<p>Don’t “come clean.” It gives you the emotional maturity of someone from TV/in almost every romantic comedy (not good). Be natural. Hang out with her. See her at this school festival. If you’re both there and you/she finds a way to naturally hang out where after a few minutes she’s not like “I need to go with my friends,” that’s a good sign. But a good sign doesn’t all of a sudden mean you’re boyfriend/girlfriend. If when you are together you are laughing, joking, clearly enjoying each other, then setting up alone time is good. With this whole tickets thing, while you were walking together were you silent or did you joke around/have fun? Did she talk freely or was she more restrained (1-2 sentence replies versus whole paragraphs)? If this sort of interaction then leads to you actually being alone doing stuff together, then you can talk about dating. But don’t confess your love until you’re already established in a relationship. The problem with romantic comedies is they keep advancing this notion of “love at first sight” where it makes sense to declare your love. But love at first sight is one of the most shallow emotional concepts and generally leads to weird/unnaturally creep feelings.</p>
<p>^ That is some good advice.</p>
<p>KingCat has received some good advice in this thread. I only hope he will take some of it. I don’t think he will though…</p>
<p>How old are you?
What school do you go to?</p>
<p>well I didn’t tell her. should I do another song on facebook, tag her and a few of my friends in it (so she won’t feel weird). The song will be about how a like her without mentioning her name?</p>
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<p>ahaha this.</p>
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No.</p>
<p>Find your p**** and use it.</p>
<p>No. Follow the advice on this thread.</p>
<p>Stop watching TV/romantic comedies!!! Unlike what happens in those movies, the girls don’t usually find what the guys do as “cute” or whatever…</p>
<p>TV/internet/movie love stories are for one purpose only: TO ENTERTAIN.</p>