After years of observation and study, I've concluded that the typical straight male goes through much — if not all — of his life quite deeply confused about why any woman would like *him* or the things he would like to do with and/or to her
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Frankly, everything just makes a lot more sense when you start seeing most guys (with the notable exception of the truly messed up/violent/etc. ones) less as cylons and more like golden retreievers who can do math
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I want to point out that while this puts a lot of torment on men, it creates a subtle responsibility for women, who are supposed to decide what they want and then somehow communicate that to men. Meanwhile, the societal playbook says "it's NOTHIN'! you don't need no man grrrrl"
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This might sound reductive, but seriously: a *lot* of men just want someone soft and pretty to be nice to them and ask them for things they are capable of providing. And a *lot* of women think they *need* to actively cultivate toughness, distance and total self-sufficiency
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Given sufficient intimacy and demonstrated caring, an especially awesome woman can not only get an endless supply of support for her own stuff but also consistently level up her man by being so confident that he already is what she needs that he moves mountains to give it to her
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You always know it when you meet couples like this. They're not just happy, they're almost scary productive
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The guy's end of the deal is viscerally trusting his woman and her judgment enough to believe that she wouldn't ask for or push for him to be anything other than what he is capable of. Which means being vulnerable enough to show her what she's working with
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Yeah, I'm being unclear here. Stable people, men *and* women, have enough going on in their own lives that they have no interest in puppeteering their partner's, too. They just totally get off on seeing their mate act on the bleeding edge of competencehttps://twitter.com/lumiferrous/status/1217948629496934400?s=21 …
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My point is that you need intimacy + trust before you can nurture competence; otherwise, insecurity generates threat. You've probably met at least one couple where one or both people were suppressing the other's competence for fear of "not being good enough" for a strong partner
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End of conversation
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