- Joined
- Jan 2, 2013
- Messages
- 100
Chase has a ton of great advice on this site. 99% of the do's and don't's he lists are spot on and I always pick up on something I could've done better or something I totally nailed. It seems that most instances of a guy not getting a girl--barring her clearly not being attracted to him--the guy is at fault in some way. But aren't there cases where the guy does mostly everything right and the faults of the girl prevent anything from transpiring?
Example: I tried to date a girl I work with. She was giving me signals earlier in the year, I responded with a semi-romantic gesture, and she got weird on me. I backed off for weeks until her signals returned. I asked her out as soon as I could. She wasn't sure about dating a co-worker but she said that she would think about it. I gave her my number and went about my business. Then she had her friend ask me to go out with the two of them--minus the friend, who said she would be too busy (wink, wink). I played along and said sure and "they" would let me know when. The final week of her work semester (she's a teacher), the girl was acting really upset when she would see me around. I thought about asking her out again (to emphasize that we wouldn't be working together that summer), but her busy schedule prevented me from seeing her. When I passed by her, I asked her if I could stop by her room to talk, but now she was acting weird again. She sent me an email the next day saying that she was moving (only an hour away though) and a relationship was not her top priority. So I wrote her a note wishing her good luck and gave her my number again.
This girl's signals (which had accrued over months) were immense before and after I asked her out and even the day after I gave her the note. Yet after making moves, she wouldn't let me get close.
Are the guy's moves supposed to always make up for the girl's hesitations? If I was really good enough, should I have gotten her to see me before she leaves and after? Or are some things just out of the guy's control sometimes?
Example: I tried to date a girl I work with. She was giving me signals earlier in the year, I responded with a semi-romantic gesture, and she got weird on me. I backed off for weeks until her signals returned. I asked her out as soon as I could. She wasn't sure about dating a co-worker but she said that she would think about it. I gave her my number and went about my business. Then she had her friend ask me to go out with the two of them--minus the friend, who said she would be too busy (wink, wink). I played along and said sure and "they" would let me know when. The final week of her work semester (she's a teacher), the girl was acting really upset when she would see me around. I thought about asking her out again (to emphasize that we wouldn't be working together that summer), but her busy schedule prevented me from seeing her. When I passed by her, I asked her if I could stop by her room to talk, but now she was acting weird again. She sent me an email the next day saying that she was moving (only an hour away though) and a relationship was not her top priority. So I wrote her a note wishing her good luck and gave her my number again.
This girl's signals (which had accrued over months) were immense before and after I asked her out and even the day after I gave her the note. Yet after making moves, she wouldn't let me get close.
Are the guy's moves supposed to always make up for the girl's hesitations? If I was really good enough, should I have gotten her to see me before she leaves and after? Or are some things just out of the guy's control sometimes?