vvvexation (
vvvexation) wrote2005-07-06 10:20 pm
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Another take on the "nice guy" conundrum
A comment (and addendum) I posted elsewhere--fortunately not a propos of anything in my life at the moment, but I've been chewing on it for a while:
Dan Savage had some scathing things to say once to a disabled guy who wrote in complaining that he couldn't get chicks--mainly because, as Dan pointed out, he was only looking for "hot" chicks and didn't seem to have considered dating disabled women for a moment. I've since been convinced that what all those guys who complain that women won't date them because they're "too nice" really mean is that beautiful, bitchy women won't date them. Maybe if they actually went looking for nice girls--and bothered to include shy girls, plain girls, and nerdy girls in that pool--they'd have better luck finding a few who genuinely like nice guys.
(Okay, so I have known some genuinely nice guys who can't seem to get dates. In fact, that description fits a fair number of my closest friends. But you know what? Absolutely none of them, to my knowledge, have trouble getting dates because they're too nice. Some of them have self-confidence issues, and some of them are just nerds surrounded by too few nerd-loving women, but niceness is definitely not what holds them back.)
Dan Savage had some scathing things to say once to a disabled guy who wrote in complaining that he couldn't get chicks--mainly because, as Dan pointed out, he was only looking for "hot" chicks and didn't seem to have considered dating disabled women for a moment. I've since been convinced that what all those guys who complain that women won't date them because they're "too nice" really mean is that beautiful, bitchy women won't date them. Maybe if they actually went looking for nice girls--and bothered to include shy girls, plain girls, and nerdy girls in that pool--they'd have better luck finding a few who genuinely like nice guys.
(Okay, so I have known some genuinely nice guys who can't seem to get dates. In fact, that description fits a fair number of my closest friends. But you know what? Absolutely none of them, to my knowledge, have trouble getting dates because they're too nice. Some of them have self-confidence issues, and some of them are just nerds surrounded by too few nerd-loving women, but niceness is definitely not what holds them back.)
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I never date guys without being friends and comfortable with them first (those are my trust issues there). Some of them I am only attracted to once I really relax around them. But there are still the few that I pick up the "safe" vibe from, whether or not that makes them sexless to me now. Most of the time I am not attracted for other reasons, but I can still point them out in a crowd.
As for the "betrayed" thing -- it comes from having a relationship free of the stresses of sexual tension (and believe me, for most people it is stressful) suddenly shattered by the revelation that he's really been looking you over, just like any other male. It's like discovering that the nurse who's helping you undress has been checking you out. As someone to whom sex has always been at least mildly anxiety-inducing, having that one person who will never even hint at sex is a great relief. Having them turn into just another man with his mind on sex (even if it is romantic and friendly) is worse than if they had never been safe at all.
98% of the men I encounter do not fit in this category. 85% of geeks don't. But for the rest, no matter how many women they become friends and comfortable with, they never get beyond that point, and it's not for lack of interest. Next time we're both in a large group of geeks (not at a sex party, that skews things), prod me and I'll see whether I can spot one for you.
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Actually, now that I think about it, I do know one or two. It's just that I'm pretty sure that's not the reason I'm not attracted to them.
It's like discovering that the nurse who's helping you undress has been checking you out.
Not really, because presumably in your friendships you don't feel sexually vulnerable in the way you do when someone's undressing you.
As someone to whom sex has always been at least mildly anxiety-inducing, having that one person who will never even hint at sex is a great relief. Having them turn into just another man with his mind on sex (even if it is romantic and friendly) is worse than if they had never been safe at all.
Okay, I can see how that would happen if either a) you knew or suspected that the guy in question would be disappointed by your rejection and always kind of be thinking of it afterward and wishing you'd said yes and perhaps actively hoping you still might (which, granted, would be true of a lot of guys--I just don't know that many of them these days) or b) the idea of sex in general was scary. That might indeed be more common than I'd figured, but in the first case it still probably boils down to self-esteem issues on the guy's part, I suspect.