Kanubis, on 24 September 2013 - 11:27 AM, said:
So help me out here. These 'Too nice' types - is this when they're nice along with some other attribute such as lack of self-esteem, lack of drive, lack of positive outlook or some other unattractive trait, and they chose the blame the 'niceness' instead of sorting out the other thing? I've never found being nice a problem. At the end of day most who seem to whine about this kind of thing seem a bit dull, or wet, or uninspiring or something.
More or less, as I understand it, the complaint goes thus:
Girls are always saying that they "just want a nice guy".
Guy in question is (or considers himself, at least) to be a "nice guy". May even have been called such by a female friend, possibly while simultaneously ruling out a relationship with him.
Guy sees girl dating not-so-nice guys who treat girl like shit, all the while she complains about this.
Guy sits there, lamenting the fact that either girl is a hypocrite, or he is somehow "too nice" to be a viable boyfriend. "Why won't you see what's right in front of you?!?!"-style.
Or some variation thereof. The guy gets "stuck" in the "Friendzone" because girls won't go out with him because he's "too nice" even though the girls keep saying they "just want a nice guy". Can also be summed up as the perceived difference between an 'alpha' and a 'beta' guy, if you happen to have seen those terms used; the ostensible "nice guy" is what 4chan would term 'beta'.
In reality things are not that simple nor that logical, obviously. To a certain extent it is about introversion vs extroversion, confidence, taking a risk, putting yourself out there, and not giving up just because the first girl you asked out said 'no'. It's also about realizing that you can't sum up what you want in a partner in two words without being incredibly general, and you probably can't expect (and most likely don't
want) anyone to actually enumerate accurately the reasons they aren't interested; they probably don't know themselves, and if they do, they are sparing your feelings by not sharing them in detail. If they do share them in detail, there a bunch of other reasons why someone would do that, too.
'Tis a complicated issue, which stems from personal self-image concerns, social standards and peer pressure, and the convoluted world of other people's feelings or preferences, combined with biological imperatives, personal experience, and level of self-understanding. On both sides of the equation. In other words; it's life, it's not easy, and it never will be. It will be harder if you let that get to you. *shrug*