Back in the 1990's, there was a large number of teenage sitcoms on TV. Here is a partial list of the shows shown in the US and a list of shows I used to watch religiously:
* Step by Step
* Family Matters
* Boy Meets World
* Saved by the Bell
* Full House
Now, they all had one thing in common. They showed situations where the guy wanted to have sex and the girl did not. The pattern was ridiculously similar each and every time:
1) The guy is pressured to have sex by the society around him.
2) He somehow tries to influence his girlfriend to have sex, with no force at all.
3) She reacts badly in one way or another, and either threatens to or actually dumps him.
4) He is humbled, vows to win her back, and promises to never pressure her again.
5) She forgives him, and they live celibately ever after.
Now, at age 27, I'm fully aware of why that pattern was always followed. They were family shows, and some of them aired on Disney-owned networks. So of course they would never show teenagers having premarital sex. The CEOs would simply not allow anything else (while themselves having tons of mistresses, but that's beyond the scope of this thread).
But at the naive age of 13 to 17, this completely screwed up my mentality. Those shows depicted all guys as raging horndogs and all girls as frigid ice queens. I started to believe that asking your girlfriend to have sex with you was the most horrible thing you can do as a boyfriend, so in order to find a girlfriend, I tried to depict myself as someone who would never ask for sex. It never occurred to me until college that a girl would actually want to have sex with a guy she's dating. This goes against what every alpha-male does: portraying himself as a manly, sexual being, which gets him girls left and right. They're the guys who lose their virginity before graduating high school, unlike myself, who lost it at 22 to an escort.
I didn't set myself straight until my second year of college (age 19), when I was able to cast off the wrong messages I absorbed from teenage sitcoms, and started showing true sexual interest. Now by then, having been a virgin for so long, I also showed desperation, but that's a completely different problem.
Now, I'm sure I'm not the only aspie guy who absorbed wrong messages from watching those sitcoms as a teenager. NTs who watch those shows get the same messages, but they have ability to use their social intuition to somehow "filter out" the information. They know by age 13 what I learned only at age 19: those are supposed to be family shows, and what's shown there does not match what happens in real life. Aspies, on the other hand, not having much real-life social insight, grab on to any insight they can get, including the one that may do more harm than good (without themselves realizing that until much later).
Anyway, hope this thread gets some good responses. Carry on.
Last edited by Aspie1 on 20 Feb 2011, 2:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.