Youtube hearted comments of (@MarvinPowell1).
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Like I said on this channel before, I was rejected constantly and non-stop in my twenties for being way too short for most women I talked to IRL and online (180 cm) to the point I've completely given up on trying to find a partner and left marriage behind as an impossibility. Now, I'm 37 and on this social media app that has a dating side-section, Boo, I'm constantly getting "right swiped" by women in their thirties who were the same types who rejected me in my twenties for being unattractive, too short, not rich enough (six figures), etc., despite me not having any personality flaws or red-flags, at least in my opinion.
Women never gave me the time of day until I stopped caring and gave up on them. And now I'm at the point I can't see any positives being with 95% of them, if not more. Today, I just work my job, go to the gym, and write fictional stories and make art. I was a gentleman and a romantic for most of my young adult life. It was real life women who red-pilled me more than anything else. And all because I wasn't a tall, 9 out of 10 Chad.
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I once went to a Halloween speed dating event in 2019 with just me and three other guys, and twenty women. One guy was tall (6'5"), around the same age as me, and extremely nervous and had severe autism. The other three of us were short guys (I'm 5'11", the other two men were 5'9".) I'm far from good looking; maybe a 6/10, but the other two guys were a 5/10, and the Autistic guy a 4/10 with messy unkempt hair and clothes. The autistic guy couldn't even hold a conversation and seemed to have severe social issues and might have been home-schooled in addition to being heavily autistic. I love real human conversations and felt I had a lot of interesting things to say to each girl, trying to get to know them the best I could in three minutes. One of the other guys was a divorced dad with dad jokes, and the fourth guy was kind of self-absorbed and only talked about himself.
At the end of the speed dating, what do you think happened? The 6'5" autistic guy who couldn't hold a conversation got 15 of the 20 women interested in him, while me and the other two men got no Yes votes at all. The autistic guy was only interested in 3 woman, and none of them chose him out of the 15 who did. Literally no one got a date in a room where there were five times as many women as men. This is why I don't feel sorry for any single women out there; they would rather choose a tall guy with messy hair and no social skills or stay alone forever, then lower their standards in a single category, like height. You can say I "dodged a bullet" there, but given the diversity of the women at this event, I'd say this mentality reflects women as a whole. So I don't want to hear anything else about single women complaining about being single ever again.
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