el Jay
Well-known member
bender22, to reply to your reply to me several posts ago (avoiding massive quoted posts):
In some (well, most or all, really) of the cases where I was ghosted after a longer period of time (let's say 2 weeks or more), they were times where we got along and things seemed to be going well. Some great, some alright, but if we've been talking at least semi-regularly for that long (say, at least like 10 minutes per day average, with some talk every other day at the least), there's some degree of connection.
I did not necessarily push hard for meeting up, but these were longer-distance situations, too. I've had more conversations and such from other sites that aren't dating sites, but that has the disadvantage of not being able to select for location (but also generally means the people I meet, if any, have likely shown that they have interests in common). So I obviously don't push to meet because they may be several states away (I'm in the US and generally avoid trying to strike conversation with someone who lives overseas). I've also followed other advice that you posted earlier, including asking questions to show an interest in her while also giving me chances to talk about myself (so it's not just one-sided), and also poking at more risque topics in what I can only assume is not a creepy or awkward way, given that it's one aspect of things I've agonized over after being ghosted, but have never found a pattern that suggests it was responsible.
Plus, there's the whole "instead of going straight for a relationship, actually get to know her and be her friend first" theme that I've often seen suggested (primarily by women).
In some (well, most or all, really) of the cases where I was ghosted after a longer period of time (let's say 2 weeks or more), they were times where we got along and things seemed to be going well. Some great, some alright, but if we've been talking at least semi-regularly for that long (say, at least like 10 minutes per day average, with some talk every other day at the least), there's some degree of connection.
I did not necessarily push hard for meeting up, but these were longer-distance situations, too. I've had more conversations and such from other sites that aren't dating sites, but that has the disadvantage of not being able to select for location (but also generally means the people I meet, if any, have likely shown that they have interests in common). So I obviously don't push to meet because they may be several states away (I'm in the US and generally avoid trying to strike conversation with someone who lives overseas). I've also followed other advice that you posted earlier, including asking questions to show an interest in her while also giving me chances to talk about myself (so it's not just one-sided), and also poking at more risque topics in what I can only assume is not a creepy or awkward way, given that it's one aspect of things I've agonized over after being ghosted, but have never found a pattern that suggests it was responsible.
Plus, there's the whole "instead of going straight for a relationship, actually get to know her and be her friend first" theme that I've often seen suggested (primarily by women).