I think I got a crush on my dance instructor. Which fucking sucks for all the obvious reasons. Normally I wouldn’t be so worried. BUT I JUST HAD A GODDAMN ROMANTIC DREAM ABOUT HER. Seriously I just woke up from a dream about her confessing her love to me and me eagerly doing the same about her.

So how do you stop a crush from developing further? Because this is a well from which only disappointment may be drawn.

Edit: I am single btw.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Full speed ahead, tell her how you feel. It can only end in two ways:

    1. Your dream becomes a premonition and you live happily ever after.

    2. She tells you she doesn’t feel the same way and it ends there, awkwardly or not.

    Speaking from experience. I had a crush on this one girl and I just couldn’t get her out of my mind. I decided to do something about it and asked her out. She said no and that was the end of it.

    Don’t be afraid to be awkward.

    Edit: If this truly is an impossible situation (you or the instructor are already in committed relationships) then I agree with everyone else telling you to find another instructor.

    OR

    Still do what I said but try to reconcile your feelings for her, with her. Also speaking from experience here. If she is a dance instructor, she is probably no stranger to having her pupils develop feelings for her.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      101 year ago

      If she is a dance instructor, she is probably no stranger to having her pupils develop feelings for her.

      But this just makes it worse. Cause you’re probably right. Which would make me feel even more like a schmuck. Yeah I think I’m just gonna go find a new instructor.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Agreed. Coming out to a crush has never helped me personally as it was pretty evident they weren’t showing as much interest in me as I had in them. For me, crushes have always happened when my exposure to the person was one-sided/parasocial (as seems to have been the case in your lesson). I have found that the most effective way to prevent this is to get to know people that excite you on a personal level before a crush can develop. This usually means enthusiastically trying to interact with them moment I notice them and abandoning them if it does not work out — instead of watching them for a while and then deciding whether to approach.

      • SanguinePar
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        31 year ago

        Maybe you could get a new instructor, but tell the current one why, and say you just feel it’s right to move on.

        Then, if there’s any reciprocating feelings you might find out. And if not, at least you’re already moving on.

  • @[email protected]
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    161 year ago

    Tell her. Then she likely rejects your feelings, and you distance yourself from her to kill the feelings.

    • nawa
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      1 year ago

      Yeah. It’s super scary but it’s really the most optimal route. I fell in love with a friend, told her, she said she doesn’t feel the same way but we still remain friends and after a period of awkwardness it got back to the way it was before. We live in different parts of the world most of the year so nothing would really change one way or another, but still, it was easier to get things out in the open.

      Just should tell her in a non-creepy casual way and it should be fine.

    • Victor
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      51 year ago

      This is what I was thinking.

      Either she rejects and that’s a big turn off for the very obvious reason of her not wanting to be with OP (or it should be), or she accepts and it could be great. Nothing to lose.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Lol that’s not even close to real awkwardness of letting romantic feelings develop to crazy levels and end up friendzoned or worse. We need to be men and avoid falling a victim to our own naivety.

        Also, that’s also why I said to distance from her, which includes not taking classes with her anymore.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    From my own experience: cut all contact with that person… which may not be viable in your situation.

      • edric
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        71 year ago

        I mean, you can find a new dance instructor.

        • RBG
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          31 year ago

          Yeah, salami, can you just switch classes? Or another dance studio, same course or something?

          • @[email protected]OP
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            1 year ago

            Yeah that’s actually not that bad of an idea. If things go south I’ll use this as a last resort. Change dance studios that is.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I had a crush on a girl when I was 14, still do, It’s been 10 years. Havent seen her or talked to her for 8. Can a hypnotist or someone help.

      Its not a deep crush now, but I still think about her OFTEN and am not at all over it.

      Edit: jeez i wonder what it’d be like to be on the recieving end of that lol.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    Imagine her picking her nose and eating the booger. Next, imagine her taking a huge stinky steaming dump. Disclaimer: only works if you’re not German.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    61 year ago

    Are you single? If so, just go with it!

    Are you in a monogamous relationship? If so, find a new dance instructor.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      61 year ago

      I’m single. But I think I’m still just gonna go find a new dance instructor if my crush on her won’t settle down.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni
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    11 year ago

    Think of all the aspects you like about her and think of all the ways they might be impractical. I know someone who said they had a crush on “the most delicate person I could have met” and I asked “but would delicacy be good for parenting” and then her crush ended.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    All this advise is making me realize it wasn’t just a crush.

    I’ve not seen her for years, I try my best to have contempt for her, I don’t look her up or make any sort of contact. She’s dead as far as I know, and that’s kinda how it feels. But I think about her often, I think about the regrets. It’s been years of no contact and I’m still mourning losing this “crush”

  • Andy
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    981 year ago

    Try actively steering your fantasy past the peak of infatuation and into the latter stages of a relationship and on to breakup.

    Right now, you have intrusive thoughts about falling in love with them, and probably the excitement of getting to know someone intimately. Instead of trying to hold back, let that fantasy play out in your head further. Imagine moving in, imagine them not getting you when you’re explaining your problems. Imagine liking them, but finding their bad habits increasingly intolerable, and never being able to pick a movie to watch. Imagine them not flushing the toilet and clogging the shower drain with hair. And then imagine meeting someone new, and feeling guilty about crushing had on them. Imagine this new person reciprocates, and imagine politely explaining to your dance instructor that you guys can stay friends but, the romance has run it’s course.

    And there you are. The itch is scratched, and in your mind they’re just a friend again.

    • Bunnylux
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      181 year ago

      This made me sad to the core. What’s the point of life

      • Andy
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        231 year ago

        I’m sorry if I bummed you out! For what it’s worth, I think you’re misreading this!

        This exercise isn’t supposed to reflect an inevitability to relationships becoming unfulfilling. It’s just a tool to recover the ability to see people in a balanced and realistic way instead of through the uncontrollably lens of puppy love.

        I’m in a long term relationship, well past the point of early infatuation, and I can tell you that that feeling is replaced by a different kind of love that I enjoy just as much. Long term relationships shouldn’t be scary, they’re wonderful. But when you’re smitten, simulating the evolution in how you feel about someone as you get to know them is just a way to remove the effects of a crush.

        Don’t be sad! Long term relationships with a person you like are wonderful.

        • Herbal Gamer
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          11 year ago

          Don’t be sad! Long term relationships with a person you like are wonderful.

          Joke’s on you; I don’t have those.

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      This totally works. Way back in middle school I had a pretty big crush on this guy. I was shy and there was just a trickle of his interest in me, posibly imaginary, but just enough to keep me miserable. One night had a pretty long dream about us going through a whole relationship with all the misunderstandings, arguments, and realizations that come with it. Woke up super refreshed, fulfilled, and ready to move on. About a year later he asked me out and I turned him down. Felt like it’d be going back to an ex or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Simple yet effective. I think that there is something missing romantically in your life and those feelings won’t go away because you bury them

  • Resol van Lemmy
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    81 year ago

    Come out of the closet as asexual and aromantic and the issue will disappear like a puff of smoke.

    NOTE: this strategy could have negative consequences if you live in a country that doesn’t recognize LGBT rights.

    • WIZARD POPE💫
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      81 year ago

      Would asexuals really have that bad of a time in a country that is not that supportive of LGBT? I don’t think not wanting to have sex is seen as bad by people who dislike LGBT?

      • Resol van Lemmy
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        31 year ago

        In my country especially (it’s Morocco), so many people think it’s a bad idea to not get married and not have children (which requires sex anyway) simply because it’s so engrained in our society to do that. Blame the state religion.

        Idk why, but when I told my dad I wanna be celibate, he called me an atheist, which I’m not.

        Also, asexualism is technically a part of LGBT, just in a very secondary manner. If people know about the full picture, they’ll start threatening you.

      • Jojo
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        31 year ago

        Any religious argument against LGBT folks works just as well on Ace folks. (Which is to say they don’t, but the people making the arguments think they do)

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I first read that as “asexual and aromatic” and I was like, … Well, i guess if you don’t like sex and you smell like garlic…