BeExcellent
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2015
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Nah. Its just there for anyone to observe, lol.
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.
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.
Here's what I'd do., but I would like to hear your perspectives first.
Bok did get Ariana Grande in real life, that’s factsNah. Its just there for anyone to observe, lol.
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.
I’ve presented arguments, you’ve replied with personal remarks.Again another attempt to save your ego by demonstrating some sort of "superiority".
Kind of pathetic actually.
Yes, it does. It demonstrates that you are likely a narcissistI’ve presented arguments, you’ve replied with personal remarks.
That difference speaks for itself.
I’m not interested in taking it further.
Using clinical terms you don’t understand isn’t an argument. If you want to engage seriously, bring reasoning instead of labels.Yes, it does. It demonstrates that you are likely a narcissist
"People with NPD want to be recognized as being superior without the necessary achievements that go along with that,” says Newman. A narcissist will routinely overestimate their abilities while simultaneously devaluing the contributions of other people, and they may act surprised when they don’t receive the praise they feel they deserve. Often, if they aren’t reaching the level of success they expect to, they find a way to blame other people or society, but never themselves."Using clinical terms you don’t understand isn’t an argument. If you want to engage seriously, bring reasoning instead of labels.
Copy–pasting a clinical description doesn’t make it applicable to the discussion or to me. If you want to address anything I actually said, do so. Otherwise there’s nothing to respond to."People with NPD want to be recognized as being superior without the necessary achievements that go along with that,” says Newman. A narcissist will routinely overestimate their abilities while simultaneously devaluing the contributions of other people, and they may act surprised when they don’t receive the praise they feel they deserve. Often, if they aren’t reaching the level of success they expect to, they find a way to blame other people or society, but never themselves."
If it sounds like a duck and quacks like a duck, I assume it's a duck.
Literally go reread your first post and the title of this thread and then come back and read this. Nothing more has to be said.Copy–pasting a clinical description doesn’t make it applicable to the discussion or to me. If you want to address anything I actually said, do so. Otherwise there’s nothing to respond to.
I’m clear on what I wrote. If that’s all you have to add, then we’re done. Take care.Literally go reread your first post and the title of this thread and then come back and read this. Nothing more has to be said.
My bad...I thought this was the one where you wanted to show up your professor...go combine that with this oneI’m clear on what I wrote. If that’s all you have to add, then we’re done. Take care.
Believe whatever you like. Take care.My bad...I thought this was the one where you wanted to show up your professor...go combine that with this one
Loud vengeful callout for being disagreed with on an anonymous web forum- tell us more how you’re not a five year old crying inside wrapped in a narcissistic blanket?This forum has a noticeable amount of insecurity, and it becomes clear in the way some discussions unfold. Everyone is free to live how they choose, but a few of the louder voices here seem to be projecting personal experiences onto others as if they were universal truths.
@Divorced w 3 — promoting “staying single” as a life philosophy after your own situation doesn’t provide guidance, it simply reflects your own experiences. Encouraging others to follow the same path is more projection than advice.
@BeExcellent — and your responses so far show we’re operating on different levels of understanding, which is actually useful for me to recognize. The insecurity becomes especially clear whenever topics like status or hierarchy come up — your reactions change immediately (This one applies to everyone here mentioned).
@BackInTheGame78 — your conduct is well known here, and even the moderators seem aware of it. Taking ideas without acknowledgment and then trying to undermine the original person is a familiar tactic. I’m not as unaware as you may assume.
@TaiyuOtaku — the passive-aggressive tone after I challenged one of your statements was noticeable enough without further comment.
The accusations of “bragging” or “narcissism” usually say more about the accuser than the accused. Your reactions made the pattern clear. People who are secure in themselves tend to recognize this dynamic immediately. Those who actually understand the points I’ve made will see the value, I expected more of that.
Rather than projecting personal frustrations onto others, it might be more productive to focus on improving your own situations.
I’ll leave it at that.
What happens, IN HER MIND, is that she comes to see you as WORTHLESS simply because she hasn't had to INVEST anything in you in order to get you or to keep you.
You were an interesting diversion while she had nothing else to do. But now that someone a little more valuable has come along, someone who expects her to treat him very well, she'll have no problem at all dropping you or demoting you to lowly "friendship" status.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
I assure you, no one cares. I have a few degrees. Yea, I'm a physicians assistant, but no one really cares. Most don't like a show off either. You completed the degrees for you and your life, not necessarily to impress other people. Besides, most degrees are worthless these days. Outside of medical, STEM or law, they are a dime a dozen since so many people have them.Lets say you work at a Prestigious Consulting Company like McKinsey and you are pursuing your MBA.
I’m curious how others see it, if you were in that position, would you let people know that you work for McKinsey or keep it to yourself?
I will share my own experience afterward, but I would like to hear your perspectives first.
To add to that, law degrees are only worth much if they are from a top 20 school. If you went to any of the 100 or so other schools, you have to graduate at the top of your class.most degrees are worthless these days. Outside of medical, STEM or law,
In a sense of they respect your Professional experience, but I wouldn't say they dont care. For me it’s similar. I’m in a top-tier MBA program that my consulting firm is sponsoring, and my background includes CFA Level III, LSS Black Belt, and PMP. In my field a CPA isn’t really necessary, so I didn’t pursue it. I think the value of an MBA really depends on the program structure, aspirations, Professors and the Tier can be beneficial sometimes. Modern programs tend to be more updated and include systems and technologies that didn’t exist decades ago and that are essential nowadays, you basically need them. I wouldn’t call an MBA useless, Its really not, at least not for me from what I know, learned and applied.I assure you, no one cares. I have a few degrees. Yea, I'm a physicians assistant, but no one really cares. Most don't like a show off either. You completed the degrees for you and your life, not necessarily to impress other people. Besides, most degrees are worthless these days. Outside of medical, STEM or law, they are a dime a dozen since so many people have them.
Example, I have a total of four degrees, my GF has three, but one is a doctorate. Does that make her more educated or smarter than me? Or, because I have four and she has three, does that mean that I'm smarter or more educated than her? No on both accords.
She has a higher degree, but she is also paying off her student debt, I do not have any. The military paid for my degrees. He salary is 2.5 times my salary, but with my rental properties, I earn four times what she earns.
In the end, degrees mean very little. One could argue, most degrees are worthless. An MBA is worth as much as a degree in underwater basket weaving. Nothing wrong with an MBA, I have one from a very good school (thank you US Military). I've never used it. My GF has one from a very good university in NYC.
Overall, it's nothing special. In the 80's and 90's it was worth more, but not so much any more. If you really want to stand out, go for your CFA, CPA or ChFC. Now, those are designations which will earn you a lot of money and you can show off proudly. Very hard to achieve the 1st and 3rd designation.