C
chevalier
Guest
I suppose some women might simply be intimidated by the level of specificity and detail, while others will think you have a passion that’s important to you but they don’t really share, so they won’t get involved with you because they think you need someone you can share with (the female part of the populace can be surprisingly humble and altruistic about such things as opposed to the conquest thinking more characteristic in our part). Perhaps only a small share will think, “Eek! Creepy! What a nerd. I must run!” For the record, I’m a weirdo that knows both Latin and PHP, so our experience isn’t so dissimilar.Indeed true. But it always bugs me when someone turns 180 degrees when they hear I build watches for fun, or clean Roman Imperial bronzes on a Friday night. Oh well. One time I ended up in a conversation with someone who seemed really nice, until they asked what book I was reading at the moment. I made the mistake of answering(“Chronological Systems of Byzantine Egypt”, if I recall correctly). I suppose the person who can be interested in that may well be the person I marry.
Anyway, you didn’t make a mistake, you acted correctly and you got the correct result, it was only tough to take. Downside of having a small effective pool.
Sounds familiar.That was my approach, too (I did do another estimate using the Drake equation). I factored in whichever of my dealbreakers that had statistics tied to them (Catholic population, age range, education levels, and a few others I dare not mention). I did use a number theory concept called “ultimate sets” along with a few guesses in regards to mutually inclusive factors.
Good luck!That’s true! I was just pondering the idea ‘aloud’ as to what that would look like. It’s true about sharing interests; I really would like to find someone who speaks a different language or has a different skill (drawing, let’s say) that they could share/teach.
Even if connection could be found, causation would be awfully hard to measure. But something I can tell you after reading all that appellate jurisprudence from Rome is that a lot of cases look like someone didn’t do homework or thought things would work out. (In case you’re interested: here is some. No, just kidding.Yes, that is indeed unfortunate. Of course, the divorce rate nowadays may stem from inappropriate familiarity (too early) which is the risk I was referring to. I’d be curious to find out which is more likely to lead to divorce: more familiarity or less familiarity before marriage.