Doctor’s Note: Around the start of a new year, I like to look back and re-answer some older questions as I would if I had received them today. Whenever possible, I answer them without having read my previous response, to see and how my advice has changed in the intervening years.
Welcome to Ask Dr. NerdLove: Revisited for 2026…
Today’s letter was originally published on December 17, 2018
DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: I am a 35-year-old single guy who keeps attracting the wrong kind of girls. Don’t get me wrong, they are not bad, just not my kind. They’re usually not into the same things I am or able to keep up a conversation.
I’m 6’2″ and bald and I used to be chubby but since I started working out, I have become quite broad. Since then, I seem to interest girls that love dominant manly men while I’m just a nerd; I went to university, play chess and love video games. Some girls even compared me with Vin Diesel. For now, I’m trying numerous things: starting conversations about university or video games, wearing nerd-shirts, wearing caps, growing a beard… but I can’t seem to find a good strategy yet to keep the wrong women at bay and get liked by the women I like, an intelligent witty girl.
Help?
Nerd In Jock’s Clothing
DEAR NERD IN JOCK’S CLOTHING: Hey NIJC, haaaaaaave you met Henry Cavill? Cavill is, unquestionably a nerd. He’s the kind of person who hotrods his PC to play games at the highest possible specs, who paints Warhammer miniatures for fun and who ultimately left his role as Geralt of Rivia because he thought that the showrunners didn’t keep true to how Geralt was depicted in the Witcher novels.
He’s also a six-foot something slab of beef with abs like phwoar and piercing blue eyes.
(This is possibly the first time in a long time that Cavill has been a point of positive comparison, instead of the yardstick guys are measuring themselves against. The irony, she is palpable.)
Caville may be among the pantheon of actors who play superheroes and absurdly jacked figures from myth, but he’s a diehard geek.
The same goes for Vin Diesel, for that matter. Among his many accomplishments in life, he not only has gotten Dame Judi Dench to play Dungeons and Dragons, but produced a vanity project based on his own D&D character.
The point is that geeks and nerds come in all sorts of shapes, sizes and body composition, because being a geek is in how you act, more than in how you look. Not every nerdboy or girl are going to look like Finn Wolfhard or Shannon Purser, after all, as attractive as they are. Some are gonna look like Joe Manganiello, Chris Jericho, Ta-Nahesi Coates, Aabria Iyengar, Erika Ishii and Deborah Anne Wohl.
But how we present ourselves does affect how people perceive us, and those assumptions are often going to be based on stereotypes. A tall, jacked bald guy with a beard isn’t necessarily going to scream “big ol’ nerd” at first glance. If anything, it’s going to say “this person watches a lot of MMA had has very strong thoughts about the NFL draft and knives in his every-day carry.”
If you look like a Joe Rogan fanboy, people are going to be quick to make assumptions about who you are, especially if you’re in places that aren’t as popular with your fellow geeks. You can certainly soften your appearance with, say, thick-rimmed glasses, or dress up your look in geek shibboleths (…says the man who wears a Green Lantern ring and rocks the mark of the Arashikage clan) to help set first impressions, but your demeanor and overall behavior will be even more effective in changing the way that they see you.
Consider Critical Role’s Travis Willingham as an example. He is a huge dude, and he looks like your typical jockbro… and he’s also exuberant, expressive, playful and even goofy. His physical presence suggests one thing, but his behavior suggests another entirely. Anyone who hangs out around him will figure out in nanoseconds that he’s as much of a dork as you might ever expect to find. So the way you carry yourself will help too – not just personal warmth, but a willingness to be a little sillier and playful will help give folks a better idea of who you are, especially if paired with a geeky tee or visible nerd signifiers.
Just as importantly though: if you want to find nerdy and geeky women, you’re going to have a lot more success if you go where they hang out. It’s one thing to try to find someone who knows the difference between a tiefling and a genasi, or an Asari from an aasimar, at a sports bar; it’s another entirely at GenCon or Emerald City Comic Con. If you’re looking to meet your people, you want to go where your people are. You may well find geek curious folks at bars or clubs, but the odds will be a hell of a lot higher at the coffeehouse in a college town that’s near the local comic store.
In fact, the best advice I have for meeting amazing women who are right for you is simply to engage in your hobbies and passions in ways that bring you in contact with other people who share those interests and passions. This can mean going to boardgame nights at your local gaming store, participating in public D&D events, going to makerspaces, renfaires, or other places where your fellow geeks and nerds also hang out. Become a regular in those spaces and at those events, network and make friends and become part of the community. This will help you meet the geeks of your dreams… many of whom will also be interested in a dude who looks like a jock but also understand why the Crisis on Infinite Earths was a more significant event than Secret Wars.
Good luck.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com