My problem in dating has not so much been finding interested women, because I have found quite a few. The problem has been getting them to stick around. I believe that part of the reason for this difficulty is my failure to solve what I'd call the "friend/lover dichotomy."
The problem is, at least for men, the qualities in a man that make him a good supportive friend are often the opposite of the qualities that make him an appealing romantic partner. This is why Nice Guys incessantly complain that women are attracted to jerks.
A supportive friend is available, upfront, kind, emotionally stable, agreeable, egalitarian, and unselfish. However, an appealing lover - a man who is romantically and sexually exciting - is more on the side of unavailable, mysterious, emotionally dynamic, dominant, powerful, and self-oriented.
So I have a problem. I can either be one or the other with a woman, but not both. If I display more of the friendship traits with a woman, then I can have a good friendship with her, but she insists that she has no romantic interest in me. If I display the lover traits, she will often be attracted to me and may become physically intimate with me in some way, but the relationship is brief and she doesn't stick around.
But some men do manage to pull off being both a friend and a lover. They know when to respond as a friend and when to respond as a lover. I think this is part of the social intuition that I'm missing.
So what can you suggest for me? How do I know when to be a friend and when to be a lover, so that I can both attract a woman and get her to stick around?
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Your neurodiverse (Aspie) score: 107 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 122 of 200
You seem to have both neurodiverse and neurotypical traits