nerdygirl said:Is finding us really the issue, or is it trying to figure out what to do once you spot us?
'Cause I assure you that I go to the comic book store. I can be found in the RPG book aisle at the book store or library. I attend various events. I look at stuff at Gamestop. You know what happens? Guys kind of twitch as they realize a female has entered. Guys immediately look anywhere BUT at the female. Sometimes, guys even slowly ease out of the female's space... providing her several feet of solitude.
As for online... I very rarely get messages on okcupid. Even if I initiate communication with somebody, there's just nothing in return. If I talk to somebody while gaming, he either doesn't respond or he's kind of a jerk.
Hmm. Maybe I just don't realize it, but I'm really hideous.
SufferinginSilence said:I had to laugh when I read this... brought me back to my first year of uni. Myself and another girl decided to join the gaming society in college, went to the first meeting to be met with stone silence and absolute shock by the rest of the society who were all males. Needless to say we didn't go back to avoid inflicting more discomfort
Yeah. I agree.I would rather be hated for what I am than loved for what I am not.
I love being a nerd but thats not my brand, my brand is *** appeal. However when people get to know me.. they are shocked to know I am a star trek freak, anime fan and a debate team geek. I used to be ugly which suited these hobbies but I had to leave them behind when I started modelling… I miss the old me sometimes though… hair in a ponytail watching star trek with my dad.
So clarify this statement for me - are you actually saying that only ‘ugly’ people are into nerdy-type hobbies or is that just how I’m interpreting it?
I know it's not true - I mean, to think otherwise is laughable. That's why I was wanting clarification because I figured I must be interpreting Cenotaphgirl's comment the wrong way.It's not true regardless.
One of the hottest women I've ever met, who I thought was my dream girl for a while, was into all the "nerdy" stuff I was - including Star Wars and DnD - plus my non-nerdy interests like music and cars, and was also an artist in several mediums, and into all kinds of mystical topics too. I thought I had a chance at first, but she was way more advanced than me at basically everything, and was way more confident as well, and valued confidence in men. I simply didn't have myself together in time. She's still a cool person, but at this point it's not going to work.
I see now why it would have been very difficult for that situation to have worked, but still. It goes to show that nerd-type hobbies are not necessarily looks-based.
Then she wasn't really a nerd.I thought I had a chance at first, but she was way more advanced than me at basically everything, and was way more confident as well, and valued confidence in men.
I know it's not true - I mean, to think otherwise is laughable. That's why I was wanting clarification because I figured I must be interpreting Cenotaphgirl's comment the wrong way.
Then she wasn't really a nerd.
One of my former regulars, a part time model and a legit 10/10, was into that Comicon thing.
But she would dress like Super Girl, Wonder Woman, etc.. and strut around.
She would always show me the pics, and believe me, she was there to be seen.
She was also one of the ones I used to take to trendy spots.
So yeah, some hot girls may be into dress up and being gawked at by male nerds, but they are not really nerds themselves.
Both.But, did this person do that stuff out of attention seeking, figuring that the "nerds" would be an easy target market?
Or was she really a fan of that stuff?
Both.
She was into DC stuff AND making nerds go goo-goo eyed...when she wasn't drinking and doing coke in Meat Packing district clubs, or zonked out on adderall and xanax in hotel rooms...
One time I was lecturing her and she said it was like being in bed with her mother...That's a shame, but oh well. Nerdy guys would do well to wise up and don't waste time thinking about people like that. I hate getting used. It doesn't happen often, but when it has, it was so insulting, like that's all I'm good enough for, that's how I'm seen. I'd rather be left alone than seen as a mark.
You can't save people like that, they have to want a different life themselves. Any attempt to "save" them, just makes you look like the Fun Police in their eyes. There's nothing you can do.
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