T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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478.1 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Grail seeker | Tue Jul 24 1990 10:59 | 32 |
|
How about some honest talking?
Like....
"I feel that I'm getting mixed signals from you. When you do X,
I feel that you're suggesting Y. When you do A however, it feels
like you're suggesting B. I am feeling very awkward therefore -
because I don't want to offend you or make a dork of myself in the
long run, can you tell me which set of signals I should believe, or can
you stick to sending out one flavour or the other?"
Maybe that's a bit too blatant, huh?
The following is *very firmly* just my own opinion and experience....
I've played games like that before. I didn't realise that
I was doing it at the time, and it wasn't meant to be deliberately
hurtful (if that's any consolation).
For me it took a lot of self-work, and unlearning of ways that I'd
learned to act around men from when I was very young, to stop doing it.
I was conditioned into certain behaviours that weren't healthy
or honest, as I believe many women are.
Many of us, though, are now becoming self-aware enough and willing to
put in the hard work necessary to get rid of that conditioning.
It takes a long time, and isn't easy. It may take a real shock to
shake someone who plays those games into seeing their behaviour
another way.........
'gail
|
478.2 | One woman's opinion | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jul 24 1990 11:08 | 60 |
| Yeah, I've got plenty of comments! The "man" in this scenario sounds
incredibly passive, with very low self-esteem, little self confidence,
a suspicion of women and an anger that he has to "go through them" to
get to their goodies.
What this man is seeing is nothing different than what goes on between
same sex people and between animals of all species - the strong
dominating the weak. It's nothing inherent in only women. You offer
your throat, someone's going to cut it, sooner or later.
Since when does a woman hold all the power to "make" a man interested
or not? Good heavens. What about the man's power? What about
charming a lady in whom HE is interested? What about making HER day
a little brighter? It seems this guy is interested only in himself and
in only those women who hint that they might do something good for him.
This seems pretty sad to me.
He should find someone in whom HE is interested, for his own reasons,
and simply be friendly and when the time is right, suggest lunch or
whatever. She either says yes or she says no but she has NO power to
"make" him look like a fool. How? Even if she turns out to be married
and declines, so what? I'm sure she'd be charmed and flattered and if
the guy can take a no without going all to pieces and assuming it means
that he's lecherous pond scum, an enjoyable friendship could even ensue.
But I get the impression that scoring is at the heart of it in this man's
mind and if his tiniest display of interest doesn't set him immediately
on the road to success, he feals cheated and/or exposed and/or used by
women who will giggle about him during their coffee breaks. It sounds
rather paranoid. Don't just react, act! Call some shots of your own!
Probably every one of these women has been "used" by a male in a much
deeper sense, after all! The man in the basenote is merely afraid to
make a date for fear of being used. Most women have made love and been
used! And they survive and even make love again. So get a grip.
My advice would be to calm down. Women are merely people just like
anybody else and most would prefer a friendship with a nice guy to have
a chance to grow into something more over time. But if this man never
offers a woman friendship, (but merely waits for what he assumes are
mating signals), he is likely to get the kinds of responses he
sees in the base note. It's always crystal clear to me what exactly a
guy is interested in when he approaches. And the ones who are open and
friendly are far preferable to the ones who wait in the shadows, who
search my face and my words looking for a green light to home plate.
Truthfully, I'd probably be tempted to have a little fun with a man who
thought so little of me too! What the heck, why not?
Have some dignity, assume the woman you'd like to approach has some
dignity and act accordingly. Nothing is more alluring than a sincere
expression of like. And nothing will get one treated with dignity more
quickly than treating others in kind. There are just too many head
trips and assumptions and all kinds of games going on here for said man
to find a real relationship with a real woman. True love is not for
the faint of heart. You will have to put yourself on the line to get
it, frightening as that sounds. But it can be done with class and
dignity and one does NOT have to slink off back under a rock if love
doesn't immediately occur as a result. Everyone wants love - even the
women who tease men they sense are easily teasable and deserving of
little else. He should be someone she, (and he himself!), can be proud
of and things will definitely start to change.
|
478.4 | Assertiveness Attracts | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Tue Jul 24 1990 11:26 | 2 |
| re .2 - I love reading your notes. I couldn't have said it better.
|
478.5 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Tue Jul 24 1990 11:35 | 13 |
| re .2
Somehow, I don't think you're the type of lady I was talking about in
.0.
I'm generally pretty forthright when I take the initiative as you
suggest. I was talking about a scenario when the lady seems to be
taking initiatives that turn out to be bogus.
Very entertaining, Mary, but kind of a straw man argument in the final
analysis.
Craig
|
478.6 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | MARRS needs women | Tue Jul 24 1990 12:31 | 7 |
| RE: .2
This IS MENnotes ya know... isnt he allow to discuss HIS FEELINGS?
or is that still considered taboo......
Oh... sorry... how unPC of me..... please, continue.... Continue
telling us low self esteem, whimpy males how to feel.....
|
478.7 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Tue Jul 24 1990 13:51 | 8 |
| re .6
If Ms. Ciccolini thinks my feelings are inappropriate, there's nothing
wrong with her saying so. I said my piece, she said hers.
Magnanimously,
Craig
|
478.8 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | MARRS needs women | Tue Jul 24 1990 15:46 | 19 |
| RE: Last
True. I was merely stating that her entry, to me, was rather rude and
inconsiderate. You asked an honest question, looking for honest
answers.. If that is her honest answer, then so be it.
RE: the topic
Although I have been married for five years, I still "look" around and
I personally see those "mixed signals" that you reference. No, they
are not directed towards me, but I am not brain dead, I can see them.
I think that men AND WOMEN, no matter what others think, like to play
these little games. I think that flirtatious games have no place in
the work area, and furthermore, are rather self destructive. A person
could be on the edge of "nutsville" and "break" because of someones
need to toy with him.
|
478.9 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jul 24 1990 16:47 | 23 |
| > I was talking about a scenario when the lady seems to be taking
> initiatives that turn out to be bogus.
Well that's just life, isn't it? People do all sorts of things and
we have no control over it - only over our reactions. Feeling "foolish"
isn't a reaction I would think one would want to have to a person who's
acting like a child. Just move on until you find someone of your own
caliber. But I suspect the underlying question is along the lines of
"how can I get such a woman to back up her flirtatious behavior?" and
that to me seems just as futile a pursuit as what you hear in women's
advice columns time and time again in various forms - "How can I get
him to marry/commit/say he loves me?" The answer to both is the same.
You can't get anyone to "pay up" or "make good" on their hints or promises.
You either allow yourself to be pushed around, select your friends un-
wisely or you don't. Everyone in the world deals with the same 'general
public'. Some get scorched, some survive. It's everyone's choice and
it's my belief that self-esteem and self confidence make the difference
between which one happens most often.
> If that is her honest answer, then so be it.
Thank you, Al. Why would you think that this would be anything *but* my
honest answer? Cuz you didn't like it?
|
478.10 | woah! | EDSVAX::CONFSCHED | Tres fromage! | Tue Jul 24 1990 17:08 | 4 |
|
re -.1
I don't think the base noter is as cynical as you seem to be.
|
478.11 | | CYCLPS::RAINEY | | Tue Jul 24 1990 20:06 | 37 |
|
Sandy-
I really didn't think Craig was upset or feeling
foolish because he was unable to score, and I don't
think that he was trying to find ways to make women
"make good" on these mixed signals he was referring
too. As to feeling foolish when somebody of the
opposite sex plays these little head games with you,
I don't think the bit about self-confidence really
applies. I am pretty confident, and it's very
confusing and disturbing when somebody you've have
taken an interest in, who sends you similar signals,
turns out to be playing games for whatever reasons
they may have (I find that the game playing behavior
is usually indicative of a low-self esteem, and this
self-ego boosting is a way of becoming superior [in
one's own mind] to the victim, be it a male or female).
Perhaps I didn't understand what Craig was trying to
state, but I thought Craig was questioning why some
people do this and how can he spot the sincere overtures
from the insincere ones.
Craig,
If that's what you were asking, I wish there was an
easy answer. The best I can offer is to try to have
frank discussions with the person in question and
take it from there. However, if somebody does spurn
your advances because their purpose in coming on to
you would be to play these head games, I'd try not to
lose too much sleep over it, because that person was
obviously not deserving of your company/friendship to
begin with. I know,easier said than done, but I hope
this helps.
Christine
|
478.13 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt ISVG West | Wed Jul 25 1990 00:34 | 4 |
|
Wasn't that a hit song from Journey? ... or was it Head Games...?
|
478.14 | | CSC32::CONLON | Let the dreamers wake the nation... | Wed Jul 25 1990 00:48 | 3 |
|
Head Games was done by Foreigner.
|
478.15 | moved | BLITZN::BERRY | U CAN'T TOUCH THIS | Wed Jul 25 1990 07:01 | 13 |
|
<<< QUARK::NOTES_DISK:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MENNOTES.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics Pertaining to Men >-
================================================================================
Note 478.15A Headhunting and mixed signals 15 of 15
FOX::SIMPSON "I will not draw naked ladies in class" 3 lines 24-JUL-1990 23:48
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE: .2
"Don't have a cow, woman."
-Bart
|
478.16 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Wed Jul 25 1990 10:51 | 41 |
| Re .11 and .9
You've got it about right, Christine. I'm very happy, actually, to have
Sandy's kind of strong counterpoint coming into this topic, but I'm not
inclined to spend a lot of time defending statements that I do not make
or motivations that I do not have (at least not that I'm aware of). But
I cannot fault Sandy for suggesting that the motivations may exist
somewhere in the depths of my ego, not to mention my id. I don't have
any specific agenda other than to find out if other people know what
I'm talking about and what, if anything, they do about it.
So it's Sandy, not Mary. I think there must be someone with a similar
surname named Mary in another conference I use (maybe SOAPBOX), and
I thought it was the same person.
I see a problem in my base note that may have thrown Sandy a little off
the track: I try to talk about mixed signals and teasing all in the same
motion, and thus seem to say that one always implies the other. It's
possible for a young woman (hypothetical, of course!) to develop an
honest crush on a man (perhaps a much older man who would never think of
approaching her without a little prompting); maybe she'll think he's
"neat" or "cute" and want to get to know him better, but she's not sure
how far she really wants it to go.
So she starts testing him to see how he reacts; she's really
trying to find something out, but doesn't want to be too blatant about
it, and perhaps it never occurs to her that the fellow finds her actions
pretty confusing. She probably has no idea of the powerful effect such
behavior can have, and doesn't really think of herself as a manipulator.
Also in my base note, I describe the value-for-value, tit-for-tat way
that I tend to respond to mixed signals. This can be a game in its own
right, of course; although it feels "real" to me, maybe the lady sees it
only as a game; i.e., she may see my reaction exactly the way I see her
action, and thus think I'm the one doing the jerking around.
It would be much better, of course, if such games were never played;
unfortunately, human nature is the only game in town. Trust me, Sandy, I
speak out of sadness, not desperation.
Craig
|
478.17 | And joke 'em if they can't take an initiative! | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Thu Jul 26 1990 16:20 | 50 |
| I spent years feeling the feelings expressed in .0, and I don't think
it was because my self-esteem was low (usually the opposite tendency
prevailed) but because I was genuinely interested in NOT OPPRESSING
anyone with my attentions. After the n-dozenth comment from my female
friends to the effect of "God, I hate it when you're just being a
*person* and this guy *comes on* to you!" I got so I was real tentative
about making advances. Just to avoid the ambiguity without putting
anyone on the spot, I more-or-less adopted the policy that she had to
ask *me* out. (This fit well with my menist politics, too; it's about
TIME women started taking more of the risks.) And I made a lot of money
because it's hard to find baby-sitters on New Year's Eve ^).
One cheap ploy that would settle things for me was to firmly place the
initiative in her hands. "Let me know if you'd like to go out
sometime." End-of-discussion. For woman I didn't run into frequently:
"Here's my number; give me a call if you'd like to go out." Not a
question: I didn't want them to squirm or (God forbid) start telling me
that "my boyfriend wouldn't like that"... and I didn't want them to say
"I'd sooner die than be seen with you." Woman, if you want to, take the
initiative, otherwise be irrelevant, evolutionary-wise, for all I care.
I must note that women called me up about 5% of the time, which no
doubt reflects the cut of my chin (what chin?) but ALSO reflects the
fact that, feminism or no, there's very few who put themselves out there.
On the other hand, the women who had the chutzpah to call me up were
the kind of women I enjoyed -- that self-reliance and initiative was a
great basis for separating the women from the girls (*there's* an
expression that needs more currency). And if they called me up, then
they were unambiguously interested, and they NEVER had occasion to
complain that I was putting moves to them. It was quite comfortable for
all parties.
Now I'm happily married (to one of those high-initiative women) and
find myself doing something awkward. A few weeks ago, on vacation with
wife and kids, I was apparently on my own at a beach party where this
woman was an attractive sort and was gyrating in the general vicinity
of where I was dancing with myself (B. Idol, 1980). "So," she starts,
"are you from around here." Ohmigod. I reply FAST "No, actually I live
in Brookline, MA, in a three-family house with my wife and children, we
even have a station wagon, no dog though." She laughed right at me. "I
get the picture." It was only a little awkward. I was determined to
save her the ambiguity and humiliation, though, that is the
characteristic lot of men in this not-really-feministized world.
I recommend putting out *lots* of expressions of interest, and then
turning the initiative over to the woman. That is, if you LIKE that
kind of woman. It worked very well for me.
- Hoyt
|
478.19 | Just call me.. call me? | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Fri Jul 27 1990 19:09 | 19 |
| re .18:
Yes, and thanks, but do you call him up?
Since this is MENNOTES, I guess it'S suitable to ask the question
WHAT PERCENT OF THE TIME ARE YOU (SINGLE PERSON) TAKING THE
INITIATIVE, I.E. ASKING OUT, NOT BEING ASKED OUT?
I predict that men take the initiative 90% of the time, and women take
the initiative 50% of the time. The apparent discrepancy will be
because the women consider taking initiative to include smiling and
saying hi and just being friendly... which is why .0 is confused.
Let's try to head that off by defining "initiative" as saying out loud
words to the effect of "Would you like to go out <at some precise
time>".
- Hoyt
|
478.20 | where many women are coming from | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Sat Jul 28 1990 22:21 | 12 |
| Hoyt,
For many single women of my generation and many younger than I, there
is still a serious social bar to asking a man out....there are still
many women who feel that men won't respect a woman who asks him out,
or that she will appear to be sexually available when she doesn't
want to give that message.
Bonnie
(who is very glad, from stories she's heard, that she is happily
married)
|
478.21 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:07 | 13 |
| re .19
I would not consider it an "initiative" if a woman just says hello to
me and smiles a lot; I'd call that "being civil". If I sense that she
is going out of her way to do so over a period of time, or starts to
pop up behind me, or seems a little agitated when she sees me--and
seems to be pissed off at me for no reason at times-- I think I would
call that a strong sign of interest. If I then ask her out and she
tells me she's going steady or whatever, I think I have been jerked on.
This is pretty much the simplest case; it can get a lot more
complicated.
Craig
|
478.22 | Women, empower yourselves! Call!! | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:52 | 29 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re .20 (Bonnie)
The social constraint which women feel is there, I agree. I don't know
where it comes from. Maybe it's appropriate. My response to getting a
phone call is "Neat: she's interested in me (!) AND she has what it
takes to pick up the phone." I suppose there are plenty of men who
might think the caller is desperate and/or horny. As you probably know,
the psychologists call this projection: given an ambiguous situation,
we project our own attitudes into the picture. Princes (like ME 8^) will
think the best of the caller, creeps will think the worst.
One solution would be to avoid calling creeps. Of course, it's not
always easy to distinguish the creeps, so the woman could TEST for
creepiness in a controlled situation. SHE's making the call; she can
set the agenda. A lunch date is always perfectly safe. An invitation to
a dinner party can't go too wrong. If the guy doesn't appear respectful
and/or makes inappropriate advances, then give him the old heave-ho.
Since you're in charge of your dating life, you can do so with relative
ease! You're not facing the alternative of another dozen Saturday
nights with the VCR and a bowl of popcorn.
It's scary to take the initiative. Men have had to go through that for
years and years. There are certain assumptions when WE make phone
calls, too. He doesn't respect me. He just wants one thing. These
issues don't arise or go away because one party or the other picks up
the phone. Fear is an excuse.
IMHO - Hoyt
|
478.23 | shrug and move on ... | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:20 | 30 |
| re: .21 Craig
I was personally surprised by the behaviour you would categorize as a
"strong sign of interest": going out of her way to say hi, popping up
behind you, seeming agitated when she sees you, seeming pissed off with
you. I don't think that's so strong! Maybe it is interest, may be it
is light teasing, but I don't see it as a foregone conclusion that she
is openly pledging that she wants you to ask and she will definitely go
if you ask and she is completely unattached and ...
Maybe a woman as you describe *is* going out with someone but finds you
attractive and has no idea she's becoming visibly agitated (!) around
you or is seeking you out. Maybe she just wants to be friends with you
and this is the type of friendship with men that she's used to. Maybe
she has a flirtatious personality and she acts like this with everyone.
Maybe she doesn't have many friends and isn't sure how to handle making
a new friend.
I'm just surprised that at such (to me) mild signs of interest are seen
by you as being so strong that you would think she's "jerking" you
around by declining. I'd say, give her the benefit of the doubt.
Wires may cross, but I don't think it's fair to assume that the woman
would be doing it all deliberately.
Furthermore, if you see this kind of thing all the time, it **could**
be that you are looking for this type of woman without knowing it. You
should find one who doesn't hint but asks straight out! (Easier said
than done, I know...but they do exist.)
Pam
|
478.24 | Putting your heart on the line is always a gamble | SAGE::GODIN | Summertime an' the livin' is easy | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:42 | 25 |
| re. .21 (Craig) -- Could some of the male members of the conference
shed some light on the different signals you would expect to get from
an individual (1) who is interested in you as a possible romantic partner
and (2) who is interested in you as a possible friend?
From the referenced note, I'd guess I've been unintentionally sending
the wrong messages to certain men in my life.
Re. the woman doing the asking, like Bonnie, I was reared at a time
when this was a definite no-no. A woman who did the asking was
considered fast and available (probably for anything). Fortunately, I
was flexible, and as the social scene changed during the '70s and '80s,
I became more willing to take the initiative when so inclined. Met
some pretty nifty men that way. Also met some real jerks that way.
The worst of the real jerks were those whose egos couldn't handle a
woman doing the asking, and weren't at all restrained in their
expressions of distaste for a woman who would presume to be so pushy.
Had I been of a more retiring nature, the first encounter of this kind
would probably have put an end to my asking. But like the mouse that
gets alternately rewarded and punished for seeking food through the red
door, I kept on trying. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Some men can handle it; some can't. Some women can do it; some can't.
Karen
|
478.25 | signals can get crossed - be explicit | STARCH::WHALEN | Vague clouds of electrons tunneling through computer circuits and bouncing off of satelites. | Tue Jul 31 1990 14:18 | 18 |
| RE: .24
> re. .21 (Craig) -- Could some of the male members of the conference
> shed some light on the different signals you would expect to get from
> an individual (1) who is interested in you as a possible romantic partner
> and (2) who is interested in you as a possible friend?
Well, I'm not Craig, but I'll tell you that as far as I'm concerned the only
way that I'll interpret that a woman is interested in being a possible romantic
partner is if she isup-front about it. Many years ago I used to consider being
friendly as being interested, but I found out that the error rate was so high
that it wasn't worth my asking and I now consider all such instances as if the
woman is just being friendly.
One of the hardest things when you see someone who appears to be attractive is
to find out who they are. There are various ways of doing this; at work the
easiest is to be observant enough to notice the name on their badge.
Rich
|
478.26 | Is it mixed signals or wrong expectations? | SELECT::APODACA | Does a dyslexic worship Dog? | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:31 | 34 |
| I saw something once, not too long ago, that pointed out the
differences in what men and women consider as Interest vs.
Friendliness. It was intriguing, and offered a possible explaination
for "mixed messages" or misunderstandings.
Men and women were given a film to watch of male/female interaction.
Men were much more likely to interpret a smile and or hello from a
woman to a man as a sign of Interest (the interest that would lead to a
date), while the women watching the same film interpreted it as
Friendliness (being polite, etc.) If memory serves, this was the
smile of a woman to a stranger, such as she may pass on the street, but
I suppose it would work in bars, the workplace, etc.
Another example was the "is this seat taken?". This was a real life
example used to illustrate the differences in male/female
interpretations of common gestures. A man asked if a seat was taken
next to a female passenger, who replied, quite honestly and innocently
(aka she was not interested in the man as a possible sexual partner),
"No, it isn't." And she had no objections that the man sat there.
However, this gentleman read the gesture as a possible invitation for
conversation and eventually hinted that they rendevous upon landing.
The woman remained disinterested and the remainder of the discussion
turned on how to dissuade the man from pushing the issue.
I thought the article was somewhat illuminating. I would personally
hate to think that a smile and hello, or being friendly with a man (and
I don't mean FRIENDLY as in flirtatious/come-hither) would be
interpreted as some kind of advance. I have smiled at passerby's when
walking down the street and garnered some kind of comment unintended,
but those occasions were few and far between, so I personally can't
validate the theories presented in the article. I did think the notion
worth mentioning after reading the entry a couple notes back.
---kim
|
478.27 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:49 | 9 |
| re .26
I would call those scenarios "asking in case she's interested;"
I used to do that on occasion, but was never upset if it didn't
go the way I hoped.
Later,
Craig
|
478.28 | | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Tue Jul 31 1990 15:58 | 2 |
| "Ask in case she's interested" is analogous to the old golf adage,
"Swing hard in case you hit it."
|
478.29 | talking | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Aug 01 1990 10:39 | 50 |
| I think talking is the only way to find out whether there
is any mutual interest.
I offer some opinion or fact about myself and ask about her.
Does she reply to the question? Does she seem interested in
learning more about me? Does she look at me when she talks
to me? Does she seem to be enjoying what she is doing? Does
she like to talk? What does she like to talk about?
All of that can go on while walking to a meeting, from a meeting,
at the cafeteria lunch table with others, while getting a cup of
coffee. All of it takes place with very low risk on the part of
either person. All of it is in the realm of finding out of there
is a potential friendship.
----------
If there is a potential friendship, then long before I or she has
to take a risk and ask to take the next step (something as simple
as meeting for lunch as a two-some), I and she will already know
what involvements we each have with other people. She will know
that I am two months into the grief of being dumped after a three
year long wonderful relationship. (which should make her cautious,
as well as it makes me cautious) I will know that she is ...
We may be friends and enjoy some areas of interest and it may be
clear that it can go only so far, because one or both want it to
go only so far.
(The above is in the context of work. It could be in the context
of meeting in the apartement building where we live, at the
laundromat, in a church group, whatever. If the meeting is brief
and lasts only a few minutes, but it's pleasant, I'd part with,
"Gee, this has been fun talking. Maybe we can talk again like this?"
If she seems of the same mind, I'd say, "I'll probably be doing
this again next Monday evening." THat gives her a chance to push
for a specific time and place, or leave it up to a chancier meeting
on next Monday evening, or simply say, "Oh, well I might see you
there." Which I would take to mean "I can't decide now, or I don't
really want to follow up." (All of this could be happening in the
other direction, of course, with the woman taking the lead, and
making the offerings, and me responding.)
But trying to guess intentions from smiles and jokes, etc, seems
like trying to swim while sitting on the beach. You have to
get in the water to swim. You don't have to get in over your
head, or in crashing surf, but wet is important. If the water's
too cold, too rough, too dirty, then you get back out long before
you start swimming. Talking is a way of getting wet before you
start swimmming.
Bill
|
478.30 | The thing to do, IMHO | AIS13::MARTINO | Martino isn't my name! | Wed Aug 01 1990 16:38 | 21 |
| Hmm, I am curious as to how old the woman was who was "headhunting".
Having just graduated from college, I have spent a lot of time with
women between the ages of 18 and 22. Many of them acted like this.
I always thought it was a sign of insecurity.
On the other hand, I had a friend who was *extremely* sensual.
There's no other way to put it. But she acted this way towards
everyone, male, female, 10, 40, 70. Any person not knowing her
or just meeting her would think she was hot for them. But she didn't
even know she was doing it, and used to get upset when guys would
make passes at her "for no reason".
I am an extremely friendly person, and find that (atleast this was
true of the men at my college) men always thought I was making passes
at them when I was only being friendly. Try to watch this woman's
behaviour with other people (male and female). If she acts this way
in general (ie: super friendly), then pass it off as her being super
friendly. If she acts this way only with men, stay away from her.
If she acts this way only with you, ask her out!
KarenKay
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478.31 | Yes, but... | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Thu Aug 02 1990 09:41 | 22 |
| re .30
I quite agree with you. When I wrote the base note and several
followups, I was referring only the case when someone acts
extra-friendly toward me and (usually) seems impatient with me
when I don't respond immediately--and then, when I make a move,
turns me down. Typically, the turndown consists of telling me
they are unavailable (going steady, engaged, whatever), usually
accompanied by a startled, "I-can't-believe-my-ears" expression.
Women who do this are usually young (I first started getting it
at college or during summer jobs), but I've seen women in their
30s and 40s do it too.
Yes, there are women who just have generally flirtatious personalities,
but you might just as well excuse men who have naturally bellicose
personalities. Both personality types cause an awful lot of
unnecessary trouble.
There's something else I want to say in reply to an earlier note, but
I have to do something else now.
Craig
|
478.32 | Because there's too many fish in the sea-ea (M. Rider) | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Thu Aug 02 1990 10:21 | 31 |
| I think the whole process of putting yourself out there is easier if
you do it a lot. The method I suggested a few notes back, namely invite
her to invite you out, is fast and simple and won't ruin her life, so
she probably won't make remarks or take actions which ruin yours. One
of the lessons you get from doing this is that IT'S NOT PERSONAL.
There are some mantras you can repeat to yourself to remember this:
- All of us are assh*les
- All of us have valuable, redeeming features
- The odds that any given pair finds each other attractive is 1/100
- If the pair DO have enough mutual interest to go out, then the
odds of finding each other "permanently" attractive are 1/100.
This is to say, that all of us have warts that may disqualify us, and
virtues which may endear us, and the likelihood that any two people can
accept each other's wart/virtue combos is pretty teensy, SO KEEP
LOOKING (and work on the warts).
My fifteen-year-old step-daughter is experiencing this: if the guy in
whom she's interested doesn't respond in kind, she concludes that it's
because she's worthless and ugly and so on. I wish I could counsel her
to simply move on and try with someone else. I *do* advise her to feel
comfortable taking the initiative. She'll eventually grow as cynical as
I am, and then she'll find it's easy to put herself out there. When the
odds are 1/10000 (you multiply them, right!?) of THIS one being THE
one, then you should naturally EXPECT to fail a lot along the way.
And you have to keep on fishin'
- Hoyt
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478.33 | Environment counts | STARCH::WHALEN | Vague clouds of electrons tunneling through computer circuits and bouncing off of satelites. | Thu Aug 02 1990 10:24 | 10 |
| Since writing my earlier note I've remembered an occaision where a woman might
have been interested in me, but the environment caused me to question it. The
instance was a woman in a sales position in a small store. She was friendly on
a couple of visits after a major purchase which she helped me with. Because
people in sales positions deal with the public I somewhat expect them to be a
bit more friendly than usuall, particularly to a past customer. In a case such
as this out-right friendliness generally won't get me interested, the woman will
have to make the first move.
Rich
|
478.34 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Aug 02 1990 10:47 | 12 |
| re: .32
Good point about the odds. One can also use that to feel good about
the ones that don't work out: "That one didn't work out, only 8,731
more to go!" It also is *very* important to realize that it may not
work out for reasons that have absolutely nothing at all to do with
you. There is no way you can *make* somebody like you; all you can
do is be yourself, have 'em take you the way you are, and see what
happens. At the age of 42, I occasionally wonder how *any* two people
can be together for more than 5 minutes without killing each other.
I have no idea how I ever managed to find my wife, or how we manage
to get along so well together. I'm just very glad.
|
478.35 | talking revisited | 11SRUS::GEYER | Happiness is living upstream | Thu Aug 02 1990 14:15 | 95 |
| re .29
If it's that easy for you, you are probably one of those lucky people
blessed with a neutral, wildcard personality who makes friends easily
and hits it off well with almost anybody. Your advice offers some nice
back-to-basics ideas, but reminds me a little of advising a stock market
novice to buy low and sell high.
I have found it extremely difficult to isolate certain people 1:1. When
I really want to talk to someone and get acquainted, even if I'm
fairly sure of my welcome, they nearly always seem to be walking in the other
direction when I run into them, or they have someone with them. If you
have no real work relationship with them, your intentions are pretty
obvious if you start visiting their office. If you do have a work
relationship, mixing in a personal relationship can progress or regress
into various messy situations--I have that on the best authority. I
do approach fellow employees, because work is where I meet people, but
its risky on many levels. I realize this sounds a little paranoid,
but whenever you try to date a fellow employee, whether it works out well
or not, you risk creating a very awkward interpersonal situation that
can escalate into something serious--often more as the result of things
not said and done than anything that actually happens.
I hesitate to get down to cases, because they can be a little
embarrassing to the other party, but I think this one is okay:
About 12 years ago, my office was about 15 feet from that of a very
attractive young divorcee. She was friendly and laughed at all the
right times when I was being facetious or whimsical, and pretty soon
I was stopping by her desk fairly often (as did quite a few men in the
area). We seemed to have a lot of common interests and opinions. Best
of all, she said she hated dancing; I knew I had found the girl of
my dreams when I heard that. We had talked about many personal things,
including some of the details of her failed marriage, and she had never
mentioned a current SO, so I finally asked her out to dinner. She
brightened up, said it was a nice offer, said I was one of several who
had asked her, but she wasn't in circulation at the moment. She was
seeing someone exclusively for now, but they were having problems and
she hoped I'd stay in touch. I was very impressed with her forthrightness
and felt that it had gone as well as it could have under the
circumstances. Nevertheless, the plot started to thicken.
I think the main problem for me was that I felt she might become
available at any time, and I had to be right there when the time
arrived, given the amount of competition I had. I think she sensed
that feeling in our subsequent conversations; probably many of my
questions were pitched a little differently than before, and my ears
suddenly seemed a little bigger. But things went basically as before.
One time we were talking about cars; I needed a new one; she offered to
let me take a drive in her Honda to see if I liked it. I took her up on
it and, sensing a possible breakthrough, asked her to go out to lunch.
I should add here than I had noticed her spending quite a lot of time
with one fellow in particular, which had made me a little anxious.
Then a short time before lunch, she dropped by and said she had to
cancel on the lunch because she had to do something (she told me what it
was; I don't recall exactly, but it seemed like something she could have
postponed). We could take the drive during the early afternoon, but it
would have to be quick.
The conversation during the drive didn't go well; she was very hard to
pin down on anything. I gathered that her boyfriend was still there,
that she wasn't really in circulation but was looking around (the
aforementioned "one fellow in particular" at work being the principal
lookee). Later in the day, I overheard her talking to one of her
female friends near my office, saying that she really preferred younger men.
I was double-digit years older than she, and suspected that I had been
intended to overhear that conversation.
So I pretty much gave up on her; I didn't offer any ultimatum or tell
her I'd lost interest, I basically just backed off for about a month. Soon I
started getting angry looks that I did not understand at all, but that
stopped when I started making small talk with her again. But the
quality of our conversation had clearly diminished, we seemed to be
boring each other talking the same stuff over and over, and my stop-ins
became much less frequent. Then, one day, she stopped by my office and
burned the house down; I was supposed to stop following her around, stop
visiting her, stop looking at her, etc., etc., and just leave her alone.
For the next year or so, oh did I leave her alone. Eventually, we sort
of reestablished a civil acquaintance, but I've never really felt comfortable
around her since then. She's married and a mother now, which sort of makes
it all moot except for purposes of academic discussion.
So what's my point? This is certainly a rather extreme case, but the
people who played it were both intelligent and essentially
well-intended. However, when you are attracted to someone and/or you feel
someone is attracted to you, even the most innocent actions and words
can be magnified. And at the office or other closed-society situations,
you're pretty well locked in when things start to get ripe. This
certainly was not a case of headhunting; there were some mixed signals,
but they only occurred later. I think it was a matter of a desirable woman
becoming so overwhelmed with possibilities that she eventually had to do some
radical and perhaps arbitrary simplification of her life. To use a
popular gardening metaphor, it was time for some serious pruning.
Craig
|