It's the AA degree working as a teller that's off putting for most educated women. These women aren't necessarily looking for a wallet, but they want an equal partner.
Is he working towards a bachelor's degree in a good paying field?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
5’6 he needs to settle for any woman.
Not true. He needs to get a grad degree, dress stylish, and start making $500k+. My tenant is 5’6 he’s making that at age 35 at a biotech company. He rents a penthouse at $7/month with a very cute 5’2 wife who is a doctor.
Plenty of women are under 5’6 height and would be interested in a good looking well earning relationship stable man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are heterosexual and have trouble being in a relationship with the opposite sex, then YOU need to change. Part of being in a heterosexual marriage is learning to get along and live with someone who is different than you.
There's no profit in telling women they need to improve their behavior. Far easier to keep blaming men.
There are plenty of heterosexual men who refuse to change and blame women for not wanting to date them or not being good partners. Neither gender has a monopoly on this.
Sure but the media points the camera only in one direction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are heterosexual and have trouble being in a relationship with the opposite sex, then YOU need to change. Part of being in a heterosexual marriage is learning to get along and live with someone who is different than you.
There's no profit in telling women they need to improve their behavior. Far easier to keep blaming men.
There are plenty of heterosexual men who refuse to change and blame women for not wanting to date them or not being good partners. Neither gender has a monopoly on this.
Sure but the media points the camera only in one direction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having actually read the article, it's just clickbait for the NYT set. The author left an open marriage because she fell for one of the men she was dating and when that relationship didn't work out, she found herself in the middle aged dating pool in NYC where she goes out on dates with openly non-monogamous men. Hardly a representative sample of mainstream dating.
As a woman, the article just made me roll my eyes because the author and her friends seem to be self-selecting for these high drama relationships.
Spot on. I do actually believe we have a sociological problem in this country - women on the rise and wanting equal partners, men on decline and wanting the 50s back. But this article was not that at all. She was ridiculous.
This, thank you. The essay was dumb and grating -- this woman keeps making stupid relationship choices and is blaming it on "men" instead of lookin inward. It's also hyper-specific to the dating scene in NYC or similar cities at a certain age. There is almost nothing universal about it.
I do think it would be interesting to talk more about gender roles in heterosexual marriages and how what people are raised to expect and want doesn't match up. I also think sometimes people want conflicting things. Like men often want a woman who will be an equal earner, but then also expect her to do the lion's share of child rearing. Women, on the other hand, will say they want a man who is a true partner at home, but then won't let their husband's take the lead on domestic matters or expect him to be an equal partner while also making twice as much. It can just be very unrealistic. And economic pressures in the US make these conflicts worse than in other countries, because without much paid parental leave and escalating housing and college costs, the pressure is really on for families to maximize their earnings, which doesn't leave anyone with much time or energy for parenting and taking care of the home, which are essential tasks.
That would be an interesting first-person essay. This lady is just click bait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
5’6 he needs to settle for any woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
5’6 he needs to settle for any woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Secretaries ? What line of work are you in that you still have a secretary? Mine was phased 5+ years ago.
I'm a lawyer (woman) and I still have a secretary although she works for multiple people. Her title is administrative assistant, not secretary, but she handles those types of tasks. I've never not had an admin at any firm I've been at (I'm 46).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
Basically all the non 6-6-6 men are slighted by women chasing Mr Big, and are bitter about it. And the cost of housing.
Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
Basically all the non 6-6-6 men are slighted by women chasing Mr Big, and are bitter about it. And the cost of housing.
Anonymous wrote:It may be that the men that most women want to date are unavailable. My foster son is a 5'6" man who works as a bank teller and has an associates degree. He has a normal apartment that he shares with a roommate. He is a great guy who is putting himself out there and open to a relationship, but not having success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are heterosexual and have trouble being in a relationship with the opposite sex, then YOU need to change. Part of being in a heterosexual marriage is learning to get along and live with someone who is different than you.
There's no profit in telling women they need to improve their behavior. Far easier to keep blaming men.
There are plenty of heterosexual men who refuse to change and blame women for not wanting to date them or not being good partners. Neither gender has a monopoly on this.