Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a 99.9% likelihood it will not be well received and will do no good, and that they will turn it around and think and/or say nasty things to or about you. So if your motive is to "help," I think it's somewhat futile. I'd just move on.
Exactly. Unfortunately, most men are babies, and they will act like a baby does when confronted with their faults.
The best thing to do is ice someone out. I once text cancelled on a dinner date at the last minute (interestingly enough, I didnt actually had a reason, but my intuition was pinging like crazy, so I made up an elaborate excuse about having to work late and being so sorry about not being able to make it) and this loser would not stop texting me for maybe 2 days. He accused me of "leading him on" even though I had literally met him once and agreed to go on a date and that was it. Wish i had saved the barrage of texts to submit to creepyPMs- he must have sent me 50+ messages, at the least (This was in the days before Apple allowed you to block numbers on the iPhone so I couldnt do anything to stop the texts). And I was extremely polite when I cancelled.
Moral of the story? Men are crazy and it's really not something you want to fuck with. Cut your losses and move on- you dont need to be the recipient of some ragebaby's vitriol.
Anonymous wrote:There is a 99.9% likelihood it will not be well received and will do no good, and that they will turn it around and think and/or say nasty things to or about you. So if your motive is to "help," I think it's somewhat futile. I'd just move on.
Anonymous wrote:No way. Unless they specifically ask why you are not into them. The right person will find their quirks tolerable or even charming. You will come across as a crazy bitch if you give them your "helpful" feeback.
Anonymous wrote:I've just had a couple of dates with guys who really need to hear some honest feedback about why they are not having dating success. But do I tell them? Is it a kindness to them or will it just make them more insecure?
So one of the guys is from South America but been here 30 years. Problem is he has not worked hard enough on his English and doesn't know any idiomatic references at all. It made it impossible to joke around with him, he didn't know words like 'pet peeve', and 'in cahoots'. Should I tell him?
The other guy was a talk-talk-talker, and really didn't listen well. I'd get halfway through a sentence and he would take part of what I said and run with it, without waiting to hear the point of my anecdote.
Both of these guys could theoretically fix these chronic barriers to closeness but not unless someone clues them in. Should I?