ChicagoLiz wrote:
SkinnyElephant wrote:
Who says I don't want to get to know a woman, do stuff for a woman, etc?
Then what did you mean in your original post?
SkinnyElephant wrote:
Moral of the story? If that's all I've ever gotten from asking a woman out, I don't think I'm missing out on much. Especially when you factor in how miserable it is for me to cross paths with a woman after getting rejected. That goes beyond hurt feelings; that's a quality of life issue.
If the takeaway from being rejected is "I'm not missing out on much", then what you are saying is that you don't really want to date women. Maybe a little, but disappointment from a rejection is enough to make you say that you're generally not interested, so it's not very important to you. Now, obviously, it's possible that your statement is due to the fact that your pride is wounded, and you don't actually feel that way at all. But that's not what you said. Please explain more fully what's going on, because based on your words, it sounds like you would be happier if you stopped asking women out.
I
have pretty much stopped asking anyone out.
What I meant by the comment you're asking about: The vast majority of gals I've asked out in person have turned me down. In-person ask outs have never gotten me anything more than a short-lived girlfriend so strange I had to break it off after a week (and coming from me, it's saying
a lot when I call her extremely strange).
What I'd like is for a woman I'm able to stand for more than a week to accept my in-person ask out. Something that's
never happened. If it couldn't happen when I had my 20 year old looks, I have no reason to believe it can happen at 33.
Rejections are disappointing, no doubt. The bigger disappointment though (in this context at least) is how miserable the one success was.
Here's an analogy: Imagine your income is so low, the only way you can afford to eat out is by going to McDonald's. And you end up not even enjoying the food very much (because of how low quality the food is). All the finer dining establishments turn you away (metaphorically) because you don't have the money for their prices. It isn't far-fetched to conclude you might give up on going out to eat entirely.