I'm going to assume that was supposed to say
Quote:
"I'm curious as to your thoughts on the best way to learn from
www.pick-up-artist-forum.com. How should new people use all the material out their and in the forum and chat?"
The first thing that comes to mind is,
know your sources. By a completely rough guesstimate, I'd say roughly five percent of the people who post here on a regular basis are worth of the title "master" pick-up artist. Fewer are capable of communicating their knowledge in a way that doesn't suck. Most of the stuff that gets tossed around in any pick-up forum is a pile of crap, with a couple of gems thrown in for color. This is an ego game, and a lot of guys get into this expecting to be the next Mystery or AFCAdam; I'm guilty of spouting bullshit when I was young and inexperienced, and I can't imagine I'm the only one. Hell, less than a year in, I built my own "method" out of a bunch of other people's crap, and posted it like it was the New Hotness in Pick-up Technology.
Knowing who you're taking your advice from can be the difference between fast-tracking it to success and slogging through bad advice to find the good stuff. Usually, I suggest to people "Try everything, keep what works and throw out what doesn't," but the signal to noise ratio in the pick-up community has gotten a lot murkier over the years. It's important to keep the signal clear and take the advice that is most likely going to improve your skills. Try everything THOSE people say, keep what works and toss what doesn't.
The list of people I'll take advice from on this forum is pretty slim, and it's full of people who have proven their worth over the course of years of quality posting.
Second, I think it's really important that you
separate quality from quantity. I hate to dig up old fights, but I seem to recall a prodigious poster from back-in-the-day who happened to be completely full of shit (*cough*LATripp*cough*). The fact that he was always posting provided him a level of respect that wasn't backed up by anything more than hot air. For most of the best posters on the forum, you'll find that the opposite is true. They don't write a lot of pages-long article posts, but the small amount that they do post is quality. A lot of the best posts in the forums are short, to the point, and in their simplicity will win this game for you.
Think about something like the three-second rule. It's a really easy thing to write.
Quote:
From the moment you see your target, you have three seconds in which to approach and open her. More time than that, and fear will take over and you will make excuses to avoid approaching her.
That's barely a paragraph, but it's some of the best advice ever given in the pick-up community.
Also understand that people who spend a lot of time on a forum are not spending that time out picking up women.
Third,
be willing to try new things. Sometimes you need to stretch the boundaries a bit, try things that don't fit in with the mold of the commonly accepted views in the community. When someone you trusts suggests trying something outrageous, don't be afraid to give it a shot. If it works for you, if it meshes with your style better than you thought it would, there's a cool new weapon in your arsenal. If it doesn't work out, you have a funny story to tell.
Fourth, and I think this may be one of the most important things you are ever going to read on this forum,
GIVE FEEDBACK. Lurking has it's place, and it's important for new people to lurk for a while and gain some knowledge before they start spouting about their "skillz." Providing constructive feedback, asking questions, and reporting your results with a suggested technique or routine is an integral part of the scientific process here. Hypothesize, test, report, repeat.
At first, it's best to give your feedback in the General Questions forum. Don't pollute the Lounge with newbie shit, because it's not going to do anyone any good. If your comment or question is a newbie comment or question, then put it in the forum that was designed for that. If you have recently suggested something in the lounge, and you think newbies will be trying it out, it behooves you to watch the newbie forum for notes and questions on your topic, and answer accordingly.
If you're good, your feedback may be more important to the process than the original post. If you try something in the field, and it works, letting other people know that the advice is legit is important. If you try something in the field and it doesn't work, it's important to let other people know that it didn't work for you as well as the original poster suggested, or that he or she is actually full of crap.
Fifth,
teach. You'd be surprised how quickly your own game improves when you're able to see things you do wrong done wrong by people who are not you. I got a lot better a lot faster through teaching. Don't teach when you don't know, because you'll be making things worse for your students, but when you're "meh, pretty good..." you're good enough to get some guys started on the path. Watch them, correct the obvious mistakes, and when you're done, you've got new wingmen.
Don't go on the chat. It's a silly place, full of bad advice given at the speed of light. ^_^