You are supposing that my conscious and unconscious mind are one and the same. I know that it’s probably politeness. My unconscious does not, and I get a kick out of it. It’s not even self-deception, they are two separate system altogether. As I said, it works for me.
You are supposing that my conscious and unconscious mind are one and the same.
No. Only that being consciously aware of the intentions of your smiling/eye-contacting targets must limit it’s value in being anything resembling authentic romantic validation. If it doesn’t—if you are actually able to game this in a significant way through some combination of self delusion and pure unconscious engagement—then that strikes me as weird. Because it is such a significant departure from the reality of what is going on when you smile at people and they smile back.
I guess I would accept this as “social validation”. And, you could say it’s “romantic” in nature if your smiling/eye-contacting targets were attractive to you in a romantic way, I guess. But this is soooooooooo far away from anything like the sort of “romantic validation” experienced in actual romantic relationships that it still seems weird to use as a suitable alternative given the context as I understand it.
Out of curiosity, can you use this romantic validation hack on people who are paid to be nice to you? Like a store clerk?
Only that being consciously aware of the intentions of your smiling/eye-contacting targets must limit it’s value in being anything resembling authentic romantic validation
Why?
But this is soooooooooo far away from anything like the sort of “romantic validation” experienced in actual romantic relationships
How do you know?
Note: it might be the case that I’m supremely weird. Who knows, it can be true. But what strikes me as odd is: as far as I can tell you have only your experience on romantic validation, how can you say that what you feel is the reality for everybody else? As I said for the nth time, it works for me. It might work for others, it’s a thing you can try and see if it works. It’s a hack, after all. What is weird for me is your sense of certainty regarding the way people should feel in such matters.
Out of curiosity, can you use this romantic validation hack on people who are paid to be nice to you? Like a store clerk?
Sure. I mistake politeness for interest every damn time :)
But what strikes me as odd is: as far as I can tell you have only your experience on romantic validation, how can you say that what you feel is the reality for everybody else?
You aren’t arguing over actual feelings, you are arguing over word labels to attach to them (“romantic validation” vs “social validation”).
Note: it might be the case that I’m supremely weird. Who knows, it can be true. But what strikes me as odd is: as far as I can tell you have only your experience on romantic validation, how can you say that what you feel is the reality for everybody else?
As I said for the nth time, it works for me. It might work for others, it’s a thing you can try and see if it works. It’s a hack, after all.
What is weird for me is your sense of certainty regarding the way people should feel in such matters.
I’ve had a romantic relationship. And I’ve smiled at and eye-contacted attractive people. They aren’t the same.
You are supposing that my conscious and unconscious mind are one and the same.
I know that it’s probably politeness. My unconscious does not, and I get a kick out of it.
It’s not even self-deception, they are two separate system altogether.
As I said, it works for me.
No. Only that being consciously aware of the intentions of your smiling/eye-contacting targets must limit it’s value in being anything resembling authentic romantic validation. If it doesn’t—if you are actually able to game this in a significant way through some combination of self delusion and pure unconscious engagement—then that strikes me as weird. Because it is such a significant departure from the reality of what is going on when you smile at people and they smile back.
I guess I would accept this as “social validation”. And, you could say it’s “romantic” in nature if your smiling/eye-contacting targets were attractive to you in a romantic way, I guess. But this is soooooooooo far away from anything like the sort of “romantic validation” experienced in actual romantic relationships that it still seems weird to use as a suitable alternative given the context as I understand it.
Out of curiosity, can you use this romantic validation hack on people who are paid to be nice to you? Like a store clerk?
Why?
How do you know?
Note: it might be the case that I’m supremely weird. Who knows, it can be true. But what strikes me as odd is: as far as I can tell you have only your experience on romantic validation, how can you say that what you feel is the reality for everybody else?
As I said for the nth time, it works for me. It might work for others, it’s a thing you can try and see if it works. It’s a hack, after all.
What is weird for me is your sense of certainty regarding the way people should feel in such matters.
Sure. I mistake politeness for interest every damn time :)
You aren’t arguing over actual feelings, you are arguing over word labels to attach to them (“romantic validation” vs “social validation”).
I’ve had a romantic relationship. And I’ve smiled at and eye-contacted attractive people. They aren’t the same.
Of course I’ve only experienced my experiences.