“The 22 Psychological Triggers That Make Women Chase You… Starting Tonight”

Forget the cash, the cars, and the chiseled jawlines. Female desire operates on a completely different frequency. Primal. Subconscious. Triggers that bypass her logic and hit her on a gut level. Most guys are totally blind to them.

I know because I was one of them. The overthinking. The paralysis. The silent drive home kicking yourself for freezing up. Watching average guys walk away with the girl while you stood there stuck in your own head.

Then I decoded the psychology behind what actually makes women tick. 22 hard rules.  Subtle behavioral shifts that rewired my entire reality. The anxiety evaporated. Women started leaning in. Investing. Chasing.

Read more...

Men seem to make life for women worse

BadBoy89

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Article about single women in the US sharing their dating woes.

-----------------------

By 2030, 45% of prime working age women in the US, defined as women aged between 25 and 44, will be single according to Census Bureau historical data and Morgan Stanley forecasts – the largest share in history.


Hundreds of those women, from across the US, shared with the Guardian why they were single, how they felt about it and what they would be looking for in a future partner if they were still in the market for one.

"I hated being single after my last relationship broke down," said Sarah, 43, a sales representative from California. "I miss having someone to cook for, to share things with. But now, my motto is: 'My alone feels so good, I'll only have you if your presence is sweeter than my solitude.'"

Babet, 32,
a beautician from New York City, echoed hundreds of other respondents across ages and socioeconomic backgrounds.

"I would love to have a partner, but it seems like the men are super low effort," she said. "Not responding on dating apps, not effectively communicating, not wanting to plan dates. A lot of men seem to actively make life for women worse instead of better ... No matter what women say they look for in a relationship, it is completely ignored by men."

Kellie, 43, from Georgia, joined the substantial number of respondents who felt that social media narratives had made dating toxic and pitted men against women.

"I wish I could have met my person before the stupid gender wars, social media and red pill rhetoric that has ruined people's view of dating and marriage," she said.

Scores of women said that nobody available they had encountered met what they considered "basic requirements".


"I'm looking for a man who ... has goals and ambition, is intelligent, trustworthy, a provider, supportive, considerate, kind, assertive, masculine, honest, faithful, intentional, has a healthy self-esteem and a sense of humour, loves to go out, and likes fitness. These basic qualities are hard to find these days," she said.

Although many women said they found being single "lonely", they also typically said that they would not consider anyone who did not tick these or similar boxes.

Katie, 37, a biotechnology product manager from Wisconsin, said she had felt unable to look for a new partner since her last breakup in 2021.

A partner should ideally have "a robust social life, a focus on holistic health, compassionate and forthright communication skills, and functional independence", she said.

"I'm happy to compromise on things. The bar is extremely low, and yet it's rarely cleared."

Hundreds reported struggling to find a partner with shared values, political views and interests, and a similar education level, with many pointing to a deepening mismatch between men and women in these areas.

Danielle, 29, a public relations professional from Tennessee, said her future partner would need to be "kind, thoughtful, emotionally available, considerate, reliable, and responsible", but also "college educated".

"I'm very disheartened by the shortage of quality men," she added. "Men my age are less educated, their social skills are abysmal, and now they're running into the arms of Trump and 'incel' forums."

Laura, in her 40s, from San Francisco, said she had been single for the better part of a decade since her divorce despite having used many dating apps and having attended been dozens of single events.

"There's an imbalance between education levels now in the US. Many men don't want to date someone who's more educated or makes more money than them. There's also the Peter Pan syndrome: a lot of men here don't seem to want to grow up and take on the responsibilities of adulthood or a committed partnership," she said.

Although almost all women who were looking for a partner did not cite standout levels of professional or financial success as a priority, financial self-sufficiency was crucial for many. Various women stressed that they were searching for a socioeconomic equal.

Kelly Wallace, 48, a consultant from Portland, said: "I'm a self-employed high earner. I'm working on a memoir, own rental property and have struggled with finding someone who is like me: creative and high earning. I don't drink or smoke and I don't want a partner who does either."

While most women elaborated on their experience of being single in a social sense, some explained why they were legally single despite wanting to be married to their current partner.

Susan, 40,
a social worker from Ohio, said that her long-term boyfriend's economic situation had become a permanent obstacle for marriage.

"He wants to be working full-time with a decent wage before getting married and having a family. He hasn't [managed that], so we haven't moved to the next step. I'm still hoping marriage will happen, but have mostly given up on anything changing.

"The idea of breaking up and trying to find someone else seems pretty hopeless at this age, so I've basically resigned myself to never having kids."

Some respondents reported feeling so disheartened by the world of dating that they had given up actively looking for a partner despite still wanting one, among them Raina, a 41-year-old doctor from Washington state.

"My experience on dating apps over the last few years has been dismal," she said
.

Like many others, Raina cited men who had not actively "worked" on their mental health as a main hurdle in her search for a partner.

"I find most men my age have a lot of baggage and they're not actively working to process their traumas," she said. "It feels like taking on a partner would be like taking on another job – someone to care for physically and emotionally – when men can't seem to offer the same to me in return."

She felt "devastated" about being single "most of the time", she added, and felt, like dozens of other women, that she was being punished for her professional and emotional progress.

"I feel like my career and ambition have diminished my dating pool," she said.

Kristina, 32
, a mental health therapist from Chicago, said she had withdrawn from active dating after she had been dumped by someone who did not want to commit.

Although Kristina reported feeling overall very happy being single, she did have concerns about her ability to have children.

"Women are freer than ever to make their own lives outside of the confines of romantic relationships, but the 'biological clock' thing weighs heavily on my mind."

Christal Sharp, 39,
a self-employed art teacher and wedding photographer from Oregon, was among many women who said drinking, drug use and other addictions among men, especially to porn, were a major factor in why they could not find a worthy partner.

"I tried internet dating after my divorce and ... I only met men who were emotionally immature, wanted [someone] to take care of them or had major addictions to drugs, alcohol, gambling, video gaming and porn. Most guys were just looking for a woman to sleep with, not grow with."

While many respondents said they would like to have a partner, others prioritised their careers, families and personal interests. In many such cases, the financial independence these women enjoyed appeared to substantially contribute to this mindset.

"I am 35, a homeowner, have a decent income and one older child," said Lauryn, from Connecticut.

Although she would love to meet "someone hardworking, honest and loyal", she was "very comfortable being alone", she said.

Randi, 33, a government policy analyst from Chicago, said she had stopped dating entirely.

"I'm not looking for a partner because ... it's not that important to me," she said.
"I let go of the notion that a long-term relationship is an accomplishment I must fulfil to be successful.

"I find dating to be more trouble than it's worth.
The one thing is that being single is very expensive," said Nicole, 42, a high school teacher from Portland, Oregon. "The US seems designed for couples and families. Rent keeps going up, other costs are as well. It would just be nice to share the burdens with another person."

Various respondents made clear that they had no intentions to couple up.

"I'm single by choice because dating nowadays is a waste of time," said Valerie Gregorio, a 27-year-old from Maryland.

"I'm ready to accept being single for the rest of my life."


---------------------

Thoughts?
 

Manure Spherian

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Women in their 30s and 40s, going their own way, after a gorillion “boyfriends” since thirteen years old. Oh no.
 

Bigpapa

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I am guy in top 20% in finances / career / looks, health, etc . Basically solid above average/ borderline top guy in terms of all dimensions. If you add everything up most likely I would be considered a solid top guy

despite this, difficult to find a girl that at least does not make my life worse. Most women are a pain in the ass to date

So I do not really buy the narrative that the guys are necessarily the big issue with them being single :)

for sure most of them had a solid chance to be in a relationship with a guy at their level or slightly above, and in some cases with guys way above their level, especially since mainly there are women 30+ give their opinion

I think the biggest problem with women is that they never take accountability, which leads in most cases to blaming someone else for her not getting what she wants

my thoughts are that they want a high value guy but then they treat him like a low value guy, in order to feel good about themselves. Low value behavior from their end

again, quite sure that plenty of women are high value themselves and have happy relationships with other high value guys, just talking from my experience how a big proportion of women behave
 
Last edited:

Manure Spherian

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for sure most of them had a solid chance to be in a relationship with a guy at their level or slightly above, and in some cases with guys way above their level, especially since mainly there are women 30+ give their opinion
These are women who would have been better off sticking with a man they met at 16 to 22 years old.
 

Bigpapa

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These are women who would have been better off sticking with a man they met at 16 to 22 years old.
depends man :)

the only thing we know is that from 16 till 30 they for sure they had at least a couple of solid options with guys at their level / slightly above / out of their league

after 30 their options start to dwindle ( in terms of relationship ), unless they are ok with significantly older guys. For a guy in his late 40 a 32-35 girl is a peach

but with older guys the thing is that they are either smashed by previous things that happened to them , either super high value. Or just raising their family. Middle ground becomes thinner and thinner as people age
 

If you currently have too many women chasing you, calling you, harassing you, knocking on your door at 2 o'clock in the morning... then I have the simple solution for you.

Just read my free ebook 22 Rules for Massive Success With Women and do the opposite of what I recommend.

This will quickly drive all women away from you.

And you will be able to relax and to live your life in peace and quiet.

Doctor Europeo

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"I hated being single after my last relationship broke down," said Sarah, 43, a sales representative from California. "I miss having someone to cook for, to share things with. But now, my motto is: 'My alone feels so good, I'll only have you if your presence is sweeter than my solitude.'"
She possibly stop bringing net positive value in her previous relationship, and offers no real value now. Otherwise she wouldnt be single for long.

Babet, 32,
"I would love to have a partner, but it seems like the men are super low effort,"
she said. "Not responding on dating apps."
There could be many reasons men stop responding to her, but most of those reasons have her as a common denominator. She is the problem, not men.

Kellie, 43, from Georgia, joined the substantial number of respondents who felt that social media narratives had made dating toxic and pitted men against women.

"I wish I could have met my person before the stupid gender wars, social media and red pill rhetoric that has ruined people's view of dating and marriage," she said.
What she really wants to say, but wont, is "before feminism"

"I'm looking for a man who ... has goals and ambition, is intelligent, trustworthy, a provider, supportive, considerate, kind, assertive, masculine, honest, faithful, intentional, has a healthy self-esteem and a sense of humour, loves to go out, and likes fitness. These basic qualities are hard to find these days," she said.

Although many women said they found being single "lonely", they also typically said that they would not consider anyone who did not tick these or similar boxes.
But what do they offer in return? If they had high overall value, they wouldnt have this problem.

Laura, in her 40s
"There's an imbalance between education levels now in the US. Many men don't want to date someone who's more educated or makes more money than them.
This can be true sometimes. I know a woman who has an MBA but she hides it as much as possible because it "scares away" most potential suitors who are less educated than her.

Kelly Wallace, 48, a consultant from Portland, said: "I'm a self-employed high earner and have struggled with finding someone who is like me: creative and high earning.
She doesnt want a man who earns less than her. Problem is, most men who earn more than her can easily pull younger women with a little effort

Raina, a 41-year-old doctor from Washington state. She felt "devastated" about being single "most of the time", she added, and felt, like dozens of other women, that she was being punished for her professional and emotional progress.
Women can be succefull and still attract HVM but not every woman can pull it off. She is not being punished, she is reaping what she sow.

Kristina, 32, a mental health therapist from Chicago, said she had withdrawn from active dating after she had been dumped by someone who did not want to commit.
That´s on her for not screening out properly.
 
Last edited:

Bokanovsky

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"I'm looking for a man who ... has goals and ambition, is intelligent, trustworthy, a provider, supportive, considerate, kind, assertive, masculine, honest, faithful, intentional, has a healthy self-esteem and a sense of humour, loves to go out, and likes fitness. These basic qualities are hard to find these days," she said.
She is surprised that there is a shortage of men with ambition, intelligence and healthy self-esteem who want to date divorced women in their 40's???? These women are absolutely delusional.
 

BaronOfHair

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Article about single women in the US sharing their dating woes.

-----------------------

By 2030, 45% of prime working age women in the US, defined as women aged between 25 and 44, will be single according to Census Bureau historical data and Morgan Stanley forecasts – the largest share in history.


Hundreds of those women, from across the US, shared with the Guardian why they were single, how they felt about it and what they would be looking for in a future partner if they were still in the market for one.

"I hated being single after my last relationship broke down," said Sarah, 43, a sales representative from California. "I miss having someone to cook for, to share things with. But now, my motto is: 'My alone feels so good, I'll only have you if your presence is sweeter than my solitude.'"

Babet, 32,
a beautician from New York City, echoed hundreds of other respondents across ages and socioeconomic backgrounds.

"I would love to have a partner, but it seems like the men are super low effort," she said. "Not responding on dating apps, not effectively communicating, not wanting to plan dates. A lot of men seem to actively make life for women worse instead of better ... No matter what women say they look for in a relationship, it is completely ignored by men."

Kellie, 43, from Georgia, joined the substantial number of respondents who felt that social media narratives had made dating toxic and pitted men against women.

"I wish I could have met my person before the stupid gender wars, social media and red pill rhetoric that has ruined people's view of dating and marriage," she said.

Scores of women said that nobody available they had encountered met what they considered "basic requirements".


"I'm looking for a man who ... has goals and ambition, is intelligent, trustworthy, a provider, supportive, considerate, kind, assertive, masculine, honest, faithful, intentional, has a healthy self-esteem and a sense of humour, loves to go out, and likes fitness. These basic qualities are hard to find these days," she said.

Although many women said they found being single "lonely", they also typically said that they would not consider anyone who did not tick these or similar boxes.

Katie, 37, a biotechnology product manager from Wisconsin, said she had felt unable to look for a new partner since her last breakup in 2021.

A partner should ideally have "a robust social life, a focus on holistic health, compassionate and forthright communication skills, and functional independence", she said.

"I'm happy to compromise on things. The bar is extremely low, and yet it's rarely cleared."

Hundreds reported struggling to find a partner with shared values, political views and interests, and a similar education level, with many pointing to a deepening mismatch between men and women in these areas.

Danielle, 29, a public relations professional from Tennessee, said her future partner would need to be "kind, thoughtful, emotionally available, considerate, reliable, and responsible", but also "college educated".

"I'm very disheartened by the shortage of quality men," she added. "Men my age are less educated, their social skills are abysmal, and now they're running into the arms of Trump and 'incel' forums."

Laura, in her 40s, from San Francisco, said she had been single for the better part of a decade since her divorce despite having used many dating apps and having attended been dozens of single events.

"There's an imbalance between education levels now in the US. Many men don't want to date someone who's more educated or makes more money than them. There's also the Peter Pan syndrome: a lot of men here don't seem to want to grow up and take on the responsibilities of adulthood or a committed partnership," she said.

Although almost all women who were looking for a partner did not cite standout levels of professional or financial success as a priority, financial self-sufficiency was crucial for many. Various women stressed that they were searching for a socioeconomic equal.

Kelly Wallace, 48, a consultant from Portland, said: "I'm a self-employed high earner. I'm working on a memoir, own rental property and have struggled with finding someone who is like me: creative and high earning. I don't drink or smoke and I don't want a partner who does either."

While most women elaborated on their experience of being single in a social sense, some explained why they were legally single despite wanting to be married to their current partner.

Susan, 40,
a social worker from Ohio, said that her long-term boyfriend's economic situation had become a permanent obstacle for marriage.

"He wants to be working full-time with a decent wage before getting married and having a family. He hasn't [managed that], so we haven't moved to the next step. I'm still hoping marriage will happen, but have mostly given up on anything changing.

"The idea of breaking up and trying to find someone else seems pretty hopeless at this age, so I've basically resigned myself to never having kids."

Some respondents reported feeling so disheartened by the world of dating that they had given up actively looking for a partner despite still wanting one, among them Raina, a 41-year-old doctor from Washington state.

"My experience on dating apps over the last few years has been dismal," she said
.

Like many others, Raina cited men who had not actively "worked" on their mental health as a main hurdle in her search for a partner.

"I find most men my age have a lot of baggage and they're not actively working to process their traumas," she said. "It feels like taking on a partner would be like taking on another job – someone to care for physically and emotionally – when men can't seem to offer the same to me in return."

She felt "devastated" about being single "most of the time", she added, and felt, like dozens of other women, that she was being punished for her professional and emotional progress.

"I feel like my career and ambition have diminished my dating pool," she said.

Kristina, 32
, a mental health therapist from Chicago, said she had withdrawn from active dating after she had been dumped by someone who did not want to commit.

Although Kristina reported feeling overall very happy being single, she did have concerns about her ability to have children.

"Women are freer than ever to make their own lives outside of the confines of romantic relationships, but the 'biological clock' thing weighs heavily on my mind."

Christal Sharp, 39,
a self-employed art teacher and wedding photographer from Oregon, was among many women who said drinking, drug use and other addictions among men, especially to porn, were a major factor in why they could not find a worthy partner.

"I tried internet dating after my divorce and ... I only met men who were emotionally immature, wanted [someone] to take care of them or had major addictions to drugs, alcohol, gambling, video gaming and porn. Most guys were just looking for a woman to sleep with, not grow with."

While many respondents said they would like to have a partner, others prioritised their careers, families and personal interests. In many such cases, the financial independence these women enjoyed appeared to substantially contribute to this mindset.

"I am 35, a homeowner, have a decent income and one older child," said Lauryn, from Connecticut.

Although she would love to meet "someone hardworking, honest and loyal", she was "very comfortable being alone", she said.

Randi, 33, a government policy analyst from Chicago, said she had stopped dating entirely.

"I'm not looking for a partner because ... it's not that important to me," she said.
"I let go of the notion that a long-term relationship is an accomplishment I must fulfil to be successful.

"I find dating to be more trouble than it's worth.
The one thing is that being single is very expensive," said Nicole, 42, a high school teacher from Portland, Oregon. "The US seems designed for couples and families. Rent keeps going up, other costs are as well. It would just be nice to share the burdens with another person."

Various respondents made clear that they had no intentions to couple up.

"I'm single by choice because dating nowadays is a waste of time," said Valerie Gregorio, a 27-year-old from Maryland.

"I'm ready to accept being single for the rest of my life."


---------------------

Thoughts?
Female equivalents to the sort finger pointing one hears throughout much of The Manosphere. We moderns have an insatiable hard-on for personal responsibility in the abstract, yet our own desire to take this very thing remains more disappointing than Alyssa Milano's career, post-Charmed
 

The Duke

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Women have more freedom to live their lives however they choose than at any other point in history, yet they are still complaining that its the man's fault! Some things never change. Self-accountability has never been one of their strong points. This stuff used to bother me, I just poke fun at them for it now and usually get them laughing.
 

plumber

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this is really clear. the women describe themselves like a man would. successful Dr..., educated..., they describe these based on a mans value. success, educated, business.. those are all male value points. female is cute/sexy/submissive/helpful/empathetic/....... these women are single because they want to be a man and successful men don't want to date a female man.

these female men, can not compete with female females at getting top guys. they can easy to get men that are acting female, but don't want that.
 

BaronOfHair

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We ALL effect each other, in ways adverse, inconsequential, and sublime. And even these "effects" are often matters of interpretation... Is a date really "bad", if you walk away a bit wiser as to how sh-t REALLY works than you were prior?
 
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She is surprised that there is a shortage of men with ambition, intelligence and healthy self-esteem who want to date divorced women in their 40's???? These women are absolutely delusional.
Yeah, if only she could transplant her "ideal man" into such a box and give it to her 18 year old self as a gift. At 40, and especially if she was attractive, she either encountered that EXACT guy (but apparently couldn't recognize him) -- OR there were guys who WOULD HAVE developed all those qualities in himself IF she had given him the time. But self-love and egotism, huh? She was too busy trying to prove she's better than every man, she blinded herself to the men who would have satisfied her soul.
 

BackInTheGame78

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none of those types ever show up here do they? lol
And that isn't even including the men who work dead end jobs or are unemployed, live with their parents, have no ambition or are some form of addict(alcohol, gambling, drugs) or losers.

Let's be real. Most women have the options of choosing between cow turds and dog sh!t as options.
 

BadBoy89

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And that isn't even including the men who work dead end jobs or are unemployed, live with their parents, have no ambition or are some form of addict(alcohol, gambling, drugs) or losers.

Let's be real. Most women have the options of choosing between cow turds and dog sh!t as options.
I don’t know about that bro. I have a few friends who are dentists can’t find anyone. Another friend who is a company guy, makes good money, cant find anyone. They are nice guys. They are not Brad Pitt.

I’m doing OK, last 2 women I’ve taken out on 1st date and texted me after and told me off, told me off after the date. They were older too:

In terms of looks l, I was better looking than them: So either I wasn’t tall enough, or exciting enough. Maybe I should have pushed for sex on first date? They weren’t that attractive. Maybe I should have went sky diving without a helmet with them, maybe that would have turned them on.

Always my fault. I should have impressed these older women more during the date…
 

Divorced w 3

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Women have more freedom to live their lives however they choose than at any other point in history, yet they are still complaining that its the man's fault! Some things never change. Self-accountability has never been one of their strong points. This stuff used to bother me, I just poke fun at them for it now and usually get them laughing.
Any time you can smile and poke fun at feminism, especially with a beer in your hand, you have a really good shot of having sex. Law of averages.
 

Beyond It

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Article about single women in the US sharing their dating woes.

-----------------------

By 2030, 45% of prime working age women in the US, defined as women aged between 25 and 44, will be single according to Census Bureau historical data and Morgan Stanley forecasts – the largest share in history.


Hundreds of those women, from across the US, shared with the Guardian why they were single, how they felt about it and what they would be looking for in a future partner if they were still in the market for one.

"I hated being single after my last relationship broke down," said Sarah, 43, a sales representative from California. "I miss having someone to cook for, to share things with. But now, my motto is: 'My alone feels so good, I'll only have you if your presence is sweeter than my solitude.'"

Babet, 32,
a beautician from New York City, echoed hundreds of other respondents across ages and socioeconomic backgrounds.

"I would love to have a partner, but it seems like the men are super low effort," she said. "Not responding on dating apps, not effectively communicating, not wanting to plan dates. A lot of men seem to actively make life for women worse instead of better ... No matter what women say they look for in a relationship, it is completely ignored by men."

Kellie, 43, from Georgia, joined the substantial number of respondents who felt that social media narratives had made dating toxic and pitted men against women.

"I wish I could have met my person before the stupid gender wars, social media and red pill rhetoric that has ruined people's view of dating and marriage," she said.

Scores of women said that nobody available they had encountered met what they considered "basic requirements".


"I'm looking for a man who ... has goals and ambition, is intelligent, trustworthy, a provider, supportive, considerate, kind, assertive, masculine, honest, faithful, intentional, has a healthy self-esteem and a sense of humour, loves to go out, and likes fitness. These basic qualities are hard to find these days," she said.

Although many women said they found being single "lonely", they also typically said that they would not consider anyone who did not tick these or similar boxes.

Katie, 37, a biotechnology product manager from Wisconsin, said she had felt unable to look for a new partner since her last breakup in 2021.

A partner should ideally have "a robust social life, a focus on holistic health, compassionate and forthright communication skills, and functional independence", she said.

"I'm happy to compromise on things. The bar is extremely low, and yet it's rarely cleared."

Hundreds reported struggling to find a partner with shared values, political views and interests, and a similar education level, with many pointing to a deepening mismatch between men and women in these areas.

Danielle, 29, a public relations professional from Tennessee, said her future partner would need to be "kind, thoughtful, emotionally available, considerate, reliable, and responsible", but also "college educated".

"I'm very disheartened by the shortage of quality men," she added. "Men my age are less educated, their social skills are abysmal, and now they're running into the arms of Trump and 'incel' forums."

Laura, in her 40s, from San Francisco, said she had been single for the better part of a decade since her divorce despite having used many dating apps and having attended been dozens of single events.

"There's an imbalance between education levels now in the US. Many men don't want to date someone who's more educated or makes more money than them. There's also the Peter Pan syndrome: a lot of men here don't seem to want to grow up and take on the responsibilities of adulthood or a committed partnership," she said.

Although almost all women who were looking for a partner did not cite standout levels of professional or financial success as a priority, financial self-sufficiency was crucial for many. Various women stressed that they were searching for a socioeconomic equal.

Kelly Wallace, 48, a consultant from Portland, said: "I'm a self-employed high earner. I'm working on a memoir, own rental property and have struggled with finding someone who is like me: creative and high earning. I don't drink or smoke and I don't want a partner who does either."

While most women elaborated on their experience of being single in a social sense, some explained why they were legally single despite wanting to be married to their current partner.

Susan, 40,
a social worker from Ohio, said that her long-term boyfriend's economic situation had become a permanent obstacle for marriage.

"He wants to be working full-time with a decent wage before getting married and having a family. He hasn't [managed that], so we haven't moved to the next step. I'm still hoping marriage will happen, but have mostly given up on anything changing.

"The idea of breaking up and trying to find someone else seems pretty hopeless at this age, so I've basically resigned myself to never having kids."

Some respondents reported feeling so disheartened by the world of dating that they had given up actively looking for a partner despite still wanting one, among them Raina, a 41-year-old doctor from Washington state.

"My experience on dating apps over the last few years has been dismal," she said.

Like many others, Raina cited men who had not actively "worked" on their mental health as a main hurdle in her search for a partner.

"I find most men my age have a lot of baggage and they're not actively working to process their traumas," she said. "It feels like taking on a partner would be like taking on another job – someone to care for physically and emotionally – when men can't seem to offer the same to me in return."

She felt "devastated" about being single "most of the time", she added, and felt, like dozens of other women, that she was being punished for her professional and emotional progress.

"I feel like my career and ambition have diminished my dating pool," she said.

Kristina, 32
, a mental health therapist from Chicago, said she had withdrawn from active dating after she had been dumped by someone who did not want to commit.

Although Kristina reported feeling overall very happy being single, she did have concerns about her ability to have children.

"Women are freer than ever to make their own lives outside of the confines of romantic relationships, but the 'biological clock' thing weighs heavily on my mind."

Christal Sharp, 39,
a self-employed art teacher and wedding photographer from Oregon, was among many women who said drinking, drug use and other addictions among men, especially to porn, were a major factor in why they could not find a worthy partner.

"I tried internet dating after my divorce and ... I only met men who were emotionally immature, wanted [someone] to take care of them or had major addictions to drugs, alcohol, gambling, video gaming and porn. Most guys were just looking for a woman to sleep with, not grow with."

While many respondents said they would like to have a partner, others prioritised their careers, families and personal interests. In many such cases, the financial independence these women enjoyed appeared to substantially contribute to this mindset.

"I am 35, a homeowner, have a decent income and one older child," said Lauryn, from Connecticut.

Although she would love to meet "someone hardworking, honest and loyal", she was "very comfortable being alone", she said.

Randi, 33, a government policy analyst from Chicago, said she had stopped dating entirely.

"I'm not looking for a partner because ... it's not that important to me," she said.
"I let go of the notion that a long-term relationship is an accomplishment I must fulfil to be successful.

"I find dating to be more trouble than it's worth. The one thing is that being single is very expensive," said Nicole, 42, a high school teacher from Portland, Oregon. "The US seems designed for couples and families. Rent keeps going up, other costs are as well. It would just be nice to share the burdens with another person."

Various respondents made clear that they had no intentions to couple up.

"I'm single by choice because dating nowadays is a waste of time," said Valerie Gregorio, a 27-year-old from Maryland.

"I'm ready to accept being single for the rest of my life."

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Thoughts?
This is all smoke screen. All of it. There was very little if anything about the biological instincts and propensities of the women commenting. No human is without actions they could be censored for.

It’s like women thinking that they do all the emotional heavy lifting. Or that men are not emotionally intelligent. Emotionally intelligent means you don’t emote. Men who are good with women know that you don’t do this. That it’s a trick to reduce you.

Be warned about those reasons.
 

Just because a woman listens to you and acts interested in what you say doesn't mean she really is. She might just be acting polite, while silently wishing that the date would hurry up and end, or that you would go away... and never come back.

Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.

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