Quote:
How should I deal with this crush?
Let it go. "Crushes" are
not the way healthy adult relationships are formed. Healthy relationships are predicated upon a foundation of mutual respect, and central to that is respecting the freedom, agency and personhood of each other,
especially the right to say "no" and be left alone. "Crushes" objectify the target of your obsession, reducing them to nothing more than an instrument to fulfil your needs. Not perceiving their personhood, you're blinded to their needs and desires, only seeing yours. Regardless of whether or not she is interested in you (her decline of your Facebook 'friend' request is a pretty explicit hint), at best obsessive "crush" feelings express themselves as an overwhelming and oppressive emotional neediness which the target of your obsession can't possibly fulfill, and signals that you offer them nothing other than perpetually urgent demands that they fulfill your needs; kind of like an insatiable emotional vampire who will suck the life right out of them. That is
not the sort of thing folks look for in a relationship.
At worst, obsessive "crush" feelings, if cultivated and allowed to flower, will start to blur the psychosexual line between fantasy and reality. As the irrational becomes pseudo-rationalized, the building psychological tension of insatiable unrealistic neediness can start to involuntarily leech out as stalking behaviors. When your unwanted attention is inevitably rejected, this can metastasize into resentment, anger, and jealousy. Nothing good will come from having a "crush" on someone.
If you truly cared for her, you'd treat her with the courtesy and respect to which everyone is entitled, and leave her alone.