| Psychiatrist are generally inclined to prescribe pills. You want to talk, try a psychologist instead. You want my advice: learn to deal with rejection, and turn your perceived weakness into your strength.
Your perspective on the issue focuses on your race, but I do not think that is the problem. I think you are in essence right about the appeal of different races, because I have also noticed that many people state they do not want to have sex outside their race. That being said, there are many people who do not want to have sex with you regardless of your race. Being rejected, for whatever reason, feels like crap. But in your life and mine, we will be rejected by and for many things: jobs, education, loans, and women, just to name a few. Rejection is a part of life, and so you must learn to deal with rejection or spend life crying in the corner.
So a life without rejection does not exist, but does that mean the reasons for rejection are not important at all? I guess that isn't completely true either. I can imagine being rejected for a job because of your race hurts more than because of a lack of skills. However, many people have turned their racial (or other) disadvantage into their forte. People who succeed in doing this are actually ahead of the curb. Many of them have gone on to become successful businessmen, scientists, or political leaders. Isn't Gandhi, for example, one of the greatest heroes of our time? Indeed, you are afraid to be rejected by women because of your race, but Indians wrote the most influential book on sex in the history of mankind. That could be a source of strength right there. In the end, you are Indian, and you will be Indian for the rest of your life. It is a part of your identity, your self. And knowing your self shouldn't drag you down, it should lift you up. _________________ One of the most useful things you will ever learn about body language.
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