|
|
Up |
|
|
  |
Author: D. BosolaD. Bosola Date: Nov 26, 2006 18:32
Sat at Starbucks reading DeAngelo for a little while. No great
opportunities presented themselves. I wanted to try speaking to a girl
as she was leaving. My plan was to say "Hey, stop. Sit down here for a
minute. (point to chair) I need to speak to you." Will try that
sometime, but it will take guts.
Went to Barnes & Noble, walked upstairs to the 2nd floor near the CD
racks. Approached a girl sitting on a bench near the window - she had
her head down and was reading a thick reference book. Could see she was
ethnic, which is somewhat hit or miss since she may not even speak
English well. Can't see her face so I don't know if she's hot. She
turns out to be a 5.5.
Bosola: Hey, you're sitting in my seat.
HB Indian: Sorry?
Bosola: This is my favorite seat. I always sit in that seat when I come
here.
HB Indian: I am sorry, I should move?
Bosola: It's my favorite seat... (suggestively)
|
| Show full article (6.10Kb) |
|
| | 9 Comments |
|
  |
Author: Ray Gordon, creator of the pivotRay Gordon, creator of the pivot Date: Nov 26, 2006 19:26
> Sat at Starbucks reading DeAngelo for a little while.
$$$$!!!!
CHA-CHING!!
--
Money is not "game."
Looks are not "game."
Social status or value is not "game."
Those are the things that game makes unnecessary.
A seduction guru who teaches you that looks, money or status is game is not
teaching you "game," but how to be an AFC. He uses his students' money to
get women and laughs that "AFCs pay my rent."
|
| |
|
| | no comments |
|
  |
Author: dmandman Date: Nov 26, 2006 20:09
On Nov 27, 3:32 pm, "D. Bosola" yahoo.com> wrote:
> Sat at Starbucks reading DeAngelo for a little while. No great
> opportunities presented themselves. I wanted to try speaking to a girl
> as she was leaving. My plan was to say "Hey, stop. Sit down here for a
> minute. (point to chair) I need to speak to you." Will try that
> sometime, but it will take guts.
hmmm... my first thought is that getting her to sit down straight off
the bat before she has even said anything is a bit much. Although it of
course depends on the person and interaction. But I'd leave having her
sit down until a little later on?
> It's some thick reference on PERL or JAVA programming or something like
> that (it has Sun Microsystems written all over it).
Random fact: it would have been Java in all probability.
|
| Show full article (4.41Kb) |
| 3 Comments |
|
  |
Author: dmandman Date: Nov 26, 2006 20:22
Yeah, lets try not replying to him ever...
(but then again I know how futile that has been over the years, can't
stop wishful thinking anyway...)
On Nov 27, 5:06 pm, "HeeroYuy" wrote:
> "Ray Gordon, creator of the "pivot"" cybersheet.com> wrote in messagenews:X9SdnWUGwtqfxvfYnZ2dnUVZ_vWdnZ2d@pghconnect.com...
>
>>> Sat at Starbucks reading DeAngelo for a little while.
>
>> $$$$!!!!
>
>> CHA-CHING!!Gordon's post was completely pointless, but I'd expect mothing less from
> him.
|
| |
| no comments |
|
  |
Author: dracoznadracozna Date: Nov 27, 2006 00:54
dman wrote:
>
> On Nov 27, 3:32 pm, "D. Bosola" yahoo.com> wrote:
>> Sat at Starbucks reading DeAngelo for a little while. No great
>> opportunities presented themselves. I wanted to try speaking to a girl
>> as she was leaving. My plan was to say "Hey, stop. Sit down here for a
>> minute. (point to chair) I need to speak to you." Will try that
>> sometime, but it will take guts.
>
> hmmm... my first thought is that getting her to sit down straight off
> the bat before she has even said anything is a bit much. Although it of
> course depends on the person and interaction. But I'd leave having her
> sit down until a little later on?
>
>
>> It's some thick reference on PERL or JAVA programming or something like
>> that (it has Sun Microsystems written all over it).
>
> Random...
|
| Show full article (5.68Kb) |
| 2 Comments |
|
  |
Author: Seeker1Seeker1 Date: Nov 27, 2006 02:30
>>> It's some thick reference on PERL or JAVA programming or something like
>>> that (it has Sun Microsystems written all over it).
>>
>> Random fact: it would have been Java in all probability.
>
> Sun is JAVA ;-)
JAVA is Sun ;-)
Random suggestion for when carrying a programming book in public
either
ensure it is obviously of the type:
"advanced programming for experts"
( and not: "programming for dummies" )
or make sure it's an O'Reilly -
Camels and Rhinos and Tigers, oh my...
|
| |
| 1 Comment |
|
  |
Author: MTGawdMTGawd Date: Nov 27, 2006 09:00
I'm am new to this stuff, but I gotta say, your openers give me the chills.
"Hey, you're sitting in my seat."
"Hello and what is your name?"
The laundry room opening was much better then the previous two.
|
| |
| 2 Comments |
|
  |
Author: dmandman Date: Nov 27, 2006 04:01
On Nov 27, 11:40 pm, "Seek...@ example.com" example.com> wrote:
>>>> It's some thick reference on PERL or JAVA programming or something like
>>>> that (it has Sun Microsystems written all over it).
>
>>> Random fact: it would have been Java in all probability.
>
>> Sun is JAVA ;-)
>JAVA is Sun ;-)
>
Yup, that way round is more accurate statement than before.
|
| Show full article (0.77Kb) |
| no comments |
|
  |
|
|
  |
Author: divaboy88divaboy88 Date: Dec 11, 2006 17:44
Yeah brother I would tend to agree. Sounds like OP does not have the fear
of approach and perhaps should a bit.
For me:
1. a simple flirty, silly, inquisative, "what cha readin??"
2. Sitting on the floor that looks comfortable...again what cha readin...
3. laundry makes me horny. (kidding) he did fine here but kind of sounds
cocky IMO. Just being friendly goes farther but then again I'm an AFC most
of the time and he';s probably closing. Props for approaching.
"MTGawd" poot.net> wrote in message
news:part1of1.1.IHfjGJULXPGk4w@ue.ph...
> I'm am new to this stuff, but I gotta say, your openers give me the
chills.
>
> "Hey, you're sitting in my seat."
>
> "Hello and what is your name?"
>
> The laundry room opening was much better then the previous two.
>
|
| |
| no comments |
|
|