tksniper
Senior Don Juan
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2023
- Messages
- 420
- Reaction score
- 674
- Age
- 42
1- Status is ALWAYS relative. It doesnt matter where you are on the absolute scale. Its about the perception of your status relative to those in your group. A restaurant manager might be a 10 in his domain but a 5 in society. But nonetheless he gets to lord over his domain. (I had a restaurant owner friend who slept with over 100 of his female cuatomers).
2- Status is in the eye of the beholder. If you are seen as low status in society but high staus in your own narrative, then both things are true. You can be a loser in society but a winner in some niche environment. I.E. some heavily tatted jobless guy who promotes parties. Is this person a winner or a loser? Both realities are true at different times to different people.
3- Status attended to is the status that matters. Anyone can have accidental status. But its the guy whos found his niche and shows up everyday in that environment that ultimately finds dominance. Dominance is the ultimate form of status. Dominance is the pulitzer winning author, the socialite who somehow knows everyone, the "Chad" who lords over his social circle, etc.
4 - Status has inertia. It is easier to create status in a new environment than to change your status once its been crystallized. It is even easier for your subconsious mind to maintain your status in a given environment than to change it. This means that if you are low status in your environment, not only will it be an uphill battle to change other's perception of you, it will also be equally difficult to change your own internal dialogue about where you stand in the social hierarchy.
5- Status is learned. Our belief about status is developed early and every reference experience solidifies it. If you grew up as a "natural" with women, every experience will either solidify your experience or nullify it. Over time your micro-expressions will either express high status or low status. This is why game seldom works in the same social circle you grew up in. You may say confident things, but all of your subtle expressions are communicating low status so noone believes you've actually changed.
6 - Shame is the number 1 status killer. This is because it works. Look at cancel culture. If someone wants to destroy your status, they will try to shame you. And if you fall into their frame, you will lose all status. This is also how guys amog each other and how women cancel each other out (slvt shame.). Its all a status game. Dont react. Respond instead. Respond with "Ill be the one to take a higher road" and your status will remain untouched. React in any way and you show vulnerability.
2- Status is in the eye of the beholder. If you are seen as low status in society but high staus in your own narrative, then both things are true. You can be a loser in society but a winner in some niche environment. I.E. some heavily tatted jobless guy who promotes parties. Is this person a winner or a loser? Both realities are true at different times to different people.
3- Status attended to is the status that matters. Anyone can have accidental status. But its the guy whos found his niche and shows up everyday in that environment that ultimately finds dominance. Dominance is the ultimate form of status. Dominance is the pulitzer winning author, the socialite who somehow knows everyone, the "Chad" who lords over his social circle, etc.
4 - Status has inertia. It is easier to create status in a new environment than to change your status once its been crystallized. It is even easier for your subconsious mind to maintain your status in a given environment than to change it. This means that if you are low status in your environment, not only will it be an uphill battle to change other's perception of you, it will also be equally difficult to change your own internal dialogue about where you stand in the social hierarchy.
5- Status is learned. Our belief about status is developed early and every reference experience solidifies it. If you grew up as a "natural" with women, every experience will either solidify your experience or nullify it. Over time your micro-expressions will either express high status or low status. This is why game seldom works in the same social circle you grew up in. You may say confident things, but all of your subtle expressions are communicating low status so noone believes you've actually changed.
6 - Shame is the number 1 status killer. This is because it works. Look at cancel culture. If someone wants to destroy your status, they will try to shame you. And if you fall into their frame, you will lose all status. This is also how guys amog each other and how women cancel each other out (slvt shame.). Its all a status game. Dont react. Respond instead. Respond with "Ill be the one to take a higher road" and your status will remain untouched. React in any way and you show vulnerability.
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