DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: I’m 20 years old, I’ve never dated before, barely talk to anybody and spend most of my time alone. In fact, I’ve spent most of my time alone since I my pre-teens, and it intensified specially after my parents’ divorce. From there, I’d daydream constantly, mainly about girls I would see on TV or internet. It would fade away eventually, either after a long time without seeing her or after finding out that she was dating someone.
Now, in college, I’m still the same: no friends (other than a few people I talk to at class) and therefore no girls.
My father still puts pressure on me to find “the one”, and others constantly remind me of that. Problem is, I don’t feel like meeting people (and thus women) and I don’t see the reason for it, but I envy the seemingly happiness in other people’s relationships, as well as what I see in movies or tv shows – like I subconsciously know that I’m missing out on important experiences.
During the last months, I have been thinking about a girl I see in college, who is sorta reclusive too. She is also autistic, and we go back on the same bus. I was thinking about how to approach her all the time, without having the opportunity to do so. This year, some students decided to hold a “welcoming breakfast” for freshmen, and from there a lot of people met each other, especially the freshmen. Of course, I did not attend, and so no one from my class did. From the “breakfast”, some couples appeared – some of them formed in less than a week. It’s like I lost another big window of opportunities…
And, of course, the girl I mentioned, who was seemingly single, is now taken, since I saw her today holding hands with a guy – he is not a particularly handsome guy or anything, and even is shorter and skinnier than me in fact, but I don’t want to go and judge this part. The thing is, this really ended my day, as I realized that the reason she has been taking longer to appear on the bus these last few weeks was because she was staying over with him, and now I have no one left to daydream about – everybody I see on our 10-minute intervals between classes, is already taken. Groups are already formed. And, to be honest, I was never the type of guy who would share my feelings or tastes or anything, so logically I should not be expecting anything out of this.
What’s really eating me up is that I took too long to approach her, and now I envy that somebody else did what I couldn’t.
After all these years, it all just got worse. Every two weeks or so, I go on a mental breakdown – usually at night, while in bed – while having a s--t ton of disturbing thoughts and scenarios, and hit myself in the head several times until it goes away.
I’m not sure if you know anyone like this, but I hope you can help me.
Bad Brains
DEAR BAD BRAINS: OK BB, I’m gonna be honest: if you’re having repeated nights where you’re physically hurting yourself trying to make intrusive thoughts go away, you shouldn’t be worried about dating at all right now. Even allowing for hyperbole, that’s a pretty solid sign that you should be putting more time and energy into getting some help, not trying to meet people.
As I’m always saying, you don’t need to be in perfect shape – emotionally or physically – to date, but you do need to be in good working order. Right now, you are not. Under the best of circumstances, your having these long dark nights of the soul are going to make it a lot harder for you to deal with the inevitable trials and tribulations that come with dating. If you’re already having these kinds of responses, then you definitely need to prioritize your mental health above everything else, and put dating on hold until you get this aspect of your life under control.
The good thing is, if you’re in college, then you’ve access to student health services. This means there’s usually at least a counselor to talk to, and likely has at least some working association with mental health professionals that they could point you towards. So my advice is to hie yourself to health services and start talking to someone now. I don’t doubt that this is causing you a lot of stress and pain, but the way you’re managing it is only going to make it worse.
Depending on how things go with the counselors your school makes available, you may want to look into finding a therapist who specializes in cognitive behavioral therapy; CBT is known to be especially effective for managing intrusive, unpleasant negative thoughts. It’ll certainly be more effective than actually hurting yourself.
I think talking to a counselor is going to help with the issues you mention in your letter as well. I’m going to be blunt: I’m not sure if you know what you want. You don’t seem interested in actually meeting people or dating anyone, but you’re also having these really intense reactions to, well, getting precisely what you’re asking for. Which is to say: nothing. You say you don’t see the point of dating, but you’re also – literally – beating yourself up over supposedly missing out on meeting people. When you say that you don’t see the point of trying to date but you feel envious of other people’s happiness, it makes me wonder which part of this is actually true. You talk about daydreaming about people you see on TV, and occasional idle daydreams about your classmate, but not much in the way of actual interest in them.
Is it the case that you genuinely aren’t interested in trying to meet people, or is that the excuse you’re giving yourself to not try? Is it the case that maybe you’re telling yourself that you don’t like or want to meet people in order to avoid the risk of putting yourself out there and getting rejected? After all, one of the reasons why people focus more on celebrities or relative strangers on the Internet is because they’re “safe”; that is, there’s always the part of you that knows that these are relationships that can’t or won’t happen and thus you don’t have to ever actually take steps to do something about them. You can live with the daydreams, where you have complete control and emotional safety, without ever actually having to make yourself vulnerable or actually let people in and risk them actually hurting you.
I suspect this is part of why the interest fades when you find out they have a partner; you have a much harder time maintaining the fantasy when reality intrudes. It’s not just the safety of the imaginary relationship, but also the potential is there – the feeling that maybe, possibly this could happen. It’s a little like the way that Japanese idol singers and Kpop performers are supposed to not date or be in relationships; it allows their fans to fantasize about them. But honestly, that ain’t healthy for anyone, fans or performers. And in your case… well, I think it’s only serving to keep you isolated.
Now I’m sure some of this lack of interest could be a response to your parents’ divorce. It could also be that you fall somewhere on the asexual/aromantic spectrum – you’re just not that interested in romantic or sexual relationships and that’s fine. But it doesn’t sound to me like you’re happy with your self-imposed isolation. And this is self-imposed. You’re choosing to cut yourself off from making connections with other people – connections you seem to want and not want at the same time.
The fact of the matter is that you’re not missing windows of opportunity. You’re choosing not to take advantage of them when they come along. You could have met people at that student breakfast. You may not have coupled up, but at the very least you could’ve made some friends and gotten to know people. You decided not to. It’s important to emphasize this: you decided not to. The same goes with talking to your classmate. You’ve had chances to talk to her, even if on the bus. You see each other enough that you could have said “hey, I think we go to the same school/have the same classes; do you go to $COLLEGE/ have class with $PROFESSOR?” and then introduce yourself. You could even have said “It feels weird that we see each other daily and ride the same bus and I don’t know your name. My name’s…” and start the conversation that way. But you didn’t. The guy she’s dating? He did.
And that’s the important thing here. Maybe he’s not as physically conventionally attractive as you… but he’s still the one dating her because he’s the one who talked to her. Women can’t go on dates that you don’t ask them on, and you can’t complain that someone else is dating her when you haven’t so much as said “hello”. And even if this is all just daydream fodder for you… well, this is what happens when you’re basing your emotional life on the imagined “possibility” of dating someone – the odds are high that someone else is going to start dating them in reality.
The lesson to take away from that is that if you don’t take action, someone else will. Nobody, even some theoretical person who’s harboring a secret crush of their own, is going to wait around forever, waiting for you to make a move. Imaginary people may exist exclusively on a timeline of your choosing, but real people don’t; they go about their lives, encounter other people in the real world and start relationships with some of them. If you want to actually have a connection with any of them, you have to actually get in the game. Otherwise, all that’s happening is the consequences of your own choices and (in)actions.
(And before anyone suggests it, even jokingly: please, for the love of God and your own well-being, don’t go in for one of the AI girlfriends like Replika or trying to roll your own with ChatGPT. You’re already in a fragile state. Services like Replika come with a whole host of problematic issues – including the fact that the company can just wipe your “girlfriend” from existence – and chatbots have lead people in delicate emotional states down some really dark paths).
I would also point out that your father putting pressure on you is not helping, and it would probably do you a world of good to tell him to stop. Learning to establish and maintain boundaries would be an important step towards having a greater sense of agency and control in your own life.
But – dragging this back to what I said up top – that’s something that should be discussed with a counselor or therapist, and you desperately need to find one. Far more than you should be worrying about not having fantasy fodder because all the people you see between classes may or may not be coupled up. You’re experiencing some serious pain right now, and learning how to manage it in healthy and less harmful ways needs to be your top priority.
So head over to health services, find out what they have to offer and – if necessary – seek out a psychologist or psychiatrist; you may well need medicine as well as therapy. Take care of yourself and your mental health first. Relationships, in whatever form they ultimately take for you, will be waiting for your when you’re in a better place, mentally and emotionally.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com