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This is a very broad, vague and unnecessary topic in seduction. One reason is that commonalities can take several forms like:
1. Mirroring or Isopraxism. A girl moves a certain way, speaks a certain way, or texts a certain way, then you simply mimic the movement, voice tonality, or textual spellings and codes.
2. Common experience. Say, you're both athletes in college and you both got gold medals in an inter state annual competition, then you have common experience.
3. Propinquity. If you live in the same home town, belong to the same block or apartment, know the same people in your community, then you have propinquity working for you.
There are other forms of commonalities of course such as adapting your conversational style to the style of the social circle you're interacting with (Wittgenstein's language games), dressing or behaving the same way (subcultural norms), and so on and so forth.
If you can get down to specifics and prescribe a clearer way to build commonalities from scratch or find existing common experiences (without appearing to be building rapport prematurely) that you can relate with to the social group, then your theory thread will be more functional.
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his is a very broad, vague and unnecessary topic in seduction
I agree that it's very broad - that's the point! I don't claim that it's a step by step seduction method - simply something that is extremely undervalued in terms of seduction and cold approach that could quickly mean the difference between being the outsider and someone who is being portrayed as higher value.
However, I disagree that it's "unnecessary"
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commonalities can take several forms
It would be more likely the latter two examples
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If you can get down to specifics
I don't necessarily agree that it's necessary to provide a specific, step by step model for building commonalities. IN fact, I think it's more important that each individual comes up with their own specific "routine" for finding commonalities that would suit their individual style. The problem with giving specific rather than broad advice is that each person has their own style and behaviour, and simply adapting a model won't work for them unless it's something that is already suited for them.