“The 22 Rules That Flip the Script With Women… And How You Can Use Them Tonight”

Most guys accidentally kill attraction before they even speak. They assume they need a bigger bank account, a better physique, or smoother lines. They miss the point.

Female desire operates on a specific set of psychological triggers.  Break them, and you're invisible. Follow them, and you become magnetic.

I learned this the hard way. Years of freezing up. Getting friend-zoned. Watching other guys walk away with the girl I wanted. Then I discovered a set of 22 simple rules that rewired my entire approach.

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Women say having a boyfriend is embarrassing now

BadBoy89

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Article below

—————————-

Is having a boyfriend embarrassing now?


It’s the question on everyone’s lips, thanks to Chanté Joseph’s British Vogue article, where she digs into the fact than women are posting their partners on social media less than ever before.

The article claims that we have gone from a culture obsessed with the boyfriend status symbol — with names in Instagram bios and carousels dedicated to loved-up pictures — to, if they’re lucky, a man’s elbow being featured in a story that expires in 24 hours.

“To me, it feels like the result of women wanting to straddle two worlds: one where they can receive the social benefits of having a partner, but also not appear so boyfriend-obsessed that they come across as quite culturally loser-ish,” Ms. Joseph wrote.

It delves into this idea that women want to be seen as more than just their relationship while also protecting it from people who are desperate to interfere, or worse, that horrifying moment of having to hide your Instagram photos together because you’ve broken up.

Abby Baffoe, who has 1.3 million followers, shared a video of herself celebrating the news while dressed to the nines. @abbybaffoe/TikTok
It also tries to break through the, frankly, heteronormative idea that to be happy, you must be in a relationship.

The article also talks about how being single is now a flex (and yes, sometimes it is because I have no one to answer to but myself, but my god, is the single tax real).

At (almost) 30 with a relationship status that leans more “single” and “it’s complicated” than taken and surrounded by friends in long-term relationships, I can’t lie. The article piqued my interest. I know so many incredible women, and my ultimate pet peeve is when absolute icons dull their sparkle to suit their relationship.

There is obviously nothing wrong with being in love — and being proud of it — but I have always maintained the importance of having a life and personality outside of the person you’re making out with.

To me personally, all this article indicates is that there is a shift in a romantic relationship being the ultimate status symbol. Platonic connections, family, career, hobbies, and hitting financial milestones are now in the mix. Therefore, being single does not make you incomplete.

The article has sparked much debate online with brilliant, hilarious single women celebrating being unbound from this idea that their lives are sad because they don’t have a man.

Shameless Media’s Ruby Hall posted a TikTok dancing to Taylor Swift’s The Fate of Ophelia with the caption: “Apparently it’s chic to be single now.”

Fellow TikTok user Lydia posted a clip of herself waving and blowing kisses to George Michael’s Father Figure.

“Thank you, British Vogue, for making all the girlies that have been single their entire lives feel very powerful right now. A well-deserved win for us,” Lydia said.


Meanwhile, Lulu Davidson, a PR, posted a similar clip to the Mamma Mia movie version of The Winner Takes it All.

“How it feels to be single after British Vogue declared that having a boyfriend is embarrassing. I’m always ahead of the trends,” she said.

Abby Baffoe, who has 1.3 million followers, shared a video of herself also celebrating the news while dressed up to the nines.

“British Vogue is coming out and declaring that having a boyfriend is embarrassing. What a time to be alive and single ladies,” she said.

Dating expert Sera Bozza said that having a boyfriend wasn’t embarrassing — but being dependent on a relationship for your identity was, in fact, embarrassing.

“We act like love is cringe, but what’s actually cringe is pretending we’re above wanting it,” one woman said. Mdv Edwards – stock.adobe.com
“I think [the article is] less about women rejecting men and more about women rejecting dependency. For decades, being “someone’s girlfriend” was treated like a personality,” she told news.com.au.

“Now we’re swinging the other way, building entire online identities that say, I choose me. That’s progress, but it can also tip into performance.”

She said it’s residue from what influencer Tinx called “boyfriend sickness” — when your friend gets into a relationship and disappears. Now, it’s also shifted to the online world.

Ms. Bozza said there was definitely a shift to celebrating being single, but there was a big difference between “I’m single because I’m growing” and “I’m single because men suck”, with only the first being an empowering move.

“The real flex isn’t being single or taken. It’s being secure either way,” she said.

However, the dating guru raised an interesting point about why we feel this way — is it boredom with boyfriend content or is it something “darker”?

“When women get unfollowed for posting their partners or mocked for being happy, it’s not just boredom with ‘boyfriend content’. The internet loves a collective villain, and lately that villain is the woman who’s too happy, too partnered, too content,” she said.

“‘Boyfriends are out of style’ sounds like a joke, but it implies that women who find good men are somehow betraying the rest.

“That’s the crab-in-a-bucket effect: if one crab tries to climb out, the others pull it back down. The message is, ‘Don’t rise above the collective disappointment’.

“I get the fatigue with performative couple culture, the highlight reels, the matching captions, but punishing people for being in healthy relationships is just another form of self-sabotage.”

She also expressed concerns that this is going too far the other way, and it would be seen as “cringe” to care or share that we have found love.

“We act like love is cringe, but what’s actually cringe is pretending we’re above wanting it,” she said.

“If seeing a woman in love makes you roll your eyes, that’s not about her. That’s about your discomfort with what you’ve stopped believing in.”

Overall, she did say that it was important to have a life outside of your partner and that both people need their own identity, routine, and friends. She said a healthy relationship should look like a Venn diagram.

“Two full circles that overlap, not two halves trying to complete each other. You need your own identity, routines, and friends, as well as that beautiful overlap in the middle, or you end up orbiting someone else’s life,” she said.

Independence doesn’t threaten connection; it protects it. People who maintain their own sense of self tend to have stronger, more sustainable relationships.”

—————

Thoughts?
 

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.

BaronOfHair

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"It’s the question on everyone’s lips, thanks to Chanté Joseph’s British Vogue article, where she digs into the fact than women are posting their partners on social media less than ever before"

Cause for celebration. Oversharing has long been the bane of our collective existence
 

Plinco

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Article below

—————————-

Is having a boyfriend embarrassing now?


It’s the question on everyone’s lips, thanks to Chanté Joseph’s British Voguearticle, where she digs into the fact than women are posting their partners on social media less than ever before.

The article claims that we have gone from a culture obsessed with the boyfriend status symbol — with names in Instagram bios and carousels dedicated to loved-up pictures — to, if they’re lucky, a man’s elbow being featured in a story that expires in 24 hours.

“To me, it feels like the result of women wanting to straddle two worlds: one where they can receive the social benefits of having a partner, but also not appear so boyfriend-obsessed that they come across as quite culturally loser-ish,” Ms. Joseph wrote.

It delves into this idea that women want to be seen as more than just their relationship while also protecting it from people who are desperate to interfere, or worse, that horrifying moment of having to hide your Instagram photos together because you’ve broken up.

Abby Baffoe, who has 1.3 million followers, shared a video of herself celebrating the news while dressed to the nines. @abbybaffoe/TikTok
It also tries to break through the, frankly, heteronormative idea that to be happy, you must be in a relationship.

The article also talks about how being single is now a flex (and yes, sometimes it is because I have no one to answer to but myself, but my god, is the single tax real).

At (almost) 30 with a relationship status that leans more “single” and “it’s complicated” than taken and surrounded by friends in long-term relationships, I can’t lie. The article piqued my interest. I know so many incredible women, and my ultimate pet peeve is when absolute icons dull their sparkle to suit their relationship.

There is obviously nothing wrong with being in love — and being proud of it — but I have always maintained the importance of having a life and personality outside of the person you’re making out with.

To me personally, all this article indicates is that there is a shift in a romantic relationship being the ultimate status symbol. Platonic connections, family, career, hobbies, and hitting financial milestones are now in the mix. Therefore, being single does not make you incomplete.

The article has sparked much debate online with brilliant, hilarious single women celebrating being unbound from this idea that their lives are sad because they don’t have a man.

Shameless Media’s Ruby Hall posted a TikTok dancing to Taylor Swift’s The Fate of Ophelia with the caption: “Apparently it’s chic to be single now.”

Fellow TikTok user Lydia posted a clip of herself waving and blowing kisses to George Michael’s Father Figure.

“Thank you, British Vogue, for making all the girlies that have been single their entire lives feel very powerful right now. A well-deserved win for us,” Lydia said.

Meanwhile, Lulu Davidson, a PR, posted a similar clip to the Mamma Mia movie version of The Winner Takes it All.

“How it feels to be single after British Vogue declared that having a boyfriend is embarrassing. I’m always ahead of the trends,” she said.

Abby Baffoe, who has 1.3 million followers, shared a video of herself also celebrating the news while dressed up to the nines.

“British Vogue is coming out and declaring that having a boyfriend is embarrassing. What a time to be alive and single ladies,” she said.

Dating expert Sera Bozza said that having a boyfriend wasn’t embarrassing — but being dependent on a relationship for your identity was, in fact, embarrassing.

“We act like love is cringe, but what’s actually cringe is pretending we’re above wanting it,” one woman said. Mdv Edwards – stock.adobe.com
“I think [the article is] less about women rejecting men and more about women rejecting dependency. For decades, being “someone’s girlfriend” was treated like a personality,” she told news.com.au.

“Now we’re swinging the other way, building entire online identities that say, I choose me. That’s progress, but it can also tip into performance.”

She said it’s residue from what influencer Tinx called “boyfriend sickness” — when your friend gets into a relationship and disappears. Now, it’s also shifted to the online world.

Ms. Bozza said there was definitely a shift to celebrating being single, but there was a big difference between “I’m single because I’m growing” and “I’m single because men suck”, with only the first being an empowering move.

“The real flex isn’t being single or taken. It’s being secure either way,” she said.

However, the dating guru raised an interesting point about why we feel this way — is it boredom with boyfriend content or is it something “darker”?

“When women get unfollowed for posting their partners or mocked for being happy, it’s not just boredom with ‘boyfriend content’. The internet loves a collective villain, and lately that villain is the woman who’s too happy, too partnered, too content,” she said.

“‘Boyfriends are out of style’ sounds like a joke, but it implies that women who find good men are somehow betraying the rest.

“That’s the crab-in-a-bucket effect: if one crab tries to climb out, the others pull it back down. The message is, ‘Don’t rise above the collective disappointment’.

“I get the fatigue with performative couple culture, the highlight reels, the matching captions, but punishing people for being in healthy relationships is just another form of self-sabotage.”

She also expressed concerns that this is going too far the other way, and it would be seen as “cringe” to care or share that we have found love.

“We act like love is cringe, but what’s actually cringe is pretending we’re above wanting it,” she said.

“If seeing a woman in love makes you roll your eyes, that’s not about her. That’s about your discomfort with what you’ve stopped believing in.”

Overall, she did say that it was important to have a life outside of your partner and that both people need their own identity, routine, and friends. She said a healthy relationship should look like a Venn diagram.

“Two full circles that overlap, not two halves trying to complete each other. You need your own identity, routines, and friends, as well as that beautiful overlap in the middle, or you end up orbiting someone else’s life,” she said.

Independence doesn’t threaten connection; it protects it. People who maintain their own sense of self tend to have stronger, more sustainable relationships.”

—————

Thoughts?
The first step to making someone a slave is to first convince them that they are impotent. Feminism (a byproduct of nihilism) has convinced some women that the promotion of female supremacy is the means to compensate for the lack of their perceived power, and then call it independence when it's actually promoting dependency.

You can thank Kant, Marx, Bernays, and elements of the CIA among others for their depopulation agenda.
 

Manure Spherian

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Women over age 25 or so SHOULD be embarrassed for having “boyfriends”.
 

Sega Genesis

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Women over age 25 or so SHOULD be embarrassed for having “boyfriends”.
Can you elaborate MS?

How about one boyfriend? At a time. Versus juggling several boyfriends simultaneously.

Or do you not believe in the concept of girlfriend/boyfriend entirely? I read that from you (if memory serves) and it always confused me.

I mean it's not wise to meet and then just get married. People meet and date first right? When in the dating stage, he's my "boyfriend."

If you disagree I'm curious why?
 

pipeman84

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Can you elaborate MS?

How about one boyfriend? At a time. Versus juggling several boyfriends simultaneously.

Or do you not believe in the concept of girlfriend/boyfriend entirely? I read that from you (if memory serves) and it always confused me.

I mean it's not wise to meet and then just get married. People meet and date first right? When in the dating stage, he's my "boyfriend."

If you disagree I'm curious why?
Since I liked his post, I'll give you my take on it:
Generally speaking, after 25yrs or so, the SMV of a woman is declining rapidly. It's generally accepted that what we call quality women are engaged or married by the time they hit 25.

So when you hear of a say 30yrs old woman talking about her boyfriend it generally means she's either a serial dater or has been in an LTR with the same guy for a long time but he doesn't consider her worthy of marriage. Hence, he's still her boyfriend, not her husband. Either way, it reflects poorly on her.
 

Sega Genesis

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Since I liked his post, I'll give you my take on it:
Generally speaking, after 25yrs or so, the SMV of a woman is declining rapidly. It's generally accepted that what we call quality women are engaged or married by the time they hit 25.

So when you hear of a say 30yrs old woman talking about her boyfriend it generally means she's either a serial dater or has been in an LTR with the same guy for a long time but he doesn't consider her worthy of marriage. Hence, he's still her boyfriend, not her husband. Either way, it reflects poorly on her.
I don't disagree with this^^ but also could be she has been married and/or engaged and/or had several LTRs but she's experienced so much trauma in her life, she's unable to truly bond and therefore emotionally/mentally damaged in some form or fashion and these relationships end.

Such woman probably shouldn't have any boyfriend(s) until she gets her **** together no matter what her age. Plenty of women under the age of 25 who are like this too.

Past trauma is a bytch to kick but I see your point. I don't think it's an "age" thing though (25+ or 30+) a woman can be emotionally damaged from past trauma at any age and as such bad girlfriend/wife material.

Again I do see your point though, thanks.

@Manure Spherian is this what you meant? Again I recall reading a post from you stating you disagree with the entire concept of "boyfriend/girlfriend." And I've always been curious why.
 
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Manure Spherian

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I don't disagree with this^^ but also could be she has been married and/or engaged and/or had several LTRs but she's experienced so much trauma in her life, she's unable to truly bond and therefore emotionally/mentally damaged in some form or fashion and these relationships end.

Such woman probably shouldn't have any boyfriend(s) until she gets her **** together no matter what her age. Plenty of women under the age of 25 who are like this too.

Past trauma is a bytch to kick but I see your point. I don't think it's an "age" thing though (25+ or 30+) a woman can be emotionally damaged from past trauma at any age and as such bad girlfriend/wife material.

Again I do see your point though, thanks.

@Manure Spherian is this what you meant? Again I recall reading a post from you stating you disagree with the entire concept of "boyfriend/girlfriend." And I've always been curious why.
Hey, thanks for the posts. I plan on addressing this again when I can. I also have some sincere questions for you too. I’m short on time now as I’m about to take a Disney vacation for the kiddos with my parents and in-laws. I’ll get back when I can.

For now, I’ll ask one question: what is up with all these traumatized young women so often spoken about online? Why are they traumatized and why are there “plenty” of them? I’m asking partly because I have a daughter.
 

Sega Genesis

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For now, I’ll ask one question: what is up with all these traumatized young women so often spoken about online? Why are they traumatized and why are there “plenty” of them? I’m asking partly because I have a daughter.
Past family trauma, usually one dysfunctional parent or both. Narcissistic, abusive whatever.

I'm sure there are other reasons too though.

I had a great dad, he was there and spent time with us as much as he could and listened. Listening is important.

My mom not so much sadly since she was my primary caregiver.

Even as adults (20+) these earlier experiences can stay with you and issues typically surface once you get into a close intimate relationship.

If you haven't addressed the earlier trauma properly through therapy (or effectively on your own through other means), the relationship will/may typically fall apart in due course.

True for men too, this isn't a gender issue but since this is a men's forum, women's dysfunction is typically highlighted
 
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“The 22 Rules That Turned Me From Invisible to Irresistible With Women… Starting Tonight”

You can skip the expensive cars, the fancy clothes, and the endless gym selfies. Completely unnecessary.

I used to freeze the second a beautiful woman looked my way. Frustrated. Awkward. Watching other guys walk away with the girl while I stood there tongue-tied.

Then I discovered 22 simple rules that rewired my entire dating life. The anxiety vanished. Conversations flowed effortlessly. Women started chasing me for a change.

These rules trigger a woman's subconscious attraction switches. And you can start using them tonight.

Read more...

Bokanovsky

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It’s the question on everyone’s lips, thanks to Chanté Joseph’s British Vogue article, where she digs into the fact than women are posting their partners on social media less than ever before.

The article claims that we have gone from a culture obsessed with the boyfriend status symbol — with names in Instagram bios and carousels dedicated to loved-up pictures — to, if they’re lucky, a man’s elbow being featured in a story that expires in 24 hours.

“To me, it feels like the result of women wanting to straddle two worlds: one where they can receive the social benefits of having a partner, but also not appear so boyfriend-obsessed that they come across as quite culturally loser-ish,” Ms. Joseph wrote.
The sheer moronic stupidity encapsulated by the above word salad is almost too enormous to comprehend.

The world in 2025 is a very odd place. One the one hand, you've got instagram and Tik Tok-addicted amoebas like the author of that article. On the other hand, you have adherents of medieval cultural practices such as the Taliban, ISIS and Boko Haram. All of them somehow occupy the same time and space in a universe where national borders are quickly becoming hypothetical. It's not hard to imagine what's going to happen when the forces that keep those two worlds from colliding head on finally give way. The amoebas won't know what hit them.
 
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