inline with good judgment. I’ve managed to get in serious relationships with crushes only to learn later on just how horrible these girls actually were. I’ve also gone the other extreme: dating available girls because they crushed on me and I was desperate. Some girls are available for a reason. That’s why I’d choose to stay emotionally reserved, attract the most women I could, see who out there really digs me, and decide from there who scores highest on compatibility. My first question is “Who out there COULD I fall in love with?” My next question is who of those reciprocates? Emotions get involved and make the ultimate choice when there’s not just one woman left.

There’s no one right answer, so you decide what best fits your values. Is she rich? Pretty? Great personality? Cute feet? (Ok, that was me!). I mean, what is it? Everyone has a diff answer from diff values, and that’s entirely emotional. Maybe it’s straight from the heart and there aren’t words for it. Until you reach that point, don’t lose your head.

The easy answer is you only associate with a certain type. Maybe you don’t date outside your race or religion. Maybe you avoid all smokers/drinkers/caffeine addicts. Maybe you only date 6 foot blondes. Whatever. You get the practical, logical part out of the way to set yourself up for success without having to overthink it.

That goes back to the LDS experience, too. Your people had a habit of planning everything all the way to the end. Your church should have failed. Setback after setback. And you learned along the way. Same applies to relationships. Plan. Act.

Yeah, her brother says she told him she doesn't have feelings for me-- which I had suspected she'd done ever since the last time I mentioned, offhand, that she was acting weird around me and he said his guess was that she "probably just wasn't interested".

I'm pretty sure she was honest for two reasons: one, I'd already known she was going to BYU Hawaii for college and I'd just forgotten it/didn't take it into consideration until I realized she was leaving soon. And two, her application's been accepted. So that's for real. But she said she's considering attending BYU Provo (where I'm planning to go) after a year at BYU Hawaii. So maybe, maybe, after we've both served our missions we can reconnect and see if she's interested in a relationship. If I'm lucky, by the time we see each other again, either she'll be single and and interested in a relationship, or we'll both have found someone else. If I'm not lucky, she'll have found someone and I won't have. We'll see. I'm planning to talk to her about meeting up again after our missions, just me, her, and her brother, and if we've got girlfriends and she's got a boyfriend, we'll make a triple date of it. I'd love to have her become a platonic friend if we're not meant to be together. I'm rather attached to her family (at least, the members of her family that I've met) and I think it'd be great my friendship with them lasted beyond this stage of my life. (Actually, my attachment to her family is why I fell for her in the first place.)

Finding someone who shares a mutual attraction might be hard. I have literally never noticed anyone displaying signs of attraction toward me unless they actually told me. And even then, I never think they're serious. Mostly because it's always casual complimenting, almost like catcalling but more friendly. I've never had anyone "confess" feelings for me. Maybe I should start taking people seriously when they say they find me attractive.

As for a type, I didn't have one before, but I do now. LDS, strong testimony, good with kids, and the best in-laws I could ever ask for. I hope I'll be able to find someone like that. The first two will be readily apparent. The second two might be hard to test in a college environment.



AngelRho
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12 Mar 2018, 6:55 pm

The last bit is sensible. You’re well on your way. Disagreements on kids, money, religion, in-laws, fidelity (not simply adultery, but honesty in all areas), and intimacy are some of the main factors in divorce.

Your BEST bet is put your social life on hold until after college and mission. I’m Southern Baptist, btw, so I’m holding back what I REALLY wanna say, haha! But what we probably have in common is putting our faith before everything else. Going on mission would probably strain a relationship and have you compromise what you’re there to do. Kinda like I was chasing nowhere girl while a teaching intern. Never sacrifice what you want for what you want RIGHT NOW.

Hey, come to Greenville, MS for mission and look me up. I know a great place for coffee. Wait... I’ll buy you a beer. Wait... Hey, you like Mexican? :lol:

Oh yeah, I’m on staff at my church, so alcohol use is strongly discouraged. lol



rktho
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12 Mar 2018, 6:58 pm

AngelRho wrote:
The last bit is sensible. You’re well on your way. Disagreements on kids, money, religion, in-laws, fidelity (not simply adultery, but honesty in all areas), and intimacy are some of the main factors in divorce.

Your BEST bet is put your social life on hold until after college and mission. I’m Southern Baptist, btw, so I’m holding back what I REALLY wanna say, haha! But what we probably have in common is putting our faith before everything else. Going on mission would probably strain a relationship and have you compromise what you’re there to do. Kinda like I was chasing nowhere girl while a teaching intern. Never sacrifice what you want for what you want RIGHT NOW.

Hey, come to Greenville, MS for mission and look me up. I know a great place for coffee. Wait... I’ll buy you a beer. Wait... Hey, you like Mexican? :lol:

Oh yeah, I’m on staff at my church, so alcohol use is strongly discouraged. lol

Mormons don't choose their missions. The Lord tells the apostles where to call them. We don't drink alcohol either, so Mexican sounds good.



Chronos
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13 Mar 2018, 1:52 am

rktho wrote:
I’ve emailed her brother and he says it would be better not to say anything. She already knows how I feel and now she knows I know how she feels, so I don’t have anything to clear up with her.

That’s a huge relief, honestly.


Well, good for you for the attempts you made before you were certain. Even though you couldn't bring yourself to say what was on your mind, you had the courage to approach her and that is commendable.



The_Face_of_Boo
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13 Mar 2018, 2:16 am

I got so much curious about Mormons and I loved this part:

Quote:
Mormons also teach that Jesus is just one of many sons of God. Jesus is referred to specifically as “a son of God” in the Book of Mormon (Alma 36:17). Lucifer, or the devil, is another son of God in Mormon theology (Mormon Doctrine, p.163). Further, Mormonism teaches that the number of gods is increasing. Any man on Earth can one day become the god of another planet and populate it with children born to him from his eternal wife (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 345-354). Any one of those children can later become a god in his own right (Doctrine & Covenants 132:20). Thus, there is not just One God, triune or not; there are many, many gods (Book of Abraham 4:3).


Chronos, I pick you as my eternal wife.

Let's populate planet centauri.



rktho
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13 Mar 2018, 8:55 am

The_Face_of_Boo wrote:
I got so much curious about Mormons and I loved this part:

Quote:
Mormons also teach that Jesus is just one of many sons of God. Jesus is referred to specifically as “a son of God” in the Book of Mormon (Alma 36:17). Lucifer, or the devil, is another son of God in Mormon theology (Mormon Doctrine, p.163). Further, Mormonism teaches that the number of gods is increasing. Any man on Earth can one day become the god of another planet and populate it with children born to him from his eternal wife (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 345-354). Any one of those children can later become a god in his own right (Doctrine & Covenants 132:20). Thus, there is not just One God, triune or not; there are many, many gods (Book of Abraham 4:3).


Chronos, I pick you as my eternal wife.

Let's populate planet centauri.

That’s not exactly how it works.