You gotta look at prior comments before you assume we are making stuff up. |
Do you think people who violate boundaries go around saying “YES I WANT TO VIOLATE BOUNDARIES AND TAKE YOU FOR GRANTED OK NOW LETS HAVE SEX”? Obviously it happens whether unintentional or not. But a B in this context will not permit it to happen to her. |
Not true |
| I had a college roommate who was like the poster child for that book. In the book she talks about how the guy marries the woman who isn’t particularly nice to him and no one can figure out what he’s doing with her. One of the things it says in this book is figure out what makes the man insecure and then talk about how he’s really bad at that thing and how he really needs your help to get better at it. The roommate in college fastened onto the fact that she was much cooler than the boy she was dating I made a big deal about how he didn’t know how to dress and insisted on buying all his clothes for him. He eventually married her and I wonder if they still have the same dynamic where she puts him down and makes him think that She’s doing him a favor by hanging out with them. |
| She made a big deal, not I made a big deal |
Actually you sound like all three. |
Why so men take this statement so personally? When I say “society” I mean people generally, and that includes men and women. There are studies in this. When a man rejects a woman, that’s a bummer. When a woman rejects a man, she’s called a B. When a man acts assertively, he is called, well, assertive. When a woman acts the exact same way, she is called abrasive, unlikable, whatever euphemism you can think of for B. I hope that if you are partnered, she knows that you said I sound like a B for making an observation about sexism that is backed by plenty of studies and anecdotes. |
Get over yourself |
Hey if you choose to date a man who is unlikeable and abrasive, because say he has money and brings status, that’s your call. But I’m going to avoid women like that. |