First and foremost, you have to realize people answer questions as a hobby. This means
- They do it only if it's rewarding (e.g. fun, philanthropic vibes, internet points etc)
- They go for the path of least resistance
- They stop when it annoys them
In other words, as someone wishing for their question to be answered, you have to
- Provide a fun question, demonstrate helping you is a good cause or provide a lot of internet points
- Make the question as easy to comprehend as possible
- Definitely don't cross any red lines
There are too many questions to answer on Stack Overflow. To that end, people will answer those that takes the least effort to get to. Which is to say people go for questions with minimal reproducible examples first, with particular emphasis on minimal: you want to simplify as much as possible but no simpler. This includes the prose, as well as the code.
Since your question doesn't seem particularly fun, you must either slap a bounty on it or demonstrate that helping you is a good cause and hope someone particularly charitable comes by. To do that, you typically show the (tonnes of) effort you've already put in.
Finally, you mustn't violate any of the rules.
Specifically, your question isn't reproducible, and neither is the explanation concise. It lacks motivation, which probably stems from your confusion surrounding sockets and asynchronous IO.
You may observe that asking a good, attractive question is hard, and you'd be correct. You need to motivate people, you need to be a great writer and often you need to already know much about the topic. It takes practice and effort, but if you view this as an exercise of self-improvement it'd be worth it and I'll wish you luck on the journey.