Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Life is harder for women than for men. Work is harder because women are less respected. Women do more housework and child care. Women treat their partners on average better than men treat theirs. Women are more likely to be raped. Women have many more reasons to be depressed and anxious.
+1000
LOL so single women have a tougher life vs men? Women live a sheltered life. They have never been drafted and shipped off to war.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Life is harder for women than for men. Work is harder because women are less respected. Women do more housework and child care. Women treat their partners on average better than men treat theirs. Women are more likely to be raped. Women have many more reasons to be depressed and anxious.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a mid-40s guy who's been divorced for a year. I enjoy dating but not looking for anything serious. Most of the women I've met have just been casual dates but what stands out for me is that so many of them reveal that they're one of the three: bipolar, depressed, or anxious. And I mean clinically diagnosed and been prescribed meds and all that. These are women in their thirties and also forties. It's just so common it blows my mind. Needless to say, I haven't felt comfortable going forward with many of these women I've met. Just too much for me to process. I have plenty of guy friends who also mention that their wives or girlfriends are seeking therapy or taking meds to cope with some mental health diagnosis. But no guy I know has ever mentioned being depressed or anxious. I'm not saying these conditions don't ever affect men, but it just seems so common among women. Any ideas why? I'd like to meet someone eventually who won't go crazy on me.
Plainly put, many of these 30 & 40-something women fell for the childless, cool wine aunt meme. They don’t realize they’ve been sold a lie about the root of true happiness, therefore mis-diagnosing (as well as over-medicating) the source of their unhappiness.
Likewise, many single men past 35 suffer from lots of stress and anxiety when pondering the simple question of, “What’s wrong with me?”
Anonymous wrote:It's only fair to be upfront and honest about mental illness. It's a deal breaker for most people seeking a long term relationship.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a mid-40s guy who's been divorced for a year. I enjoy dating but not looking for anything serious. Most of the women I've met have just been casual dates but what stands out for me is that so many of them reveal that they're one of the three: bipolar, depressed, or anxious. And I mean clinically diagnosed and been prescribed meds and all that. These are women in their thirties and also forties. It's just so common it blows my mind. Needless to say, I haven't felt comfortable going forward with many of these women I've met. Just too much for me to process. I have plenty of guy friends who also mention that their wives or girlfriends are seeking therapy or taking meds to cope with some mental health diagnosis. But no guy I know has ever mentioned being depressed or anxious. I'm not saying these conditions don't ever affect men, but it just seems so common among women. Any ideas why? I'd like to meet someone eventually who won't go crazy on me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because A) America is a pretty unhappy society where community supports -- the most important source of psychological strength -- have been undermined, and B) there is a massive psychiatric / pharma industrial complex selling people on the idea that they have mental diseases and need to daily doses of powerful mind-altering drugs to "treat" these diseases. This continues even though psychiatry/pharma have been demonstrably unable to fix the problem -- people are taking more and more drugs but are more miserable than ever.
Depression is real, and more severe conditions are real. And meds have limited usefulness. If someone knew something that worked better, they should let us know. But meditation ain’t it by the way.
Anonymous wrote:Because A) America is a pretty unhappy society where community supports -- the most important source of psychological strength -- have been undermined, and B) there is a massive psychiatric / pharma industrial complex selling people on the idea that they have mental diseases and need to daily doses of powerful mind-altering drugs to "treat" these diseases. This continues even though psychiatry/pharma have been demonstrably unable to fix the problem -- people are taking more and more drugs but are more miserable than ever.
Anonymous wrote:Men just wander around thinking about work and what/where to eat next.
Women race around thinking about work, kids, sports, health, the house, the yard, the nanny, the days off school/vacations, gifts to buy, insurance, meal planning, family schedule planning, clothes that fit everyone, play dates, school deadlines and homework, etc.
It’s overwhelming and then to have a cluesless partner would put anyone in the loony house!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of over sharing of medical information early on. I don't get it.
Agree
Social media has created a culture of oversharing and it’s trickled into real life. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve met someone and they immediately start telling me about their addiction/sobriety, or their marital problems, or their poop. I just met you, I don’t need to know about your diarrhea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of over sharing of medical information early on. I don't get it.
Agree