Whole Foods cashiers: There's Laura again. Working that Lasagna. What is this, the third time this week? |
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"Hobbies" is theoretically a good idea, except women hate most male hobbies.
You ready to take up hunting, fishing, shooting? Warhammer 40k? Weightlifting is certainly achievable and the gym bros would love it if you approached them. Just don't expect them to approach you because too many women have said "never approach me at the gym!" |
Ha! I’m wondering if DH posted the pp. I send him there all the time, he hates it..maybe that is a ruse and he a loves it. I’ll have to ask. |
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Back in the old days, we met through friends. That's how I met my husband (in 2009). Colleagues of friends, friends of friends, etc. Everyone needs to have more dinner parties. |
| If you heal from your injury, try joining a running group. I am married but got hit on quite a bit in my old group. At 1 point men outnumbered women 2:1. It’s starting to catch on because I see lots more women joining. But the faster you are, the more men in your pace group. |
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Open board game night at the friendly local gaming store seems to be at least 75% men. Of course, many of them are married or gay, but you'll run into that issue with any social activity. And it's not a great way to meet men if you don't enjoy board gaming, because the men you meet will assume you're into board gaming. That's the problem with tailoring your activities to where you think the men are—what if you don't actually enjoy the activities that men are into?
So my advice is do whatever social activities you enjoy—not because you think there will be men there, but because you enjoy them. If you connect with someone, hooray. If you don't, you're still doing something you enjoy. |
Sorry, it will always happen. Whether or not you find it acceptable will depend on the era and your particular workplace. But don't be stupid - for a lot of people, work is where they spend most of their waking hours, and where they're most likely to find a mate. It would be utterly idiotic to deny yourself, or others, the opportunity to find a spouse at work. |
Sounds like most of our friends. They mostly met at work, school, sports or bar type setting. I met my DH at a bar when we were both in grad school, different schools. |
| College or Grad School |
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Graduate school is actually the #1 place for finding top mates.
Then online now. |
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Meeting a man in line with your own values should be your highest priority, especially if you're Christian. That can be easier said than done depending on the church; you may need to change demographics accordingly (e.g. moving to PA or IN to meet eligible young Catholic men).
Otherwise, outdoor hobbies like hiking or kayaking groups are your best bet. You're most likely to meet fit, attractive, motivated men that way; depressives aren't regularly engaged in those hobbies. Good call in avoiding OLD. You do not meet high value people on those sites. |
That's too young. |
It’s way too risky for a guy to even try to date a coworker in a professional environment. So much can go wrong. |
Again, no office rules will ever stamp down hormones and biological instincts. I don't know any way to make it clearer to you people. Maybe it's because I'm a biologist that I understand this and you don't. Or maybe the difference is just that I refuse to pathologize or criminalize normal, healthy, human reactions. |