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-   -   How come single men fall for emtional games from single women but not married ones? (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=57256)

  • Jan 27, 2007, 10:49 AM
    Allheart
    Chuff,

    Feels odd for me to say I disagree with you about your own experiences. That doesn't seem quite right does it? Now, if you dated 150 woman (you haven't have you? :) ). And this was your overall take, I would not even form a word to disagree with you.

    I will assume you have not dated 150 women. Chuff, could it be, possible, when dating, or when you are interested in a women, it is a certain type of women, that catches your eye? Perhaps you are not finding or gravitating to the type of women that does indeed like a sensitive caring guy.

    I have 4 sisters and each of us just loved that type of guy and really did not like the standoffish type at all. How can you hold a conversation with someone who is standoffish.

    Chuff, is it possible you gravitate to the types of girls who do not like the sensitive type. Or am I way off base here?
  • Jan 27, 2007, 11:11 AM
    chuff
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Allheart
    Chuff,

    Feels odd for me to say I disagree with you about your own experiences. That doesn't seem quite right does it? Now, if you dated 150 woman (you haven't have you? :) ). And this was your overall take, I would not even form a word to disagree with you.

    I will assume you have not dated 150 women. Chuff, could it be, possible, when dating, or when you are interested in a women, it is a certain type of women, that catches your eye? Perhaps you are not finding or gravitating to the type of women that does indeed like a sensitive caring guy.

    I have 4 sisters and each of us just loved that type of guy and really did not like the standoffish type at all. How can you hold a conversation with someone who is standoffish.

    Chuff, is it possible you gravitate to the types of girls who do not like the sensitive type. Or am I way off base here?


    Well the problem with that is I am not just describing myself but what I have seen with my friends both male and female. Because I'm a big guy I've been working in clubs before I could legally do it and now manage a bar and I see it repeated all the time. Now granted the people I see for the most part not church goers but I constantly hear from women, "I want a nice guy that is in touch with his emotions." Yet I see who they go out with and I know they are going to wind up used in the end but they don't seem to see it. And I always think to myself, "Who you say you want, and who you go for are two seperate people." The funny thing is no matter how much a guy is known as a jerk or has a reputation as someone that can't be trusted around women, there is always a large number of them that flock to him.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 11:19 AM
    chuff
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Geoffersonairplane
    This is going to sound really daft now but sometimes I wish I did not care so much and I did not have my emotional self awareness so as to avoid getting hurt. Yet I am proud of this because deep down I know that this is a really good thing. You should never change anything like that, neither could you..

    Its all about being true to yourself and others!

    Sorry for being random again..LOL>>need a coffee:)

    Well I probably sound daft because I don't know what daft mean! LOL.

    As an emotional male I understand 100% completely what you mean. But at the end of the day I think (at least I want to think) it does mean we are more in touch with who we really are as opposed to others who are not sure what to feel.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 11:24 AM
    Allheart
    Chuff,

    I'm not saying your wrong because, of course you are not. You have seen it. But look where. A bar. Sad to say, but sometimes, that goes hand in hand. Don't you think?

    I am sure you have seen it outside the bar atmosphere as well, but yes, it will be all over the bar scene.

    And you are right, if there is one creep, there are 20 girls who are after him. Don't ask me why that is. But I was never one of the 20. Nor where a lot of other girls. Just don't get discouraged or change who you are, you either Geoff, and Chuff, I doubt you will and your friends shouldn't either. There are incredible girls out there, that value the very things you fine gentlemen have. That's the Allheart truth.

    You just have to keep those eyes open and really listen to what they are saying. Not so much what they are looking for in a guy, but other parts of their conversation can be very telling. Is it always something that centers around them??

    The bar scene, can be a lot of fun and a place to really unwind, but it should only be a small contributing factor to how you view the mindset of women and men.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 11:36 AM
    chuff
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Allheart
    Chuff,

    I'm not saying your wrong becuase, of course you are not. You have seen it. But look where. A bar. Sad to say, but sometimes, that goes hand in hand. Don't you think?

    I am sure you have seen it outside the bar atmosphere as well, but yes, it will be all over the bar scene.

    But that's just it. I saw this in college. I see this with my friends who don't work in a bar. I see this in my with my hotel empolyees. I've seen this with other jobs I've held. I've seen this in society. I see it with celebrities. I see it in the news. I see this everywhere.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 11:46 AM
    Allheart
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by chuff
    But that's just it. I saw this in college. I see this with my friends who don't work in a bar. I see this in my with my hotel empolyees. I've seen this with other jobs I've held. I've seen this in society. I see it with celebrities. I see it in the news. I see this everywhere.


    And I believe you Chuff, I truly do. Perhaps I have been out of that part of the world for so long, I truly have lost touched. That is very sad and these girls need to wake up. Times must have really changed. I wouldn't go by the celebrity thing though, that's just a shallow life style anyway. There's nothing to real about there to begin with. Six month relationships in Hollywood is an eternity.

    I honestly don't know what to say. For all the tears I saw shed from my sisters, to my friends, and to think someone would turn away from a caring guy, is hard for me to understand. In my sisters case and friends case, we thought they WERE a good guy, only to find out just the opposite. The guys would come off as caring, loving, sensitive and attentive and then BAM, the other and real side would come out. That is mostly what I would see.

    Let's hope for better days ahead.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 12:40 PM
    LBP
    I've never cheated on or lied to a woman. I've never done anything other than be myself. I'm a good looking, driven, confident and charming person. I am also passionate and, for the most part, emotionally available. I've got a lot of pride in myself, but it's tempered by self-awareness... I try not to become too wrapped in myself and always leave my thoughts open to the influence of others.

    I've never been dumped for acting like a jerk, though heck knows that I do that from time to time. I have, however, been dumped for giving a girl what she wants and supporting her through the tought times. I remember my ex, as a matter of fact, in citing our problems as saying that 'we're probably too honest with each other.'

    Honest to goodness quote. I've heard women say the same thing you're saying, Allheart, and the difference between you and them is that where you would appear to have acted on your thoughts, when put on the spot, the women I'm talking about CANNOT COME UP WITH A SINGLE INSTANCE WHERE THEY WENT AFTER AND WERE SATISFIED BY THE EMOTIONAL GUY. It's amazing. Not one damn time.

    Why is this? Women really want this alleged 'available man' yet can't seem to come across one in the enteriety of existence? I know they exist. This board is full of them! And what's our uniting characteristic? We all got DUMPED.

    I want to give women the love and respect they deserve. I really do. It makes me sick to my stomach to see men do what they to women. But maybe those guys just know something I don't. Certainly gets them to second base a lot more often.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 01:06 PM
    chuff
    LBP are you Geoff, and I triplets separated at birth? This is exactly what I'm thinking and your quote was so close to home.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    I've never cheated on or lied to a woman. I've never done anything other than be myself. I'm a good looking, driven, confident and charming person. I am also passionate and, for the most part, emotionally available. I've got a lot of pride in myself, but it's tempered by self-awareness... I try not to become too wrapped in myself and always leave my thoughts open to the influence of others.

    I've never been dumped for acting like a jerk, though heck knows that I do that from time to time. I have, however, been dumped for giving a girl what she wants and supporting her through the tought times.

    Exactly. I've been there. You help them through a tough time and then you find yourself kicked to the curb. I guess that's what being a doormat is but as a male we would think that a woman would like a guy that can help them through emotional times as opposed to just say "leave me alone, I don't have time for you."

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    I remember my ex, as a matter of fact, in citing our problems as saying that 'we're probably too honest with each other.'

    This is so unbelievable. I'm almost at a loss. Because believe it or not I actually heard something very similar once. The quote I was given was "We probably got too close to each other and if we hadn't things would have worked out." I was shocked when I heard that. That makes no sense.

    I will admit looking back that there was not an arua of mystery but I guess when you don't hide who you are you expect to be appreciated for your honesty and not scolded for it. When I read you quote LBP that sent me back years to her saying that.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    Honest to goodness quote. I've heard women say the exact same thing you're saying, Allheart, and the difference between you and them is that where you would appear to have acted on your thoughts, when put on the spot, the women I'm talking about CANNOT COME UP WITH A SINGLE INSTANCE WHERE THEY WENT AFTER AND WERE SATISFIED BY THE EMOTIONAL GUY.

    Exactly. They say it verbally but they don't back it up with action.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    It's amazing. Not one damn time.

    Why is this? Women really want this alleged 'available man' yet can't seem to come across one in the enteriety of existance? I know they exist. This board is full of them!

    It is. And you see it all the time from guys that get dumped by a woman who leaves him for another guy that is a complete self obsessed a**hole. Then 6 month later those same woman complain that guys just want one thing and can't be trusted. That's true of some guys yes, but I'm going to go on record and say that is not of MOST men.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    And what's our uniting characteristic? We all got DUMPED.

    And in some cases such as myself spent a lifetime getting dumped for the most part. I've end some relationships but not because I found someone else.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    I want to give women the love and respect they deserve. I really do. It makes me sick to my stomach to see men do what they to women. But maybe those guys just know something I don't. Certainly gets them to second base a lot more often.

    Even after the girls get abused and used by these guys they hate all men but if the guy calls them back up many women will they jump right back in. That's not to say guys won't either, but they won't do it with a married woman like a woman would with a married man.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 01:38 PM
    valinors_sorrow
    I have been giving this more thought too as its really an intriguing question. Since married men and women cheat at about the same percentages, do the women tend to cheat with married men more and do the men tend to cheat with single women more? I wonder...

    I know that while I have never cheated, wouldn't even entertain the idea for three seconds--- the only time I was involved with a married man was when it had begun before he told me he was married. A ring on his hand would have helped, as someone pointed out earlier.

    As for the emotional man thing, I have to say that I think we (men and women) are not so different save what is put on us culturlally. Oh yeah there are some minor but significant biological differences I know, and I won't go into them now LOL. But the idea that a man can't be emotional is just hogwash! And the girls who support that profile are immature and worse, shallow.

    Since I have never been one to buy into the conventional notion of anything, it moved me greatly the first time (of quite a few times now) that I saw my strong, very masculine partner cry. He is as emotional as I am rational -- we both blew up conventional roles like that a long time ago. We made mincement out of that "Men are from Mars and women are from Venus" book and loved doing it LOL. But it took me a long time to find my match in this culture and we both had to fail at first marriages too. So maybe its more a matter of how much does one buy into the prescribed notions of who you are "supposed" to be according to the culture... shrugs?

    I think a lot of what you are talking about Chuff has to do with age and maturity. Women in their 20's are very different than women in their 30's as are women in their 40's and so on. I don't think, at least in the US, that many women are very emotionally mature as adults but this goes to how the culture has rather supported that too. Too much "Paris Hilton" allure has allowed too many girls to hang onto the shallow bratty side of adolescence well into adulthood, ugh!
  • Jan 27, 2007, 01:54 PM
    LBP
    Kudos to you, Valinor - you seem like a very together person. But consider - would so many of us men have so many similar stories if there weren't a little truth to it? I mean, it's almost comical how our experiences mirror each other's!
  • Jan 27, 2007, 01:59 PM
    Geoffersonairplane
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by chuff
    LBP are you Geoff, and I triplets seperated at birth? This is exactly what what I'm thinking and your quote was so close to home.

    Perhaps Quadruplets because we forgot Skell.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by valinors_sorrow
    I have been giving this more thought too as its really an intriguing question. Since married men and women cheat at about the same percentages, do the women tend to cheat with married men more and do the men tend to cheat with single women more? I wonder...

    If I had to place a bet on it, then I would place it on the Married men cheating with single women more rather than the married woman cheating with the single man but then I really don't know.

    I do agree with something Wildcat quite often says and that is, people want what they can't have.

    And I also agree with what val says about men and women not being that much different emotional creatures. I just think that women are usually better at dealing with and expressing their emotions than men are yet I also believe that it has a lot to do with age too.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:05 PM
    valinors_sorrow
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    Kudos to you, Valinor - you seem like a very together person. But consider - would so many of us men have so many similar stories if there weren't a little truth to it? I mean, it's almost comical how our experiences mirror each other's!

    Oh no, I was agreeing with you more than it may have sounded like. Its just, I think its source is more cultural than biological, that's all. There is a lot of common ground -- look at the opera Carmen (about a manipulative girl who takes a love-struck man down the proverbial path to tragedy).
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:06 PM
    Allheart
    LBP and Chuff and Geoff,

    I have to say the one thing that just blew me away on this site was, just what you are saying, seeing the amount of guys on here who are truly hurting over a girl ending the relationship. I still am in amazement. LBP, tell me she really didn't say that. You are too honest with each other?? I can see your frustration.

    I don't know what to say to the 3 of you. Each of you deserve the greatest of girls, who can truly appreciate the men that you truly are. Please don't change who you are, because of past and current hurts or those of your friends.

    I will tell you this, the more the guy would open up to me, the closer I felt to him and in my hubby's case, the more I found myself falling in love with him and it showed that he truly trusted me.

    There has got to be girls out there, who not only say they want a sensitive caring guy, but actually proves it in her actions. There just has to be.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:07 PM
    Nosnosna
    This feels to me like a rehash of the old "Why do girls only date the jerks and not the nice guys?" discussion.

    Women out there do appreciate the emotionally available men. Not all of them, of course, but a lot do. One thing you have to remember, though, is that 'emotionally available' means different things to different people... some women may simply want empathy, while others may want a fully open and (if you'll pardon the expression) 'womanish' emotional awareness in their men. If your definition and theirs are too different, then she'll see you as either a wuss or a jerk, and you'll see her as a hypocrite or unreasonable, when it really just comes down to a simple misunderstanding.

    Success in a relationship includes tempering yourself for the needs of your partner... simply being emotionally available isn't enough if it's not the right kind of emotionally available.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:17 PM
    valinors_sorrow
    In 1970's, when I first encountered Women's Liberation I wrote an essay article about how, if we don't correspondingly raise the conscienceness of men, we will only compound our troubles by widening the gap between the genders, that men have equally as restraining conditions being put on them. And it was sadly too radical of a view for even the underground paper on campus, sheesh! I know I sound like an aging hippy but that's because I am, dammit Janet! LOL

    I may make my "liberated" sisters annoyed with this remark but... the number of children being raised by single mothers is making it very difficult, I think. Single mothers aren't as capable of raising boys to men like men are. And where you really see the damage is correspondingly, the girls have expectations about guys that are out of line with reality. So here we are now in a culture where we are encouraged to distance ourselves from our emotions as much as possible, and at such an expense too, oy!
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:21 PM
    Geoffersonairplane
    I think society is changing and it is becoming more socially acceptable to express oneself.

    Or is that just my idealist side surfacing? Yet it seems many people feel an obligation to project themselves in a way that is socially acceptable when common sense would say that just being yourself is the best thing that you could be.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:21 PM
    LBP
    Allow me to illustrate my point.

    I live with three room mates, all men. We get along because we're of a similar sort of temperament. We're all honest, sensitive, caring guys who are for the most part physically attractive. Not one of us would ever cheat on a woman or lie to her. Out of these four men, we've had maybe a dozen dates over the course of college (most of them by me). I had my girlfriend and another has a girl at the moment (his first in his entire college career) who is over decade older than he is (Geoff, you may be on to something).

    A group of friends live down the way - they, like us, are a group of four men living together. They are not so different from us. Same age, similar education choices. The difference is that these guys could give a crap about what a woman thinks or feels. One has had a girlfriend for four years of college and has cheated on her more times than I can count. She has always come back. Another has dated two women at the same time, on more than one occasion! In fact, all four of them have indiscriminently and with abandon treated women like objects designed for their pleasure. They even joke about it. Needless to say, these men blow me and my roomies utterly out of the water in terms of getting women. What am I suppose to learn from this?

    I mean, you can say that it isn't so as often as you want! You can even say it's cliché to point it out. But I can only judge the world as I see it.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:26 PM
    valinors_sorrow
    Are you aware LBP, that the very same thing could be said from the woman's point of view? The moral of the story seems to be more a case of if you are willing to be a user about it, you'll hook up easier, doesn't matter what gender you are. But if you are going for quality stuff, well, that takes effort... no?

    There are good girls and bad...

    There are good guys and bad...

    And the bad ones always make the good ones doubt themselves, until one gets enough perspective (usually from time passing by) to see how it really works. Sadly by then some of the good and bad will have married and had kids.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 02:33 PM
    Geoffersonairplane
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    What am I suppose to learn from this?

    You can learn that you are a better human being than they probably ever will be and you should be proud of what you are, which I suspect you do.

    I understand that resentment and I see it a lot too..

    Another point is that a lot of younger women in their 20's think that is what they want, only to realise later on in life that really, they want the opposite. I have heard that said a lot by women in their 30's upwards both here and in my own life. In fact, one woman I used to work with was in her early 30's... She told me that she spent all her 20's seeing those types who cheated and lied to her. She even said she had a child with one of them and he did the same. Now she has met a nice, genuine man and married him... She said she has never been happier yet she said rewind her life 10 years or so and she would never have even thought twice about seeing someone like him..
  • Jan 27, 2007, 03:00 PM
    Nosnosna
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    Allow me to illustrate my point.

    I live with three room mates, all men. We get along because we're of a similar sort of temperment. We're all honest, sensitive, caring guys who are for the most part physically attractive. Not one of us would ever cheat on a woman or lie to her. Out of these four men, we've had maybe a dozen dates over the course of college (most of them by me). I had my girlfriend and another has a girl at the moment (his first in his entire college career) who is over decade older than he is (Geoff, you may be on to something).

    A group of friends live down the way - they, like us, are a group of four men living together. They are not so different from us. Same age, similar education choices. The difference is that these guys could give a crap about what a woman thinks or feels. One has had a girlfriend for four years of college and has cheated on her more times than I can count. She has always come back. Another has dated two women at the same time, on more than one occasion! In fact, all four of them have indiscriminently and with abandon treated women like objects designed for their pleasure. They even joke about it. Needless to say, these men blow me and my roomies utterly out of the water in terms of getting women. What am I suppose to learn from this?

    I mean, you can say that it isn't so as often as you want! You can even say it's cliche to point it out. But I can only judge the world as I see it.

    And you envy their success* with women. Would you be happy nailing every piece of tail that you could con back to your place? Probably not. Since you wouldn't be happy doing that, it doesn't make any sense to compare your dating life to one based on doing that. So long as you equate their numbers with success, you've already lost, because you couldn't possibly be happy doing what they're doing. One girl for you is going to be more satisfying than twenty, because you're not just going to hit it and quit it.

    As for me, I've been on all sides of the dating fence... I've been the cheating boyfriend. I've been the one cheated on. I've had purely physical relationships. I've been the one to add emotion to what was supposed to be a purely physical relationship. I've been the nice guy lamenting that all the girls date jerks. I've been the jerk getting too many girls. I've had sex with someone whose last name I still don't know. I've been a borderline stalker. I've been obsessed, and obsessed over.

    Currently, I'm single, and have been for two years... I've had one pseudo-date and one sexual encounter with a friend in that time, and you know what? I'm happy with that. The biggest thing I've learned from all the stuff I've done is that the only person who has anything to do with me being happy is me... I don't need to live up to what anybody else is doing in their life, and I don't have to worry about any standards other than my own. Comparing yourself to someone else's standards is just going to make you miserable, because you're simply not them.

    * - Success on their terms anyway, and since it's an issue for you, it seems that you see some value in that measure of success
  • Jan 27, 2007, 03:11 PM
    valinors_sorrow
    This is what I think successful growing up into some healthy emotional maturity sounds like:

    "I don't need to live up to what anybody else is doing in their life, and I don't have to worry about any standards other than my own."

    I'd lay some brownie (or perhaps greenie) points on you but I got the gull derned spread message again, Nos.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 03:13 PM
    Nosnosna
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by valinors_sorrow
    This is what I think successful growing up into some healthy emotional maturity sounds like:

    "I don't need to live up to what anybody else is doing in their life, and I don't have to worry about any standards other than my own."

    I'd lay some brownie (or perhaps greenie) points on you but I got the gull derned spread message again, Nos.

    I guess I should wait longer between posting useful messages :D

    It always feels strange to respond to the same post twice, but it's for a different reason this time.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    Allow me to illustrate my point.

    I live with three room mates, all men. We get along because we're of a similar sort of temperment. We're all honest, sensitive, caring guys who are for the most part physically attractive. Not one of us would ever cheat on a woman or lie to her. Out of these four men, we've had maybe a dozen dates over the course of college (most of them by me). I had my girlfriend and another has a girl at the moment (his first in his entire college career) who is over decade older than he is (Geoff, you may be on to something).

    A group of friends live down the way - they, like us, are a group of four men living together. They are not so different from us. Same age, similar education choices. The difference is that these guys could give a crap about what a woman thinks or feels. One has had a girlfriend for four years of college and has cheated on her more times than I can count. She has always come back. Another has dated two women at the same time, on more than one occasion! In fact, all four of them have indiscriminently and with abandon treated women like objects designed for their pleasure. They even joke about it. Needless to say, these men blow me and my roomies utterly out of the water in terms of getting women. What am I suppose to learn from this?

    I mean, you can say that it isn't so as often as you want! You can even say it's cliche to point it out. But I can only judge the world as I see it.

    "Spreading it around" brought to mind a couple of thoughts on some advice for the immediate situation, namely... spread yourselves around a bit.

    Engage in a bit of 'disposable dating.' (a terrible sounding term, but disturbingly apt) Go out with a girl, any girl, without any thoughts of a next date or what might/will happen in the future. Have fun with it (not at her expense, obviously), and if no second date materializes, don't worry about it... that wasn't the point of the exercise. This will get you an appreciation for another side of dating than the one you see now... remember that there's no approach to dating that is completely 100% wrong, and that there's always something that you can use to help your normal approach.

    This will also help counter a couple of the tendencies that I know I had when I was where you are now:
    1) Becoming emotionally invested in a relationship immediately, rather than having it develop over time. This issue leads to being overly bitter about the end of a short relationship.
    2) Becoming emotionally invested while working up the nerve to ask a girl out, also known as falling in love with the idea of a girl rather than the girl herself. This leads to obsession, and increased difficulty in getting up the nerve to ask her out for fear of rejection, and soon you're in a really bad place.
  • Jan 27, 2007, 04:34 PM
    LBP
    I hear what you're saying and I know I'm living in extremes at the moment. It just seems like there's this wall of deception out there that no matter how much you don't like it you'll have to work with in order to make things work. Like the social gaming that I mentioned before.

    I like your points, Nosnosna. But it does happen, to both men and women, that a partner will encourage you to invest yourself emotionally and then do a complete 180. The ex I'm referring to, for example, even went so far as to talk to me about apartments where we might live in New York City, told me that I was her other half, etc etc. I'm sure you know the sort of thing I'm talking about. Then, nothing! I mean, what do you do when that happens?

    Not let it get to that point, I suppose. Hold yourself in reserve. I thought a matter of months would be suffecient, but I think a year or more sounds far more appropriate. Well, in any event, I've really enjoyed this discussion and it's certainly given me a lot to think about if nothing else. Thanks a lot, all of you!
  • Jan 28, 2007, 06:09 AM
    valinors_sorrow
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Nosnosna
    Engage in a bit of 'disposable dating.' (a terrible sounding term, but disturbingly apt) Go out with a girl, any girl, without any thoughts of a next date or what might/will happen in the future. Have fun with it (not at her expense, obviously), and if no second date materializes, don't worry about it... that wasn't the point of the exercise.

    I really like this idea even if I am not sure I like the terms used LOL. In fact, I use this very same approach when looking for a job. I apply at places I have very little intention of hiring into so I can get in some "practice" interviewing. It really helps me polish up my approach. Life does allow a little "dress rehersal" if you are creative enough! :p

    I do hear LBP's legit complaint. The lines between fantasy and reality have been seriously blurred and culturally we have justified more and more selfishness and dishonesty. When enough people begin to operate out of a kind of jadedness and defend themselves by putting on an act (which is essentially lying), the genuine and nice people feel like they get left holding the bag. I grew up in a seriously dysfunctional family of amazing liars who don't really know they lie LOL. They taught me to develop discernment with people, among other things. My brother has been married seven times, I am not kidding -- he and his ex's could easily be several Oprah or Dr Phil shows in themselves! So I know, for me, how to be much slower to believe everything people say. I like to let time, their actions and their friends/family confirm how truthful they are being with me.

    These days, too many people are in denial too (denial = don't even notice I am lying). I like to think I have a kind of healthy skepticism without cynicism to it. I know I am genuine but the rest of you will just have to prove it. Its called the "we'll see" approach and I recommend it to anyone, especially those who are dating. S-l-o-o-o-o-o-o-w down.. . Because lies do not endure the test of time!

    And you're welcome LBP, it was a good question!
  • Jan 28, 2007, 06:35 AM
    Nosnosna
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LBP
    I hear what you're saying and I know I'm living in extremes at the moment. It just seems like there's this wall of deception out there that no matter how much you don't like it you'll have to work with in order to make things work. Like the social gaming that I mentioned before.

    I like your points, Nosnosna. But it does happen, to both men and women, that a partner will encourage you to invest yourself emotionally and then do a complete 180. The ex I'm refering to, for example, even went so far as to talk to me about apartments where we might live in New York City, told me that I was her other half, etc etc. I'm sure you know the sort of thing I'm talking about. Then, nothing! I mean, what do you do when that happens?

    Not let it get to that point, I suppose. Hold yourself in reserve. I thought a matter of months would be suffecient, but I think a year or more sounds far more appropiate. Well, in any event, I've really enjoyed this discussion and it's certainly given me a lot to think about if nothing else. Thanks a lot, all of you!

    Oh, I've been there, absolutely.

    What do you do when that happens? You get bitter, you doubt yourself, and you hate her. And then after a while you get over it... took me the better part of a year on the big one, and that included a couple of short-term relationships that suffered because they were still in the fallout. Turns out the girl who did that is one of my closest friends now.

    You don't gain anything by holding yourself in reserve... sure, it keeps you from getting hurt, but it also ends up hurting the people you date from then on. You learn from it, absolutely, and you get better at reading signs. Most ugly breakups happen because one person has a gradual cooling of their side of the relationship, which goes unmentioned by them and unnoticed by their partner until it gets to be too extreme to be dealt with rationally. With one of these under your belt (and, more importantly, time to look back nostalgically at the relationship once you've gotten over most of the bitter), you'll be able to better see it coming in the future, and be able to mitigate it somewhat when it does happen.

    ...

    And then you have some partners who are actually manipulative psychos. Unfortunately, no amount of experience will keep you from ever meeting one of them :)
  • Jan 31, 2007, 06:29 AM
    rol
    This is a very interesting thread, Like allheart I am AMAZED to see the amount of nice guys on this board and every day a new one coming with the "i need space" question...

    I am one of those girls who dated jerks throughout most of the 20s..
    After having had a serious relationship from 18-21 (when I look back now he was possibly the most husband material of the whole lot but I was young then so did not know it! ) ,
    Ive been doing a lot of reflecting recently and wondering why I dated so many jerks and actually believed they would lead to a long lasting relationship..!

    In fact I believe its because I was unready to commit myself that unsubconsiously I chose guys who I knew were not ready to commit either..

    So guys maybe this is the whole problem... what kind of girls are you choosing?

    In the late 20s I decided it was time to find a more serious ,Sensitive type of guy.When he told me he loved me after 1 month I nearly fell down as I had not heard that line for more than 8 years!

    Now another thing I've seen recently is that all my female friends are with younger guys. Ive about 5 friends going out with guys up to a decade younger... is this because younger guys want to find a girl to commit and these are the girls who are 30 or more?
    Are younger girls just not ready to commit and that is why they are choosing jerks?
  • Jan 31, 2007, 06:42 AM
    lilkimintraning
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by chuff
    Okay this was brought up in another post by Wildcat. I didn't want to take away from the original poster but this has been on my mind all day and I just want to get some other feedback on it. The OP was a mistress and as WC points out we've been seeing a lot of that here lately. Here's what WC said..



    EXACTLY! Wildcat is dead on correct. But my question is why? It almost seems like it should be the other way around.

    I don't think it's any secret that women are better at reading, using, and applying emotions then men are. Women are emotional and use that to their advantage over men. This board is field with men who get caught up being played by women and there emotional games. I know I myself have been caught more than once. I am also a highly sensitive male.

    Yet I would never get involved with a married woman. Even for me and some of the situations I've been in where I was thinking emotionally and not rationally I realize there is a limit. Marriage is a limit.

    So I guess my question is how can such a large number of women who should be more emotionally aware of a married man's intentions because of their higher acuteness to emotional games and situations get caught up in this problem?

    Then on the flip side, why do men, quite honestly like myself very emotional, and some of the other posters here who are just not as emotional as me but still men. In other words they have no advantage over reading a woman emotionally like a woman can read a man. Why are men not caught up in this situation where the women is cheating and he is blinded so much he can't see what's going on. Because if you look at our male posters, many of them are blinded by a woman's emotional games and even know she's having relations with other guys but they act like the mistresses do. The only difference is their isn't a marriage involved.

    God I hope this makes some kind of sense. In my brain it makes perfect sense, or at least my question does but I'm not sure I'm translating it here well.

    In short my question is why isn't this the other way around, why do emotionally “scarce” men not fall for this and emotionally “intelligent” women do on such a great number?

    U know I'm 17 years old and comeing from me may not mean anything to you but I may be able to answer this one. My mom a few years ago meat some guy over the internet and my mom and dad wear marryed. So I busted my mom and my dad didn't want to beleave me because comeing from a 10 year old doesn't mean nothen so I got into her computer and showed my dad everything because ownestlly I don't like females not because of what my mom did to us. The guy told her he was getting 6 million dollors because he got a one little peace taken out of his finger from work little does the stooped knows its 1 thous for every nuckle well any way It some times happens like that or marryed women are eather not happy with there husbans they could be getting abused or something for men the way I beleave they look at it. They want something new so they cheat or the women is a compleat CRAZY and daserves it. Yea its hard to find someone because I see a few people myself go thew it I'm sorry I can't help with that but. Just stay away from marryed people makes to meny PROBLEMS and you don't want that. AND the thing you ask because GUYS FIND IT SEXY AS THEY WOULD SAY and its kind of odd how that happens. I guess it just they way we are :confused: And its OK to be emoc yourself because it just shows you have a heart and for the women who play good men NEED A NEW BRAIN or something because it makes not sents why should they do it they wouldn't like it done to them. " THERE IMMATURE " they don't know what they want. But for some reson good men finish last I know that sucks but it seems to be the truth
  • Jan 31, 2007, 06:47 AM
    NeedKarma
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rol
    So guys maybe this is the whole problem...what kind of girls are you choosing?

    I dated a lot before getting married at 35. ALL of the women I dated were intelligent and kind. I could not stand dating an airhead who thought her makeup/shoes/purse/cellphone were important status symbols or who want a guy who has the fancy car (my car doesn't define who I am). Plus she had to be kind: kind to others, empathetic, not-self-centered. But above all I can't stand any game-playing as I do not do it to them. In my view the game-playing reveals immaturity.

    At the end of it all I have a great wife, 2 great kids and a nice life. I am putting my wilder side (French Canadian 'joie-de-vivre':)) on hold for a while for the sake of raising our kids.
  • Jan 31, 2007, 06:57 AM
    Geoffersonairplane
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rol
    Are younger girls just not ready to commit and that is why they are choosing jerks?

    I think so... My ex told her family who were upset about the breakup that she was too young to be tied down, that she wished she met me later on in life, that she was too young... Which she was.

    This suggests to me that she knew I was ready for commitment, that I was husband material or at the very least serious relationship material but she was just not ready for all that and neither was I at her age. I think I chose the wrong woman? But maybe not, maybe the right woman at the wrong time. Perhaps it is a question of timing.
  • Jan 31, 2007, 07:03 AM
    rol
    Yeah I think its all just a question of timing and maturity...
    Your ex reminds me a bit of myself at that age... just not ready, I'm sure she will go from jerk to jerk now and in the 30s wake up wondering how did I get here...
  • Jan 31, 2007, 07:22 AM
    Geoffersonairplane
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rol
    yeah i think its all just a question of timing and maturity...
    Your ex reminds me a bit of myself at that age...just not ready, im sure she will go from jerk to jerk now and in the 30s wake up wondering how did i get here.....

    Perhaps young women in their early 20's need to go through some toads to either meet their prince or realise what a prince is...

    I just hope I was not one of the toads>>>LOL
  • Jan 31, 2007, 07:27 AM
    rol
    That's it!
    Eventually she will look back and realise it, but she will also know that she was not ready at that time.
  • Mar 8, 2007, 11:46 PM
    wontbez
    I guess what I'm saying is when it comes to emotions women are better at using them and understanding them then men are. Time and again we see men here on this site and even in life around us that get fixated on a girl and can't let it go. She can dump him and go out with another person and he'd still take her back in a heartbeat. She'd repeat the pattern and keep him always hanging on. Yet most of the time the woman is single.

    However if that situation is reversed and the guy keeps the woman hanging on, many times the guy is married. In other words a woman won't necessarily let marriage stop her from getting involved or really what I mean is EMOTIONALLY wrapped up into him.

    And my point is that despite what popular culture and many women might say about men, we do have feelings and we do get emotional and in reality we have a difficult time letting go or getting out of relationships. But those are primarily with single women. Married women don't give us the same emotional hangups that single women do. However, single women do get caught up by the married man. And since women are "emotionally smarter" then men, to me it would seem that they should not fall for a married mans lies and emotional games like guys would and indeed do with single women.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by chuff
    Just not married women.

    Speak for yourslef, I think a married women can and do string single guys along all the time, especially when it started as just sex but the guy starts falling in love and the women will say anything to make sure the sex doesn't stop. I'm actually going to start a post on that topic.
  • Mar 9, 2007, 12:11 AM
    chuff
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wontbez
    Speak for yourslef, I think a married women can and do string single guys along all the time, especially when it started off as just sex but the guy starts falling in love and the women will say anything to make sure the sex doesn't stop. I'm actually going to start a post on that topic.

    I never said they couldn't. I think if you reread what I wrote you'll see I was speaking for the majority of cases, not every case. The majority of the time that is what takes place. Just because you as a male participated in an affair in which you became emotionally attached doesn't make it "common" or as common as a single woman getting attached to a married man. That is common in society and is a common issue here at this board.
  • Mar 9, 2007, 12:17 AM
    wontbez
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by chuff
    I never said they couldn't. I think if you reread what I wrote you'll see I was speaking for the majority of cases, not every case. The majority of the time that is what takes place. Just because you as a male participated in an affair in which you became emotionally attached doesn't make it "common" or as common as a single woman getting attached to a married man. That is common in society and is a common issue here at this board.

    Guess I was just looking to get into the mindset of a married women who does this to a single guy, sorry if I came across as lashing out at you.
  • Mar 9, 2007, 12:26 AM
    chuff
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wontbez
    Guess I was just looking to get into the mindset of a married women who does this to a single guy, sorry if I came across as lashing out at you.

    Amazingly, you are not the first to lash out at my unique perspective.

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