I can't complain about not getting enough (You)s.
Hey Alice, do I sound like one of you fine wimminfolk?
>>10217031Can I ask why you thought of doing it? I could guess, but that'd be inappropriate. I don't like therapists. They only say things you already knew. And it's like they (the university staff) want you to attend only so they can say they are doing something and they care a lot about students' wellbeing. Change has to come from the person in question. If they don't want to change then there's nothing to be done.
Is that really snitching? I mean, what exactly do you expect the average person to do in such a situation?
>>10217054Your image of yourself probably impacts your perception of the image in the mirror. A better body might give you better confidence, but if it's something deeply ingrained in your mind then it might not. I remember those pictures from a while ago, your body is not hideous. In fact, you're thinner than many guys at my university who have girlfriends. Where I live only a small percentage of guys seem to have nicely toned bodies. Most are either chubby or scrawny.
My highschool friends were chads, they had lots of success with very cute girls by simply not trying too hard. I don't know how much this helps since it's so vague, but from what I've seen all they did was act natural.
What happened to that one tinder date?
>complimentsI can say such compliments, those are easy. I can't say anything regarding their looks though. Not that I'd want to do that to some random girl, but to me it just feels awkward to say even in a relationship.