Anonymous wrote:A man behind me in a store once told me I had the smell of candy and he liked candy.![]()
Just saw my across the street neighbor, about 19 years old, unmarried, washing her car in a black string bikini, 6 months pregnant. The man next door to my right is watching her from his laundry room window, the other side neighbor is watching from his dining room window, the one in the corner is outside watching her, pretending to be on the phone.
I don't know. Is it pervy to look maybe offer help if she's wanting people to see ?
I think she's slutty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say it depends somewhat on the ethnicity of the person giving the compliment.
In my observations, (and I see this a LOT downtown, esp w/younger men) African American men are afforded more .... say, "latitude" in saying things to women unacquainted to them that would be considered offensive if the very same thing was said by a white man.
I've even asked my coworkers about it, right after it happened, and they've all sort of just blown it off, saying "he didn't mean anything by it"...
An example would be a wolf whistle, followed by an obvious look up and down, with a "mmmmmm-mmmuah!", then saying "damn you are beautiful". I witnessed that exact thing a few weeks ago, and it was pretty offensive. But my friend seemed unwilling to call it that.
I'm not sure if it's an issue of white guilt or something, or not wanting to be confrontational, or maybe even fear or intimidation, but I've seen her tell white guys to F-off when she's caught them looking at her.
It's weird. I don't understand it
I'm a woman and I've heard it too, usually with a "young lady" attached to it. I just avoid eye contact (with any random man). I'm not young--I'm in my md thirties. I'd guess that all three factors you mentioned play into others' responses.
What about Latin American men?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say it depends somewhat on the ethnicity of the person giving the compliment.
In my observations, (and I see this a LOT downtown, esp w/younger men) African American men are afforded more .... say, "latitude" in saying things to women unacquainted to them that would be considered offensive if the very same thing was said by a white man.
I've even asked my coworkers about it, right after it happened, and they've all sort of just blown it off, saying "he didn't mean anything by it"...
An example would be a wolf whistle, followed by an obvious look up and down, with a "mmmmmm-mmmuah!", then saying "damn you are beautiful". I witnessed that exact thing a few weeks ago, and it was pretty offensive. But my friend seemed unwilling to call it that.
I'm not sure if it's an issue of white guilt or something, or not wanting to be confrontational, or maybe even fear or intimidation, but I've seen her tell white guys to F-off when she's caught them looking at her.
It's weird. I don't understand it
Gosh, is there any area in which white men don't have it harder than everyone else? If only they could catch a break in life. The struggle is real.
Anonymous wrote:I'd say it depends somewhat on the ethnicity of the person giving the compliment.
In my observations, (and I see this a LOT downtown, esp w/younger men) African American men are afforded more .... say, "latitude" in saying things to women unacquainted to them that would be considered offensive if the very same thing was said by a white man.
I've even asked my coworkers about it, right after it happened, and they've all sort of just blown it off, saying "he didn't mean anything by it"...
An example would be a wolf whistle, followed by an obvious look up and down, with a "mmmmmm-mmmuah!", then saying "damn you are beautiful". I witnessed that exact thing a few weeks ago, and it was pretty offensive. But my friend seemed unwilling to call it that.
I'm not sure if it's an issue of white guilt or something, or not wanting to be confrontational, or maybe even fear or intimidation, but I've seen her tell white guys to F-off when she's caught them looking at her.
It's weird. I don't understand it
Anonymous wrote:Is it a man paying the compliment? Then yes it is creepy and rude, almost always. There are exceptions. If it's a woman, then generally no (again, with exceptions).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say it depends somewhat on the ethnicity of the person giving the compliment.
In my observations, (and I see this a LOT downtown, esp w/younger men) African American men are afforded more .... say, "latitude" in saying things to women unacquainted to them that would be considered offensive if the very same thing was said by a white man.
I've even asked my coworkers about it, right after it happened, and they've all sort of just blown it off, saying "he didn't mean anything by it"...
An example would be a wolf whistle, followed by an obvious look up and down, with a "mmmmmm-mmmuah!", then saying "damn you are beautiful". I witnessed that exact thing a few weeks ago, and it was pretty offensive. But my friend seemed unwilling to call it that.
I'm not sure if it's an issue of white guilt or something, or not wanting to be confrontational, or maybe even fear or intimidation, but I've seen her tell white guys to F-off when she's caught them looking at her.
It's weird. I don't understand it
Gosh, is there any area in which white men don't have it harder than everyone else? If only they could catch a break in life. The struggle is real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say it depends somewhat on the ethnicity of the person giving the compliment.
In my observations, (and I see this a LOT downtown, esp w/younger men) African American men are afforded more .... say, "latitude" in saying things to women unacquainted to them that would be considered offensive if the very same thing was said by a white man.
I've even asked my coworkers about it, right after it happened, and they've all sort of just blown it off, saying "he didn't mean anything by it"...
An example would be a wolf whistle, followed by an obvious look up and down, with a "mmmmmm-mmmuah!", then saying "damn you are beautiful". I witnessed that exact thing a few weeks ago, and it was pretty offensive. But my friend seemed unwilling to call it that.
I'm not sure if it's an issue of white guilt or something, or not wanting to be confrontational, or maybe even fear or intimidation, but I've seen her tell white guys to F-off when she's caught them looking at her.
It's weird. I don't understand it
I'm a woman and I've heard it too, usually with a "young lady" attached to it. I just avoid eye contact (with any random man). I'm not young--I'm in my md thirties. I'd guess that all three factors you mentioned play into others' responses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What pp's have said: it's totally contextual. I was beautiful when I was younger and would get comments on the regular - from both men AND women.
When it was delivered as a genuin, no-strings-attached and polite compliment, I was always flattered.
The lewd, sexual ones? Not so much. That's when I consider it rude and inappropriate.
Haven't been complimented in a couple years now and it makes me sad, actually.
How old are you?