It’s not about rich. All these people had advanced degrees from Ivy+, were passionate and ambitious and had already been successful at their chosen paths. So you’re looking at someone who knows how to make their way in the world. Having confidence, talent, education and so on makes it likely that your path in life will take you to interesting places. Often those types of people end up at the top of their respective fields. There are good, well paying jobs at the top of virtually any field. |
Agree! |
Many people don’t. |
What other people may or may not think of us or we of them ,has almost zero value. Most of the inferiority complex dorsnt originates from what we think of ourselves but from how we perceive others see and think of us.
If you like being a couch potato, embrace it, if you like being a fitness freak, embrace it. Judging and not respecting people because y'all aren't on the same page is absolutely pathetic. |
NP here. Just look for the good hair - if the husband's hair is nicer than the wife's hair, then you know the wife is a beard. Even if not - you would be surprised at the role reversals in the bedroom. May also correspond to breadwinner. Or not. Carry on. |
The problem comes from those who grew up in the area, or have come from less metropolitan areas, and they are trying to guess what makes who what - but they have no idea! |
You want to believe what you want to believe. The drop off and pick up at my elite private school says differently. |
I never claimed to be alpha, charismatic, high-earning, or attractive. Or tall, or anything else. So what’s your point? But when OP’s question is what do men want, I do think answering about what status-seeking women want exhibits a certain stupidity that my non-Ivy-League wife without multiple degrees never exhibited. |
Sounds like she at least knows that you like women who keep their mouths shut and know their place. She probably didn’t learn that at school. |
So many irrelevant boomer men on here talking about coeds and secretaries. |
“ I’d consider teaching high school a serious career.”
Best that many midwits can do. 🤷♂️ |
I'm not a HS teacher, and wouldn't and couldn't do it. But teaching high schoolers is challenging and important work. |
exactly! |
Men do NOT care about a woman's job/career in the same way that a woman cares about a mans job/career/social status.
Women, in general, use a mans job/career/social status (either achieved or potential) as a qualifier for entering into a relationship. They do this because the paradigm is that the man is primarily responsible for providing to her (and her children) the standard of living that she desires. A man which she believes is incapable of providing to her that standard of living is not an acceptable partner. Men understand this and we know that women, in general, will not accept being the primary bread winner and we are selected based on our ability to provide and therefore we, in general, do NO select women based on their job/career/social status because that is not their role. This is not "old order" thinking in as much as it is pragmatically what is happening in the marketplace between men and women. This is NOT driven by primarily by men. Rather, women are selecting men based on their success and we understand this so we strive to achieve success at a level which will make us attractive to a woman. Women mistakenly think that if they themselves become successful, in the same way as a man, then men will find them attractive, in the same way women find successful men attractive. In general, this is NOT the case. I know of only 1 man that selected his wife based on her career. He was objectively a 10. He was a gymnast and very well built, but not career oriented. He chose to marry a very overweight woman that was an optometrist. He has never held a job and became overweight himself. It was literally a tradeoff. Her money for his looks (which went away real fast). |
There’s one annoying woman who keeps talking about what men should like and throwing out examples of careers of her friends who objectively aren’t the “big careers” that women care about. Which actually belies the point, men don’t care about careers the same way. I agree that high school teaching is a very important societal job, but women looking to marry up probably won’t date a high school teacher while men would. |