I enjoyed this episode--and I really felt for Oliver when it came to unrequited love.
Buuut I do have something to say to Paul or Oliver or both of them:
Paul said it was okay to ask a woman out if you met her at a coffee shop.
He left out that this is ONLY OKAY if the woman is showing signs that she is interested in you. Randomly talking to a woman and not noticing or following social expressions that that woman feels uncomfortable, bothered, put-upon, etc.--it's SO NOT OKAY to hit on her.
The same REALLY applies to the woman that Oliver is obsessing over in group therapy; I'm so glad Paul pointed out her comfort level over Oliver's own comfort.
Women and female-bodied people and female identifying people: we want to be treated as human.

Crazy, I know.
In this new age, most women want to be friends before we make that next step. It confuses men, I know, but that's because sex is less of a victory for some of us and more of a DANGER ZONE where we could be attacked and vulnerable. (Mind you some women are sexually free enough to feel comfortable but I don't know what that's like or what they go through themselves.) So we want to trust basically EVERYONE before we really make a connection--it makes sense, right?
It's better for Oliver to just try and broach a conversation with this woman, notice her expressions (if she is uncomfortable or not) and then based on that VERY FIRST ENCOUNTER, let it be. Let her approach you, don't try to approach her unless she seemed friendly.
I'm saying this having to have developed a knowledge of what is okay and what is not okay, building boundaries, etc. I have a complex as a female-bodied person where it's like... I have to be nice, or you're going to call me a bitch.

Stupid fear but again, A LOT of female-bodied people are very afraid of being attacked, physically or verbally, because of how we're conditioned.
Compare being attacked to being rejected... seriously.
Just saying. I really liked the podcast but I felt that needed to be said.
