• @[email protected]
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    1593 months ago

    I get where they’re coming from, but it’s still not great being a guy and only getting vague signals that you’re trying to piece together. Ghosting is also another issue that’s honestly just disrespectful.

    While it may ultimately be those man children who ruin it for everyone, some upfront honesty is generally very appreciated.

    • gid
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      623 months ago

      While it might feel rough for you, it’s worth remembering that a lot of women have faced very real threats of violence for their upfront honesty.

      If you’re only getting vague signals then maybe that’s the sign that she’s not fully into you.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        I feel like this is very dismissive and also ignores that lots of relationships do inevitably start with vague signals.

        “Yeah, well, women have it worse so your feelings are irrelevant and it’s okay if they ghost you.”

        As I said in my original comment, I get it. But it doesn’t take away from the fact that it’s a difficult situation for men.

        Being dismissive of men’s feelings and not letting them talk about how dating is difficult for them isn’t helping anyone.

        • gid
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          443 months ago

          I didn’t intend to be dismissive and if my response sounded that way then I apologise.

          I agree it’s difficult to be on the receiving end of vague signals, but my perspective is if there’s any annoyance or frustration it should be directed at the violent/angry men who have caused women to feel unsafe.

          Helping women feel safer by tackling the violence and misogyny directed at them by men will benefit everyone.

          • @[email protected]
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            43 months ago

            The main thing for me is to remember it’s not personal. When a stranger treats me as a potential threat, it is not an insult to my character.

            Being treated as a threat by someone who knows my character, is an insult to my character.

            But when a stranger models me as a stranger, it’s not personal at all. It’s not about me. Not a reflection of who I am.

        • @Ookami38
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          293 months ago

          It’s also dismissive of the fact that a lot of women give vague signs as their signs of interest. It’s really just a damned if you do or don’t situation. Either you interpret the vague signals as disinterest and move on, or you read them as a potential go ahead and you’re a dick.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 months ago

            Trying to live so that nobody ever sees you as an asshole is a recipe for depression and regret.

            • @Ookami38
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              3 months ago

              But that’s just circular. Girls can’t be direct because guys are assholes. Guys can’t be direct because they don’t want to be assholes. If standards for one must change, guys being ok with being assholes but being direct with their assertions, then so too must the other change standards, i.e. being direct with their signs.

                • @Ookami38
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                  3 months ago

                  Trying to live so that nobody ever sees you as an asshole is a recipe for depression and regret.

                  How, else do you interpret that? Assuming that depression and regret are things to be avoided, then saying living so that no one sees you as an asshole = depression would mean that, if you want to avoid depression, you necessarily have to be an asshole. I suppose you can be an asshole without being ok with it.

        • @[email protected]
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          193 months ago

          I think there’s three main reasons for vague signals.

          1. They legitimately don’t know how they feel. Maybe they kind of like you but aren’t sure. Recommended: do not pursue. Find someone who is enthusiastic about you. Do you really want to spend your time with someone who can’t make decisions and doesn’t know how they feel? It’s exhausting.

          2. They are afraid or uncomfortable, and are trying to avoid upsetting you. Like the comic. Enough men will do just that or worse if they get rejected that being polite can seem safer, even if it makes me man feel like he’s getting mixed signals. You know you’re not like that, but they don’t. Recommended: same as above.

          2b. You are talking to someone who can’t leave like a retail worker. Stop bothering the person who can’t tell you to fuck off.

          1. They aren’t thinking about you at all. Like one time they’re happy to go bowling with you but the next time they blow you off on biking. What gives?? Mixed signals?? Nah dude she just likes bowling.
          • @[email protected]
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            173 months ago

            There’s also a sort of 1b. They’re into you but are playing games like “hard to get.” Again, do you really want to be with someone playing games with you? It’s exhausting.

          • @[email protected]
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            133 months ago

            Love this. Especially 2b. I hated this about working in a cafe.

            I’m only talking to you at all because I’m being paid to do so. I’m only smiling because my job is customer service. I’m being nice because you’re a fellow human, not because I want you in any way

            • @[email protected]
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              83 months ago

              I’m only smiling because my job is customer service.

              That in many cases smiling is mandatory is a revolting part of customer service in the US.

        • @[email protected]
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          -223 months ago

          I think one should be rather dismissive of “it would be easier for me if others engaged in behaviours that have resulted in their being abused”.

          Your fucking convenience doesn’t come before their sense of safety.

          • @Ookami38
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            163 months ago

            Missing the nuance as always. Thanks, Lemmy!

          • @[email protected]
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            -43 months ago

            Men can’t reproduce. The fear of never getting a woman to love us is fucking scary to men because our feelings evolved around a total dependence on women to propagate our genes.

            For a man, the relationship to a woman is just as valuable as his own body, in terms of viability of his genes. The types of fear we feel reflect this biological fact. We fear death yes, because death means our genes don’t reproduce. We also fear rejection for the same reason.

            • @[email protected]
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              33 months ago

              Don’t use biological arguments. In this stage of civilization, societal considerations trump biological ones.

              And the ones you’re using are bullshit anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        113 months ago

        Yeah, for men the likely worst case scenario is embarrassment, women can get straight-up beaten or murdered

        • @[email protected]
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          -83 months ago

          If by “embarrassment” you mean “getting arrested or your entire career and life ruined by sexual harassment accusations because you accidentally made someone uncomfortable”. Don’t act as if men are giving up dating in record numbers over “embarrassment”. It’s disingenuous. They’re giving up because guys like the one in the comic cause women to view them all as “creeps”.

          • Dandroid
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            93 months ago

            How often does that happen?

            • @[email protected]
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              03 months ago

              To offer a shortened version of the reply I gave to another user who asked that same question, barely at all. But many men are so afraid of becoming that one in a million example that they don’t want to take that chance. The same can be said of women who are afraid of being murdered for turning a guy down - they feel the risk isn’t worth the reward. While both of those fears are understandable, I personally feel that they are also contributing to the degradation of the dating pool, which is what leads to situations like the one in the comic, as fewer well-adjusted men choose to approach women and more poorly-adjusted men come in to take their place. The solution is obvious, but it’s also difficult: People need to be better to each other by taking more chances and giving more chances. Otherwise we’ll have more lonely people in ten years than we already do.

          • @[email protected]
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            73 months ago

            How common exactly is someone getting arrested for sexual harrassment just for asking a woman out?

            • @[email protected]
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              33 months ago

              It’s actually not common at all. But the few examples of it happening were bad enough that it has deterred a lot of men from approaching women at all. Plus, regular, reasonable guys don’t like the idea of asking out a woman who’s immediately afraid he’ll kill her if she says no, not just because they don’t like the idea of potentially making her uncomfortable just by approaching her, but also because even if she says yes, a relationship that has that level of fear or distrust right off the bat is doomed. Which of course leads to a vicious cycle, where the only men asking women out are douchebags, and then those women’s perception of men becomes worse. Nobody likes this cycle, but the only way to fix it is for people to be better to each other.

              • @[email protected]
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                3 months ago

                regular, reasonable guys don’t like the idea of asking out a woman who’s immediately afraid he’ll kill her if she says no, not just because they don’t like the idea of potentially making her uncomfortable just by approaching her, but also because even if she says yes, a relationship that has that level of fear or distrust right off the bat is doomed.

                You’ll have to excuse my language, but this just pissed me right the fuck off.

                Frankly this is a load of bullshit and not a description of how anyone reasonable actually acts. Women getting murdered for rejecting men’s approaches is incredibly common, and you’re fucking placing the blame on women for fuck’s sake. Jesus christ this is just so fucking infuriating. Reasonable men should understand that if they’re not a goddamn murderer then they should be fine.

                I made another comment with a list of the top results I got for “woman killed for rejecting man”, which should hopefully drive the point home that this actually is a scarily common problem that women face – the fact that your little fucking feefees get hurt by the idea that women can be wary of men making advances is inconsequential.

                • @[email protected]
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                  13 months ago

                  Listen. I am not angry at you, but I feel you need to understand a few things.

                  First of all, attempting to twist what I say to support your existing assumptions about men is not the way to engage in healthy discourse. If you go into a thread looking for something to get offended about, you’ll find it, regardless of whether it’s actually offensive, and if you go into it already totally convinced of your own moral superiority, you lose out on the opportunity to learn something.

                  Secondly, while I’m on the topic of assumptions, not wanting to approach someone for fear they’ll prematurely judge you is absolutely a reasonable decision. At the very least, it’s hardly more unreasonable than the notion that everyone bigger than you is going to kill you if you say the wrong thing. Yes, obviously it can happen. I’m not arguing that. But if some guy on the internet demanded that you prove to every man you talk to that you’re not going to falsely accuse them of raping you if they tell you they aren’t interested in you, you would rightfully tell him to fuck off, because A) proving intentions is impossible, B) you could just as easily just never talk to men instead of jumping through a bunch of hoops, and C) you should not have to. Besides, if women being murdered for rejecting men is really as scarily common as you claim, then by your logic, having fewer men approaching women is a good thing, and therefore, calling men fragile for giving up on dating is counter-productive to your assumed goal.

                  And finally, I must say, accusing other people of having “hurt fee-fees” is pretty brazen of you, considering that you’ve done nothing but respond with hostility and insults, whereas I’ve tried to be considerate of your feelings and even straight up apologized to you. Clearly something must happened to you to make you feel the way you do about men, and I sympathize with your situation, but I speak from experience when I say that having trauma does not make a person entitled to spread hatred. As you said, if a man is not a murderer, then in an ideal world, that would be the end of it. But you have made it clear through your words that whether someone is a murderer or not is less important to you than whether or not you fear they could be, and when you judge people by that metric, you become part of the problem you claim to want to solve.

                  • @atkion
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                    13 months ago

                    Excellently put.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 months ago

        Yet I read other thread were women bitched and men acknowledge that we just miss signs when they interested. Its a no win situation. Man glad met my wife on a dating app and we communicated properly.

        But the comic got real point because there was other thread and women dicussed dating and man the crap they deal with makes you wonder they even bother.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          The answer is to flip this psychology/narrative that men have to be the ones to initiate and women are to be demure and play hard to get. Women should be approaching men more and men should be approaching women less.

          Also, men need to have more platonic relationships with women and shouldn’t only be interested in, approach and talk to a woman because they want to have sex with them.

          • @[email protected]
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            -63 months ago

            Probably best not to be so black and white. It’s probably not a healthy friendship if one of the people in the relationship just want to be friends and the other wants a sexual relationship.

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              Right. Men should be able to be friends with women without only wanting to have sex with them.

              • @[email protected]
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                -13 months ago

                We would have to define “wanting to have sex with them”. I would say 95% of young women are sexually attractive to 95% of straight men. If someone is sexually attractive does that mean “you want to have sex with them”.

                David Sedaris did a great story about this I can’t remember the name of the episode. But as a sexual male whenever you see a woman one of the first things you think in your head is “would I have sex with her”. Not “will I” or even “will I pursue” but “would I”. Most of the time, the answer is yes.

                Being in an actual relationship and learning and navigating friendships is difficult for all humans.

                But to say men should stop wanting to have sex with women is ignorant, and not true to reality. If you don’t like it, I guess too bad? It’s not going to change.

                This doesn’t mean we should work on being more empathetic in our relationships to try and understand where others are coming from. We can still be respectful of each others boundaries while wanting to have sex with each other.

                But my original point is that it is not really a friend relationship if one person has unrequited feelings the other doesn’t share.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -13 months ago

                    It can be difficult for young men who have never been in a relationship before who also may not have positive male role models etc.

                    As social beings it’s also important to note that being rejected socially brings out some deep psychological responses in our lower animal brains.

        • @zarkanian
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          43 months ago

          Yet I read other thread were women bitched and men acknowledge that we just miss signs when they interested. Its a no win situation.

          People who can’t communicate probably wouldn’t make good partners in the first place.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 months ago

            I’ve seen this before in the thread, and I kind of wonder about it. I don’t think that like, an inability to communicate, or, realistically, in inability for communication to take place (which could be due to either person), is necessarily an indication that a relationship is impossible or undesirable. There’s more to people that just sort of, their surface level ability to communicate with one another, or show outward signals. Personality compatibility, shared interests, sexual attraction, even. Certainly, I’d say it’s pretty important, that people are able to communicate with each other, but I also don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect that, as two people naturally spend time together, they’ll probably get better at communication. Especially if they’re actually capable of recognizing that they’re not effectively communicating. What are two people doing, spending time together constantly, if they’re not in some kind of relationship already, you know?

            So I dunno, it’s one kind of, cause and effect, that’s mixed into the pot of many, but I think it’s maybe a mistake to prioritize it so highly, before any other considerations.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      333 months ago

      vague signals

      If a woman gives me vague signals it’s a sign that she’s not right for me. Everything other than a “hell yes” is a no. Which is fine, I’m okay with being alone. But I’m not going to chase someone who hints that they’re into me, because I’m too damn old for that shit.

      • @[email protected]
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        143 months ago

        Everything other than a “hell yes” is a no.

        This must be said more frequently. This is the correct attitude. You may be alone longer, but you haven’t terrorized anybody. It’s a net win.

          • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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            43 months ago

            No, it’s not. If I’m talking to someone and they look disinterested, that’s not a “hell yes.” If they’re standing there while their four-top is waiting on refills, that’s not a “hell yes.”

            A “hell yes” is them asking me questions, or sharing a relatable story. It’s them smiling and looking at me when I talk. A “hell yes” is me asking “would you like to talk alone” and her saying “hell yes.”

            Get used to being alone. Learn to love its freedom and spontaneity, and then find someone who’s better than that who says “hell yes.”

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              Well I’m just saying I’ve had not hell yes signals turned into a hell yes date very quickly when I asked them out. Of course I always ask them very open ended so they have all the chance to say no but I got a “yes of course!”

              Sometimes people are just a bit shy or afraid, I know I probably give of pretty meh signals even if I’m crushing hard.

              I agree it’s very important not to fool yourself but sometimes you gotta ask to know for sure and I don’t think it’s that black and white all the time

              E: love a good Convo down vote no reply… weak sauce.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        Also, don’t take the disrespect personally. Especially if it’s someone new in your life, they don’t know you deeply enough for that to be a personal thing.

        It’s just the game she’s decided is necessary for her safety. It might be perceivable as disrespectful, but security procedures often are. Like if you went to your friend’s house and they demanded to search you for weapons that might seem disrespectful.

        But you’re not friends with this person ghosting you. They don’t know who you are. And in some environments, when someone unknown to you comes to your house you pat them down for weapons, even if it diminishes the hospitality.

        • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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          13 months ago

          Exactly, I don’t blame them at all for anything. They don’t know me, I barely know them. If they don’t want to talk to me I have all you randos who reply to my comments. But I’m not gonna chase somebody who wants to get away. My biggest turn-on is someone who really, really wants me.

    • @[email protected]
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      233 months ago

      It’s also a bit like the job market in some professions. The good ones are more likely to be taken, so you have a magnifying effect on people who tend not to have successful relationships.

      People are not very effective communicators.

    • @[email protected]
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      133 months ago

      Ghosting is also another issue that’s honestly just disrespectful.

      Maybe it’s because I’m a zoomer, but ghosting for me is just kind of expected. It’s mildly frustrating to encounter someone who doesn’t really reciprocate your feelings or what have you, and it’s maybe more disrespectful if it happens like, after the second or third date, but if someone ghosts you after the first date, I don’t really think it matters that much. Certainly, I’d rather not have to confront it than have them tell me that they’re not interested. That’s not really a satisfying answer, “they’re not interested”, right. It makes you want to ask “why”, but realistically they’re not going to be able to give you a reasonable, realistic, actionable answer. They’re just gonna be pulling stuff outta their ass. So I don’t really care all that much, I don’t think it matters.

    • @zarkanian
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      123 months ago

      Ghosting is also another issue that’s honestly just disrespectful.

      While that can be annoying, if somebody’s ghosting you, that’s just a signal to move on, yeah? You probably don’t want a relationship with somebody who can’t communicate, anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        73 months ago

        It’s a shitty signal because it is just not replying to you and not a specific signal on its own. Could be for a bunch of reasons so you’ll have to guess that they’re ghosting you. It takes a while and even then you might not be sure.

        • @[email protected]
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          -33 months ago

          It is a clear signal, it says very clearly and in no uncertain terms they don’t want to talk to you.

          Your need for “closure” or whatever doesn’t matter.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            It could be that you are busy, had some issues, many other reasons. The whole point of a clear signal is that it’s easy to understand and with as little room for misunderstanding, which ghosting is obviously not. If you want to ghost someone, by all means, but it’s def not a clear or direct signal.

            Not to mention, I thought the whole point was that you don’t have to be direct and clear about it and hence won’t have to face the possible backlash.

            Your need for “closure” or whatever doesn’t matter.

            I’m not sure what you mean by this. I didn’t think my “needs” were a subject of the discussion lol

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      This exact kind of situation does happen all the time. I don’t believe it’s a majority of men at all, but even if it’s a small percentage, that’s still a lot because of the magnitude of their actions. Even if it’s only a 5% chance that rejecting a guy is going to cause them to go completely off the rails, you’re still not going to want to take that chance because there’s nothing in it for you, and in those 5% of cases it’s going to be extremely upsetting, or in some cases, actually physically dangerous to you.

    • myxi
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      3 months ago

      I concur. It is also very hard to make a rationale for whether your date is ghosting you, is just busy, or is not in a good mood. Obviously, if she is not in a good mood or is busy, she would prefer not to reply to me (because she might unintentionally ruin the bond), but what if she’s just not interested in me and thus is ignoring me?

      If you like this person a lot, your feelings will likely corrupt your rationale. Your hopes won’t let you move on; you will keep suffering, deciding whether to move on or not.

    • Neato
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      -273 months ago

      You are the person in this comic.

      Also another common third panel would be: not taking no for an answer and pursuing.