Archive for the ‘Fear of Rejection’ Category

Necessary Verses Needless Rejections

Friday, June 4th, 2010

From audio journal episode   AJE-2010-05-07-19-30.

  • Not all rejection is pointless, and some of it is good.  It can show us which paths to avoid in our love quests.  Rejection can actually guide us in the right direction, toward that ultimate goal of the love quest: sustained happiness in love.
  • So if we’re going to keep our love quest going, we should not aspire to avoid all rejection.  True.  Rejection makes the love quest painful.  But the quest wouldn’t be a quest without rejection, and so, neither would it be a quest without some pain first.  So we must endure some potent losses in order to reach the wins.   
  • Some folks experience rejection more than others (what authority ever said that life is fair?).  But in the end, we’ll all experience at least a little of it; whether in love, career, or any other pursuits. 
  • Many will even experience a sustained string of rejections.
  • Compassionate rejection; where a lady rejects, but does so with sensitivity and gentleness.  This could mean that she’s leaving the door open a crack, encouraging us to try again in the future, but not now.  She may have declined my date request, not because she dislikes me, but rather, due to circumstances in her life beyond her control.  Maybe she already has a boyfriend, is busy with children or career, or she’s dealing with judgmental siblings who don’t like me.  Rejections like this hurt less, and may not hurt at all, and we should follow up on this sort; asking again every so often.  Sometimes in the love quest, persistence pays off.  Just don’t be persistent where it’s not welcome.
  • In 1995 while living in my own home in Ohio, I encountered compassionate rejection from [Melinda], who may have liked me especially, but brushed aside my campaigns to step up our relationship, because of her doubting mother (according to [Melinda]).  Her mom thought that she deserved better than a vision-impaired lover, and pointed out how much extra work [Melinda] would have to do when raising our children, because of the fact that I do not see well.  But I would have done my share, and even gone above and beyond in areas like home maintenance.  The only extra responsibility [Melinda might have had to shoulder, would have been to be the default family chauffer. 
  • [Melinda] understood this and realized that being designated the default family driver wasn’t so much.  But her mother was relentless in her zeal to steer her daughter toward someone “able-bodied.”   So, to keep the peace with her family, [Melinda] rejected me; though she hinted that we might get together down the road.  Twelve years later in fact, we almost did.  But we did not, due to issues that had grown up between us during those intervening years that had nothing to do with her mother.    
  • Still though, there’s a difference between a definitive, stay-away-from-me-for-good rejection, and the i-must-reject-you-even-though-i-do-not-want-to one like [Melinda’s]. 
  • So, when rejections like these attempt to conceal (but nonetheless betray) a strong desire to say yes, it’s good to try again, now and then.  She may in fact say yes the next time.
  • Seasons change, yes, and so do people.  So even when someone rejects with obvious displeasure at our having asked them out, they could change their minds.  I experienced this too, with [First Love].  She said once that she hated me, and berated me publicly for daring to speculate that she might like me.  But a couple weeks later, she said that she really did enjoy me, and apologized for her bad mood fourteen days earlier. 
  • Sometimes, people reject in spite of their desires to the contrary, because they sense their vulnerability to the person that they, underneath it all, desire.  Though they like him, their affection may spur them to reject him!  Life’s full of these crazy ironies, isn’t it? 
  • They display revulsion to conceal their affection and thereby protect themselves.  They hide their weakness with exaggerated appearances of strength; veiling it with outward bluster and distain.  Thus the song: You Always Hurt The One You Love. 
  • So a strong negative reaction to a date request could actually signify deep feelings of attraction.  At times, NO can mean YES.  But don’t count on this being the case, because it usually isn’t. 
  • It’s convenient to assume that a rejection always means to stay away forever.  We avoid lots of pain that way if we proceed with that assumption.  After all, if what happened in the past is the best predictor of what’s likely to occur in the future, then if someone rejected us before, they’ll probably do it again if given the opportunity.  This is generally true.
  • But not only might the enthusiasm of someone’s rejection mean that they actually regard us highly.  It’s also often true that when a received rejection hurts us deeply, that we deeply desire the rejecter.  The more the rejection hurts, the more we wish that they’d say yes instead. 
  • Rejection, both the pain of receiving it as well as the exaggerated enthusiasm that it’s often dispensed with, are at times, covers for highly positive feelings.
  • If someone behaves too strongly like they hate us, they may in fact actually like us very much but wish us not to know that. 
  • So, a single rejection does not necessarily mean that she’ll never say yes; just that she won’t be saying yes now or in the near future.
  • Respect her NO, but don’t take it as absolutely definitive and ever-lasting. 
  • So, a single rejection does not mean that she’ll   never   like me; she just does not want to get involved with me at this moment.
  • In my younger days, I’ve sworn to never again approach a rejecter; even a one-time rejecter.  Sometimes, that’s best.  Sometimes, it’s not, as indicated above.
  • Now if they were to ask me never to approach again, then their rejection could very well be permanent; they’ll likely never change their minds. I can then black-list them with high confidence that I’ll not be missing a thing by foregoing all future unsolicited communications with them.  They’ll probably never say yes if they’ve said no in this way. 
  • But usually what happens is while the vast majority of women do say no to me, when pressed, they will not go on to say further that I should never check back in.  Not even married ladies would do that. 
  • My feeling on rejection – my fears of it and the resulting strong wish to avoid it – are colored by how much I’ve allowed it to hurt me.  The more it hurts, the more I fear it, and the more I fear it, the less I try. 
  • I’ve grown supersensitive to rejection because I’ve interpreted it in more hurtful ways, ways that overly disparage myself.  I’ve taken it more personally than not when in fact, only a small portion of it could rightly be attributed to choices I’ve made.
  • Thinking through rejection like this does tone down its sting, desensitizes me to it, and accordingly, lessens the fear of risking it again.
  • If rejection didn’t hurt so much, then we need not work so strenuously to avoid it; we could in fact, be a little more caviler about the dreaded no; so long as we don’t become so cocky and carefree that we ignore others’ wishes. 
  • We can’t avoid rejection totally if we’re gong to ever be happy in love.  So the best strategy is to predict it, minimize it, learn from it, and above all, keep moving despite it. 
  • Like all shades of gray, picking and choosing which situations deserve a follow-up and which should be left alone can be quite challenging.  Often, women’s views on this differ from men’s.  This makes the topic of rejection hard to write about, because in order to adequately express the moderate approach to it, we must write much more than it would take to say simply to avoid all rejection or that a rejection always means that the rejecter never wants us to ask again.
  • My understanding of rejection is not yet complete, and still contains some apparently contradictory points.  But I have faith that these can be eliminated by mastering the gray view; the moderate one.
  • I began writing about it with the notion that certain types of rejection indeed do predict future rejection.  But now, I’m not so sure. Perhaps some can.  But today, it seems that these are the exception rather than the rule.
  • I know my feelings for women are generally static (once I feel a certain way about them, I’ll likely feel that same way forever), and as such, initial impressions do not usually become more favorable over time.  If they think I’m plain at first, they’ll still think I’m plain at last.  You cannot earn someone’s passionate love.
  • Also, I suspect the same to be true of women. Specifically, if they, upon meeting me, think I’m not attractive enough to date, then they’ll probably never change that opinion no matter how much they come to know me as just a friend.  At times, I’ve waited years (decades) for ladies to come around.  But it never happened, and in the interim, I wasted lots of money on them to mention emotional energy.
  • So we might infer from this that when someone acts toward us like they hate us, that they’ll probably keep hating us, and thus, rejecting us, no mater how many times we ask them out, no matter how long we’ve known them. 
  • But is she really dead set against me?  Are her feelings necessarily as fixed as mine tend to be?  Perhaps not; definitely not in many cases.
  • However, sometimes, I must acknowledge that people do change; though I’ve never observed this sort of drastic transformation within myself.  That is, I don’t believe that I’ve ever come to deem a lady as Miss Universe after years of knowing her, when her stature repulsed me at our initial meeting.  Once ugly, always ugly.  Though over time, I may come to know her as an exceedingly nice and trustworthy person, her consistent behavioral goodness never changes how romantically attractive she appears to me, no matter how long it lasts or how nicely she acts.  Regardless of her effort, she generally will not overcome my first impressions; no matter what lengths she does to try.
  • But not everyone else is like me.  Some people can in fact be impressed later by qualities that did not surface initially.  So, they may reject me once.  But then, with equal legitimacy, decide later to accept me. 
  • So it’s often the case that a NO now does not mean NO tomorrow; though I may be too humiliated after one rejection to want to risk another anytime soon.
  • Having faith in human diversity makes risking rejection less emotionally risky therefore.  
  • Because people’s feelings are often in constant motion, they could very well despise me today, yet embrace me tomorrow.  After all, it works the other way around all the time.  That is: They often have liked me at first only to hate me later. 
  • So it’s hard to tell from a single rejection if she means it forever, even though we might wish it did, as an excuse to avoid future rejection from her. 
  • The thing is: You can’t tell for sure after just one rejection, or five, or ten rejections over twenty years how she’ll respond the next time you ask.  But I admit that the more times she says no, the more likely she is to say no again. 
  • But though I acknowledge people’s changeable feelings, I still think it foolish to wait around for someone’s feelings to change.  Why?  Because there’s no guarantee that they’ll change. 
  • Sure.  In light of the above, checking back every five or ten years is prudent.  But it’s not good to put our lives on hold until she says yes. 
  • [Carlene J] said no to me ten years ago, primarily because she was married happily as it turned out.  But if her situation ever changes, I may yet secure an afternoon with her in a Jacuzzi.  I still desire her, and she may change.  So I ought to check back every few years when I can. 
  • She may say no.  But I owe it to myself to keep tabs on her, in unobtrusive ways of course, just in case the tides would turn toward me. 
  • I felt a bit ashamed for asking because, as it turned out, she was in fact happily married.  But the outcome of the asking does not determine the appropriateness of the asking to begin with.  So though I did learn that she was happily married, there should have been no shame in my asking her if this was in fact the case.  I had to be sure, so I asked her for me.  If I’d succumbed to my fears and said nothing, the far worse agony of not knowing would have poisoned my life in those days.
  • As it turned out, she knows that I like her in romantic ways, and hopefully, if she’s ever in a position to accommodate, she’ll seek me out.  Or, I’ll renew my request should our paths ever cross again.  But I’ll not expend energy trying to find her, nor will I wait around for her to surface again. 
  • Since I have no way to get hold of [Carlene J], I’ll have to be comfortable with the notion that if she has good memories of me from so long ago, then she’ll find me again, should her circumstances change to favor me. 
  • I’m okay either way though.  True, if we had been able to get together back then, what fun we could have had.  I’ve dreamed of that scenario often through the years in fact. 
  • She was great, to be sure.  But there are many others like her (at least in the greatness regard) out there.  So even if I never bump into her again, I’ll still be able to experience that similar greatness with others.  So there’s no urgency to locate her before I grow too old or anything. 
  • To improve my chances of finding said greatness, I’ve created an account on Facebook; the strategy there to make friends with many women, and silently keep an eye on their relationships statuses.  When one I adore becomes single or widowed, I’ll pursue her.  But don’t worry.  I’ll wait until after she’s taken an appropriate amount of time to mourn the end of her last relationship.  Once that time passes, I’ll poll them.
  • I get too many shameful rejections if I invite people who are married for some fun in the afternoon sun.  Only approaching single or otherwise unattached ladies is one sure-fire way to reduce the amounts of needless rejection one incurs. 
  • Sometimes, it may be appropriate to approaching a married person; but only if they make it abundantly clear beforehand that they’re unhappy in the marriage, that they full well intend to leave it, and that they’d welcome an approach from me.  They may communicate these sentiments through body language.  So, I watch for these signs.
  • But it’s tough to find any universally definitive, leave-me-alone-forever types of rejections.  Normally, I’d think that a rejection from a happily married person signals as clearly as it can be signaled, that they’d prefer I never ask them again; at least, while they’re married.  But that’s not always the case either. 
  • At this point, I’ve decided that good hard and fast rules about accurately avoiding all needless rejections are hard to come by, because every situation is different.  There are some good general rules; but not many that apply all the time in every similar situation.  So, we are, to a certain degree, blind when it comes to love questing, for there are few certainties, and those that we do manage to discover, do not remain true indefinitely.
  • In short, there are only so many precautions we can take to minimize the amount of humiliating rejections we incur.  Playing the dating game is painful and debasing; at least, until you win.  Then, the victory makes all of the negative precursor worthwhile.  I hope.  :
  • But a reasonably useful rule might be: Don’t ask again tomorrow if you’ve been turned down today.  Give it a few years, at least.  It seems that the more time that elapses between now and the last time we were rejected by a particular person, the more likely it is that they may change their minds.  But this changing is generally a very slow process.  So don’t count on it happening next week, next month, or even next decade.  In fact, I wouldn’t count on it happening ever.  But just make sure that you account for the possibility that it can happen in your dating strategies. 
  • Sometimes, it’s best to never approach again.  Our hearts know these situations, and alert us to them when we’re considering entering into one, by generating sensations of fear and anxiety.
  • Sometimes, our fears wisely instruct us to stay away.  In fact, this is usually true in my opinion.
  • Don’t defy a rejection.  Always respect them, even though vast numbers of them create feelings of intense frustration.
  • After a few (or more) tries, it’s just best however to not try anymore.  I chose this course with [First Love].  She rejected me for nearly a quarter century, and at the end of that time, I was no closer to wining her heart than when I started.  Now, some long-term pursuits do pan out.  But it’s key to recognize the unfruitful ones early and end them before we’ve wasted very much time and resources.    
  • I suppose that how attractive we deem the lady to be, determines how much rejection we’re willing to endure.  If she’s attractive enough, there’s no such thing as needless rejection. 

Take care.

Tom Hesley

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Combating The Shame Of Rejection

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Inspired by audio journal episode   AJE-2010-05-07-19-30.

As I said in the previous post   here, needless rejection should be avoided.  To summarize: A needless rejection is one where you experience more pain and humiliation than necessary, to find out if that lady you like so likes you back.  Dating requires some risk, but not excessive risk.  Risking foolishly not only hurts too much, but it can damage you psychologically by creating insecurities that not even the best therapists can help rid you of, and these will plague your love quest with undue hardship.  So take the possibility of being rejected seriously, and don’t ask her anymore than you must in order to figure out her wishes, and don’t linger once she’s made it clear that she does not desire you.  Do not pester, and as a general rule, do not retry very often.  If she says no, she probably means it, for years to come.  So give her those years, before you ask her out again. 

As long as we’ve shown her all the consideration, respect, and sensitivity we can, then we should not be embarrassed or shamed should she reject us anyway.  Once we’ve stopped the excessive strutting, asking for too much too soon, and the too-frequent retries, any rejection that we still get does not make us universally bad people.  Experience shows that ladies usually reject us for circumstances beyond our control to fix, and beyond theirs as well.  So why blame them?  Why blame ourselves?  Doing so only angers us at them, and pointlessly shames us besides. 

Rejection is usually not personal; especially once we’ve eliminated any bad-choice components from our approach.  That is: Rejection typically does not occur due to things about ourselves that we could have controlled, or should have.  Once we’ve incorporated politeness, respect, consideration of her needs, and gentle-but-not-brutal honesty into our getting-acquainted routines, her response becomes the choice of the gods or destiny; we are neither responsible for a yes nor a no answer.  Primarily, it’s nature that defines who we’re attracted to, and who’s attracted to us.  Any choices that we could rightly be held accountable for, are secondary and so, for the most part irrelevant.  So, we cannot be faulted much for another’s dislike of us, and so, should not feel guilt or inadequacy when ladies shun us. 

While she may deem us unworthy when she scoffs at us, that opinion is not universal fact; though it may feel like it.  In fact, the only universal truth she can state with any authority whatsoever is that she personally does not find us attractive.  Period.  Anything beyond that, such as hateful glares, insults, and demeaning comments, is just blusterous and meaningless.  Why? Because she’s neither qualified nor empowered to evaluate our worthiness; unless we empower her.  Therefore, her words should not be allowed to diminish our self opinions.

She has no right to put us down for trying; at least, not for trying the first time. Indeed, the simple act of polling her does not make us bad, and asking her out does not reduce our universal worthiness.  There’s nothing wrong with inviting her to a date, unless of course, we know that she’s already happily involved with someone else, or we’ve asked her recently but she declined.  In these circumstances, asking her anyway would constitute the needless risk of rejection mentioned above, that we’re well advised to avoid.  It may also show her that we do not respect her wishes, which will offend her and thus, net us a much more poignant rejection than necessary.   So the trick is to ask without needlessly offending her.  Once we’ve eliminated that needlessly offensive part from our love questing strategies, there’s then nothing wrong with asking. 

Asking does not decrease our worthiness.  Nor does her response actually; no matter how inhospitable that might be.  She may not like that we asked, and in fact, may object boisterously.  Never mind that though, because it’s beyond her purview to shame us for asking.  All we were doing was testing her availability.  So we should neither be ashamed to ask, nor feel like we’ve committed a grave sin by asking, should she reject us.  We all deserve to be happy in love, even if she denies our request to be happy with her. 

In fact, her response to our date request does not determine the appropriateness of our query at all.  In other words, we should never conclude after receiving a rejection that we were wrong to ask in the first place.  Indeed, in light of today’s diverse cultures, how would we know what she’d say?  She may berate us for asking, and she might even suggest that our asking was inappropriate. But she’d be wrong because the outcome of a poll never determines the rightness of taking the poll.  The conclusion of the poll may reveal undesirable answers.  But the degree to which those answers are wanted (or not) does not invalidate the need to take the poll in the first place, to get those answers.  We would not have those answers unless we polled for them to begin with.  So it’s irrational for her (and us) to project backward and harshly refute the poll’s necessity because of what we learned from it.  Whether she accepts or rejects our date request, it is always right to ask given that the conditions above are met. 

Rejection and how we interpret it is by far the greatest opposing force to wining the love quest.  If we regard it too little, then we needlessly offend others.  But if we take it too much to heart, we become overly anxious and fearful, and deny ourselves  the opportunity for true love.  Indeed, the more afraid of encountering rejection we are, the less we’ll approach new ladies; and the less approaching we do, the less likely we are to find a dream girl who feels likewise about us.  It’s all about the numbers; the more we try, the more we’ll succeed.  So to make the love quest as painless and rewarding as possible, we must put rejection into the least hindering perspective.  We should not take it for more than it actually means, and through this writing, I hope I’ve lessened its negative connotations for myself and all who read this. 

Take care, and happy hunting.

Tom Hesley

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Avoiding Needless Rejection: 2010-05-19

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Inspired by audio journal episode:  AJE-2010-05-06-11-12.

I encountered anxiety while writing this piece lately; at times, the words just weren’t coming; classic writers’ block. Sometimes, I beat this by just writing anything, impromptu, even when I did not yet know what to say.  Or, failing that, I set pieces like this aside for a week, a month, or sometimes a couple years.  In the interim, I read, consider, and gather more life experience.  Then when I return, the words often flow more freely  This process often reveals defective premises in my thinking, and when eliminated, the writing comes easier once again. 

Indeed, the topic of avoiding needless rejection has challenged me in just this way recently.  But after some journaling, brainstorming, and considering my own colorful history of rejection (both giving and getting it), as well as the circumstances that typically surround it, I’ve dissolved the writers’ block, and wrote down some helpful insights to me, that I’ve discovered on my love quest.  So I offer these here, hoping that they’ll help you, my readers, to enhance your own dating experiences. 

Romantic Rejection Is Harmful!

Rejection really hurts, and things that hurt are typically harmful.  So, rejection is NOT harmless, precisely because it hurts so much.  It traumatizes.  While it rarely results in visible bruises or any immediately-obvious physical tolls whatsoever, being told NO too often wounds the self-esteem.  It can permanently cloud an otherwise positive outlook on life.  Too many refusals over too short a time, encourages us to chronically doubt ourselves.  This consistently negative history of recurring rejections instills fear in us against trying again, by undermining our self confidence and resolve.  Perennial rejection can set us to wondering if our dreams of happiness in love are worth the pains of the pursuit.  In the worst cases, we may answer this question with a resounding NO; foregoing fulfillment in love forever.  We give up the dream.  In this way, rejection keeps us from what we want, and not getting what we desire is perhaps the biggest source of pain and dissatisfaction and curtailed longevity in life.  We’re forced to bear the pain of not getting everything we want, and it’s this burden that makes us humans humans, and not gods; for the gods never pine, since anything they desire is within their easy grasp.  A god does not know the pains of unfulfilled desires.  But we humans know it all too well. 

Chronic denial of our dreams, even if we’ve become resigned to the notion that our dreams will never come true, can sour our moods, make us overly sensitive and reactive to rejection, trigger weight-gain and other symptoms of depression, interfere with sleep, and thus, sap our good health.  Constant deprivation can anger us and so, drive us to commit violent crimes in extreme situations.  Specifically, unrequited love needs remind us that we’re outside our desired social circles and that there are no places that accept us fully where we wish to dwell.  This cements the idea that we either do not deserve, or are just not good enough to love dream girls.  Since this blog is written in the context of a love quest, what us love seekers want most is to date the ladies we most desire; we most wish to win the love quest. 

But repeated refusals by our preferred women leave us drained, unhealthy, and thus, less productive in the game of life than we’d otherwise be if we were fully gratified.  Frequent rejection starves us physically and emotionally.  Also,  we’re likely to encounter harsh judgments from women due to our resulting reduced economic efficiency; which further exacerbates the problem.  If they think we’re earning less than we should be, they reject us even more.   In this scenario, loneliness begets more loneliness, and we’re compelled to shun and hide our insecurities rather than embrace them.  It’s a repeating cycle that holds us down in the dumps, sometimes for entire lifespans.  So clearly, lots of rejection can be a cumulative and bad thing, and ideally, we should avoid it where possible to protect our physical and mental welfare. 

Some Rejection Is Necessary, But Be Careful!

But to get what we want (in any endeavor, not just dating), we must risk some rejection.  There’s no way around this.  Indeed, unless the lovelorn man isolates himself from women totally, he’ll be unable to completely duck rebuff without entirely giving up his dreams of loving a desirable lady.  Some learned writers suggest that rejection is to true love as a nut’s outer shell is to its tasty core.  That is: To be loved, you must first endure a period of rejection, and so, to enjoy those delicious kernels, you must first get through the nut’s hard and inhospitable encasement. 

But just as we respect the potential of getting burned when nearing a hot stove, so too should we deeply consider the potential for rejection to hurt us.  A rebuff from a desirable lady can scar the soul just as profoundly as a burn from the stove can scar the fingertip. Though it may not show any physical injuries, rejection is nonetheless, quite dangerous.  So we ought not be caviler about it.  We should avoid shrugging it off as “no big deal” because in fact, rejection is a very big deal. We should instead, respect its potential harmfulness, and approach situations where it’s most likely to occur with  great caution

Rejection: A Needed Step Toward True Love 

Why must rejection come before true love?  Because put simply, no one likes everybody.  So, as he quests for love, a man will virtually always first encounter women who think him strange, weak, immature, shallow, and so on.  Whatever the adjective, there’s bound to be at least one lady out there who would describe each of us with it.  While as mentioned, there’s no way to completely avoid all negative judgments, one can sidestep some of them.  He can very often, read her heart without risking the humiliation of asking her for a date, and hearing her tell him NO.  One can in fact, determine the temperature of the water by sticking a toe in; he need not dive in head first to learn it.  More on this below. 

So many startup businesses fail because people invest too much into them without figuring out first if there’s a big-enough market for what they’re selling.  They dump all their money into the venture without any real idea what their customers are looking to buy.  Nor do they care much about that when the zeal of becoming self-employed swamps their thinking and corrupts their judgment.  They just want to get that new business up and running; taking a build-it-and-they-will-come attitude.  But had they invested a little restraint and careful effort up front, had they taken more of a build-a-little-and-we-will-see-if-they-come approach, then they would have been able to tell how well their product would likely be received, before risking too much.  Carelessness and impatience lead many a business into excess spending, and then, to ruin.  Unfortunately, as we’re tempted to do in the quest for successful business, so too do we pointlessly and excessively risk our emotional wellbeing while seeking true love. 

Play With the Odds, Not Against Them 

While we’ll likely never be able to completely eliminate rejection as a major spoiler in the love quest, we can take steps to minumize its pain and humiliation.  Consider that to make most any business profitable, we must take some risk, just as we must on the love quest.  But just as excessive risk can spell financial ruin for a budding enterprise, so too can careless gambling permanently hobble us in the quest for true love.  For example, asking a woman out when she’s clearly communicated with body language and other nuances that she does not wish it, on the off-chance that she’s changed her mind or that we have a better approach this time than last, would constitute such a needless rejection risk. 

Off chances are just that; they usually don’t pan out.  Ignoring the long-shot nature of long odds can not only subject us to needless humiliation, but can make us appear dumb, inept, and obnoxious, and the lady will like us even less than she otherwise would have, had we followed our instincts and left her alone to begin with. 

True.  She could be playing hard to get, and so, perhaps her rejections are fake.  Maybe she’d really rather we keep pursuing her.  But it’s not a good idea to take on the task of figuring out her true intentions if she’s not forthright with them at the start.  For one, if we guess wrong, we could offend her beyond our ability to make right again by apologizing.  Second, if she hides her true feelings, then getting straight answers from her could be difficult as the relationship progresses.  She may have chronic difficulty communicating her feelings; making for a painfully uncertain and drama-laden future with her.  People, who lie or intentionally misrepresent what’s in their hearts, court lots of irritating drama.  This manipulative concealing may show that she has a tendency to be careless with a man’s feelings as she is intentionally misleading him about hers.  So to avoid uncalled for pain, drama, and rejection, keep clear of these so-called game players by taking NO to always mean NO.  More on that below. 

That Bogus Hard-To-Get Test 

Sometimes as mentioned above, women play hard to get to test just how attracted to them a man really is.  They reason that if he keeps coming, despite the repeated rejections they dish out, then his feelings must be genuine, deep, and therefore, lasting.  But then, these same women are miffed when, after the relationship blossoms, the fellow frequently ignores their feelings.  Their test, rather than proving his undying interest, only showed him to be a bully because these sorts of tests attract men more interested in conquest than true love, and so are lousy indicators of the depth of a fellow’s attraction. 

In fact, many caring guys with deep feelings will back off when rejected, out of respect.  Indeed, how quickly a man takes no for an answer might be a better measure of the depth of his feelings; namely deference and considerateness.  So watch out for men who persist, even after being rejected, because this could indicate that he doesn’t value women’s wishes much.  This could be right dangerous to ladies who love him. 

No, the better approach for the fellow wondering whether he should press on through her rejections, is to take at face value what she says, and don’t try to read between the lines.  If she says no, she in all likelihood means no, and this should not be challenged.  To do so creates fertile grounds for needless rejection to sprout.  While on those rare occasions when NO can actually mean YES, we’re nonetheless happier taking NO to mean what is almost always does:  NO!  This keeps dating simpler, and could very well keep us guys out of jail!  Challenging a woman’s rejection is never a good idea, because women are highly sensitive and easily scared off these days by men who attempt to overly dominate them.  It’s critical therefore to avoid such appearances, and make sure to always treat her face-value wishes as supremely important.  Respect her always; even when she says no. 

Knowing Better 

We embarrass ourselves more than we might otherwise, by risking rejection when in fact we should have known better than to try.  It’s that should-have-known-better part that intensifies the guilt and shame feelings that accompany rejection, and makes women think us stupid. 

To minimize those nasty stingers, heeding her body language is highly important.  If she acts disinterested, she virtually always is disinterested, and in most cases, one need not go as far as asking her for a date to learn this.  Why not?  Because our conscience speaks this to us though feelings of fear and anxiety.  Contrary to common view, fear has wisdom and is thus a good thing.  When there’s fear, experience shows that there’s usually good reason, and that reason typically is that she’s just not interested.   Most of us know this instinctually, and we’re reminded of it by the eruption of intense anxiety when considering approaching a lady who’d rather that we didn’t.  But we ignore this warning sign and press on anyway because of the “bad rap” society accords fear these days.  We seem to revere people more who successfully defy their fears, and think far less of those who succumb to them.  But sometimes, it’s right to yield and those who do are thus the more wise.  Approaching a lady who obviously finds us unattractive is one scenario in which we should listen to our fear and leave her be; lest we injure ourselves psychologically. 

When we make the conscience our guide, we need not become experts in reading body language to know better, because it already does know better   While learning about what the various body language cues mean might very well help us more fully appreciate the wisdom that’s already built into our conscience, it won’t make us anymore adept at correctly interpreting the signals; not if we listen to our fears and stop when our conscience instructs us to.   

Yet many of us, to assert our machismo and defy our fears among other reasons, insist on disregarding her subtle yet quite clear, non verbal communications; we approach her anyway.  But doing so virtually never wins her, and it may cost us dearly by netting us bad reputations in the singles community as overbearing and pushy jerks.  Obviously, this complicates our efforts to find desirable people who will go out with us. Ignoring our conscience therefore, can make us insensitive to and defiant of her wishes, which endears us to no one. 

Truth be told: We need not push her to speak her answer when her answer is already obvious, and should be obvious to any right-thinking man.  Don’t keep pushing once you should already know; lest your feelings get hurt more than they already have been.  If you feel afraid to ask her out, then don’t.  Period. Listen to your conscience when it speaks through the voice of fear, for it really does know best. 

Try-Again Rejections 

Sometimes however, women reject us though they actually want a date, and they do it for non manipulative reasons.  Perhaps they’ve experienced love at first sight for us, but are afraid to get involved with a new lover because they were badly hurt by the last one, and wish not to risk a so-soon repeat of that experience.  Or, maybe they fear how a new relationship, though desirable, will impact their career or home life that they’ve worked for years now to establish.  They may even have children, and though they may like us immensely, they want to move slowly to see if we can be trusted around their young.  In these cases, their resistance may appear at first as rejection.  But it’s not.  It’s more of a cautious yes than a definite no. 

We should be able to sense the difference between definitive, irreversible rejection, and cautions acceptance.  There’s a difference between her saying no because she detests us, and no because she wants to be careful though she likes us very much.  In these cases, it makes sense to subject ourselves to rejection a second, third, or fourth time. 

So in spite of what I’ve said above, there are times when it’s smart to keep pressing forward, even when you get “no” early on.  Again, reading her nuances and listening closely to her voice tells the true and whole story.  Still though, when she’s unwavering in her denial of our invitation, our best bet is to pack it in and move on to another, as we need not (nor should not) have to coax someone to love us. 

While some judicious risking makes sense, the rest is silly, and it’s that unneeded and generally fruitless part of rejection that I’ve attempted to explore in this post, and hope to discuss more fully in subsequent writings.  I’ve found through bitter experiences in my own love quest, that when it comes to rejection, playing  against  the odds too often gets you hurt in big ways. So I encourage more of a play-it-safe approach; one that just as effectively gets the job of ringing out interested ladies done, yet goes more with the odds rather than against them.  Gamble only when the odds favor you.  The rewards are just as worthwhile, and the pain and damage to the self-esteem when risking more intelligently (good risk management), are greatly reduced.  Thus, our overall confidence level rises, increasing the chances of connecting with women we truly wish for.  Enduring needless rejection is one handicap that no one needs in the love quest. 

More later.

Tom Hesley

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Facebook Update: 2010-05-06

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

10:30 PM: From audio journal episode:  AJE-2010-05-06-11-12.  Facebooked and went on a friends rampage, where I invited a hundred folks to be my Facebook friend.  Made several new friends as a result, and talked with [Ann] there. 

I’m pleased with how the Facebook experience is going, because I’ve made lots of friends and few people have ignored me, even with my pictures posted up there.  :-)   Of course the question is: How to advance these friendships; particularly with the women?  Many are not advance-able because the lady is married or has other precluding circumstances.  But some should work out well. I just need to gently nudge them forward without pushing too hard, and also to realize sooner when it’s not going as I’d like, and back away before getting my feelings hurt too badly. To this end, I can join in on conversations they’re having and see how receptive they are to my talk. 

Perhaps I said good-bye to my philosopher / doctor friend too soon last last.  Maybe I should have asked his advice on how to proceed.  Ah but I’ll manage okay. :-)   The key is to avoid risking too much, making unwarranted assumptions, and pulling away early when signs of disinterest surface.  More about that later when I deal more fully with the topic of rejection; specifically, avoiding  needless  rejection. 

Tom Hesley

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Indeed A Fear Of Rejection

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Dear [Ron],

How are you? Are you ready for camp? I sure am ready for the vacation. :-)

At any rate, just a quick note that this month, I discovered that it is indeed a fear of rejection that keeps me from approaching most women. As you know, I went to a really cool party at the beginning of this month. The ladies there were always receptive, talkative, pleasant, and polite; no chance of being rejected. Commensurately, any fears I might have had to talk to them, were nowhere to be found. So when there’s no threat of rejection, there is no fear.

As you know, this fear and I are old companions. I’ve battled it, considered it a wise guardian, envisioned it as a great wall with windows through which I could look at women on the other side yet could not pass, and it has appeared as a raging tiger, growling and blocking the path of my love quest. This fear is, I fear, by far the most crippling force that opposes me in my quest.

But with time marching on and me well into middle age, I wonder if, the fear of dying unfulfilled, will eventually trump this fear of rejection, and enable me to consistently approach beautiful strangers at will? These two fears constantly wage war in my soul and I’m weary of their fighting. I need some insight; reinforcements if you will. Will I always be so concerned about offending women that I’ll never be able to tell them my heart?

Every several years, I like to reexamine my thoughts about this fear of rejection. So, if the muses are with me, I’ll be writing letters to you and [Mentat] over the next few months, telling you what I know about this fear so far as well as what I suspect. Any feedback or insights you or anyone else has on this topic would be welcome.

Tom Hesley

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Foot-Worshiping Party

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

I took the plunge today and signed up to attend my first foot party in early May. From what the host described, this could be exactly what I’ve sought to either indulge in or get past my fantasies of worshiping the feet and legs of beautiful women. He says that they carefully screen the ladies, who are no older than 25, and who are thin. That’s a real relief, since the tall and thin type that I prefer are so hard to find at large these days.

No cameras, drugs, alcohol, or tobacco products allowed. No exchange of bodily fluids or any action whatsoever above the knees either. Cleanliness is the operative word here; the women wash their lower bodies between each session, so there’ll be no odors to ruin the erotic mood.

They’ll offer a few VIP suites, where one may worship in private if desired, and they provide food and beverage as well in between the sessions.

The building adheres to all fire and safety codes since it is a public facility, and is located in a nice area in southeast PA.

The party is billed as   private.    So you can only attend by invitation in order that they can assure their customers that only up-standing people will be there. They maintain tight security, and they’re a bona fide business as well; it’s not just some guy having a house party in his cramped apartment. Safety and privacy therefore, shouldn’t be issues.

Such establishments eliminate all the painful screening that I’ve endured through the years, without much success I’d add. The women at these gatherings know that the guys are into foot worship. In fact, they enjoy it themselves, which is why they’re there in the first place. Thus the risk of rejection when approaching one of these beautiful strangers approaches zero; a nice change from the near one hundred percent rejection rates I’ve gotten throughout the past score.

Foot parties like this should save money too; I won’t have to “wine and dine” women anymore just to find out if they’ll remove their shoes and stockings for me. Plus, the need for long courtships is nonexistent. No more wasting money on women who end up never baring their legs anyway. No more waiting for years sometimes for them to do so. No more milking my wallet as much as they can by putting me off for a long time. This setup really does embody   instant   gratification.

There’s no pretense either; no need to hide one’s true desires behind propriety and silly, outdated mating conventions. There are no complicated and hit-but-usually-miss protocols to follow, and I won’t have to waste my brain power learning about her “insides” before she’ll let me love her outsides. A good thing too, because if I have to play therapist to one more lady, I think I’ll go crazy myself. Here, unlike more traditional methods of pursuing women, I can indeed enjoy the milk for one night without having to buy the whole cow forever.

Could it be for the first time since my longing for women began, that I finally have a reliable source of beautiful ladies who will help me bring my childhood fantasies into reality without asking the world of me in return? I hope so. Whether it is or isn’t, I must find out.

Now I am concerned that this will hurt [Emmy], because I do love her and so, I wish to minimize her pain as much as I can. Our therapist and I are putting many hours into helping her understand. But the bottom line is that she’s just going to have to accept my need to play until I get it out of my system, just as I had to do when ladies like [Emeebee],   [First Love],  and others asked it of me. I know from experience that it’s painful. See my 1994 Love Quest Archives to read about the extensive and long-lasting pain I felt. I grew a lot from that pain however, and [Emmy] will too, I hope.  Regardless, I must come first. If that makes me a nasty, selfish person, then I’ll embrace that judgment if it means that I can finally get what I want.

Tom Hesley

Tom’s Love Quest Summary

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Hello.

It’s Tom here again with some background about me to help put this whole love quest thing into context.

Let’s see. I’m a 48 year old single white male. I never married, never had children, nor do I want to. I’m 5’ 8’’ tall at 179 pounds. Currently, I live where I grew up, in central, PA. However, in my working life of nearly 20 years, I’ve lived in Dayton, OH, Pittsburgh, PA, and Philadelphia, PA.

I began my education in public school. At that time, I lived at home with my parents and sisters, like most kids. But in third grade, I switched to a special needs school in Pittsburgh due to weak eyesight, which affected me since birth.

Well, if I had it my whole life you may ask, then why didn’t I switch schools sooner? Because the low vision did not lower my grades in the early years, and I liked being close to my family. The teachers in kindergarten through second grade accommodated me lovingly. They liked me and were eager to help. So my grades stayed very good, my self-confidence kept pretty high, and I got along well with the other kids.

But it got harder to keep up as the lessons grew more complicated, as they had in third grade. Kids teased me then about my thick glasses, threw rocks at me, and beat me up in the school yard at recess. I grew frustrated since I could no longer follow the training, and teachers grew impatient as I got angrier. I missed more and more of the lessons, as teachers taught more with chalk boards, overheads, and copies of their handwritten notes; which I could not read well without getting very close. If I was going to have any chance at a good education, I needed a different school; one equipped to handle low-vision kids like me. So, in February, 1970, I left the school across the street for, hopefully, a more positive learning experience in Pittsburgh.

Of course, this meant living much of the school year away from home since each way to Pittsburgh took more than two hours. So with the new school over a hundred miles away, I stayed there overnight during the week. The only times I saw my family were the weekends and on summer breaks. Initially, this adjustment hurt all of the family, and my Mom agonized for years over whether she should have sent me away. In the end though, we all agree that she chose wisely, and I’m grateful to her for sticking to it though she missed me and cried over it often. I cried too, especially on Sunday nights, for the first couple years. But I’m glad we all stuck with the new school, as it did what we’d hoped it would by giving me a second, much better chance at a decent education.

Though my vision is low, it’s always been stable, thank goodness. I have enough to be productive in many “sighted” activities. I read large print, take buses, and watch TV. I know what colors are. My favorite is a deep yet vibrant blue. I maintain the house, doing most repairs and enhancements myself. I fix computers, mow the lawn, do light construction, perform plumbing and electrical repairs, and I paint. I know how to use power tools like drills, saws, sanders, and heat guns. That great school in Pittsburgh taught me well how to better apply the vision I had to maximize my independence and productivity.

However, the biggest drawback of my reduced sight is that I cannot drive. This fact has complicated my love quest greatly since good old sweet sixteen. In fact, many women who’ve rejected me confirmed this. “I can’t date you,” they’d say with a tone that challenged my audacity to ask them out in the first place. “You don’t drive,” as though I should have known better than to seek their affections. Nonetheless, finding sustained pleasure in love remains my top priority. Though my eyes are weak, everything else is strong; including a desire to enjoy fulfilling erotic relationships.

The search has been hard for different reasons at different times. During high school, I struggled because there weren’t many girls there that I wanted. Why? The high school was small, with less than 150 boys and girls combined, and of all the girls, only four to six interested me romantically. Of these, three were too old. Plus, the remaining three were quite popular with the other boys. Thus, competition was fierce, leaving the pickings quite slim. So I had few dates in high school, and no one ever asked me out first.

I was also quite shy. The prettiest girls scared me most. The more I wanted them, the more I feared approaching them. This meant that the girls I desired most were the least likely to know that I wanted them. I never quenched my teenage thirst for great sex. Not until well after finishing high school (which, in retrospect, was probably a good thing), did I ever score. Looking back on that time from here in 2009, I’m glad I didn’t have sex and am thankful that I never got anyone pregnant. But in the 70s, I hated this abstinence forced on me as it was by the circumstances at the school, by what some described as my average looks, and my own fears.

My fear seemed my worst enemy. So, I spent the first decade or two of my love quest, trying to rid myself of it; striving first to understand it, then learning how to beat it, and finally, once I realized that I couldn’t beat it, learning to happily live with it. I’ll share how this came about in upcoming episodes.

Fear turned out to be quite the foe. I could neither silence it with alcohol, nor marijuana, nor a hundred self-help books, nor direct confrontation, and not with years of psychotherapy. Fear has been such an encompassing and basic part of my conscience that eliminating it completely proved impossible. So I’ve not destroyed it. However, I do go after what I want, even though the fear accompanies me everywhere. I negotiate with it and sometimes, it allows me to speak.

I’ve made peace with fear, and learned to tell my desires to women, not so much in spite of it, but rather through working with it. What do I mean by that? Well nowadays, I see fear as a protective parent or older brother, watching over and guiding me, using its strong but gentle hand to steer me away from situations likely to be fruitless. But I didn’t discover until well into adulthood that fear almost never the bad guy, and there are times when it does not restrain me, even around the tallest, thinnest, most attractive women. Sometimes, it allows me to approach. And those situations were the most likely to turn into full-blown, happy relationships; more so than when I chose to ignore it and press on without considering its counsel. Few (if any) times where I defied my fear ever turned out good. In retrospect, I should have listened to it more that I did. It has wisdom and so it knows when the women like me and when they don’t, and it permits me to approach those that do and pushes me away from those who’d rather I fly a kite. I’ve come to understand how that works and I hope you’ll check out future episodes for more details.

Though in my teens, fear kept me away from almost every pretty girl, at times I rose above it and made my interest known. However, usually the very thing happened that I feared: They rejected me and threw in some distain and jeers for good measure. My fear knew what it was talking about when it said, “Stay clear of this one.” Nonetheless, I enjoyed some potent romantic times. A few girls said yes. A few girls, my fear permitted me to seek out.

One case was our tenth grade prom. That date turned out to be perhaps the best romantic date I ever had before or since. I asked this female employee if she’d go with me. When she agreed, I almost fainted with thrill. The date turned out well and even today, I remember most every minute of it. But because I was a minor (sixteen at the time), she wouldn’t go out with me again. And by the time I came of age, she had left the school and I, in this pre-Internet era, could not locate her though I tried.

Besides the prom date, I had a “first love” and it was in eleventh grade that my passion for her really ignited. But for various reasons, anxiety tainted that association because her first love was someone other than me, and, I knew it. Plus, she and I had very different values. I was too young to understand that intellectually, although my conscience got it loud and clear. And so, at least during high school, we never connected romantically; although I daydreamed about her often during class, as I watched her much more than I paid attention to the teacher. She was just so beautiful, and I’m certain I failed a few exams due to focusing too much on her.

She and I had a few encounters. But she’d never come as my date to school activities. True, we’d dance sometimes and she’d let me hold her hand once every several blue moons, though she never squeezed back. She’d allow me to nuzzle her shoulder during a slow dance. But her arms only rested on my shoulders; never drawing me closer. Not in high school anyhow. Once in a while, she’d even come out with me for pizza or movie, at my prompting of course. But she never invited me to go with her anywhere. Any activity where we’d be announced as a couple, she rejected. In fact, I had asked her to our tenth, eleventh, and twelfth grade proms as well as numerous dances and field trips. But she always said no, though she said yes to others. This hurt, and the pains of her repeated rejections followed me though many of the early years of my love quest. Let’s just call her   [First Love].   She really was that and to me, because   [First Love]   always came first. I would have taken her to the tenth grade prom. But I took the employee instead, since   [First Love]   rejected me. Nowadays, I don’t see the employee lady as second best even though she was not my first choice, because I ended up falling in love with her afterwards, once I realized just how memorable that prom date was. Still though, my feelings for   [First Love]   never wavered and I would continue chasing her for many years; long after the employee departed, and long after high school ended.

Of course I did more than just quest for a girlfriend as a student. I enjoyed repairing electronic devices and dabbling in amateur radio; I loved anything electronic. Additionally, I worked several little jobs as a teen, which included a kitchen helper, a telephone switchboard operator, and receptionist. I sold Christmas trees each December to raise funds for the school, and I played music at our dances. I also managed the school radio station and interned at KDKA radio in 12th grade. These jobs made me feel important and confident, and this I thought, gave me a leg up on the competition for girls. Though I loved the fun of this work, I did it to attract more girls as well. The jobs paid money and as I saw it, girls liked money and guys who had it. So anything I could do to make more of it, I did.

Electronics, specifically radio, fascinated me. This was a good thing too because aside from a few friendships, it was the only pursuit that distracted me from feeling sad for not having a girlfriend. I cried often after seeing girls I wanted hanging out with men I deemed beneath me. Yet those girls avoided me like I was beneath them! They seemed to view me as badly as I did their loser boyfriends. They saw me as the loser, and those losers as winners. Go figure. I didn’t get it. How they could want those cads and not me? I thought this was because I appeared ugly to them. Indeed, some of them said this to me. But over all, I didn’t believe them. So, I kept pressing for a good date. True, I got frustrated often for not finding good ones. But never did I consider my looks a curse, nor did I obsess over them.

I rarely used cologne or dressed up, and did little to enhance my appearance beyond the daily bathing, shaving, nail cutting, hair grooming, teeth brushing, and wearing clean clothes and deodorant. I was secure about my looks even though some said I was plain and unappealing. I never wore designer clothes, gold necklaces, or name brand shoes because I was fine and whole without them. Indeed, as I looked in the mirror to straighten my hair, I liked the guy looking back. He was reasonably handsome with much going for him, and he should be able to attract the girls he liked. Yet in high school, no girl ever desired him back. They laughed as he passed or scurried away on the street as they walked arm-in-arm with their thuggish boyfriends; those guys with the rap sheets that terrorized us civilized folk. The girls preferred these “bad boys” to him. To me: me who never had a police record; me, who got drunk only seven times in high school; me, who never beat up anyone; me, who had better grades; and me who had the promise of a good career in electronics. All these good things that I had, those losers did not. So what did they have that drove the girls wild? With all the jobs and good performing I was doing, I thought I should have been more attractive than the losers. But the girls disagreed. The fact that I wasn’t confounded and confused me, and I’d spend many an hour pondering why this was so through the rest of my love quest.

My powerlessness to answer led me through years of depression, which stretched way beyond high school, and sometimes, affects me to this very day. But as I entered adulthood, electronics kept me sane and made all this bearable. It gave me something besides dating to focus on. While studying, I could forget the nasty looks and words from pretty girls. So, I continued studying radio and TV repair into the mid 80s.

In fact, upon my 1979 graduation, I attended trade school for two years. There as well as at the school for blind children, I only saw a few ladies at Connelley that I liked, but more than in high school. There weren’t many female students in the electronics classes, although the school taught other subjects that drew more just down the hall. Still, I was too scared to approach any ladies. I liked one woman in my advanced electronics class. As usual though, I was too afraid to tell her. But she figured it out after catching me watching her a few times. Flattered she was, but not interested in dating me. So while I did well in trade school scholastically, I had still made no love connections. No matter though because two months after graduation in 1981, I was onto my next adventure; my first full-time job.

In August, I got a temporary job as an electronics technician, also in Pittsburgh. The first few months were hectic because I had no direct supervisor to teach me about the equipment I’d be repairing. There was no senior technician because that fellow had taken ill some months earlier. With him gone, his office soon filed up with hundreds of broken audio visual devices. So once that pile got real big, they felt compelled to bring in someone temporary to repair some it. So they hired me.

I was all alone with this mountain of malfunctioning projectors, TV monitors, and video cassette recorders. My mission: To fix it all. It was nice though, because no one pressured me. They understood that I, fresh from trade school and the only technician there, was in way over my head. Soon however, I could repair three to six items per day once I learned how things worked and how to order parts. Fortunately, most projects were simple — such as frayed power cords, broken belts, missing knobs, and burned out lights. Yet, there was much to do, simple though it was.

As in trade school, again I feared failing and so, spent many extra hours at the office and took home manuals to read over the weekends. I so wanted not to screw it up. Thus until the senior technician returned, I didn’t have time to think about women. I was all about the job at that point.

But ten weeks after I started, the boss man returned. I thought that I’d be laid off. However, the directors liked my work so much that they voted to keep me on to assist, until we finished fixing that massive pile of equipment. With two guys working, it soon disappeared. Then, they asked me to stay for over a year more, and I soon realized that I didn’t have to work so hard to please them. So I had time to resume my love quest, and resume it I did.

Four ladies at work caught my eye. I was still too afraid to say to ladies that I liked them directly. So I’d let them know by just hanging around them until they got it. Then, either they’d pull me aside and say that they knew I was interested and that they’d love to go out (which never happened at that job). Or they’d say sadly that they already had boyfriends and that, while they’d love to go out, they couldn’t. This always happened. I wrung out all four ladies this way, and you guessed it. None were available. So, with no one there left to pursue, that familiar ache of loneliness soon came back again. The excitement of the new job along with the hope of meeting a special lady there was gone.

To cope, I sought religion. Perhaps while following this story, you’ve wondered about my religious background. So let me say that I am neither religious nor spiritual these days. Though raised Catholic, as I matured, believing in things through sheer faith became impossible; especially once my beloved and devout grandmother passed away in 1980. I’ve always been a terrible follower, and so believed in nothing in my early twenties, simply because another said I should. I’m a concrete guy, and so, must sense it for myself to believe it with conviction. However, all of that notwithstanding, as a young adult I attended church often. In 1982, church was good. The people welcomed me and that felt nice. But it was just a distraction, for it left my heart still empty once the services were over. I enjoyed that temporary respite though, because anything (even church) was better than sitting at home on a pretty Sunday morning, alone, with nothing to do. With each passing year, I grew less and less spiritual. But it would be fourteen more years until I completely dismissed the church as a useful means to feel less lonely for having no lovers.

My interest in church came in spits and spurts. So after several months, church lost its appeal as this particular spurt came to an end. I knew that I’d probably not meet my lady there because all of them seemed to believe more strongly than I in God. The whole speaking-in-tongues thing and the faith-healing was just plain crazy to me, and so I could not respect women who believed so strongly without proof. Blind Faith and I never got along, and so I felt guilty attending. Parishioners questioned me about why I was going and suggested I stop until I “saw the light.” So I did stop going regularly in late 1982 once I realized that love questing in church would probably be a fruitless endeavor.

Currently, I’m agnostic – neither believing nor disbelieving in God. He may be out there. He may not. I can’t prove it either way; nor can anyone else for that matter. That’s good enough for me, but not so for women at large who generally believe in a greater entity that regulates their lives and helps them succeed when they follow his rules. They call me a humanist and one even said that I was a son of the devil and kept her children away from me, fearing that I’d corrupt their views about heaven and hell and how God wants us to serve him. I fear not the possibility of no life after death as they do. I’m fully prepared to embrace this if it turns out that way. But without strong faith and hope in a life hereafter, the love quest got harder; not because God was thwarting me, but because the women I encountered looked down on me for questioning. Staying true to my beliefs has cost me dearly in my love quest.

Long ago, I stopped arguing religion. Nonetheless, when I was a stronger believer in the 70s and early 80s, I spent hours a week praying to God, asking him to brighten my dark heart, and bring the woman of my dreams to me. Well, he never did, even after two decades of praying. Indeed I’ve done better in my search by myself, once I stopped believing that he’d do it for me. God was not going to win my love quest for me. No, if this would ever happen, I’d have to do it myself.

But I digress. So let me get back to my job.

Eighteen months into the job, in the spring of 1983, I realized that I could not earn the money I wanted fixing home entertainment devices. Nor had I found a true love at Pitt. It didn’t look like I would either, for I had quickly run through all the women in mine and surrounding departments. Like I said, none would date me. Though I made my own money, aloneness still followed me everywhere. Thus far, the women weren’t impressed with my achievements, hard to achieve as they were, and successful as I was at achieving them.

So when that tech position ended, I went in a new direction; to college for computer programming, a career that promised a higher wage, and would bring more desirable ladies to me, which it eventually did. But during the first two years, I made only three new friends because I was a bookworm. As usual, I was terribly afraid of failing, and since I’d been out of high school for nearly five years, rusty in my reading and writing skills too. So, besides the usual college level work, I also had to relearn many of those forgotten skills. This left little time for socializing between 1984 and 1986, as I spent most every hour outside of class studying. Even the summers were full in those days, as I took my Calculus courses during the first two summers, computer classes in 1986, and a writing class in 1987. Actually, I’m glad I didn’t meet a lady then, because I’d have surely flunked out. There wouldn’t have been time for managing both an education and a relationship although occasional sex without strings was nice.

I longed for my dream girl just the same. So much so, that I visited my first psychotherapist in the fall of 1986. For nine months, we met each week, and though I couldn’t put my finger on any particular insights I got, I did start feeling better about being alone, and less afraid to talk to college women. At times in therapy, I just wanted to get rid of the desire for women rather than satisfy it. No doubt you’re wondering, “How could you want something, and then wish that you didn’t?” Well, at this time the rewards in my love quest were so few, and the disappointment so great, that the longing had become painful, leading me into many humiliating situations and leaving me feeling ashamed. Often women reacted so negatively when I showed them interest that I began feeling that my desires were wrong. At 25 years of age, I believed that though the world was full of beautiful women, none would ever think me beautiful.

Now a few women agreed to date me. So I could attract some, but not those I really desired. I was so disenchanted with the love quest by then, that I’d have been relieved to find that why hadn’t yet found Her was simply because no such person existed. At least that way, my aloneness could not be my fault. That would have been easier to swallow than the idea that there might be some correctable thing wrong with me that was keeping them away.

The therapist listened patiently, offering a consoling voice. I liked discussing the love quest with someone who understood my pains of loneliness and the dilemmas of how to satisfy it. But he refused to assure me that She was just a figment of my imagination. He also assured me profusely that I was not defective in any way, even with my low vision. He thought that She was out there and that I just had to find her. He thought I was fine and that if I was going to ever find Her, I’d have to search harder and smarter. I’ll tell you how I did these things in upcoming episodes.

Therapy encouraged me to intensify my love quest efforts, though I left it with more questions than I had going in. I don’t know how. But even with those questions unanswered, I was, while not cured, markedly better. Maybe it was the therapist’s cheering me on or his unwavering confidence in me. I’m not sure. But I felt more confident asking ladies out. I had achieved the objective of that therapy, which was to get more women into my life. That therapy gave me a big push that got me very far along the journey of my love quest.

Meanwhile back at college, I also improved at the coursework, which meant that I could study less. So in the fall of 1986, I joined a computer users group of sixty students. We sent email back and fourth, and met each other for meals between classes. At night we partied, and so I drank back then, quite a bit. I was known for carrying this round black bottle that had the words “Get Bombed” printed in white letters on the side. I’d fill it with a quart of Jim Beam whiskey and take to many a gathering. In fact, this flask looked like a bomb and the girls seemed charmed by my tipsy displays as I held onto it. I did make a couple close female friends from all that. Yet this life style was not quite what I was after. I wanted them to like me for the sober me; not the intoxicated version. But thinking that I’d have to sacrifice my values a little to get what I wanted, I went along with the drinking for a good while. I attended all sorts of college parties, visited bars, dances, festivals, and hung around the student union, looking for ladies who would come to my bed and please me.

But, with my collegiate education nearly complete, I thought I might have to leave Pittsburgh for a job. So, I avoided serious relationships, though I ached for one. I knew that if I found it, that it would only be temporary. But I didn’t care. Anything would be better than nothing, even a one-night stand. Also, the ladies I met, while very nice, either did not attract me or vice versa. Yes, that same problem once more. I always seemed to interest the ones I didn’t care about. Nonetheless, I made lots of lady friends; a real change from life before college. So while college didn’t drop a dream girl in my lap, it, along with therapy, moved me closer to Her, for I had more female friends and was asking more of them out than ever before. The odds of finding Her thus, had improved much.

While I asked more for dates than ever before in a given year, I also got more rejections. In a way, this was also rewarding. Rejections were better than nothing at all, as they proved that I had begun to master my fear of approaching ladies. The more rejections I got I reasoned the less afraid of ladies I must be. So the rejections themselves became a measure of success in my love quest. At least now, I was hunting, trying different approaches, and acquiring the emotional scars to show it. So at last, in college, I finally managed to break out of my shell.

I finished school in 1988, with a Bachelors degree in Computer Science along with a minor in mathematics from the University of Pittsburgh; the same place I’d worked some five years earlier. From there, I went on to spend fifteen years, working as a software engineer for a fortune 500 company.

My hope that the computer field would bring more women into my life came true. Indeed, during my first two years, I met hundreds of women; more than in my entire adult life prior. Now that I had more money than ever, I could afford to try dating services, attend weekend-getaways, and go to dances and meetings with singles groups. I signed up for my first dating service immediately after cashing my first big paycheck. I then applied for a second one a year later.

Then in 1992, I bought a nice home after a few sweet raises. This, I thought, would surely impress the ladies and I was certain that only a little more time stood between me and my dream girl, who would, at any moment, waltz right in and complete my life. In fact, I bought an extra-large refrigerator, reserved space for her things in my bedroom alongside my king sized waterbed, and saved a spot in the garage for her car.

One day in 1994, a neighbor called as I was sealing my back deck, and invited me to his church. Eager to bond with my new neighbors, I forgot about why I had abandoned church in 1982, and I went with him, just to check it out. To my surprise, I found lots of eligible women. But soon, just as had happened some twelve years earlier, II quickly grew bored with it. I was no more a believer in 1994 than I had been in 1982. The truth was, I wasn’t there to worship. Instead, I went to meet women. That was it, and they knew it quickly. Once again, none would go out with me. Another strategy tried in the love quest, and another one failed.

Meanwhile, at work, I asked over a hundred ladies for dates, hoping that now that I was in my own home, they’d surely say yes. I invited them for lunch and hosted a couple team-building sessions and parties, so that all would see how well I was doing and appreciate how good a provider I could be. They came, they complimented me, and some stayed a couple hours. They liked my house and how well I kept it. But in the end, like my latest church stint, the big house and good salary never won any hearts. So no one ever parked her car in my garage. No one ever put her underwear in those empty drawers in my bedroom. No one ever brought any food to keep in my refrigerator for her next visit. I had instead, this cold draft that I felt against my face every night I ascended the steps to the second-floor master bedroom; a daily reminder that no one was up there waiting for me, and that no one I’d met so far wanted to be up there. So, after four years, with my dressers, garage, refrigerator, and heart still empty, I came to the conclusion that once again, a big change would be necessary to move me ahead in my love quest. I could not turn that great house into a wonderful home full of love thought I put every spare hour I had into the quest. I began feeling tethered to that house and soon, came to hate it there.

So in 1996, in that final year in the house, I came to look forward to Mondays and dread Fridays while my coworkers felt the opposite. They couldn’t wait for Fridays but hated Mondays. Why was I so different? Because I knew that come Friday, I’d likely spend the entire weekend alone, and that come Monday, I’d at least have people around me again when the new work week began. The loneliness burned in my heart. Career-wise I’d come so far. But socially, I ached as much as ever for sustained eroticism, and love.

As fate had it, I discovered Philadelphia, a city with way more single women. Some friends from there invited me to visit. So in December, 1996 I went, and loved it from the minute I arrived. Pretty ladies adorned every city block downtown. Plus, with the extensive public transportation, I could get to the social spots much easier than where I was currently living in Ohio. So, it didn’t take long to decide to sell my house and move there.

The Philly move turned out to be another big step forward in the love quest. For the first time, I could access thousands of women easily, without transportation worries. So I made friends, went to bars, boat trips, restaurants, skating parties, a trip to New York City, and any event I could to place myself among potential mates. One day even, I had two dates; one in the afternoon, and one that night. Each weekend, I’d pick a spot in the city, and then learn how to get there on the bus or train, and then go there, striking up conversations with beautiful strangers along the way. The thrill of learning a new city kept me from feeling too lonely, for the first year at least.

But after three plus years there, and only a few delightful but short-lived relationships (Cathy, Violet, Carol, Joyce, Karen, [Vee],   [Lynn],   [Tina],   Joanna), I was still alone. Now I did meet more women per year in Philly than in any other place prior, and I did have a few wonderful erotic encounters. During my last year there in 2001, I asked at least a thousand women to dance, and also launched numerous campaigns on the online and telephone dating services, where I contacted thousands more. I approached more women than ever that year. However, all but ten rejected me flat. And of those that agreed to meet me, only four wanted a second date. And of those romances, none lasted longer than a few months and all but one fizzled after just a few weeks. So while the move to Philly provided the target-rich environments I sought to move further in my quest, I left there in December of 2001 empty-handed, unfulfilled, and extremely disappointed. I was fresh out of ideas of what to try next and didn’t even want to try anymore.

This love quest had by this time cost me lots of money too! There was the move from Ohio, the loss of money when I sold the house, and all the household stuff I had to just about give away so I could downsize from that four-bedroom, two-story house with a double garage, to a two-bedroom apartment in a high rise building. Also in Philadelphia, the quest cost the most as I paid for most all my dates as well as my own drinks and transportation to the various hot spots around town. My desire for companionship was strong as ever, but after three decades, I still had no idea how to get it. I felt I had to do something radical but wasn’t sure what. But then, fate laid another clue in my path.

During my last year in Philly, I started having problems at work. The job was getting harder, I received no raises my last two years there. To add insult to injury, I still had not found my dream girl after thirteen years of building that career and the wealth that went with it. That’s when I surmised that corporate life was not for me anymore. All the hard work and extra hours to build a happy, successful life had not paid off though I had done everything a fellow was supposed to do to succeed. I got educated, held a good job for a long time, and set up several great living quarters. Unfortunately, ladies never lingered, if they even came at all.

I grew weary of the increasing pressures to step up my work performance. While I liked the raises and promotions which were more plentiful during the 90s, I found the rewards emptier and harder to get, the higher in the company I got. Working harder just didn’t make sense eventually, since all I had when I turned off the computer was an empty, cold dwelling. My place.

So the question occurred: Why fight so for a career whenever only cold rooms, a quiet kitchen, and an empty bed were my reward each night? I couldn’t answer this except to say that I shouldn’t. I understood that I couldn’t fix whatever was keeping her away, while working myself to death as a senior software engineer. I also knew that finding her was more important than anything, including making lots of money as a corporate big shot. Life was marching on too, as I was already well into my forties without having solved my happiness problem. So I promised myself in the summer of 2001 to either find my dream girl or die trying. If that meant devoting full time to the quest, then that’s what I would do.

It would be some months before I appreciated fully what that promise meant. But I knew right off that I’d have to free up lots of time to work on me. I would need to quit my job and learn once more how to live cheaply, at least until I found Her. But I agonized over doing this because the job treated me better financially than I could do on my own; guaranteeing me a spot among the middle class as long as I kept working. Plus, after reading hundreds of thousands of ladies’ profiles on the dating sites, it was clear that lots of women find richer men more attractive than those with modest incomes. So quitting would exclude me from consideration by many attractive women and thus, set me way back in my love quest. These and other truths made leaving one of the toughest choices I’ve ever made.

I suspected that I’d never find another position that paid as well; at least not initially. But so what? What good was the money if I wasn’t happy? Money had not made me happy to date. In fact, the joy of having it did not counterbalance the hardship of earning it. In the end, I was indeed worse for the wear.

True. The job qualified me for, and surrounded me with, lots of women. But simply being among ladies and having lots of money in my pocket and a nice suburban home was not enough. While the job exposed me to more women, the fact that I had it did not interest the ladies, any more than did my previous endeavors. They still saw me as, at best, too plain, and at worst, too ugly to date. The job with all its trimmings therefore, did not end this now-monotonous love quest.

Plus, and most sadly, women still looked down their noses at me, the same as they had twenty-five years earlier in high school. The fact that I was now earning close to ninety thousand dollars a year didn’t matter. The results of my approaches had remained essentially the same as it was in my teens. Zilch. I was still as lonely as I’d been in the 70s, yet still just as eager to win at love. Working so hard at a career just hadn’t gotten me where I thought it should, and I was ready to give it up in order to try something different.

So, in late 2001 I began preparing to resign: I saved money, moved back home with Mom, fixed up her house while I still had my software engineer’s salary, and spent thousands of hours journaling and mentally turning myself inside out. I looked for ways to change for the better, all the while seeking tools I could use to finally end my love quest victoriously.

This effort became my full-time job. Everything else, including my real job became a distraction. I substituted self-help books about relationships and dating for computer and software manuals. In the evening, time that I’d normally spend working extra hours on some programming project, I instead spent trolling the Internet for ideas and dates. My day job had become second priority, especially after business hours. Imagine that!

Now I’d planned to keep working for three years once I knew that I’d be leaving. But as the first of those years progressed, the job changed into an irritating distraction from my true purpose. That purpose, which I now understood since making the promise to myself in 2001, was to finally win the love quest. I wanted to really give the quest my all.

Though I had given up the extra hours, I was still putting too much time into the job, and too little into finding fulfillment in love. Not only did I wish to spend my evenings and weekends working the quest, but wanted to throw in the forty regular weekly work hours as well. As usual, the loneliness which had been with me since the age of twelve continued pounding at my soul, and I was getting really tired of it, and more eager than ever to find relief. From my history of many things tried and many things failed, I figured that I wouldn’t silence its doleful voice unless I could fully focus on it – something I’d never really done before. What else could I do?
It seemed like I’d done everything else. Let’s see. As I mentioned earlier, I:
• Acquired a good self image,
• Reduced my teenage fears of talking to women.
• Held jobs all through grade school and high school,
• Stayed out of serious trouble,
• Successfully completed high school and trade school,
• Held an electronics technician job for nearly two years,
• Completed psychotherapy,
• Joined the computer users group in college,
• Successfully completed college,
• Got a good job,
• Owned a nice home,
• Learned how to maintain a home,
• Attended singles groups and churches,
• Approached more than ten thousand women,
• Achieved a respected status at work,
• Earned close to ninety thousand dollars a year at the end,
• Which enabled me to give a lady a very good time,
• I avoided drugs and immoral behavior,
• I was stable and kind,
• Threw myself into lots of new environments and cultures throughout the quest so I might find the best areas in which to search.

But the one thing I hadn’t done so far was to completely devote my entire life to the pursuit. Up to this point, the love quest had always been more of a hobby; one that I worked during weekends and sometimes on weeknights. I’d never really gone at it full tilt before. Yet I knew that I would never be as happy as I could be unless I could find Her, and I was convinced that the way to do that the most effectively, was to sink every last waking hour into the search and into fixing myself.

So it came about some fifteen months after I began executing my plan to resign, that I did indeed quit. Was this too early? Perhaps. True. I didn’t make it to the end of 2004 as in the plan. I actually resigned in March of 2003. Nonetheless, I managed to pay off all debts and finish all the maintenance projects on Mom’s home too. I cancelled any magazine and music subscriptions I no longer needed, hauled away a ton of junk, and began saving coupons. This resignation was a pivotal moment in my love quest, and I’ll discuss more about this difficult choice in future episodes as well as what happened subsequently.

An all-time approach to this problem (as opposed to a full-time or part-time approach) proved to be grueling. So I devised a few diversions. One was part time DJing. Others included writing, computer repair, reading a lot, buying and selling on eBay, and watching classic movies. I enjoy watching Dr. Phil McGraw and Dr. Joy Browne as well, as my philosophies generally align with theirs. I’ve written numerous articles and stories which are, as of yet, unpublished. But they will be, in this blog and podcast. I’ll share some of my best works, which center on the quest. In fact, most of them do actually. Also, as in high school, I still enjoy ham radio, and hold an extra class Amateur Radio license (my call sign is N8UBU). Also, I got certified by Microsoft as an expert on various versions of their Windows operating system. Nowadays, I’m butler and caregiver for my Mom, who is recovering from open-heart surgery. I just finished re-plumbing her house last March and installing a wooden banister alongside the bridge from the parking lot into the side walk, so she has something to hold on to when entering. I do keep busy, which is one way of reducing the feelings of emptiness I discussed earlier. It’s not a cure. But it is good, temporary relief.

Perhaps my love quest talks will sound humanist or Buddhist in that they encourage us to tap our own inner strengths rather than looking to greater, outside, and improvable forces. This is my mantra now and it is an essential premise in my philosophy throughout the love quest. This should help clarify why I chose as I have as well as why I’ve tried doing much of it myself.

Through no other force than my own hard work and lady luck, I think I’ve found Her. But I’m not sure. I’ve enjoyed a wonderful relationship with [Emmy] for going on six years now, and prefer this association far over being alone. We get along quite well; we’re lucky if we fight once a year, and even then, we never yell at each other. We always maintain respect for each other and never go to bed mad. Although we have problems sexually that we’re working on currently, [Emmy] is among the most caring and understanding woman I’ve known. I have 95% of the relationship I’ve sought, and feel that once we work out the issues of eroticism, I’ll officially be able to end my love quest.

So since I’ve not yet actually won the love quest, I admit that I’m no expert. So while you’ll see many success stories here, you’ll see much sadness and despair as well. Indeed, the bulk of my experiences have been sad, sorry to say. For every one hour of joy I’ve experienced in my quest, I’ve probably had a hundred hours of pain and disappointment. In my search, sorrow has been a big part of the reality. Many have suggested that I express more of the joys than the sorrows. But to preserve the truest essence of my quest, I must relate completely my sad times because as painful as they were, they made it possible for me to have the good times that I do now. So I’d trade none of those sorrowful years away.

Not all the stories are sad. There are many pleasant ones. I’ll tell you about my introspections and the changes to my philosophy and approach to the problem that enabled me to reduce depression. In short, I’ll let you know how I learned to cope with being alone. Merely coping however is not ideal. So I’ve not given up. I hope through this blogcast that I can persuade those of you who have abandoned your search, to keep trying. In 2001, I declared that I would either win at this game, or die trying. You’ll need this same resolve if you’re ever going to experience true happiness, and I hope that through sharing my experiences and insights, that they’ll help you find the resolve to press on yourself.

I am no psychologist and have little formal training in this subject. My writings come not from any large-scale clinical studies or other systemic techniques for deducing human behavior. They come however, from my own three plus decades of experience chasing “the perfect woman”. So any advice I give should be considered no more than inspirational, and is not intended to replace bona fide professional help. This blog is for informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as anything other than me, telling my story of my love quest.

What is “the perfect woman,” you ask? Well, stick around and I’ll tell you about my vision of her. But not now. However, I will tease you and say that the word “perfect” here does not mean absolutely without flaws. More on that in future episodes, along with much more about the struggle to find perfection and the many strategies I’ve tried, to get it.

So thanks very much for stopping by and I hope you’ll visit again soon. There’s lots more to say.

Tom Hesley
http://tomhesley.com/

How to Keep Sex Good

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Notes for Today’s Therapy Session
Activities
• I made suggested changes to my web profile.
• I then blinked at 50 to 75 ladies after the new profile was approved.
• One was interested, several said no, and the rest gave no response.
• The one who answered positively insisted too fast on having my email address. So I pulled away.
• [Emmy] and I tried being physical again. No improvement. I still can’t get interested.
• I have not ordered the “Guide to Getting it On” book yet, because I believe my issues stop me way before the bedroom. If I manage to get that far with someone I desire, I’m fine, at least until that desire goes away. It’s getting them there in the first place that’s the real challenge. Will this book help with those pre-bedroom courtship rituals?

At the session, we discussed the following:
• The web profile changes I made did not improve the response rates.
• Suggestion: Post a better, more casual picture of myself, and get rid of the one from 1999 that has boxes in the background.
• Suggestion: Avoid direct admission of sexual interest in the web profile.
• Thought: Perhaps I see [Emmy] more as the daughter I never had than the lover I always wanted. This may contribute to our sexual problems.
• Question: Am I prepared to leave [Emmy] should I realize that we’ll never enjoy the sort of sustained erotic sex I want? Probably not. But I would, if I thought that being alone again would solve this problem.
• The thing is that I don’t believe that, given that I’ve experienced this same rapid decline of sexual desire with several other women; some older, some younger, and some my age. In any relationship I enter, I lose that interest, just weeks later, and it never comes back.
• I’m afraid to give up [Emmy] because then I’d have to once more troll the Internet and other places, seeking babes to date. I’d have to again face relentless rejections, and I don’t know if I want to weather that any more.
• Thought: My fantasy world and the real world of women diverged long ago. That is: Not since my teens have real-life sexual encounters produced as much excitement and pleasure as they do in my daydreams. They did once; but not lately.
• Question: Sex in the real world has consistently left me wanting. It’s never been as pleasing as the fantasy. So why do I seek real sex so?
• I was wrong to predict good real-world sex just because it went so well in my fantasies. It’s almost never been so.
• Suggested reading: Five Love Languages by Gary Chapman. Perhaps [Emmy] and I speak different ‘love languages’ and the thought is that this book might help us to discover that, if it is the case.
• Recommendation: I get off of my current dating web site, since that place is more geared to long-term relationships than the casual, no-strings-attached sexual flings that I need right now.
• Question: Is it realistic to try to create a steady stream of beautiful strangers in my life, so that the highly erotic pleasures of young romance never fade? Perhaps it isn’t given women’s tendency to think me unattractive. I’m lucky if I get one lady interested that way every few years, much less a steady stream of them every month. I want good sex a few times a month, and for that, I figure I’d need several different women, since novelty seems to be an essential component of strong sexual desire for me. I’d preserve the novelty by always having a few new women each month to date. However, since I can only attract one every few years, how likely is it that I’ll ever lure in enough to build a sustainable monthly supply of fresh blood? Not very, to be sure. But what else am I to do? I love that feeling and I’ve experienced it way too little. But if I admit that my reach exceeds my grasp here, then I must also give up that hope of ever experiencing that feeling again. I’m neither ready nor willing to do that. So I guess I’ll keep dreaming, hoping, and trying new things. I suppose I’ll keep going at my love quest.

Tom Hesley

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Therapy Session: 2009-02-21

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Before this session, I brainstormed to come up with items to discuss as follows:

While I believe that my fear of rejection is rational given my experiences, I deem it too overpowering and strong-armed.  Why?  This fear largely prevents me from approaching women even though a loss of friendship or a potential friendship would not be devastating.  I wish to be able to contact women in places convenient to me; like the corner grocery store, but stops, on the train, and so on. 

The loss of [Carlene J]; no big deal.  I took the risk and lost her as a friend.  But while this was not what I’d hoped would happen, the fact that she’s not in my life in any way today is of little significance. 

I’ve imagined fear in many forms:

  • It’s been a tall, cement block wall with lots of small windows, that let me see into heaven.  These portals look onto a beach full of beautiful women, and every one of them is waving at me, becoming me to join them.  But I cannot because of this confounded wall. 
  • It’s also been a roaring tiger that snarls and shows his teeth every time I try to scurry around him to reach my dream of oneness with beautiful women.
  • But then, at times, fear is not my foe; but rather a consoling force like a knowing father or a helpful older brother that gently yet firmly insists that I steer clear of the gorgeous ladies I so desire.

 

I’m afraid that the only ladies who turn me on, are those that are way out of my league.  Perhaps I’m a two who insists on a perfect ten.  How futile is that hope?  I feel that this fear is seriously hampering my efforts at securing happiness and that I’ll never be able to get through it.  I’m stuck at level three in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs triangle, and as long as I’m there, I’ll never realize my fullest potential in the esteem and self actualization levels (levels four and five respectively). 

There is an irrational part of fear, for while I know that rejection isn’t too bad, I fear it so nonetheless.  I’m afraid of screwing up the approach, and blowing my chances with the lady; now and forever to come. I’ve seen guys relentlessly hit on ladies on the Philadelphia busses.  The women obviously wished they’d get lost.  But they didn’t, and the more they pushed, the more foolish they appeared.  It was clear that their pushing did not endear them to the ladies.  In fact, it compelled the ladies to like them even less than when they started; not more.    I fear the same thing would happen to me if I express my interest in ladies; though I would not push as hard or as long as the bus fellows did. 

Tom Hesley

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Feelings Make Melinda Pretty

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

Dear [Melinda],

Oh shucks. You wouldn’t show me your feet? I truly hope you trust me not to reject you just because you have rough soles. No. No pedicured or adorable feet are necessary. At least, not in your case. My feelings make me see only your beauty.

When the right feelings occur, oddities in a lady’s physical form don’t seem to matter as much. I don’t fully understand the psychology, though I believe strongly in the idea. Surely the cosmetics industry would rather women not learn this because if they did, then cosmetics commerce would slow to almost no volume at all. Imagine if the conviction became wide-spread that women only need makeup during the first few minutes of new relationships, and that it thus plays no proven role in sustaining a love affair over the long term. Economic calamity to be sure.

Nonetheless, in spite of the great stock people place in makeup’s perceived benefits, there’s an ineffable trait about deep attraction which appears at first to be contradictory. But over time, whatever it is that makes us truly love someone seems unaffected by makeup, clothes, the softness of one’s skin, Etc.. That is: Attraction in the heart of he who desires the woman seems to spawn largely from her physical form. Yet once the romance takes off, small to moderate “imperfections” in that form do not diminish the feelings initially inspired by that form. Interesting that what, in the beginning is so necessary to fan romance to life, lessens in importance later on. Once big enough, the fire keeps burning, and no matter that the spark that started it goes out. In fact, once the fire reaches a roaring din, the spark seems quite small and insignificant, though before ignition that same spark was all the light there was, and seemed a much more significant force. I suggest that our history makes things like [your] rough feet and bunions [that you've mentioned] inconsequential in my eyes. Your feet may be a bit rough. But to me, they’ll always be the beautiful, kissable feet of a queen who fully deserves a man’s worship. So I urge you not to be self-conscious of their condition because our time knowing each other has created a sort of aura around you that hides your marks. I only see the beauty in you.

There. Now you have a small taste of the sort of philosophizing I’m doing in my book. J Comments welcome, even if you hate it.

Tom