Asking for what? Did I say that? Coming on to me? No. Good fucking god, you have got this victim-blaming shit on the brain. This board is a victim waiting to be blamed.
Since no one has done anything wrong, who is to blame? I am certainly not blaming a girl for doing what comes naturally and, keeping her distance, attempting to see if some reasonably attractive older man might give her a look (find her cute). And if he does, so what?
I recall a trip to a state park I once took with my family. This was about fifteen years ago. My wife cooked burgers on a disposable grill and I played with my sons. We had a great time on the swings and wrestled a little on the ground.
After we left the park and we were driving down the road, my wife asked me if I had noticed the girl. "What girl?" I asked her. "Really," my wife said, knowing me as she does, "you didn't notice the girl staring at you for at least an hour?"
"No, I didn't," I said. "When was this?"
"When you were playing with the boys. God, she was taking off her sweater and putting it back on, standing up and sitting down and moving this way and that."
I asked how old the girl was and my wife rolled her eyes.
"I don't know. Thirteen maybe... she was really trying to get you to look..."
Wow, you know, there's that word. And it's a true story. You can choose to believe it or not. Being who you are, of course you will not.
Perhaps you can tell me why when I am sitting on a bench talking on my cell phone
a girl of about twelve decides to choose the area of the jogging track right in front of me to bend over and change from her roller blades into her tennis shoes. In this particular situation, I would've had to look away in order to avoid seeing. It was not as though she used the bench in any way. The jogging track is at least three hundred feet long, encircling a pond. She could have changed anywhere, but she chose to change there, right in front of me. Whether it was intentional or it was by chance, I saw what I saw.
And no one got hurt and no one was to blame.