It might be number 2. Women also find some men good enough to sleep with/have fun with but not be with seriously. Here's the thing, everyone has their own definition of what a 'regular' guy is based on their personal background. To some women, Burger King is a regular guy job. To most of the women on this forum it's not. You are really really not speaking to your audience here. |
| PP at 8:28 again. Also the fact that you haven't picked up on the fact that this is not your audience tells me you are very likely to go for women (not females) "out of your league" for lack of a better term, and not even realize it. |
+1 |
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| Bump |
No, dummy. If their preference is to be with someone who they can actually satisfy and who will appreciate them. Most women on DCUM would be very difficult to satisfy. Posters here casually demonstrate a sense of entitlement that borders on grotesque to people from elsewhere. Why bother with demanding women when you can easily find an equally attractive woman who is less demanding? I understand now why men are "intimidated" by ambitious women. |
OP here , pp you made some good points(lets refrain from name calling thougb).but like you said men are either intimidated or simply dont wanna be bothered by alot of women attitudes now. |
So true. I would add some guys don't want to get married if they feel like they can't financially support a family. Also, when couples do marry one of the top things that causes stress in the relationship has to do with arguments amount money. So basically if you are dating someone with an eye that it has the potential to lead to marriage someday, you would want to have a similar vision of the future. I met someone that he and his wife spent years traveling and earning enough to live, no real careers. Eventually he started a career as a tour guide and they had a young toddler. While that may not have worked for every woman , he found the person that lived life the same way he did and was a partner in that adventure. So really it doesn't matter if salary/income is a deal breaker to most women, if that is where you are at, you have to find the person that is fine with that. My parents argued about money a lot and each wanted the other to do more. It was important to me to find someone that saw family finances the same way I did. |
So, if high-earning women are too entitled and demanding and you don't want to be bothered by their attitudes, it shouldn't bother you at all that they don't want to date you either, right? Why are you even asking this question instead of hitting on the girl who works the fryolator? |
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Being willing to do what it takes to be an equal partner is important to me. If that means being a SAHD who runs the household and budget then great. If that means earing a high or low salary then great.
A guy who was unemployed for a prolonged period of time while we were dating would likely be a non starter for me but it has more to do with what that means than the fact that he isn't rich. I could never sit around doing nothing productive for months and don't think I would be compatible with someone who could |
You can have a great personality but if someone has spent the time and energy and has the drive to become a doctor or attorney, they may question why your efforts have only managed to get you to Burger King. You two likely don't have a lot of common interests either. And, honestly, if you want a doctor or attorney for a wife, then get yourself to a place where a doctor or attorney would consider you as a spouse. |
| I've never met a high-earning, educated man who dated a woman with less than a college education. Ever. Or vice versa. It might be different in the case of a blue-collar man who gets rich owning his own business, but lawyers do not date hot women who work in food service or retail, unless she is still in school. Most people marry someone similar to them in values, tastes, and lifestyle - career and income are wrapped up in the big picture. This is borne out by a number of studies. Like attracts like, even when it comes to similar levels of attractiveness. |
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I earned more than my husband, who was a teacher, but, he was a teacher with a master's degree (which I don't have), not a fast food worker. If we are both in our 30s and I am a professional and you are a fast food worker, yes, I am thinking, this person is not a match for me because while I spent the last 10-15 years building, he has been doing....what? And all the answers I have for that don't bode well for me wanting to date you -- prison, nothing, getting a GED and so on.
But you know all this, you're just hoping someone here will tell you something different. |