Drifa -> RE: The No Thanks Circle Game (12/22/2007 5:52:12 AM)
|
Hmm. As a submissive, if I searching for a new relationship (unlikely!) but *if*, if I made a sincere overture asking for a date or play or "let's meet for coffee" or whatever and was rejected with little information, I am very likely to write back and ask, POLITELY, if the domme would be willing to tell me why they made that decision -- whether it's just "you do nothing for me", or "your approach sucketh mightily" or whatever. I think it is a mistake to ignore the possibility of learning from your failures. When I am searching for a job and am turned down, I will contact the hiring manager and politely ask them what things I could have done better, so that when I search for that type of position again I can either have rectified my lack through further training, or by editing my résumé to be clearer, or in how I perform at interviews. And I have gotten some *excellent* feedback this way, then applied it to my life. And I've actually sent a "thank you" letter back to hiring managers who offered me feedback when I was hired down the line, telling them that I'd applied their suggestions, and that I'd made them work for me, and thanking them again for their time and candor. One of those subsequently hired me for another position a year later, and remembered me out of the pack as someone who sought advice then used it positively, which was a prime consideration for what she wanted in a team member. I do acknowledge that many of the people who ask for a "profile review" here are just trying to drive traffic to their profile in hopes of nabbing an interested person -- the power of indirect advertising! But I respect those who genuinely are looking for constructive feedback THEN APPLY IT. I figure that the ones who are spamming and don't recall who they have been rejected by in the past probably are not keepers anyway. As a sub, do you think I am gonna trust you to remember my limits once I'm tied down if you couldn't freaking remember that you sent me overtures in the past? Holes in the head, that's what it is! The holes in their head let the memory -- and any brains -- leak out.
|
|
|
|