Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of these about 25 years ago.
Thinly-veiled code for ‘girl we’d like to run a train on’.
“One of the guys” girls usually don’t let anyone they hang out with touch them and the guys she does hang out with protect her like their sister.
If they were running trains on you then you weren’t one of the guys. You were the chick they talk about with the guys.
Anonymous wrote:The girl at the Super Bowl party who is actually watching the game and understands the rules.Follows football and may have a team in a fantasy league vs. the girl who had her hair and nails done for the party and doesn't know what "first and ten" means.
Anonymous wrote:The woman fits in to a group of low stakes, low emotional/drama relationships typically enjoyed by stereotypical heterosexual men.
Anonymous wrote:I was one of these about 25 years ago.
Thinly-veiled code for ‘girl we’d like to run a train on’.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck does this even mean?
Means they think of her like a cousin or something. And they have a common sport or job or alum group, whatever.
Means they don’t view her as a romantic interest. Not a Pick Me girl either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck does this even mean?
Means she’s easy to talk with in the group and no one’s sexually or romantically interested in her.
Like Sally rider the astronaut was treated “like one of the guys.”
Anonymous wrote:She’s the kind of woman that men marry, not date for fun.
Anonymous wrote:I was one of these about 25 years ago.
Thinly-veiled code for ‘girl we’d like to run a train on’.
Anonymous wrote:Decent sense of humor, not easily offended, likely punctual, few dietary restrictions, sense of personal accountability, a brain ruled by logic and a desire to be pleased with whatever comes their way.
Anonymous wrote:The girl at the Super Bowl party who is actually watching the game and understands the rules.Follows football and may have a team in a fantasy league vs. the girl who had her hair and nails done for the party and doesn't know what "first and ten" means.
Anonymous wrote:I was one of these about 25 years ago.
Thinly-veiled code for ‘girl we’d like to run a train on’.