corrector
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2009
- Messages
- 10,263
- Reaction score
- 3,980
I noticed something lately and wanted to open it up for discussion.
Whenever men experience abundance, their whole demeanor changes. It doesn’t even matter if the abundance is real or simulated.
Some men go to the gym, get in shape, and women flock. That’s real abundance.
Others find it through music, ASMR, or VR experiences where a friendly face keeps them company. That’s simulated abundance.
Back in the day (Gen-X here), guys felt abundance just by chatting with girls online before exchanging pictures. The imagination itself carried them.
The funny thing is, the end result is the same: a man carries himself as if he has options. Confidence leaks out into his interactions.
Now, I’m not saying one is “better” than the other. But let’s be real — if a man can trick his subconscious into believing he has abundance, isn’t that still abundance?
Or to put it provocatively:
Is there really a difference between a guy with a harem of women in his phone and a guy with a harem in his neighborhood?
Discuss.
Whenever men experience abundance, their whole demeanor changes. It doesn’t even matter if the abundance is real or simulated.
Some men go to the gym, get in shape, and women flock. That’s real abundance.
Others find it through music, ASMR, or VR experiences where a friendly face keeps them company. That’s simulated abundance.
Back in the day (Gen-X here), guys felt abundance just by chatting with girls online before exchanging pictures. The imagination itself carried them.
The funny thing is, the end result is the same: a man carries himself as if he has options. Confidence leaks out into his interactions.
Now, I’m not saying one is “better” than the other. But let’s be real — if a man can trick his subconscious into believing he has abundance, isn’t that still abundance?
Or to put it provocatively:
Is there really a difference between a guy with a harem of women in his phone and a guy with a harem in his neighborhood?
Discuss.