S/O - Why does DCUM hate this kind of woman so much?

Anonymous
The only kind of person DCUM hates is men.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This site is full of hypocrisy OP, I've stopped trying to make sense of it. There are posts after posts about how evil men are and misogyny and yet there are posts after posts of women being vile to each other.

The people who judge someone because of how they dress or what they look like are insecure nitwits. For whatever reason, the stereotypical wealthy soccer mom seems to set people off the most. I mean just look at 1622, it's still a dig at people who wear a tennis bracelet and pp is trying to be all "I'm not like other girls".

I have no dog in this fight. I don't own any of the things mentioned. I just find it ridiculous how grown adult women behave on this site.


It's not hypocrisy. It's just different people posting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not that it matters, but I wouldn’t recognize the bracelet and necklace mentioned in the post.


Me either. I still don't understand what a tennis bracelet is. I played tennis and took off my watch when I played - can't imagine wearing any sort of fancy bracelet!


Because Chris Evert liked to play tennis wearing a diamond bracelet, which she once lost during a match.

https://www.borsheims.com/blog/what-is-a-tennis-bracelet/


Thank you!
Anonymous
I don’t mind and I genuinely like some designer pieces, but I confess I don’t understand a lot of label-obvious pieces, like a sweatshirt that says “GIVENCHY,” or a tote that has the two huge Chanel interlocking Cs.

I think that Van Cleef Alhambra earrings are objectively pretty, for example, even though they are obviously from a designer label. Whereas interlocking Chanel C earrings just…aren’t beautiful. I enjoy beauty for beauty’s sake, whether it is a Tiffany silver cuff or a no-name silver cuff.

A lot of times I wonder, why the label and not just something pretty? Who is impressed by a sweatshirt or a baseball cap that has a designer logo?
Anonymous
I don't hate her at all. I posted in that thread in support of her.

Like I think I said there, women like that look good. Maybe not great. But they look good -- put together. Not everyone needs to set the world ablaze with cutting edge style.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Because the women who wear “the uniform” are oftentimes also the ones who judge the ones who don’t. It starts in middle school and never ends.

Clothing, accessories, cars - they are all chosen to send a certain message about how much social capital one has or wants to have.


Yep. This
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:For me it’s a childhood thing. This is the kind of girl and woman that my mom always wanted me to be, and I could never really pull it off.
People act like this is easy, but it’s kind of hard to pull off. Your hair has to be expensively, tastefully, and recently highlighted, and your lulu pants have to hit at the right place on your ankle over the right kind of shoes. If you don’t do it right, you look like a cheap knock-off.

I don’t know that it’s jealousy, although it definitely was when I was a teenager. It’s more like I spent a lot of formative years consciously deciding that this isn’t someone that I really want to be, and it’s hard to reevaluate as an adult.



I think you are touching on something here, but then pulling back from it.

OP's question was why do y'all hate this women. I think it's because women "spent a lot of formative years consciously deciding that this isn't someone" I CAN be. Not necessarily "this isn't someone that I really want to be." Women tell themselves the latter, and then the jealousy comes boiling out and to save their own ego they have to twist themselves up like this and say things like "I don't know that it's jealousy" ... when deep down they know it is.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:ETA - I posted this in Relationships because I would also love to get a male perspective.
Male here, since you asked. Cartier bangles and van clef necklace, WTF is that ? I don’t even look at hair, it’s all about T&A. That’s all any hetro man is thinking about. And if your wearing LuLu, better not be fat.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This site is full of hypocrisy OP, I've stopped trying to make sense of it. There are posts after posts about how evil men are and misogyny and yet there are posts after posts of women being vile to each other.

The people who judge someone because of how they dress or what they look like are insecure nitwits. For whatever reason, the stereotypical wealthy soccer mom seems to set people off the most. I mean just look at 1622, it's still a dig at people who wear a tennis bracelet and pp is trying to be all "I'm not like other girls".

I have no dog in this fight. I don't own any of the things mentioned. I just find it ridiculous how grown adult women behave on this site.


I'm the PP above you, and I don't disagree with any of this. I just believe it is understandable.

I'm myself "not like other girls," but that's not a cool thing. I'm socially awkward, probably ASD adjacent, have very niche skills, and built a life for myself around work and specific interests. It's fine. I like it. It works for me, but it's not cool or enviable. It's just the space where I can do best for myself -- I couldn't climb that particular ladder if I dedicated my life to it.


Pp here. It sounds like you're comfortable with who you are and that's great. But do you judge the women who do wear designer things and are outgoing and bubbly and the things that you say you're not? Do you assume they are trying to climb a particular ladder or that they are shallow or vein? Or do you just figure that they, like you , are just being themselves and who they want to be. I'm not talking personality wise, I'm just talking first impressions when you see someone like that in a group setting. I think that's the difference between you who just owns that you're not like them and the pp who is all "lol I don't even KNOW what a tennis bracelet is. I play sports! I'm not like those vapid women!".
Anonymous
I wear a tennis bracelet and people comment on it. Lol, it's from Amazon. Given what else I wear, no one would ever guess.

I bought it to wear to see if I really wanted a real one, but I got used to it and like it so I'm just going to keep wearing it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t mind and I genuinely like some designer pieces, but I confess I don’t understand a lot of label-obvious pieces, like a sweatshirt that says “GIVENCHY,” or a tote that has the two huge Chanel interlocking Cs.

I think that Van Cleef Alhambra earrings are objectively pretty, for example, even though they are obviously from a designer label. Whereas interlocking Chanel C earrings just…aren’t beautiful. I enjoy beauty for beauty’s sake, whether it is a Tiffany silver cuff or a no-name silver cuff.

A lot of times I wonder, why the label and not just something pretty? Who is impressed by a sweatshirt or a baseball cap that has a designer logo?


You "don't understand"? Or you are contemptuous of it? I doubt you truly "don't understand" the appeal of a Givenchy sweatshirt. You just feel the need to put yourself above it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:ETA - I posted this in Relationships because I would also love to get a male perspective.
Male here, since you asked. Cartier bangles and van clef necklace, WTF is that ? I don’t even look at hair, it’s all about T&A. That’s all any hetro man is thinking about. And if your wearing LuLu, better not be fat.

T, A and narrow, flat waist.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:For me it’s a childhood thing. This is the kind of girl and woman that my mom always wanted me to be, and I could never really pull it off.
People act like this is easy, but it’s kind of hard to pull off. Your hair has to be expensively, tastefully, and recently highlighted, and your lulu pants have to hit at the right place on your ankle over the right kind of shoes. If you don’t do it right, you look like a cheap knock-off.

I don’t know that it’s jealousy, although it definitely was when I was a teenager. It’s more like I spent a lot of formative years consciously deciding that this isn’t someone that I really want to be, and it’s hard to reevaluate as an adult.



I think you are touching on something here, but then pulling back from it.

OP's question was why do y'all hate this women. I think it's because women "spent a lot of formative years consciously deciding that this isn't someone" I CAN be. Not necessarily "this isn't someone that I really want to be." Women tell themselves the latter, and then the jealousy comes boiling out and to save their own ego they have to twist themselves up like this and say things like "I don't know that it's jealousy" ... when deep down they know it is.


I'm pretty sure you want it to be jealousy, PP.
Anonymous
People like to put other people in boxes. Especially women.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This site is full of hypocrisy OP, I've stopped trying to make sense of it. There are posts after posts about how evil men are and misogyny and yet there are posts after posts of women being vile to each other.

The people who judge someone because of how they dress or what they look like are insecure nitwits. For whatever reason, the stereotypical wealthy soccer mom seems to set people off the most. I mean just look at 1622, it's still a dig at people who wear a tennis bracelet and pp is trying to be all "I'm not like other girls".

I have no dog in this fight. I don't own any of the things mentioned. I just find it ridiculous how grown adult women behave on this site.


I'm the PP above you, and I don't disagree with any of this. I just believe it is understandable.

I'm myself "not like other girls," but that's not a cool thing. I'm socially awkward, probably ASD adjacent, have very niche skills, and built a life for myself around work and specific interests. It's fine. I like it. It works for me, but it's not cool or enviable. It's just the space where I can do best for myself -- I couldn't climb that particular ladder if I dedicated my life to it.


Pp here. It sounds like you're comfortable with who you are and that's great. But do you judge the women who do wear designer things and are outgoing and bubbly and the things that you say you're not? [1] Do you assume they are trying to climb a particular ladder or that they are shallow or vein? [2] Or do you just figure that they, like you , are just being themselves and who they want to be. I'm not talking personality wise, I'm just talking first impressions when you see someone like that in a group setting. I think that's the difference between you who just owns that you're not like them and the pp who is all "lol I don't even KNOW what a tennis bracelet is. I play sports! I'm not like those vapid women!".


1. I don't think so. I *do* very vividly remember (and with much affection) the beautiful former cheerleader I spent a month of call shifts with in the ER as medical students. She was hilarious, and kind, and sharp as a tack. I wasn't as secure in myself back then and assumed she wouldn't vibe with me, but we got on like a house afire. Since then, I think I make a lot fewer assumptions.

2. Here is where we may part. If you do this look well, it really is work (as another PP said). It's commitment. I think that has to say you value knowing and abiding by the (mostly unspoken) rules if you do it well, and I'm not sure that doesn't say something about you. It may not say anything bd, but it does speak to what you value, and what you are willing to give up for it. That doesn't mean we can't be friends, but I'm pretty sure the odds are lower.

But no, I'm not going to go with shallow or vain necessarily -- I've known plenty of women who felt they had to do these things very well in order not to be judged and to fit in. Frankly, I'm not likely the friend you want if you want to fit into that schema enough to try that hard -- I would not be an asset. And that's okay. We are doing different things. But that sort of judgment? yes, it is there for me, for what it's worth.
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: