Exactly. Man here. Kindness was the 1st thing I used to look for, so important! Then I looked for sense of humor, her being genuine, intelligence (not necessarily her advanced education), and availability. Easy going, not at extremes politically either side. Responsible financially (notice, I'm not saying rich). Later compatibility in bed which was not rushed. And have the ability to honestly & enthusiastically commit to an exclusive relationship with no desire to revisit past relationships. Did I say she needs to possess kindness? |
Man here, and completely agree. I will add that being into having a family and having a nice home life were super important to me. |
Honestly, women are not interested in the "put out and shut up" model of marriage. They are also not interested in "asshatery". I would like to be in a healthy marriage of equal partners, but, TBH, I don't really ever meet men who treat me like an equal nor do I see any marriages in my peer group that I would consider marriage of equals. Even my well-educated, successful female peers with good jobs have been forced to downshift more than their partners for unpaid caregiving. Women work. They can have kids on their own. They have options that don't involve being in an abusive or unequal partnership, and their desire to "not compromise" and stay out of that kind of relationship is what has "kept them unmarried." |
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Wondering about the dude who doesn't want women to have opinions. What exactly are we supposed to do with our opinions, then? It's pretty hard to be a successful professional and not have opinions on something -- teachers tend to have a lot of opinions about education, for example. I imagine that lawyers probably have opinions on the constitution, doctors have opinions on healthcare, etc. I kinda think if you want to be with a successful woman then she's probably going to have opinions and to express them. It's kind of what adults do.
Wondering also how you raise children without having any opinions about child-rearing. Or is the idea that the only opinions in the relationship should be his? My parents have a relationship like that -- he's an arrogant narcissist who always has to be right. it's actually really embarrassing when he lectures people on topics he knows nothing about, especially if they happen to be experts on the topic. Is that what this dude is looking for? He sounds kinda awful. |
Well, that and being fat. |
Same here, the happy go lucky dumb doormat strategy has served me and my marriage well too. |
So sounds like someone with ASD needs to meet their spouse whilst doing their academic hyper interest, hurry up propose, get married, and lock in a kid before any basic life incapabilities get discovered. |
Exactly: kind, wants to have kids, wants to keep the home and life nice Perfecto. |
+1 Exact same here. I know several who simply wasted too much time on the wrong guy/guys and eventually it was just too late. I also know 2 “failure to launch” women- who have always been so focused on their parents/family of origin that it left no time for dating and/or scared guys away from getting serious. Very “my big fat Greek wedding” type scenarios |
PP with the ASD husband and son, back for answer a poster's question, and comment on the above post. Well, the truth is, good looks go a long way towards attracting a mate, and money goes a long way towards keeping a mate. My husband was very cute and poor when I met him, and is now less cute but wealthy. He has interesting opinions about many things, and has a trouble-shooting mentality. He is not empathetic, he cannot read body language or hints well, things have to be spelled out. He's awkward in social settings. When he helps, he does help a lot and without stinting. It's difficult to describe exactly all his capacity for hurting yet also supporting us. He just doesn't see the world on the same plane as most of us or operate within the usual social rules. I think I have a lot of patience, I don't mind explaining social mores to him, and translating constantly: maybe because I come from an international family, and grew up constantly translating in my mind, and juggling different cultures, languages, social expectations, religions, etc. Autism is just another "culture/language/alien planet" one needs to adapt to. "Basic life incapabilities" usually are revealed after having children, because parenting requires a lot of social acumen: you're doing the social communication work for two, because little kids aren't self-aware and can't make sense of their feelings. If the parent has ASD, you start to see issues - they can't read their own child easily, and start to enact rigid and sometimes inappropriate rules until the kids start advocating for themselves properly. When a kid has ASD, that's when all hell breaks loose, because now you have two people who butt heads with each other because neither can read the other well. Having both a husband with ASD and a son with ASD made me consider divorce, or simply running away. Now my son is in college, and I think we've survived the worst. |
+1. Although to me kindness doesn’t mean things like spending time and attention on the downtrodden or cats, it more means valuing people for themselves rather than players in their personal narrative. Maybe that’s not a conventional definition of kindness. |
PP. No, no hot chicks. I know what’s out of my league. I do well enough with pretty, overweight women but it’s not like I attract them, they’re just willing to accept my attention. I think they know they’re settling. |
+1 |
Its still a good definition as kindness comes in different forms. |
I think she always thought she was a bit of a prize because she is a professional with a good job (she goes on about our job having "prestige" which is annoying and not something everyone would think, lol). As far as everything else, she has to know she's average at best. She's just got to. |