Anita18
DANCE FOR ME, FUNNY MAN!
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2005
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You can think of it as a competition, sure. I was attracted to my husband's confidence, competence, and mindfulness, and my husband was attracted to my ambition, steady nature, and intelligence. All good things to have in our future children.We all know compatibability is the most important thing. You've helped a lot of people out here by preaching that (including me). My point is, we need to stop sugar coating the fact that life is a gene war. We are all trying to secure the best possible mate so that our children can be successful. At least that is the woman's mentality more often than not. They desire traits in men that go hand in hand with acquiring resources. This means highly ambitious men that are dedicated to their craft and dominant in their niche. Confidence is a euphemism for the ability to kick the next guy's butt and take his lunch money away for mommy and the kids. You have to be ready to compete at all times. That's the mentality that men simply have to get into if they want success in life. I wish I was told that when I was younger.
Men are irrational in this regard in that they react purely to sexual incentives sometimes almost exclusively. But eventually rationale wins out and you need to go back to finding a reliable mother that can secure your child's welfare.
Average women have the ability to line up average men simply because all those men are responding initially to sexual desires. The woman seeks something beyond that. She can easily lure men in based on those sexual incentives, and quickly weed them out once she gets more information from them. It has nothing to do with whether every woman operates that way. Somewhere there is a mean of your average women incentivizing sex in order to extract information those 'beta followers' divulge at a later date.
But the part where compatibility comes in is that you don't know what a specific individual's "competitive standards" are. A lot of men wouldn't have liked my kind of ambition in a partner, because that means I spend less attention on them. Whereas I find uber-ambition a turn-off, because it's exhausting for me to be around. And my husband doesn't find a lot of feminine grooming-type things to be attractive, because to him, it's far more important that I'm relaxed about myself and not spend hundreds of dollars getting my hair done.
Also, where you and I differ on our approaches is the mindset about competition/adaptability. For me, sheer competitiveness is a turn-off because it implies having a non-adaptable nature and probably a bit of stupidity. That one must win no matter what the context, even if the context has changed (hence the stupidity).
I'm Asian, we were all practically brainwashed from birth that we had to be the best. (Except I'm lucky that my parents were pretty lax about "the best" part...) And you know what I learned? The HS/college valedictorians (or the cheerleaders/jocks, whatever your jam is) are no more successful or happy than anyone else. In fact, a lot of my Asian friends are UNhappy despite their academic credentials. I even have one friend who was pushed so hard going to an Ivy League, she burned out completely and now can't work at all because of chronic pain.
So to me, competitiveness isn't the answer, or even something to strive for. Adaptability is. Being adaptable to one's circumstances, making things work even in a subpar situation, takes an extremely high amount of intelligence. Sheer competitiveness doesn't take any intelligence, only a stubborn nature. Why steal someone else's lunch money and unnecessarily make enemies, if you can find a pot of gold in a place nobody else has looked in?


He is surprisingly domestic and really handy around the house too (which is great, because i'm useless!). We both equally love movies & tv and so can spend entire days binge watching shows together. He scrubs up well when we go to parties or weddings, but he's always got that little spark of mischief in his eyes
