jhonny9546
Master Don Juan
So I had a very long conversation with my sister, asking her to be as serious as possible and to put her feelings aside as much as possible (even though I know she speaks that language all women speak, and that we shouldn't really ask a fish how to fish).
That said, what my sister focused on most, regarding the "most attractive qualities a man can have, and that would make me feel attracted to him in a LTR," wasn't beauty or anything else, but rather two things: status and how you make her feel.
Regarding status, she talks about how some men, like managers, executives, doctors, lawyers, or those who work in a big company, or people with a higher status like soccer players or singers (unattainable for her), are actually what she describes.
She then says how a man who works as a bartender, waiter, office clerk, or in other jobs is considered low-status.
She actually says how managers, or financial advisor, or just those men who work those 9to5 for those big companies are such a "stable" investiment for her.
Regarding this, I also asked her :"So a man with high status right? What about if He doesn't care, He doesn't work at all at his job, or, How he got there, or what he actually does at his job; you're just interested in the position, right?" She replied, "Yes."
This confirms that women really don't have the intelligence to understand whether a man is trying hard but still can't achieve results, versus someone who is in a position of status but isn't actually capable of putting two and two together.
Women really don't know how to distinguish between "commitment and perseverance", versus "entitled."
As for how you make her feel... she said: protected.
She gave me examples of some relationships around us, and from there I understood that what she meant by this is precisely the beta provider, who makes her feel cared for and protected, who have economic stability, who can fix issues, or supporting her with her problems.
This whole discussion simply made me connect some dots in the relationships I see around me.
Indeed, women seem really susceptible... very susceptible to the status changes of the men they keep an eye on, and this was something I'd already talked about, about when I improved my status a bit and some women who were already in a relationship started "flirting" me.
But I also realized something else: it's ephemeral.
In fact, women get bored after the boost in status has made them feel something, then they get bored of being with you because at first they felt that "lawyer" was a great status, but then, even if you're the best man in the world, they want something else.
So, even the status doesn't hold up.
What disgusts me most is the fact that for us men, it means committing ourselves every day to competition and to doing our best out there, and actually listen to women that say that they want the result, and not the actual work, the actual commitment you put in.
Now I understand why intelligent men don't compete or play, but live their lives, and this gives them much more confidence than others who live to achieve status. These men may sacrifice their position, but they're honest about their lives, and enjoy it.
Women can't really tell if a man has earned his position and it's maintaining it with great effort, or if he's just faking it.
Women can't recognize the effort a man is putting into his life if he doesn't achieve results. Women judge men's lives by the results they achieve.
No results = He's not putting in the effort = He's a loser.
Results = He's putting in the effort (even if it might not be true) = He's a winner.
(this is the result of so many divorce when the man "lose" or "lower" the status due to a job loss, or any other bad event of his life).
I'd really like to understand how your life changed after understanding how status affected women's perceptions of you.
How did this impact your relationships?
And how did you ultimately draw conclusions and create your own morality about it, and what is that morality?
Also, let's not just talk about status; let's also discuss "how you make her feel" and what you think about that.
That said, some women here may be interested to come in to join the conversation, do a bit of self reflection before discussing this, and actually speak like we men speak to each other. We like when women could do that!
@Sega Genesis @BeExcellent
That said, what my sister focused on most, regarding the "most attractive qualities a man can have, and that would make me feel attracted to him in a LTR," wasn't beauty or anything else, but rather two things: status and how you make her feel.
Regarding status, she talks about how some men, like managers, executives, doctors, lawyers, or those who work in a big company, or people with a higher status like soccer players or singers (unattainable for her), are actually what she describes.
She then says how a man who works as a bartender, waiter, office clerk, or in other jobs is considered low-status.
She actually says how managers, or financial advisor, or just those men who work those 9to5 for those big companies are such a "stable" investiment for her.
Regarding this, I also asked her :"So a man with high status right? What about if He doesn't care, He doesn't work at all at his job, or, How he got there, or what he actually does at his job; you're just interested in the position, right?" She replied, "Yes."
This confirms that women really don't have the intelligence to understand whether a man is trying hard but still can't achieve results, versus someone who is in a position of status but isn't actually capable of putting two and two together.
Women really don't know how to distinguish between "commitment and perseverance", versus "entitled."
As for how you make her feel... she said: protected.
She gave me examples of some relationships around us, and from there I understood that what she meant by this is precisely the beta provider, who makes her feel cared for and protected, who have economic stability, who can fix issues, or supporting her with her problems.
This whole discussion simply made me connect some dots in the relationships I see around me.
Indeed, women seem really susceptible... very susceptible to the status changes of the men they keep an eye on, and this was something I'd already talked about, about when I improved my status a bit and some women who were already in a relationship started "flirting" me.
But I also realized something else: it's ephemeral.
In fact, women get bored after the boost in status has made them feel something, then they get bored of being with you because at first they felt that "lawyer" was a great status, but then, even if you're the best man in the world, they want something else.
So, even the status doesn't hold up.
What disgusts me most is the fact that for us men, it means committing ourselves every day to competition and to doing our best out there, and actually listen to women that say that they want the result, and not the actual work, the actual commitment you put in.
Now I understand why intelligent men don't compete or play, but live their lives, and this gives them much more confidence than others who live to achieve status. These men may sacrifice their position, but they're honest about their lives, and enjoy it.
Women can't really tell if a man has earned his position and it's maintaining it with great effort, or if he's just faking it.
Women can't recognize the effort a man is putting into his life if he doesn't achieve results. Women judge men's lives by the results they achieve.
No results = He's not putting in the effort = He's a loser.
Results = He's putting in the effort (even if it might not be true) = He's a winner.
(this is the result of so many divorce when the man "lose" or "lower" the status due to a job loss, or any other bad event of his life).
I'd really like to understand how your life changed after understanding how status affected women's perceptions of you.
How did this impact your relationships?
And how did you ultimately draw conclusions and create your own morality about it, and what is that morality?
Also, let's not just talk about status; let's also discuss "how you make her feel" and what you think about that.
That said, some women here may be interested to come in to join the conversation, do a bit of self reflection before discussing this, and actually speak like we men speak to each other. We like when women could do that!
@Sega Genesis @BeExcellent