Aiphok
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DEEP DIVE ON COLD APPROACHING
By: Aiphok
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Listen to boost confidence
Table of Contents
The Real Value
How your body speaks before you do
The logistics of an Approach
How to outrun your own overthinking
The Blueprint
The Vibe Killers
Reading the Room
The Clean Exit
The Real Value
When it comes to cold approaching, most people just think it is a cheesy way to pick up girls. It's not. Learning how to walk up to a complete stranger, break the ice, and have a complete and normal conversation is a massive advantage across your entire life.
How your body speaks before you do
Before you even open your mouth, the other person's brain has already subconsciously analyzed you.
The human brain judges things like trustworthiness, competence, and aggression within 100 milliseconds of seeing a new face.
(https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16866745/)
This instant check is handled by the amygdala, the survival part of our brain. Its job is to scan the environment for danger. If you approach someone hesitantly, their brain instantly flags you as suspicious or weird.
Because of a psychological bias called the Primacy Effect, that first impression sets the tone for everything else. Once that filter sets in during the first 7 seconds, they will judge everything you say next based on that initial vibe.
(https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1946-04654-001)
That first impression determines the fate of the interaction.
The logistics of an approach
How you move around during the interaction is an indicator of your intentions due to the science of Proxemics
One of the biggest mistakes people make is bad positioning. Walking up to someone straight up face to face is called ventral fronting. In nature, a head on approach is correlated to predators striking their prey. It instantly raises the stress hormones of the other person in the interaction.
Allow the other person to have some breathing room. This should be around 2-4 feet away from them. If you hover over someone instantly, it will trigger their fight or flight response.
Furthermore, always approach at an angle, never in a straight line. If you come in at an angle, they can most likely see you first through their peripheral vision which keeps them from getting startled.
Our brain's also instantly scan a person's hand for security reasons. However, it can say a lot about the person. When someone is nervous, they will put their hands in their pockets. Keep your hands relaxed, visible, and above the waist. You should be moving your hands as you speak (where the expression speaking with your hands came from).
How to outrun your own overthinking
When you want to talk to someone, a mental clock starts ticking. If you wait too long, your brain tricks you into thinking everyone is watching and judging you. This is due to The Spotlight Effect. This makes the situation feel scary and can make you freeze up.
(https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2000-13328-002)
To overcome this, you can use the 3 second rule. The second you notice someone you want to approach, start walking towards them without thinking. By acting quickly, you beat your brain's ability to overthink and create fake scenarios. It also allows you to sound natural rather than rehearsed.
The Blueprint
A great approach should feel casual, low pressure, and normal (yes, you have to be NT or at least know how to act NT). Here is a basic outline you can use as reference (for girls):
The Vibe Killers
If you want the approach to go well, avoid these:
Reading the Room
In any social interaction, what someone says out of politeness matters a lot less than what their body language is doing involuntarily. You need to read their body language to know whether to stay or leave.
By: Aiphok
Thread song
Listen to boost confidence
Table of Contents
The Real Value
How your body speaks before you do
The logistics of an Approach
How to outrun your own overthinking
The Blueprint
The Vibe Killers
Reading the Room
The Clean Exit
The Real Value
When it comes to cold approaching, most people just think it is a cheesy way to pick up girls. It's not. Learning how to walk up to a complete stranger, break the ice, and have a complete and normal conversation is a massive advantage across your entire life.
It completely frees you from dating apps! Instead of competing with thousands of men online, you make yourself stand out right away by showcasing confidence. It proves you are a risk taker which is a massive green flag to women. No women is going to think you are a weirdo for approaching them (unless you are ugly...sorry).
The people who can change your life are usually not looking for you. You have to find them. Whether you are at a cafe, airport lounge, or out on the street, being able to introduce yourself smoothly opens many doors that a simple email never could.
It allows you to expand your social circle wherever you are in the world. You stop waiting and you instead become the person taking action.
How your body speaks before you do
Before you even open your mouth, the other person's brain has already subconsciously analyzed you.
The human brain judges things like trustworthiness, competence, and aggression within 100 milliseconds of seeing a new face.
(https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16866745/)
This instant check is handled by the amygdala, the survival part of our brain. Its job is to scan the environment for danger. If you approach someone hesitantly, their brain instantly flags you as suspicious or weird.
Because of a psychological bias called the Primacy Effect, that first impression sets the tone for everything else. Once that filter sets in during the first 7 seconds, they will judge everything you say next based on that initial vibe.
(https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1946-04654-001)
That first impression determines the fate of the interaction.
The logistics of an approach
How you move around during the interaction is an indicator of your intentions due to the science of Proxemics
One of the biggest mistakes people make is bad positioning. Walking up to someone straight up face to face is called ventral fronting. In nature, a head on approach is correlated to predators striking their prey. It instantly raises the stress hormones of the other person in the interaction.
Allow the other person to have some breathing room. This should be around 2-4 feet away from them. If you hover over someone instantly, it will trigger their fight or flight response.
Furthermore, always approach at an angle, never in a straight line. If you come in at an angle, they can most likely see you first through their peripheral vision which keeps them from getting startled.
Our brain's also instantly scan a person's hand for security reasons. However, it can say a lot about the person. When someone is nervous, they will put their hands in their pockets. Keep your hands relaxed, visible, and above the waist. You should be moving your hands as you speak (where the expression speaking with your hands came from).
How to outrun your own overthinking
When you want to talk to someone, a mental clock starts ticking. If you wait too long, your brain tricks you into thinking everyone is watching and judging you. This is due to The Spotlight Effect. This makes the situation feel scary and can make you freeze up.
(https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2000-13328-002)
To overcome this, you can use the 3 second rule. The second you notice someone you want to approach, start walking towards them without thinking. By acting quickly, you beat your brain's ability to overthink and create fake scenarios. It also allows you to sound natural rather than rehearsed.
The Blueprint
A great approach should feel casual, low pressure, and normal (yes, you have to be NT or at least know how to act NT). Here is a basic outline you can use as reference (for girls):
Notice a specific, casual detail like her style, her shoes, or a unique piece of clothing and name it. It keeps you from looking desperate while instantly starting a genuine interaction. If nothing stands out, don't overthink it. Step into her field of view calmly, look her in the eye, and state reality cleanly without smiling too hard or over selling yourself. (This would be saying she looks cute or wtvr blah blah blah)
Stay completely grounded. Do not brag, do not flex your status, and do not put on a show to impress her. Act like you’ve been there before. Pay attention to the back and forth. If she gives short answers and doesn't ask anything back, the interest isn't mutual. End the conversation and keep it moving.
If the dynamic is smooth and she’s smiling, do not stay until the momentum dies. Act like a man with purpose who has things to do. End the interaction cleanly right at its high point. (More on this later)
The Vibe Killers
If you want the approach to go well, avoid these:
| Hovering | Standing near someone for 10 minutes trying to build up courage. It looks incredibly suspicious and puts everyone on edge. |
| Creeping up | Never approach someone from the back. It triggers an automatic defense mechanism and scares people. Always circle around so they can see you coming from the side. |
| Simping | Laying on the compliments way too much ("You're the most gorgeous, incredible person I've ever seen..."). It shows desperation and lowers your value. Keep it to one clean, simple observation, then talk like a normal human. |
| Interrogation | Blasting them with rapid-fire questions. It feels tense and unnatural. Keep the flow back and forth. |
Reading the Room
In any social interaction, what someone says out of politeness matters a lot less than what their body language is doing involuntarily. You need to read their body language to know whether to stay or leave.
Indicators | Signs of Tension | Signs of Comfort |
Torso & Feet | Their face is smiling, but their body and feet are already angled away from you. | They are fully facing you, shutting out the rest of the room or area. |
The Smile | Only the mouth moves. The eyes stay flat, static, or completely cold. (Fake smile) | A genuine expression that creates smile lines around the corners of their eyes. |
Subconscious Movements | Instinctively touching their throat, adjusting their collar, or covering the base of their neck. | Relaxing their shoulders, tilting their head slightly to the side, and softening their posture. |
The Energy | Giving short, one word answers ("Yeah," "Cool," "Nice") just to be polite. | Expanding on their answers, matching your pacing, and asking you questions back. |
(https://www.verywellmind.com/unders...ial-expressions-4147228#toc-the-arms-and-legs)
If the vibe gets tense, stay calm and leave first. Just say, "Anyway, have a good one," and walk away. Walking away first keeps you in control.
The Clean Exit
The single biggest mistake beginners make is stretching a good conversation out until it dies. They talk for a while until an awkward silence sets in, and then they try to ask for a phone number or business card. By then, the energy is dead.
Our brains don't remember an experience based on the whole timeline. Instead, we judge an encounter on the average of just two points: The Peak (the highest emotional point) and The End.
Vmemory = Peak + End/2
Thus, if you stay for too long and let things get boring, the "End" of the memory feels flat and they will likely think of the whole interaction in a less positive way.
The exact moment you hit a high point, that is your cue to leave.
"Look, I actually have to go or I'll be late, but let me grab your number and we can plan something next week."
By pairing the contact exchange with the absolute highest point of the interaction and taking your presence away immediately, you leave a HUGE positive impression. You make sure their memory of you is set at its peak, which drastically increases the odds that they'll get back to you.
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If the vibe gets tense, stay calm and leave first. Just say, "Anyway, have a good one," and walk away. Walking away first keeps you in control.
The Clean Exit
The single biggest mistake beginners make is stretching a good conversation out until it dies. They talk for a while until an awkward silence sets in, and then they try to ask for a phone number or business card. By then, the energy is dead.
Our brains don't remember an experience based on the whole timeline. Instead, we judge an encounter on the average of just two points: The Peak (the highest emotional point) and The End.
Vmemory = Peak + End/2
Thus, if you stay for too long and let things get boring, the "End" of the memory feels flat and they will likely think of the whole interaction in a less positive way.
The exact moment you hit a high point, that is your cue to leave.
"Look, I actually have to go or I'll be late, but let me grab your number and we can plan something next week."
By pairing the contact exchange with the absolute highest point of the interaction and taking your presence away immediately, you leave a HUGE positive impression. You make sure their memory of you is set at its peak, which drastically increases the odds that they'll get back to you.
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@Hexum
@Marlboro
@syna @Histy @Mandy @Beyondthegrave @Includings @hoodsickle @iloveyou @Hyporoxin @Jester4Foids @i_blame_oxytocin @user @VelocityAnt @Judenbänker @makeaway @Nardicus102 @thuuk @fentasticfob @guilty @4pfl @atrophicpyra @Brian @sneakyalex7 @bob08674 @Monstrum (love u bhai) @.Raze @nikolozzz
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maybe this will get sum hot moms
