On the other hand, how would you likeit if someone told you he had something to say to you. You tell him that this is not a good time for something big, and he says. "OK. See you later."?
Wouldn't this sounds like it isn't important them? If Swen did that it would sound like what he wants to tell her is not much important to him making the love confession sounds even cheaper.
Important != urgent. A topic can be very important, but if it's not time-sensitive you don't necessarily have to talk about it as soon as possible. In fact, if it's really that important a subject to discuss, you really should wait for a time to talk about it when everyone involved will be able to think clearly and absorb what you're saying.
Being in a rush to talk about it suggests it isn't really that important in and of itself, that what you
really value is telling someone about it, which isn't the same thing. It makes it less about the topic and more about
you.Regarding Sven and "nice guys:" given Sven's stated philosophy toward relationships and how he interacts with women, I don't think he feels deserving of/entitled to anything from Faye. It seems, to me, more likely that he's just not sure of what to do to win her over since his usual bag of tricks, which were pretty much all he knew before and never failed until now, is completely worthless. It seems less, "If I do this she'll
have to want me," and more, "What does she want from me?"
Actually I take part of that back, 'cause even that summary seems more cynical than I think he's being right now. He's in a place he's never been his entire life, at least according to Dora's description of him (short version: always been the best and most successful at everything with almost no effort on his part). He doesn't know why things aren't working for him or what he's supposed to do to fix what he did to screw it all up. I wouldn't go so far as to call it being "out of his depth," just that he's at a loss, not only for what he has to do to get what he wants, but even about
what he wants (thus "I
think I'm in love with you" vs "I'm in love with you").