hurtloam wrote:
I've said this before, but I'll say it again. There has to be a point where you both agree that you're hanging out for romantic purposes and not as just friends. A verbal conversation can help to establish this.
I'm pretty unlikely to have that kind of discussion even if there is verbal contact, and we are hanging out together. In fact, I never had it with anybody. I think part of the reason I never had such a conversation is that it feels very weird and strange. It's like the people involved don't understand the interaction, and needs to confirm it verbally, which I find a bit off-putting.
hurtloam wrote:
Even if you feel certain that the other person is into you romantically, a conversation can clear it up. I've been sure the guy was romantically interested only to find out he saw me as just a friend.
It could also be that he somehow changed his mind. Just because he finally wasn't romantically interested doesn't mean he never was.
hurtloam wrote:
Verbal communication helps you not get in too deep when the other isn't interested. It can also reassure the other that you are interested if they are interested and it means they don't have to be on the lookout for someone else. They can focus on you.
I believe in action and not in verbal assurance. That means a girl will need to prove her interest, a process that should advance. A girl should require the same from a guy. The major issue is that things become static and never advance. As long as things advances, even if very slowly, there is no need to be worried or fallback to verbal communication of interest.