Anonymous wrote:Ha. I am not gay.
Older women? Btdt. It gets really hard when the two of you are at really different points of life.
Why older women? Is it bc my attributes are not what stereotypically 'desirable' women ~25-40 find desirable? It's okay, be honest. Bc that's what I'm leaning toward. I am actually pretty good looking. Enough so that in college girls on campus all thought I looked like some soap opera character whose name escapes me.
Job? An okay one. Low six figures. Not getting rich, but that's okay. Family money awaits someday (inheritance). Don't care - would rather have my folks around.
Self esteem? I know I'm great at certain things and generally good at mist things I try. With women? I'm not intimidated, just pretty sure most are interested in other things.
Anonymous wrote:No I just meant sometimes I really want to make a difference (positively) & other times I just don't care. Not trying to be deep. Weird posting = typing on an iPhone.
friends who are brutally honest? They think I should be nailing all of the women I work with / at my gym...and that confidence is my issue.
I spent a long time in a (codependent) relationship with an older woman. It's been really hard since.
Thank you all for the replies.
Anonymous wrote:30something guy best described as follows:
Loves: border collies, vintage porsche restoration, bungalows, skiing, playing the guitar.
has an encyclopedic knowledge of rock and roll sub genres such as punk rock, garage rock, indie rock etc.
Likes to read, cook, run, bike, kayak. Socially liberal, fiscally conservative.
Likes to live relatively simply, not into social climbing.
Ideal vacation is 2 weeks on Martha's Vineyard in summer, or up at Stowe Vt in winter.
Relaxing is a glass of laphroig, neat. Whilst laying in a hammock, reading, while Iggy and the Stooges 'raw power' emanates from the record player. Or perhaps adjusting the valves in my 84 Carrera with a cold beer.
I feel like I am out of step with my generation.![]()
Not trolling for sympathy. I just feel too straight for the freaks and too weird for normal people. It has been like this all my life. The captain of my high school baseball team called me 'alternative (first name)'.
What happens to people like me? Do we find love? Fulfillment?
I am sitting here, looking at my 13 year old border collie who is slowing down, wondering what I'm gonna do when he is gone.
Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:To me (and I am not your target audience I suspect, I'm an early 40 something married woman with kids) you come across as way too self-involved. The idea that your musical tastes, your vintage porsche, and your scotch drinking--excuse me, Laphroig, neat-- somehow defines you as a person---much less as someone 'odd' or out of step or unique--is amusing. The fact that you dropped in being on the high school football team (but yet apart from it) and that you don't really care about money (and yet--there's an inheritance) and that you happen to be oh so good looking is a bunch of faux modesty. The fact that you think these things somehow convey something of importance about you--and that you share nothing of your values, interests, life experiences--is also telling.
While a list of attributes on an anonymous message board surely cannot convey the intricacies of a person, the story you construct about yourself sounds a hell of a lot like a well-crafted personal ad. Moreover, it's clear to me that you're not really worried that you're a weirdo. You are seeking out feedback, admiration, positive reinforcement, hoping to elicit exactly the responses you are mostly getting (wow, such an interesting, deep, soulful type--why is he done?). But carefully constructed self-image in need of constant reinforcement, even from strangers, is a total turn-off. Dating someone like that is exhausting and pointless--there's no room for anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Dominant.
And no for fucks sake I'm just saying I just like all this shit none of my generational cohort gives a flying fuck about. My life is not a Wes Anderson movie.
I am NOT looking for constant approval or praise. Wanting to know you aren't alone/a total deal is hardly the same thing.
Went to a big state school. Marketing director for a privately owned smb.
And I never talk about music in front of peopl. C'mon - do you rally think I don't know nobody cares about that shit? Ha ha
Anonymous wrote:I am 40 and think your knowledge of music sounds boring and I would hate it if you played it or talked about it all the time. Otherwise I think you sound great!
That's pretty much the best post I've ever seen on DCUM. PP, are you the one who crafted such witty profiles of people based on their kids names?
Anonymous wrote:Hipster? Leave dc.
Anonymous wrote:Are you dominate or submissive in bed? Answer the damn question!!!! Sex is 50% of a relationship. This is a critical question!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me (and I am not your target audience I suspect, I'm an early 40 something married woman with kids) you come across as way too self-involved. The idea that your musical tastes, your vintage porsche, and your scotch drinking--excuse me, Laphroig, neat-- somehow defines you as a person---much less as someone 'odd' or out of step or unique--is amusing. The fact that you dropped in being on the high school football team (but yet apart from it) and that you don't really care about money (and yet--there's an inheritance) and that you happen to be oh so good looking is a bunch of faux modesty. The fact that you think these things somehow convey something of importance about you--and that you share nothing of your values, interests, life experiences--is also telling.
While a list of attributes on an anonymous message board surely cannot convey the intricacies of a person, the story you construct about yourself sounds a hell of a lot like a well-crafted personal ad. Moreover, it's clear to me that you're not really worried that you're a weirdo. You are seeking out feedback, admiration, positive reinforcement, hoping to elicit exactly the responses you are mostly getting (wow, such an interesting, deep, soulful type--why is he done?). But carefully constructed self-image in need of constant reinforcement, even from strangers, is a total turn-off. Dating someone like that is exhausting and pointless--there's no room for anyone else.
That's pretty much the best post I've ever seen on DCUM. PP, are you the one who crafted such witty profiles of people based on their kids names?
This is good. +2
Smack down delivered.
What if PP is OP sock puppeting her own thread.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me (and I am not your target audience I suspect, I'm an early 40 something married woman with kids) you come across as way too self-involved. The idea that your musical tastes, your vintage porsche, and your scotch drinking--excuse me, Laphroig, neat-- somehow defines you as a person---much less as someone 'odd' or out of step or unique--is amusing. The fact that you dropped in being on the high school football team (but yet apart from it) and that you don't really care about money (and yet--there's an inheritance) and that you happen to be oh so good looking is a bunch of faux modesty. The fact that you think these things somehow convey something of importance about you--and that you share nothing of your values, interests, life experiences--is also telling.
While a list of attributes on an anonymous message board surely cannot convey the intricacies of a person, the story you construct about yourself sounds a hell of a lot like a well-crafted personal ad. Moreover, it's clear to me that you're not really worried that you're a weirdo. You are seeking out feedback, admiration, positive reinforcement, hoping to elicit exactly the responses you are mostly getting (wow, such an interesting, deep, soulful type--why is he done?). But carefully constructed self-image in need of constant reinforcement, even from strangers, is a total turn-off. Dating someone like that is exhausting and pointless--there's no room for anyone else.
That's pretty much the best post I've ever seen on DCUM. PP, are you the one who crafted such witty profiles of people based on their kids names?
This is good. +2
Smack down delivered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me (and I am not your target audience I suspect, I'm an early 40 something married woman with kids) you come across as way too self-involved. The idea that your musical tastes, your vintage porsche, and your scotch drinking--excuse me, Laphroig, neat-- somehow defines you as a person---much less as someone 'odd' or out of step or unique--is amusing. The fact that you dropped in being on the high school football team (but yet apart from it) and that you don't really care about money (and yet--there's an inheritance) and that you happen to be oh so good looking is a bunch of faux modesty. The fact that you think these things somehow convey something of importance about you--and that you share nothing of your values, interests, life experiences--is also telling.
While a list of attributes on an anonymous message board surely cannot convey the intricacies of a person, the story you construct about yourself sounds a hell of a lot like a well-crafted personal ad. Moreover, it's clear to me that you're not really worried that you're a weirdo. You are seeking out feedback, admiration, positive reinforcement, hoping to elicit exactly the responses you are mostly getting (wow, such an interesting, deep, soulful type--why is he done?). But carefully constructed self-image in need of constant reinforcement, even from strangers, is a total turn-off. Dating someone like that is exhausting and pointless--there's no room for anyone else.
That's pretty much the best post I've ever seen on DCUM. PP, are you the one who crafted such witty profiles of people based on their kids names?