My ‘flirting’ involves answering the person’s messages in a timely fashion, being invested in the conversation, and using an increasing number of red heart emojis ❤️. With women, this often just leads to me being perceived as a very sweet friend. Oops.
I’m autistic and quite direct in my communications as a result of that. I’ve learned to better advocate for myself, including in dating interactions. If I’m talking to someone I’m romantically interested in, I’ll start dropping boundary-setting markers like “what are you looking to get out of our talks?” and “how do you feel about where the convo is going?” If I think the other person is interested in me, I may just ask something like, “are we flirting? No problem either way, I just want to know where things stand,” to give everyone involved clarity.
There’s a hilarious gendered divide between how men and women perceive my outward personality. I tend to actively flirt with and pursue connections with women. But my flirting is often mistaken for friendliness. The cis-het men I encounter in daily life seem more… easily pleased, even mistakenly so. I’m very much on the receiving end of the phenomenon where men think any amount of friendliness I show is flirting. I also dress sluttier than the women around me. Pierced nipples visible through my sweaters, always in heels, prefer miniskirts, etc. Men in public often think that this mere state of existence is an invitation for them to speak to me (it’s not). Heartwarmingly, the women I run into just think I’m pretty and that is a feeling I live for. I love women, honestly.
But basically, if I’m quite friendly, invested in the conversation and dropping heart emojis… I’m probably flirting. Those are the textual markers I exhibit when I care about someone. And most of my flirting is done via text. I’m ‘weirder’ in person. That’s great, but not conducive to flirtation.
Comments
tima…… “I flirt by thinking of you, and if you don’t feel yourself in my thoughts, then it wasn’t meant to be”….. iconic
@TimaLikesMusic – I don’t think I’ve heard of the “classic tragic stereotype of a masc who almost never makes the first move” of which you speak, and I am SUPER INTRIGUED. Is there a TedTalk and/or peer-reviewed article on this? Ok if it’s not on ProQuest.