- Joined
- Oct 9, 2012
- Messages
- 6,172
I’ve seen this come up a bit here, especially with younger guys.
It’s pretty natural for someone to stumble on Girls Chase or another resource, start poring over it, and say, “I’m going to start doing this 30 days from now.” Some guys do hold to this, and I’ve seen a number of guys on the boards who said they started reading the material and began 30 days later, or 90 days later, or a few even a year or two after they seriously started reading pickup material. I won’t fault anyone for this, particularly since we all have different priorities in our lives and I have no idea what yours are.
However, I’ll say this: if (big “if” here) you are wanting to start now, and debating whether you should (and there are no other significant considerations, like, “I’d better make sure I get into the major I want” or “I have to complete this 80-hour-a-week project at work before I do”), then the best advice is “Start as soon as humanly possible.”
I’ll tell you from my own experience – I waited to start learning girls seriously until 4 years after I’d decided to. I’d had it in my head after high school at 18 that I was going to move to a beach town, get a job and an apartment, and hit the nightclubs hard until I figured out how to get girls coming home with me and sleeping with me, and then I got discouraged, went home, and worked at a tire shop for the next year before starting university instead, and I didn’t seriously consider trying to get good at girls like a skill set again until I was almost 22. Had I followed through with my plan and found a job and an apartment in the beach town and hit the 18+ clubs on weekends and taught myself to chat up women and to pull, I’d have had a very different next year, and a very different 4 years in university, too.
These days my attitude is, “If I’m thinking about if I should start doing something that isn’t going to totally wreck my finances or schedule, and there is at least a small part of me that wants to, the answer is YES.” I’ve discovered that the worst thing that can happen is you stop doing it, only now you have more experience doing it, and if you want to give it another go later it’s easier.
However, many of the things I’ve considered and said, “Well, I’m thinking about it, so I guess I might as well do it,” have ended up being things I stuck with and that changed my life for the better:
… and so on and so forth. Every “YES” I’ve said has resulted in tremendous growth of the sort I can’t imagine experiencing had I stayed put. I notice when I touch base with people from my past they’re all almost all doing the same things and in the same place… it’s like they’ve been living in stasis the past decade plus.
Which would be fine if they had all found their dream lots in life, but the thing is, where you are right now is almost always going to be a combination of luck and happenstance, with a little of your own preferences and motivation driving you there. If you want a life that is more constructed around what you want, dream of, and desire, that entails taking more big risks and big steps off into the unknown and spending more time off the beaten path. You can always circle back to old things you used to do later, but you can’t always find opportunities to do new things you want to do if you turn them down the first few chances you get.
Moral of the story: if you think you want to start now, and some part of you wants to start now, and you don’t have any VALID reason not to do so (i.e., based in something an objective third party would call valid, rather than putting it off because you’re afraid, which you will be with anything new)…
Then start now. Future you will thank you wholeheartedly later on when he looks about and notices he’s got way more cool things and exceptional people and enticing options in his life than everyone else from his past who’re still all doing largely the same things they were doing when you started taking your risks (i.e., today).
Chase
It’s pretty natural for someone to stumble on Girls Chase or another resource, start poring over it, and say, “I’m going to start doing this 30 days from now.” Some guys do hold to this, and I’ve seen a number of guys on the boards who said they started reading the material and began 30 days later, or 90 days later, or a few even a year or two after they seriously started reading pickup material. I won’t fault anyone for this, particularly since we all have different priorities in our lives and I have no idea what yours are.
However, I’ll say this: if (big “if” here) you are wanting to start now, and debating whether you should (and there are no other significant considerations, like, “I’d better make sure I get into the major I want” or “I have to complete this 80-hour-a-week project at work before I do”), then the best advice is “Start as soon as humanly possible.”
I’ll tell you from my own experience – I waited to start learning girls seriously until 4 years after I’d decided to. I’d had it in my head after high school at 18 that I was going to move to a beach town, get a job and an apartment, and hit the nightclubs hard until I figured out how to get girls coming home with me and sleeping with me, and then I got discouraged, went home, and worked at a tire shop for the next year before starting university instead, and I didn’t seriously consider trying to get good at girls like a skill set again until I was almost 22. Had I followed through with my plan and found a job and an apartment in the beach town and hit the 18+ clubs on weekends and taught myself to chat up women and to pull, I’d have had a very different next year, and a very different 4 years in university, too.
These days my attitude is, “If I’m thinking about if I should start doing something that isn’t going to totally wreck my finances or schedule, and there is at least a small part of me that wants to, the answer is YES.” I’ve discovered that the worst thing that can happen is you stop doing it, only now you have more experience doing it, and if you want to give it another go later it’s easier.
However, many of the things I’ve considered and said, “Well, I’m thinking about it, so I guess I might as well do it,” have ended up being things I stuck with and that changed my life for the better:
- “Buddy wants me to travel overseas with him. I’ve never left the continent before. Should I do it?” → YES
- “I’ve got this super hot, dream girlfriend, she’s everything I want; but I’m still just a beginner at pickup… should I tell her I want to be with her but am not a one-girl guy, even if it means I risk losing my dream girl?” → YES
- “My job wants me to take a position where I’ll spend two weeks at a time at a tiny Air Force base in the middle of North Dakota and only two weekends a month back in civilization – should I do it?” → Well, maybe no here… since in this case no part of me actually WANTED to
- “My job wants me to move out to California – I don’t know anyone there, and I’m not the California sun-and-fun surfer dude musclehead type at all, which means it’s almost certainly going to put me out of my element. Should I take the offer?” → YES
- “Guys keep bugging me to set up my own blog on pickup and stuff, but who even reads blogs, I know I sure don’t… should I do this ridiculous thing?” → YES
- “My relationship with my girlfriend is in the pits, my job is getting ready to lay me off since I won’t agree to relocate somewhere boring, and I’ve outgrown the city I live in – should I leave my home country and embark into the great unknown, unsure where I will end up and leaving behind the corporate path I’ve started on?” → YES
… and so on and so forth. Every “YES” I’ve said has resulted in tremendous growth of the sort I can’t imagine experiencing had I stayed put. I notice when I touch base with people from my past they’re all almost all doing the same things and in the same place… it’s like they’ve been living in stasis the past decade plus.
Which would be fine if they had all found their dream lots in life, but the thing is, where you are right now is almost always going to be a combination of luck and happenstance, with a little of your own preferences and motivation driving you there. If you want a life that is more constructed around what you want, dream of, and desire, that entails taking more big risks and big steps off into the unknown and spending more time off the beaten path. You can always circle back to old things you used to do later, but you can’t always find opportunities to do new things you want to do if you turn them down the first few chances you get.
Moral of the story: if you think you want to start now, and some part of you wants to start now, and you don’t have any VALID reason not to do so (i.e., based in something an objective third party would call valid, rather than putting it off because you’re afraid, which you will be with anything new)…
Then start now. Future you will thank you wholeheartedly later on when he looks about and notices he’s got way more cool things and exceptional people and enticing options in his life than everyone else from his past who’re still all doing largely the same things they were doing when you started taking your risks (i.e., today).
Chase