Perhaps, but like I've been saying, I try to be the best I can be. I don't go out into the world as an angry, disgruntled, pessimistic jerk. I may not be the most "fun" or "exciting", but I try to be the best person I can. It's just frustrating, confusing, and sometimes downright depressing to think that I'm in my mid-20s now, and even when I'm being the "best I can be", that's still apparently not good enough.
Eh. I can't say I really subscribe to the same beliefs as you, per se. I wouldn't say women don't have to deal with rejection, rather, I think men and women experience different types of rejection. I'd agree that women are basically the "gatekeepers" as to whether or not dating occurs with any particular guy; for men, getting rejected is typically a more short term thing, and it's basically a complete shut down from the start. I'd argue that women get "rejected" when they date a guy that's just not right for them; he either cheats on her, mistreats her, or just isn't the guy she thought he was. In this situation, the major difference, admittedly, are that the girls get to date and do that stuff with a guy before they're rejected, whereas, a guy getting rejected doesn't get to do all of that stuff at all. Which is worse, I don't know, and I don't care to debate on.
Anyway, I'd say that it's difficult to find anyone that really "understands", man or woman, because most people have dated at least once in their life between the ages of 16 and 24. Not many people truly know how it feels to never find one single person to date by the time you're hitting your mid-20s. That's not to discredit anyone, or anyone's advice, or anything like that. It's just not something a lot of people can actually relate to empathize with. Of all the people I know who are about the same age as me, I don't know ANYONE else that has never dated at all. So, I don't even have anyone that understands and relates, out in the real world.