Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If women are so independent and self sufficient these days why are men still the ones expected to make the first move? If a woman likes a guy what's preventing her asking him out? If she wants to be his wife what's preventing her from asking him to marry her?
Are you a man? or woman? I have found that most men don't like women to make the first move
Anonymous wrote:If women are so independent and self sufficient these days why are men still the ones expected to make the first move? If a woman likes a guy what's preventing her asking him out? If she wants to be his wife what's preventing her from asking him to marry her?
Anonymous wrote:Women hate rejection as much as men do. Men want sex more, so they'll approach. In other words, women don't like approaching and they don't have to.
They'll rationalize it as something else. ("Oh, I'm being passive to make sure he isn't passive. That's the ticket!") Or that they *are* actually making moves even if those "moves" maintain plausible deniability and don't involve risk of rejection.
But, ultimately, risk of rejection is unpleasant and they don't have to subject themselves to it, so they don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never had a woman asks me out. I would love it though . Where are the places I need to go for this to happen. The bar? The club? At work? Please let me know and I'll.be at these places. Haven't had much luck on OLD.
26 years ago, I joined a community theater group (I had done theater in high school and college, but stopped when I got a "real job"). There aren't the many guys in community theater to begin with. But the guys that are single, straight and join theater are relatively few and far between. One woman made a move within a few weeks of me joining. We were exclusively dating within about 2 months, engaged 2.5 years later and are going to celebrate our 22nd anniversay in less than a month.
And you don't have to be an actor or singer to be involved in community theater. Community theater needs carpenters who can build sets, lighting and sound designers and crew (and we teach new crew members almost every show). If you can't do any of these, then stage hands that can move furniture on and off stage. Even just folks who can come on work days to come and move equipment, tools, help hold pieces to build a set and so on. There's a ton of work to be done for both skilled and unskilled help. And most importantly, community theater is about 2/3 women, many of whom are single and available. Something about theater makes many actresses more forward and more likely to ask the rare single, straight guy out.
Anonymous wrote:Never had a woman asks me out. I would love it though . Where are the places I need to go for this to happen. The bar? The club? At work? Please let me know and I'll.be at these places. Haven't had much luck on OLD.
Anonymous wrote:Your assumptions about who does what are out of date.
Anonymous wrote:Answer: because testosterone and estrogen are still a thing.
Because males are biologically wired for the hunt/chase in order to spread their seed and femsles are wired to discern and select.
This is true throughout the entire animal kingdom.
So sure, we can try to “normalize” a different behavior pattern through social customs, but patterns will still return to biological baseline if left alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If women are so independent and self sufficient these days why are men still the ones expected to make the first move? If a woman likes a guy what's preventing her asking him out? If she wants to be his wife what's preventing her from asking him to marry her?
Because in the mammal kingdom, males pursue females in search of mating opportunities. Females decide which advances they will accept and which they will not. It's true of lions and tigers and dolphins and elephants.
We are mammals, too.