BloatedGuppy said:
DrOswald said:
Ok, I am going to have to flat out disagree with that one. Women get up to just as much courtship bullshit as men. I could tell you plenty of stories about all the insane stuff I have seen women do, especially high school and early college age girls.
Disagreement is, of course, your prerogative, although it would be helpful if you could substantiate your perspective with more than just "I have anecdotal experience that suggests otherwise".
I can't point to scientific peer reviewed studies from reputable journals on the crazy shit people get up to while courting if that is what you are asking. All I can go off of is what I have observed. However, I would be willing to check out any such studies you could point me to that prove your stance.
DrOswald said:
One thing on here that I am seeing often is the following situation being described:
Man and woman have a relationship. Man has romantic feelings for the woman, but the woman has no similar feelings for the man. The man therefore decides to end the relationship.
The conclusion often drawn is that the man is a misogynistic pig that only was in it for sex.
Can you quote someone espousing this? It seems rather like a straw man. I do believe the problematic elements of the term "friend zone" have been described in less polarizing terms than that. Are you certain you're not gravitating to the most outlandish/contentious posts because it reinforces a bias that critics of the term are zealots?
"I only dislike the people that suddenly completely distance themselves from said friend after they were rejected. It's like they felt entitled to have those feelings reciprocated or only became friends with the other person for possibility of sex in the future."
"Because it's not very far from "they were willing to be friends, until they were told there wouldn't be any fucking"."
Both from the first half of the first page of this thread. And there have been many threads with many pages about this subject and every time I enter one of those threads I see it.
Notice I didn't say always, I didn't say usually, I said "often". I am not saying that everyone or even most are saying or thinking this, only that it is happening too often in my opinion.
DrOswald said:
Why is it wrong for a person to want to end a relationship that is not what they want? Obviously feeling like the woman cheated you out of rightly earned sex is twisted and stupid, but it seems that many people are going past that and saying that if the person is unwilling to continue the relationship on the terms of the party uninterested in romance then they are a bad person.
I'm not seeing anyone saying that, although it's possible I'm overlooking a post or two. Can you quote me someone saying a rejected party is
obligated to carry on a friendship?
Using the word obligated? no. However, often it is implied or stated that if the rejectee ends the relationship then they are in the wrong. See the quotes I gave above.
DrOswald said:
I find this mode of thinking unfair, immature and, above all, selfish.
I would happily agree, I've just never encountered "this mode of thinking". I rather suspect it is a villain you have created with your imagination, or at best a fringe perspective you have projected onto a silent majority.
Again, I never said that this kind of thinking was in the majority. I used the word "often" as in "too often, even if this type of thinking is in the minority."
I have written before about how I too often see racist people being racist and how that needs to stop, but that does not mean I think that everyone or even the majority of people are racist. And just because the vast majority of people are not racist does not mean I am going to give the small minority a free pass. At its core racism is an incorrect mode of thinking, one that I am attempting to correct.
Similarly, I have seen some number of individuals on these forums embracing what I perceive as an incorrect mode of thinking. I am attempting to correct that error. It is entirely possible, even probable, that people other than the intended audience will read my post. In fact, I would say that most of the people who read my post will not be the intended audience.