Anonymous wrote:This is such a myth. Guys approach only after they have been given some small signal, a look, a smile, a nod, a slight touch.
Anonymous wrote:I doubt I'm the only person or the only guy in the world that's always had a lifelong hatred or resentment towards this. Guys always being expected to make the first move and ask the girl out, be the initiators,or they say, men court women, etc.
What is the origin behind that you think?
It's probably the main thing or the number one thing I've always hated about being born the male gender, it's like why can't women go after men too right?
There are other things I resent about it to but I don't want to get too much deep into it but I might answer it as I reply to comments.
When people say "that's the way it is", makes me more mad and angry and only adds fuel to fire towards my resentment.
Some people say it's not always like this, and that the world is slowly changing about this.
But I mostly doubt and part of me thinks that it'll be this way for all eternity.
Anonymous wrote:It’s bc that’s as good as any man will ever get. If he can’t manage a courtship phase, he’s not going to be better after marriage when he stops trying at all.
Anonymous wrote:It's because women were considered property until quite recently, and men didn't ask women if they could go out with them. They asked their fathers, who owned these women. And then if they married (only with the father's permission), the woman became her husband's property.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's because women were considered property until quite recently, and men didn't ask women if they could go out with them. They asked their fathers, who owned these women. And then if they married (only with the father's permission), the woman became her husband's property.
This. I mean, this rule is embedded in 20,000 years of the world sucking for women. Sorry that for 40 years, it's slightly tilted the balance in favor of women.
Anonymous wrote:It's because women were considered property until quite recently, and men didn't ask women if they could go out with them. They asked their fathers, who owned these women. And then if they married (only with the father's permission), the woman became her husband's property.