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You know, having a fairly mundane job is not really that much of a hurdle as long as you can frame it with enthusiasm. It's possible to have the opposite problem, which actually seems to take a bit more thought to overcome. One of my friends is a firefighter, the other is an airline pilot. Traditionally, these two are great jobs for getting attention from women, but neither of them are as successful as one would think. I've seen them react when women ask them what they do. The pilot in particular kind of stumbles on the answer - women generally either call "bullshit" or assume he's out being predatory (in a bad way). Again, the solution is to frame the answer differently. Going too over the top with the enthusiasm when you actually do have an unusual, cool-sounding job can throw up a red flag ("this guy's a player/full of himself/whatever"), while downplaying it (presenting a weak frame) can result in outright disbelief. Any thoughts there?
This is where I show self interest. I would tell about the things I love about the job, what makes it something that I could do for the rest of my life and be perfectly content, why I can't wait to get up in the morning to go do it. You start showing some serious interest in it and she's not gonna call bullshit anymore, because you're not just saying, "OH! I'm a pilot! It's sweet!" You are giving details that make it hard to deny. It's just like when someone tells a lie, usually it is either very simple, or it is full of holes, but if there's tons of evidence to back it up, then people believe it.