Herman wrote:
(Im Autistic too by the way and been exactly the stereotype I will describe, so no need to feel embarassed or like you are being studied!)
I see the stereotype of lonely virgin autistic guys here over and over, dying pining for a girlfriend or sex. But a most significant part of that stereotype is very picky, specific attributes of that desired female based mostly if not wholly on very conventional aesthetic beauty.
I would like to know how many of the guys here fall into this bracket, even if you ditch the virginity and severe loneliness. How many of you crave / are predominantly attracted to conventionally beautiful women, to physical attributes like figure, facial symmetry, dolled up appearance that would put a girl on the cover of a magazine or in a music video.
How many of you are into that? When you see girls like this, do you pine for them? Do you want them to like you? Do you get sexually or emotionally excited?
And how many of you are into something entirely different, far removed from this simplistic aesthetic "beauty" ?
If so, feel free to describe what that is. ESPECIALLY if you still fall into the category of severe loneliness and desiring specific attributes, just ones that are not based around conventional aesthetic beauty.
Firstly, I'll start off by saying I kind of fall into this category (I'm a virgin and lonely in the romantic sense). I believe the reason that people with minimal relationship experience crave beautiful partners so much is because they themselves feel unattractive, but this belief is challenged if an attractive person is to show a romantic interest in them.
I think many of the people in your aforementioned stereotype feel a relationship with a pretty woman will fill a void in their confidence that has been accumulated over a vivid past of not receiving romantic interest from the opposite sex. Most aren't as interested in a practical relationship as they are a way to boost their own self-esteem.
As for myself, I would say I used to base the possibility of having a relationship with someone off of my extreme preferences (e.g. I have a thing for girls with curly hair, so I would mostly only look at girls with curly hair), but now that I'm 19, my standards aren't as extreme, and I only completely turn my head away from a prospective partner now if I find them unattractive/not even a little bit attractive. To put it in perspective, I probably swipe right on 75% of Tinder profiles nowadays (but I don't generally read their about section). Of course I'm still much more motivated by people with my strong preferences, but it's not make or break anymore.
As for pining for people, that's also a thing of the past for me. I might offer someone a compliment, but only if I can cleverly interweave it into the conversation. The more needy you appear to be, the less desirable you make yourself, so I steer clear of that sort of thing where possible.