Hyperion
Member
So my question is this: should I start to drink more when out with new people?
I hardly ever drink, not because I'm training, or have any health or religious objection to alcohol, I just genuinely DON'T like the taste.
Tonight though I realised at what a disadvantage it puts me in when trying to meet new girls in the UK (Glasgow in this case).
As most fellow Brits can attest to, drinking when going out and meeting/socialising with people is pretty much a universal code of conduct. Anyone not drinking is the odd one out. Enter me.
I went out last night for a mate's birthday, and while trying to chat up a really hot girl who I started talking to in a bar, my mate's gf said to me later on, somewhat along these lines:
"You're WAY too sober. You look so serious, even when you make a joke and are being friendly. Girls are intimidated by that. You need to get a little tipsy, so you don't always sound so smart and well spoken. Let your guard down, you look like you're afraid of getting drunk and letting others have a laugh at you."
I have to agree with her. While I was at university this wasn't that big an issue. The "dating pool" was so large and diverse (social, cultural, ethnic groups etc) that at one time or another during the year, you'd find some crowd that shared your personality traits.
But now that I'm not at Uni and don't have such a wide array of people to meet, I'm finding it exceedingly hard to date girls. 95% of the times I will meet Glaswegian girls that are very similar in nature, and fit in with British drinking culture.
Unfortunately, even though I shouldn't have any real tolerance to alcohol, I actually do have a rather good one. It takes something like 5 pints of Cider just to get me to slur my words, and drinking so much of a drink I barely tolerate is not my idea of a good night out.
I hate beer, so that's out of the question and spirits just make me throw up, but not drunk.
How do you suggest I manage to get myself tipsy just to not appear so "stiff" to people?
I realise that this drinking behavior is almost entirely contained to when people go out, the rest of the time/day they are probably just as sober as I am.
Anyway, just thought I throw this out there, see what people think.
I hardly ever drink, not because I'm training, or have any health or religious objection to alcohol, I just genuinely DON'T like the taste.
Tonight though I realised at what a disadvantage it puts me in when trying to meet new girls in the UK (Glasgow in this case).
As most fellow Brits can attest to, drinking when going out and meeting/socialising with people is pretty much a universal code of conduct. Anyone not drinking is the odd one out. Enter me.
I went out last night for a mate's birthday, and while trying to chat up a really hot girl who I started talking to in a bar, my mate's gf said to me later on, somewhat along these lines:
"You're WAY too sober. You look so serious, even when you make a joke and are being friendly. Girls are intimidated by that. You need to get a little tipsy, so you don't always sound so smart and well spoken. Let your guard down, you look like you're afraid of getting drunk and letting others have a laugh at you."
I have to agree with her. While I was at university this wasn't that big an issue. The "dating pool" was so large and diverse (social, cultural, ethnic groups etc) that at one time or another during the year, you'd find some crowd that shared your personality traits.
But now that I'm not at Uni and don't have such a wide array of people to meet, I'm finding it exceedingly hard to date girls. 95% of the times I will meet Glaswegian girls that are very similar in nature, and fit in with British drinking culture.
Unfortunately, even though I shouldn't have any real tolerance to alcohol, I actually do have a rather good one. It takes something like 5 pints of Cider just to get me to slur my words, and drinking so much of a drink I barely tolerate is not my idea of a good night out.
I hate beer, so that's out of the question and spirits just make me throw up, but not drunk.
How do you suggest I manage to get myself tipsy just to not appear so "stiff" to people?
I realise that this drinking behavior is almost entirely contained to when people go out, the rest of the time/day they are probably just as sober as I am.
Anyway, just thought I throw this out there, see what people think.