Why this « never give up » culture?
15 is really too young to determine whether or not you'll struggle with dating in your twenties. For one thing, the majority of people are still virgins at 15 and a sizeable percentage have never been in a relationship before either. So its kind of expected that you don't have a lot of relationship experience at that age.
Secondly, most people at 15 haven't even fully developed physically yet. It's possible that you'll look much better at 21 when you're fully mature compared to when you were 15.
A lot of these mismatches are due to sheer luck. If you grow up with a community/school with girls who know you they might already be comfortable with dating you and even hooking up because they know you. That's just being born in the right place (like having the fortune to be born in a wealthy family).
My neighbor two houses away back in highschool was filthy rich and their son was an a-hole. But girls from other rich parents would come visit his house and he used to hang out with them. The girls knew he was an a-hole but as they say "better the devil you know".
The_Face_of_Boo
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nick007
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It would seem to me that most would rather commit suicide than accept life-long romantic and sexual loneliness. Most of us are biologically programmed to intensely desire those kinds of experiences with members of the opposite sex, and the idea that we do not get to have those experiences, but must live in a world where we are constantly exposed to everyone else getting to have those experiences is infuriating.
You've mentioned that you're likely to give up if your current relationship doesn't work out. I would say giving up after having your fair share of romantic and sexual experiences is significantly more palatable than being told to give up despite never getting to have those experiences at all.
Why would someone who has an extremely intense desire to experience romantic and sexual interactions, who is extremely frustrated and depressed about their inability to do so, want to continue living when romantic and sexual experiences are off the table for them? Nobody wants to continue feeling that way, and essentially being forced against their will to give up on having the experiences they value more than anything doesn't stop them from feeling that way.
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Sometimes I wonder why that is.
Probably because someone from a different cultural background is less likely to notice or care about the subtle ways you are unable to fit in to your own cultural background.
This is also why, quite apart from dating, I think autistic people are best off living in highly multi-cultural neighborhoods, with immigrants from all over the world, and with no one dominant ethnic group.
For similar reasons, such a neighborhood is a good place to live if you have a speech impairment. My boyfriend has been hassled for "not speaking English" everywhere he has lived except here in NYC, where his speech impairment is seen as just another accent.
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Sounds like you may be the best person here to advise and support other people here (especially men) in a similar situation.
It's great that you succeeded in finding a partner.
Hopefully you can help others here figure out what might work for them?
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jamesebtrout
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Yes, and hopefully you'll be more useful that some other Autism/Asperger's adult groups. I was briefly in one with a group that was based out of LA (the director reached out to me online). I ended up quitting after a few sessions, because I found it to be counterproductive. Sorry, but I'm not paying $75 for a biweekly session to hear platitudes, cliches, and bromides about dating. If I tried David DeAngelo (who is a fraud BTW) or Neil Strauss's "The Game" as tactics, I'd get thrown in jail. I can understand telling a 17 year old to "be patient" when it comes to dating, even a 27 year old, to an extent. A 37 year old though?
Telling someone obsessed with romantic failure "you're just not cut out for dating" really isn't as helpful as some people believe it to be. It just feeds into the Grand Narrative of Uniquely Hard-Done-By Misery, thereby fueling the obsession.
I've certainly never sat down and decided "I will be single evermore, alas!" But nor do I waste much time brooding about an area of life I'm bad at. There are other things to be getting on with, and other things to enjoy. There are worse things that could happen. I've never suceeded in putting that view across to anyone in misery mode, so I generally don't bother anymore.
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jamesebtrout
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I don't talk about my dating life so much anymore, because #1. it's upsetting and #2. it has in the past given people the (false) impression that it's literally ALL I care about. Times like this when I talk about this are the exception rather than the rule. In my 20s, I would be brooding about it on forums like this on a regular basis.
The_Face_of_Boo
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Sometimes I wonder why that is.
Probably because someone from a different cultural background is less likely to notice or care about the subtle ways you are unable to fit in to your own cultural background.
This is also why, quite apart from dating, I think autistic people are best off living in highly multi-cultural neighborhoods, with immigrants from all over the world, and with no one dominant ethnic group.
For similar reasons, such a neighborhood is a good place to live if you have a speech impairment. My boyfriend has been hassled for "not speaking English" everywhere he has lived except here in NYC, where his speech impairment is seen as just another accent.
For me it was the looks, locals find me so below average while some other demographics find me handsome.
nick007
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Sometimes I wonder why that is.
Probably because someone from a different cultural background is less likely to notice or care about the subtle ways you are unable to fit in to your own cultural background.
This is also why, quite apart from dating, I think autistic people are best off living in highly multi-cultural neighborhoods, with immigrants from all over the world, and with no one dominant ethnic group.
For similar reasons, such a neighborhood is a good place to live if you have a speech impairment. My boyfriend has been hassled for "not speaking English" everywhere he has lived except here in NYC, where his speech impairment is seen as just another accent.
_________________
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https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Ru ... cquisition
nick007
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Location: was Louisiana but now Vermont in capitalistic military dictatorship called USA
Sounds like you may be the best person here to advise and support other people here (especially men) in a similar situation.
It's great that you succeeded in finding a partner.
Hopefully you can help others here figure out what might work for them?
_________________
"I don't have an anger problem, I have an idiot problem!"
"Hear all, trust nothing"
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Ru ... cquisition
I was told by my wife that I look a bit like Michael Bolton. I can tell you I never heard THAT one back in Europe.
Maybe the exotic element in an international relationship will never quite go away. But at the end of the day what makes a relationship last (and thrive) or not is personality and compatibility, IMO.
The_Face_of_Boo
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