<Snipped quote by Hope Lover>
I don't know your life, but I can say from lots of persona experience that this is 100% not factual.
But it is. It's consistently been my experience, and I've seen many other men undergo the same thing. But I'm happy that you are the exception among the norm! I'm not denying the existence of the exceptions, I'm just acknowledging their rarity relative to what's out there. And judging by what you wrote, we're not talking about the same thing. I'm talking about using friendship as courtship, which backfires in 99% of cases.
One reason why I think using friendship as courtship (as a man) is flawed is because if a man is attracted to a woman, and yet he pursues a friendship with her, he's not only projecting a lack of confidence, but is also being dishonest. Speaking of 'strong foundations', being friends with a woman you actually like is like planting lemons and wishing for apples to sprout.
If you think about it, it's also manipulative, because he believes that his niceties (listening to a woman talk about her problems, helping her sister move, driving her home at 3 AM when she's hammered etc.) entitle him to a woman's affections. They don't. We aren't owed anything. Least of all when we're so ashamed of our desires that we can't even share them transparently.
When these men eventually reveal their feelings, they also reveal their cowardice and dishonesty, which completely turns the women off, and even hurts them if they genuinely considered the guy a platonic friend. And then he becomes angry, vindictive and hurtful, solidifying his weakness. A recipe for disaster (I've done it way too many times, as have many other men).
What's worked for me and almost every other guy I know, regardless of whether we're pursuing a long-term relationship or a short-term get-together, is putting the cards on the table early on. Letting a woman know in socially appropriate terms that we are not looking for friendship (usually asking for her number or inviting them for coffee).
And guess what? A lot of them say 'no', and that's okay. I'm not looking for validation; I'm looking for connection. But a lot of them also said 'yes', and I wasn't friends with any of them. Simply being vulnerable and honest transformed me from a man who lacks confidence to one who has an abundance of it. It's made me more discerning with whom I choose to be with.
Thanks for sharing your side of the story, hope you appreciate mine!