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submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) by sprigatito_bread@lemmy.world to c/asklemmy@lemmy.world

The other day, my parents asked me (22M) if there were any women that I find attractive (I guess because they're paranoid about me being gay lol) and I told them yes, there's a fair number of women that I've seen in public that I've found attractive.

They asked me, "Do you talk to any of them?" and I said "No??? It's inappropriate to approach women in public unless you have business with them."

I told them that it is only appropriate for a man to talk to a woman he doesn't know when the social situation is explicitly designed for meeting strangers—dating apps, hobby groups, meeting friends of friends, etc. In my view, cold approaching women you don't know just because you're attracted to them is harassment.

My parents told me that I'm being ridiculous and making excuses because I'm nervous. They are adamant that I need to learn to approach women or else I will never find a partner. I told them that times have changed and this is disrespectful and potentially predatory behavior along the lines of unsolicited flirting and catcalling. Approaching women is a violation of their personal space and could make them feel very uncomfortable, especially if they feel like they don't have an easy way out.

My parents are almost 60 and they are very conservative, so they don't exactly follow progressive discourse, and I feel like they're super out of touch on this as a result. Particularly, my mom tends to strike up conversations with other women in public, and she's skeptical when I tell her that I can't do the same thing because I'm a man and would be viewed as a potential predator.

But I also don't get out much, which makes me second-guess how distorted my understanding of the social world is from reality. My parents are like a broken clock, and sometimes they DO have a point about something despite 90% of their opinions being insane. Maybe there is a more nuanced reality that I'm not picking up on.

So I wanted to ask here. Are my parents out of touch? Am I out of touch? Are we both wrong? I want to know your opinion.

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[-] Taleya@aussie.zone 1 points 3 minutes ago

Got a bit tangled there bud and you're horseshoeing

If you never approach women unless you have business with them then you're treating them as things to have business with or romantic entanglements.

Try just treating us as people. You can have friends, you know.

[-] mrodri89@lemmy.zip 4 points 1 hour ago

My husband asked very politely for my number when I was a cashier. He said "Excuse me miss, may I have your number, id love to take you out sometime to get to know you."

[-] Wahots@pawb.social 16 points 4 hours ago

Both of you are right and wrong, it's not so black and white.

You absolutely can make friends, chat with people at the bus stop, strike up convos at bars, the local ski resort, bike park, etc. Friendships can naturally blossom into relationships (or remain friendships, which is healthy and natural too).

You can't approach people and immediately ask them out, it feels weird and unappreciated (and that goes both ways, I've had a complete 180° role reversal and it was still weird and gross).

You're young, you have plenty of time, and honestly the weirdest thing about all this is that your parents are worried you're gay, like there's something wrong with that. There's barely any differences between genders, people overhyped the shit out of it in church, tbh.

Anyways, any% dating really doesn't work, and I feel like your parents should know that. Don't even try for dating, everyone can sense desperation. Just dgaf and focus on having fun and making friends. Love will naturally evolve out of good friendships.

[-] Mallspice@lemm.ee 42 points 9 hours ago

Both of you are right. Both are wrong.

My advice, if you can safely take a shot, do it. Fortune favors the bold, not the stupid. Be polite, be flirty, pay attention to their body language, don’t try hard to turn a no into a yes, don’t worry about rejection.

[-] jade52@lemmy.ca 20 points 6 hours ago

This is the answer. You can absolutely approach a woman if you are interested in her, just be respectful and polite about it. I'm a woman who has been both rudely approached and politely approached.

Scenario 1- bad experience: I was at a show seeing some metal bands I really liked. I was wearing a shirt with a local band that was big in the 80s 90s. The band is bit niche, not hugely known to the general public. So I'm minding my own business waiting to buy a drink, and this guy approaches me, points to my boobs and says "Do you even know who that band is?" I told him "yes, I'm a huge fan and have been listening to them for years." That should have been the end of it, but then he tells me "oh I'm only asking since my niece has been wearing my old band shirts because they look cool". Ok bud. There was no reason to tell me this. He was not approaching other men and asking them this same question. He was belittling me, in order to get me to talk to him. Which is a common tactic around men who don't respect women as people (see Dennis Reynolds from it's always sunny)

Scenario 2 - positive experience: Again, at a metal concert. I'm there with my husband and his bff. I was there to see the headliner, they were there to see the band before. My husband wasn't feeling great all day, and his friend had to work early the next day, so they left and I stayed to watch the headlining band. I noticed this group of guys, especially one, sort of looking at me every once and a while, but I ignored it and watched the band. Once the show was over, I left and was waiting at the bus stop. The same group of guys approached me, and one that was looking at me during the show says "hi, my name is ____. I'm sorry to bother you, but I just wanted to introduce myself since I couldn't help looking at you during the show. I don't want to be a creep but I think you're beautiful, would you like to grab a drink with me and my friends?" So I thanked him, and said I would have to pass, but hoped they all had a fun night". The they left, I got on the bus, felt safe and not bothered. This man complimented me in a respectful way and that was the end of it.

Hope that helps!

[-] Anti_Iridium@lemmy.world 9 points 8 hours ago

If you dont ask, the answer is automatically "No" .

[-] Zoomboingding@lemmy.world 4 points 7 hours ago

"""You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky" - Michael Scott" - ZoomBoingDing

[-] IndustryStandard@lemmy.world 5 points 6 hours ago

You are right, women are not into bots.

[-] termaxima@programming.dev 60 points 12 hours ago

Honestly, as a woman, I think it’s more about knowing when it’s appropriate to talk to people.

It’s okay if people hit me up at the park or the bar. It’s not okay when I’m doing my groceries in a hurry, or when I’m crossing the street 😆 and if you get “rejected” (sometimes it’s not a hard rejection, my social schedule is just already full), just take it well and go talk to someone else.

I don’t think this is rocket science, and apart from some teenagers whistling me from across the street (which I always pretend I can’t hear), almost all adults get this right.

[-] nibble4bits@lemmy.dbzer0.com 23 points 13 hours ago

It's okay to approach and have normal conversations with women that you don't have business or school commonalities with. Even if you think you may have interest to eventually escalate it into dating. Just be genuine and don't try to be someone you're not. But once you make that attempt to date, if they say no, accept that no and don't try again unless it's blatantly obvious they've changed their mind.

[-] throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 4 points 10 hours ago

school

I thought people said college was the right time to date and have relationships?

I mean as long as its student-student and not professor-student, its fine, right? Or did people teach me wrong?

[-] nibble4bits@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 6 hours ago

Yes, I completely meant any dynamic where no one is an authority figure over the other. Student to student, student to campus coffee shop barista, student to visiting alumnus.

[-] TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago

Being a person is always great advice.

In this situation. Great person respect their boundaries and wish to be single.

Her then telling me about CNC and free use love is giving me mixed signals lmfao

there's real trauma, but can feel the connection. Eventually.

[-] nibble4bits@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

I'm not sure what CNC means, but free use love usually means they don't want the attachment of a single relationship. If you're fine with sharing, and some people are open to that, communication and knowing boundaries of everyone involved is extremely important to maintain the trust. If you're not fine with sharing, then it's probably a bad idea to pursue that one.

[-] TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago

Consensual non consensual. Free use in that she like doms

Said she wants to be single. Has no romantic partners after trauma relations.

Whatever it ends up being I'm down 🤷

[-] JandroDelSol@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago

CNC is consensual non-consent, and "free use" is about your partner being able to have sex with you no matter what you're doing

[-] orcrist@lemm.ee 19 points 13 hours ago

You might be out of touch, but it depends on what you mean about approaching people. For example, it's perfectly reasonable to talk to anyone at all for a wide variety of reasons, including things related to your hobbies or your jobs or simply because you're waiting for the bus. Conversation is generally a safe thing to do with other human beings. If you are specifically avoiding conversations with people because they are women, then I think you should rethink your position.

Maybe your parents are asking you to start flirting with people, which is totally different from simply talking to them. If that's the topic, then it makes sense to be somewhat more careful about the time and place.

[-] Waldelfe@feddit.org 23 points 15 hours ago

I'm forty, so a different generation than your parents, but I still grew up and had my first dating experiences before the internet. Online dating wasn't really a thing here until I was in my early twenties.

At least where I grew up the guys who randomly approached girls to ask them out were seen as creepy even back in the 90s. I and everyone I knew met partners through activities like sports clubs, parties, bars etc. (I'm not from the US, so people from my school started going to bars pretty early). While there wasn't a big discourse around men approaching women in public (or none that reached my little town), we did have some guys in town who'd just walk up to girls on the street and ask them out and the consensus was that they were weird and should be avoided.

I met all my partners so far through activities. My first boyfriend was a regular at the same student café and we ended up sitting next to each other during quiz night. I met guys I had dates with in uni - sitting next to each other during lectures and talking about the Prof, going to the same presentation or cooking night etc. None of them "approached me" in the sense of coming up to me and asking "can I have your number" with zero context. We chatted, had an interesting conversation. At the end we exchanged contact information to meet for a coffee, usually without any expectation of it being a date. When coffee went well, someone would ask the other out on a proper date. No approaching, no deciding within a few seconds wether you want to date someone. Just casually getting to know each other before asking for more.

I also met my husband that way. We went to the same event, talked, had a lot in common. We met the next day to continue a discussion about a certain topic we were both interested in. That's when things started getting flirty and by the end we made plans to meet for a real date. I don't even remember who asked whom, we were both heavily flirting with each by the time we talked about seeing each other again so it was very obvious the next meeting would be a date. He didn't ask me out out of nowhere or hit on me, we were just getting to know new people and eventually we started flirted somewhere along the line.

[-] TheDoozer@lemmy.world 17 points 14 hours ago

If you wouldn't strike up a conversation with a guy, don't strike up a conversation with a woman. Be comfortable with conversations with strangers of whatever gender with no ulterior motive, and you'll meet more people.

If you meet more people, your likelihood of finding dates will increase as a side effect.

If you are only approaching women, particularly women you find attractive, in places that are not generally for that purpose (bars, parties, swingers clubs), then you're being a creep.

But regardless, it's better to have interests, pursue those interests, and meet people with similar interests. Because when you have interests, you might become interesting, and someone might become interested.

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[-] detun3d@lemm.ee 12 points 14 hours ago

Your instincts are probably well placed. Obviously different people will have different preferences and reactions in this regard, but you're better off getting to know people in a friendly manner than just for the sake of finding a partner. Learning how to strike up conversations with strangers and leave them wanting for more is useful, but that's about all I'd say your parents are right about.

[-] Teknikal@eviltoast.org 3 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

If you don't try you won't get, I'm pretty direct but I have friends who are way way worse than I am.

I generally don't try unless I get at least a smile and/or eye contact held in my direction but I do think most women like to know if they looking attractive even if they aren't interested.

Anyone who takes offense over expressing an interest would have been horrible to date anyway in my opinion.

[-] swelter_spark@reddthat.com 14 points 15 hours ago

Some people enjoy casual chat with random people, and some people find it annoying. There's no right or wrong answer. It's definitely not the only way to meet romantic partners, though, especially these days.

[-] jordanlund@lemmy.world 26 points 18 hours ago

There's a difference between "approaching women" and "APPROACHING WOMEN."

You should be comfortable interacting with women in any environment simply because a) they are human beings and b) they're over 50% of the population.

You can't go outside and just never talk to women, that's actually creepier.

You don't have to be trying to pick someone up to, you know, treat them like a human being and talk to them.

[-] cattywampas@lemm.ee 189 points 1 day ago

The unsatisfying answer: you're both a little bit right.

You're correct that times have changed somewhat. But I think it's overkill to say that "approaching women at all unless you have business with them is disrespectful and borderline harassment".

Of course, context matters a lot. Don't bother women at their jobs, the bank is not a lady zoo. But in a social situation where you would expect to meet other people, it's fine to strike up a conversation with strangers or even ask them out.

However, by your own admission you don't get out much. So I'm assuming you don't get a lot of situations like bars or parties where this would happen. So I would try networking in your community, develop some hobbies, go to functions where you might meet someone in this manner.

[-] ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 20 hours ago

OP already accounted for social situations where you would expect to meet people, though, and his parents seem to think that he should be approaching people in other situations—like in a store, or on the street. I'd be very cautious about that.

[-] Cocodapuf@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

like in a store or on the street.

Well yeah, I think that's part of what's being said. I would say that in a store, or cafe is totally fine. On the street is a little weird, but in most public places it's fine.

[-] sprigatito_bread@lemmy.world 16 points 16 hours ago

Yeah, I specifically mentioned to my parents seeing an attractive employee stocking shelves in the grocery store, and they said that I should have approached her. She was clearly busy when I passed by her. I just kept my distance and casually thought, "Wow, there are plenty of fish in the sea. I'll definitely find one eventually, in a more appropriate social setting."

Not once did it cross my mind to strike up a conversation with a busy employee, but they insisted that I should have. In my mind, the fact that it's easy to find women that I find attractive is proof that I don't need to go out of my way for one. Attraction is not a quick time event; to me, it's a reminder of abundance, of just how many chances I have to find someone. I don't need to do silly stunts or disrupt busy people. I just need to keep creating social opportunities for it to happen organically, and eventually it will. I think my parents saying that I have to chat up every woman that I find attractive no matter where is silly and neurotic. I believe being patient and not stressing over every "missed opportunity" is the best way to go.

Besides, this thread is proof that I'm not ready for a girlfriend in the first place. It would be great for me to practice talking to strangers casually and making some friends first. That way, I can get comfortable talking to people in general and build my confidence.

[-] Num10ck@lemmy.world 3 points 6 hours ago

'you know, you shouldn't be in the frozen food section.. because you could melt all this stuff!'

[-] naught101@lemmy.world 55 points 1 day ago

As usual, the nuanced answer that doesn't oversimplify the complexities is the best one. Good answer.

I bet women 30-40 years ago would have loved to see this answer too. It's a good thing that the world has changed in this regard.

[-] SCmSTR 8 points 14 hours ago

I'm like a dozen years older than you, and still have this conversation with my parents about jobs. They want me to cold call people and stalk them and stuff. Really wild stuff.

Your parents are wrong in basically every way. Except, yeah, you should be capable of cold approaching anybody. Not to sexually harass them, but for normal things like, "excuse me have you seen a grey glasses case around here?"

Your parents are not out of touch entirely, as this is a culture thing. Largely a generational one, but still, an existing culture. I personally do not believe it good, but I'm also somewhat like you, except 3,000% queer, poly, and engaged. Sometimes I wish guys would just show up and shoot their shots. Be respectful and accept defeat, but still shoot them. Years ago (when I was about 25), I used to work sort of near a bar and this random dude from a bar somehow made his way to me, working, which was, again, fairly far away by foot. And he REALLY wanted to take me home, putting on all the charm and offers. Which was flattering and all, but I wasn't interested and was forced to steadily increase my level of rejections, plus I was still working. My really cool boss apparently overhead and saw a bit of it, and after the guy finally left (honestly like 30 minutes of him trying), we talked a bit about it and had a good laugh. The guy really just couldn't take a hint. Luckily though, he was a little guy and where I worked was very open and very well lit and so there was no threat.

I think that there's a time and place for everything. That you need to be comfortable in being yourself, and have your own drive and reasons for the things you do. Your parents ARE trying to help you, but often exacerbate their kids by pushing too hard or not putting ANY effort to learn or meet their kids even halfway.

And then you have to take into account that, yeah, people really ARE all different. I know girls who wouldn't want to be cold approached at all, for any reason. I know guys that way, too.

But I also know people that wish they'd be swept off their feet by a price charming or hulk or something. Honestly, I'm kinda that way, but with the duality that as much as I fantasize the forceful, having it be by somebody I don't accept is terrifying and horrifying. And that's not on any one specific thing - people are weird and have all their own unique, weird, internal, intuitive flags and needs. Be it a political alignment, a philosophy, an interest, an appreciation, an open mind, wanderlust, a sexual dynamic, a certain look, a certain feature, a familiarity, an unfamiliarity, for them to be monog or poly, a smell, certain kinds of armpits, tabs vs spaces, etc, whatever.

We are all different, is my point.

Different strokes for different folks, I guess. And you, as it seems, are not a seeker type. So, you should focus on what you want in a partner and who you are and want to be. You can listen to your parents a little, but realize that, they, too, besides from being your parents, are just some random ass people with some opinions they've formed by their own unique vision, through their own unique bodies and personalities - what works/worked for them may ONLY work for them, and that's fine. It doesn't make it better or worse than what works for you. I say, try it, at least once, and be prepared to apologize, and then learn from it. You're only young once.

The key is to be respectful.

Also, have you tried... 🫴 femboys? ;)

[-] Fondots@lemmy.world 38 points 20 hours ago

I think there's a lot of nuance that both sides of this are missing. There's a lot of middle ground between not talking to women out in the world at all, and going up to random girls and saying "nice shoes, wanna fuck?

You absolutely can approach people, strike up a conversation, maybe even hit it off and spin it into a friendship or romantic relationship.

I'm far from the guy to tell someone how to do that and try to pick apart the it's and outs of what makes some things ok and others not, but it is something that absolutely can be done.

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[-] tyfpgg@lemm.ee 7 points 15 hours ago

Woman here who gets approached from time to time… casual chats are fine and low-key expressing interest is ok. The least stressful approaches I’ve had are when a guy sends his buddy over to expression interest. So you can appease your parents by asking a friend to make the approach on your behalf, maybe.

[-] madeinthebackseat@lemmy.world 72 points 22 hours ago

Just learn to talk to all people in social situations, and don't make it transactional.

The right people will just drop into your life naturally.

[-] TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world 19 points 22 hours ago

Great advice. The bit about it not being transactional is very important. Go live your life, chat with everyone to connect to other human beings.

[-] Donebrach@lemmy.world 7 points 15 hours ago

It’s ok to talk to a woman. But judging by your wall of text… maybe it’s not ok for you specifically to talk to a woman.

[-] Lucky_777@lemmy.world 14 points 18 hours ago

Instead of making a move or straight up asking the out on a date. Just strike up a convo. You can really tell when someone doesn't want to push a conversation. Maybe they find you attractive and keep the conversation going?

If you want to cold approach, go to the club.

[-] RBWells@lemmy.world 28 points 20 hours ago

Do you talk to men you don't know in public? Small talk, or jokes at a bar? In the grocery store? Why wouldn't you talk to women? I am a woman and have daughters and none of us is offended by this, nor even the hypersensitive one, not even the lesbian. It's friendly talk.

It's harassment if you don't stop when you get a rejection. It's harassment if you sidle up with some horrifying personal comment about her body, or grab her arm and make her listen. You aren't going to do any of that. Small talk is not harassment, flirting is not harassment.

You are right in one way - it was bad that guys used to be able to say anything with absolute impunity, and women couldn't stop them, I was around for the end of that. Those guys didn't treat women like people, but in a way, neither are you, right? We are just people, talk to us like people.

[-] sprigatito_bread@lemmy.world 8 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

I don't talk to anyone in public because I have historically considered it to be a violation of their right to be left alone. I believed that people stick together in groups of their friends or family, and those groups don't want to interact with each other. Solo people are a group of one. If everyone follows those rules, there will be no unplanned or unwanted interactions with strangers. Given the current state of the world, the constant phone usage, and general social unrest, it made perfect sense to me that nobody would want to interact with anyone that they didn't already trust. Based on the responses to that post, it seems like that mental model is flawed.

But this is why I assumed that the discourse around sexual harassment extended to approaching women at all. It was because I already believed that talking to strangers in general was an act of violating their space. So, I assumed that the discourse around guys being creeps was also talking about that. After all, I'd probably get nervous if someone randomly started talking to me, so of course it would make sense for other people to feel super uncomfortable from it, especially if you don't know if the person talking to you is a predator.

This is an example of how wanting to do the right thing, combined with my limited social understanding, leads to weird and extreme takes.

[-] RBWells@lemmy.world 2 points 7 hours ago

This makes sense, if they modeled steamrolling people instead of gentle conversation I can understand you don't have practice or guidance on conversation, and also it's really normal to feel like you need to have alone space if your family didn't give you enough of it.

But - unplanned and unwanted are two different things. Without that element of luck, randomness, our lives would be so dull. It's nice when spontaneous conversation happens. It doesn't have to go anywhere, doesn't have to mean anything. I would say if you want to practice the non-confrontational small talk literally just look up from your phone when you are out and about and say hi to people, let them greet you too, see if you feel more comfortable over time.

I will note this is a sort of regional thing - Florida is sort of like 'The South' and kind of not, but in terms of people just striking up random conversations, we are like the South. It's very much normal here. NYC is different people are in a hurry and brusque.

[-] Chronographs@lemmy.zip 7 points 17 hours ago

I mean I generally don’t talk to strangers in public unless I have a specific reason to. Why would I talk to someone I don’t know in a supermarket? They’re just other people doing the same thing I am

[-] RBWells@lemmy.world 1 points 8 hours ago

"Woah, those apples look so good! Which ones are they? "

"I can never tell if a watermelon is ripe, can you?"

When I am buying something, often someone will say "have you tried that before? What is it like?"

Stuff like that. Small talk. We aren't machines, we are social animals who interact with each other. I do think people are quick to discount the value of weak social interaction, shallow relationships, and focus on deep friendships and romantic ones, but those weak connections are so valuable too. They are like a glue for a community, connections that don't demand much from you.

I'm far from extroverted and moderately socially awkward, but still my life is so much better when I look up and say hi to people.

[-] Chronographs@lemmy.zip 2 points 6 hours ago

Yeah have never had anyone say anything like that to me at the grocery store unless I’m shopping with them. If they did I’d probably just be vaguely annoyed. Maybe it’s s culture thing I don’t know

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I'll just say you probably shouldn't take dating advice from people who haven't done any dating for the last 30-40 years. The world has most certainly changed.

[-] blitzen@lemmy.ca 59 points 1 day ago

People are allowed to speak to one another in public. Just be respectful of people’s cues, and that goes for people of all genders.

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[-] chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 points 19 hours ago

I think the bigger issue here is that you are obviously uncomfortable with the idea of approaching people in public and your parents are treating this as irrelevant and something you are supposed to just force yourself to do it anyway despite feeling like the situation is wrong and threatening. You shouldn't need to justify not wanting to do that by appealing to some kind of cultural authority about what is acceptable to society.

Personally even as a man it normally freaks me out when strangers approach me in public. It just feels like a very unusual, unexpected and potentially unsafe kind of circumstance, almost never something positive, there's no way I would trust such a person, so I'm not going to do that to others because it's like I would be inflicting that on both of us simultaneously, and that would of course come through in any interaction I attempted. How could I expect them to be receptive to that when I would never be myself? People may argue, that's the wrong way to feel and so it doesn't matter, replace that attitude with a better one, as if they themselves could easily substitute a totally different way of being for how they are.

If you need an invitation in order to feel safe in a social situation, I would say it is ok to demand that people respect that and not mock you for it.

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[-] blitzen@lemmy.ca 34 points 1 day ago

Do you ever make small talk with men with whom “you don’t have business?”

I’m assuming yes, you probably do. Speaking with women is the same, just be sure to pick up on cues if they don’t want to speak. In fact, I’d advise you to practice by making small talk with everyone you can, with no agenda, and pay attention to their cues.

[-] littlewonder@lemmy.world 3 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

The amount of times I've been in a pleasant conversation with a dude and when it becomes apparent I'm not available, they just immediately stop talking to me. Like... what? It's abrupt, obvious, and super shitty to do to someone. And for the readers making assumptions about the scenarios--this wasn't in a bar or a social event. It's just random places in public where two people might make small talk.

I hope everyone takes your advice. Just talk to people to talk to people, without a transactional goal. Worst case scenario, you practice your conversation skills. Best case, you meet cool people and sometimes those people might want to meet up again or start texting etc. Boom a new friend that could be a relationship if you both are into it. Or you can just collect cool friends.

Disclaimer: This is for relationships and not just people to fuck. Go to places where other people are looking for that if you want to speed run fucking (bars, clubs, mixers, anime cons, etc.), which is totally fine.

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this post was submitted on 05 May 2025
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