Anonymous wrote:Being needed for common every day tasks gets old, can’t reach the top shelf? just get a stool and stop bothering me.
But the occasional side hug with a hand placed in the center of our chest when you tell us something good we do, have done, have made or have made you feel is enough to keep us chasing your approval for lack of a better term. One of these a month is enough to keep me working my ass off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that was a thing until I met a woman that was insecure and grew up in a toxic household. I suddenly wanted to be her hero and give her everything she never had.
So what happened with her? Why did you break up?
Not sure if PP did break up. But, if he did, I wouldn't be surprised. Women who are insecure and grew up in toxic households aren't super good at relationships, as a rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that was a thing until I met a woman that was insecure and grew up in a toxic household. I suddenly wanted to be her hero and give her everything she never had.
So what happened with her? Why did you break up?
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that was a thing until I met a woman that was insecure and grew up in a toxic household. I suddenly wanted to be her hero and give her everything she never had.
Anonymous wrote:This is very situation specific. And yes, it is cuter in younger women. If you’re older and are dating divorced guys with children, the last thing they need is to have to take care of someone else’s problems. So for that demographic, they are not looking for a woman who needs a handyman. But this might work if you’re both 25.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a very functional, capable woman. I would never ask a guy to hang a shelf or change a lightbulb. I pride myself on being competent and independent.
And yea, a lot of guys don’t like it. Those guys are not people I want to be with. I don’t want a man who needs a lot of fawning. I don’t want a man who needs to feel like a woman depends on him, because then he’s not working on being a good partner to keep her around, he does whatever Tf he wants and assumes a woman will just stick around because she has no other choice.
I do get men who are strongly attracted to capable women and they are generally much better to have as partners. Some not so much (they want to basically be absent in a relationship but still have an independent woman on speed dial for booty calls). But most are very capable, functional men who want the same.
Basically, I want to admire and compliment men based on their character, intellect, etc and I want them to do the same for me.
Also, the damsel in distress look is cute when you’re 24 but puts you in an extremely vulnerable position as you age. Male or female, being helpless in your 50s is extremely unattractive and sets you up for hardship. I’ve seen so many women who didn’t know how to care for themselves because they relied on their husbands, and then when their husband leaves, cheats, dies, etc, they are f***ed. Figuring out adulthood at age 60 is not good.
Anonymous wrote:🤷♂️ Everyone likes to feel needed.
Of course, “let your man know you need him” is in tension with the current dogma that All Women Are Strong and Independent and Don’t Need No Man.
Anonymous wrote:This is very situation specific. And yes, it is cuter in younger women. If you’re older and are dating divorced guys with children, the last thing they need is to have to take care of someone else’s problems. So for that demographic, they are not looking for a woman who needs a handyman. But this might work if you’re both 25.