Anonymous wrote:Narcissistic mother pushing favorite child to be a catch. Took scuba lessons with one and she literally grabbed her bikinied breasts in her hands and waved them in a male instructor’s face while exclaiming loudly, “I don’t know why I can’t sink! I guess I’m too much a floater!”. Not the term I was thinking, but whatever floats your boat lady.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The question is why do you like to get your affirmations from strangers.
Not the PP, but affirmation from unbiased third parties is probably a more objective reflection of how attractive you are. I mean, it's sweet of my mom to tell me I'm handsome, but if a lady on the street is making googly eyes at me, that's probably going to put more of a spring in my step.
Anonymous wrote:
The question is why do you like to get your affirmations from strangers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I used to go out (I have 2 kids and currently pregnant with #3 so don’t go out much), I used to love male attention and I used to get it a lot. I don’t have any trauma, but I am very sexual and it feels/felt great to have a man wanting you. It’s not a competition for me. Also, somehow, I always got a lot of attention without trying...
Just curious. Was your father in the home? A workaholic? Affectionate or aloof? How would you describe your home life as a child? Was Mom around? Did any provider travel a lot, military? Maybe a childhood boyfriend that cheated and broke your heart while you were still a virgin?
No matter what, no judgment at all from me. Just curious. Is it possible some past experience (nurture) impacted this personality (nature)?
Nope to anything you mentioned. Have a great dad whom a had a great job and basically never drank. Mom worked and was successful, but still loving and present. Neither was a workaholic. I did have several boyfriends, but none broke up my heart. Some were sad breakups of course, but nobody betrayed me (that I am aware of). Some people are just more sexual than other and lead with their sexuality when they first meet someone. I think men can perhaps sense that and are attracted to that?
It does not hurt that people (men and women) regard me as very attractive and naturally fit, but I don’t think this is the reason why I get/got more attention when out
Anonymous wrote:We’ve all got those friends in our circle. They love male attention and are often over the top in how they go about getting it.
No name calling or negative posts please - I’d really like to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I used to go out (I have 2 kids and currently pregnant with #3 so don’t go out much), I used to love male attention and I used to get it a lot. I don’t have any trauma, but I am very sexual and it feels/felt great to have a man wanting you. It’s not a competition for me. Also, somehow, I always got a lot of attention without trying...
Just curious. Was your father in the home? A workaholic? Affectionate or aloof? How would you describe your home life as a child? Was Mom around? Did any provider travel a lot, military? Maybe a childhood boyfriend that cheated and broke your heart while you were still a virgin?
No matter what, no judgment at all from me. Just curious. Is it possible some past experience (nurture) impacted this personality (nature)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve all got those friends in our circle. They love male attention and are often over the top in how they go about getting it.
No name calling or negative posts please - I’d really like to understand.
Why not ask the friends in your circle why they need attention and are so over the top in pursuit of it?
Because I don’t want to offend them and I’m not sure they’d have an answer.
Look at it this way. Let's say you had friends in your circle who were alcoholics and wanted to understand.
Well...some people turn to alcohol to relieve stress. Some people began drinking at an early age and developed an alcohol problem or a physical dependence on alcohol as they get older. Some people turn to alcohol when feeling anxious or depressed. Some people have a parent or other relative who was an alcoholic.
In other words there are a number of factors/reasons as to why some people are alcoholics - varies from individual to individual.
Same rule of thumb applies to excessive attention seeking behavior - varies from individual to individual.
If you want to truly understand what issues/factors are the at the root of your friends behavior then you need to ask those individuals.
If you're truly a friend then offending them is the last thing you should be worried about. Helping them should be your main motivation.
OP here: Thanks for the reply.
I don’t see their need for attention as something that needs to be treated - it’s just part of their personality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think ALL do. It's planted in women by thousands of years of evolution.
I don't think it's evolution. I think it's internalization of patriarchy that's probably more of a by-product of the agricultural revolution -- so about 12,000 years.
Anonymous wrote:When I used to go out (I have 2 kids and currently pregnant with #3 so don’t go out much), I used to love male attention and I used to get it a lot. I don’t have any trauma, but I am very sexual and it feels/felt great to have a man wanting you. It’s not a competition for me. Also, somehow, I always got a lot of attention without trying...