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RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 12:16:07 PM   
Zonie63


Posts: 2826
Joined: 4/25/2011
From: The Old Pueblo
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: FieryOpal


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

I don't think that men and women are the same, nor is it even true within genders. No two men are the same, and no two women are the same. We're all individuals.

Precisely. Within any culture, there are differences. However, I was shaking my head after getting into a discussion/debate recently with an otherwise intelligent man close to my age who insists that men and women are alike, that their sole differences are anatomical. It was like talking to a wall. This was his flawed basis for equality, but his arguments revealed a kind of reverse-equality, where he felt that men were entitled to more rights. I asked him if he were the frontman for the Men's Liberation movement.


I can see where some things are the same. After all, we're part of the same species, so we're more alike than different. But I can also see where some might believe the differences between men and women as a matter of socialization and conditioning from birth, not solely due to biology. Equality is more of an abstract principle, a human contrivance which doesn't really exist in a state of nature. Because of this, concepts of equality are often vague and imprecise, unable to mesh completely with the laws of nature. I think many people believe that society should still make an honest effort in striving toward equality, while realizing that it will never be perfect.

But some people insist that everything should be perfect, and are visibly frustrated when it isn't. That's where a lot of the consternation over this video seems to be coming from. The basic argument seems to be that these men in the video were bad people who shouldn't be saying or doing stuff like that, and that a woman should be able to walk down the street without being hassled, insulted, or molested in any way. Within that argument is an implied expectation of perfection which may be unrealistic.

Male rights advocates also advocate a similar notion of "perfect equality" from the opposite side. Both sides are frustrated because they can't get everything they want, and neither side seems willing to compromise. That's partly due to the overall society becoming more politically polarized, not something strictly related to gender issues.

quote:


quote:

For some reason, I'm reminded of the 80s teen movie Just One of the Guys....
(Buddy) says something to the effect (in regards to Women's Liberation) that "women are now just as free to be as perverted and sex-crazed as the guys."

OMG, I loved that movie! It's one of those timeless '80s flicks like "The Breakfast Club."
Incidentally, this is why my position has always been that I don't want to be treated like just one of the guys. Why should I, as a female, get knocked down a few notches and operate at a baser, more primitive, animalistic level?


Sure, I can understand that. But this may be where some of the confusion sets in, since the past several decades have seen women pushing to break through societal barriers which excluded women from all-male bastions and institutions. But once they broke through those barriers, there were obviously some things they didn't like once they saw things from the inside.

One thing about Just One of the Guys which I've found to be a relatively common theme in popular culture was the other character Rick, whom Terry starts to get sweet on and is seemingly a nice guy except that he wears dorky clothes (because he comes from a working class family and can't afford better). I don't know if it was unintentional or not, but I thought it sent an odd mixed message in that no one was really interested in Rick as a person. But once he got a better haircut and a set of fancy clothes, suddenly he was an item, even getting a date with the prom queen (at which point Terry started to get jealous).

Of course, he wasn't the geeky, wimpy kid in The Breakfast Club who ended up alone while the others paired off and asked him to write their essays because he was the one who was so smart. The criminal and the jock get the girls, but the brain who tries to be a good citizen does not. That's another bizarre theme which gained prevalence in popular culture.

Just like the base, more primitive character of "Fonzie" was far more popular with the females than the civilized "nerds" from the same show which coined that very term. To be sure, these are all just fictional presentations which should not be confused with reality, but it can't be denied that they've had some level of influence on how people think and see things in society. You ask why you should knock down a few notches to a baser, more primitive level, and I would ask the exact same question.

quote:


quote:

Of course, as with many things, there's a fine line between pursuing and stalking.

If you will recall, this didn't really become taken seriously until the late '80s to early '90s. The same with sexual harassment in the workplace and mandatory corporate-wide sensitivity awareness seminars.


Yes, now that you mention it, I do recall that it was around that time. It's interesting to see commentaries about all those 80s era movies (and earlier) being looked at through 21st century eyes, with many of the younger crowd asking "Was it really like that back in those days???" If nothing else, questions like that might indicate that some progress has been made. It's not like society is standing still or regressing back to an earlier era (although there might still be a risk of that, if we're not careful).

quote:


Not that stalking is ever okay or justifiable, but the backlash effect of this was that (American?) men became more timid.
I remember back in the '80s, my elderly dad quizzically asking me what was the difference between (non-physical) sexual harassment and a man behaving romantically toward a woman. I didn't want to go into the particulars with my dad about overtly sexual behavior or misconduct, so the straightest answer I could come up with off the top of my head was to say that if the woman is attracted to the man, then it's not sexual harassment; if she's not, then it is sexual harassment because his advances are unwelcomed and unwanted. That gave my dad, always the gentleman, a chuckle.


Perhaps some men became more timid, at least in some respects. I think men are probably more flexible and can conform within certain boundaries than many women might give us credit for, but our analytical side might still pore over the fine print and try to look for loopholes. In fact, the general subject matter and overall consensus of this thread seems to indicate that many men aren't very timid at all. But the situations described are not taking place at a job or school or some other controlled, structured environment. It's more out in the streets, in "open territory," so to speak.

As for sexual harassment, my understanding was that men weren't required to be more timid, but just more respectful. If a man makes advances toward a woman and she says no, then that's the end of that. It's when it becomes an ongoing, repetitive thing that makes it into harassment/stalking, not just a one-time faux pas. But if a man of good conscience is told in no uncertain terms that certain behaviors are unwanted, unwelcome, and not okay, then they may feel duty-bound to respect the rights of others. Some people disparage it as "political correctness," and I'll admit that it can get rather silly at times. But if someone is convinced that something is hurtful or offensive to other human beings, then it may be simply a matter of not wanting to hurt others.

quote:

quote:

I don't know any men who believe that there isn't anything wrong with stalking, although people may have differences of opinion as to where the threshold between pursuit and stalking actually is.

If a man admitted to it in public, he'd be crucified. Either that, or I've been hanging out with too many submissive males. Not nowadays, but back in the day, many a vanilla man (whether single or married) expressed a desire to have an attractive woman show them that sort of interest. Nobody wants an undesirable person to "pursue" them. They considered it flattering. These conversations were more than a decade ago, though.


Perhaps it might be slightly different nowadays, but it wasn't all that uncommon in the 70s and 80s for attractive women to pursue men they found to be attractive. But those who are attractive would already be accustomed to attention from the opposite sex anyway. That's why so many teenage boys dream of becoming rock stars, since they see all the screaming female fans at the concerts.


quote:


quote:

Regarding what people do and their socially unacceptable behavior, I find myself in a quandary about that. I mentioned in an earlier post that this is related to an overall problem of a lack of manners and civility in general, not just in situations like in this video. A lot of people are just plain rude; some act like loud, obnoxious turds. I just can't understand it sometimes. I was raised to be generally nice and polite, with a certain set of manners.

If you don't mind my saying, you and I come from a totally different generation. But I suppose every generation thinks that young people are disrespectful and ill-mannered to a certain extent.


True, and there were a lot of disrespectful and ill-manner youth in my day too. I reached my teen years in the late 70s/early 80s when crime was higher and juvenile delinquency was the in thing. Back then, it might have been the case where we knew what the rules of polite society were, but openly flouted them anyway. Today, however, it seems that fewer people actually even know the rules, probably because of what our generation did to those rules.

quote:


quote:

That may be why some men see it differently. If they see a woman dressed provocatively, the other men might see it as "oh, he just cracked under the pressure," whereas a woman might see it as something quite different.

On a somewhat side note, at least regarding women I know, when it comes to women and clothes, there's a kind of alternate reality which I've never been able to fully understand. Not that there's anything wrong with it, but it's something I've found difficult to fathom, which is why I'm more inclined to avoid any assumptions about why a woman chooses to wear whatever outfit they're wearing. However, I've noticed that many women and men tend to go for the latest fads, fashions, and styles, and I must confess that it's a personality type I don't easily relate to.

I don't think it says anything about one's sexual mores, or that they're open game or "asking for it," but I also don't see that there's anything deep or meaningful about it either. It's probably something simply explained as "everyone else is doing it," the overriding "logic" of popular culture. I remember when Madonna made it big, a lot of women and girls started dressing like Madonna. I'm completely favorable to equal rights for all citizens, including gender equality and all its permutations, but when I see so many people who are free and independent to make their own choices succumb to pressure to conform like that, I tend to wonder.

It really does depend on the mentality of the male and much he sexually objectifies women or how he's been raised. In some foreign countries, this attitude still prevails. Greta referred to the disparate reactions among her Western male friends and her Singapore male friends, the latter implying that if a woman was not dressed modestly, then perhaps she invited inappropriate male behavior and responses to her.


I think religious mores have also played a role in how society perceives these things. Males are human, and as with all humans, their mentality is malleable and generally a product of the society in which they were raised. If religious-based societal conventions tell people that certain parts of the human anatomy are "dirty" and that "fornication" and "coveting" are evil sins for which someone will burn in hell for all eternity, then it may lead to similarly irrational reactions and attitudes.

quote:


Speaking of Madonna, I remember when that whole wearing underwear as outerwear trend started with young women. Women my age wouldn't have been caught dead with our bra straps showing.

No, we cannot control the actions of other strangers, but we can intervene when necessary by speaking out (without putting ourselves in danger, so it's a judgment call) or we can choose to remain passive bystanders. But I do agree that teaching and instilling respectful values starts at home, and that schools can be a stopgap measure for some, but it is by no means the responsibility of the educational system to take on more than it already has. We can blame the breakdown of the modern nuclear family and lack of good male role models, and any other number of sociological factors, but that won't provide us with a solution. Basically, when things can't get handled at the grassroots level, then the government (whether by local ordinances getting passed) and law enforcement will end up getting involved, which will mean more legislation and more political posturing, and loss of civil liberties, ad nauseam.


Well, there's nothing wrong with speaking out against it, although it need not lead to any kind of physical confrontation, depending on how one expresses oneself.



(in reply to FieryOpal)
Profile   Post #: 381
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 12:20:53 PM   
shiftyw


Posts: 2837
Joined: 6/6/2013
From: The Shire
Status: offline
Omg.

*faints dead*

Get me some smelling salts cause we made it to 20 pages. It's so satisfying and even.

(in reply to Zonie63)
Profile   Post #: 382
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 12:24:03 PM   
ExiledTyrant


Posts: 4547
Joined: 12/9/2013
From: Exiled
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: shiftyw

Omg.

*faints dead*

Get me some smelling salts cause we made it to 20 pages. It's so satisfying and even.


Smelling salts, really?





_____________________________

Gnothi Seauton
To lead, first follow: Aurelius, Epictetus, Descartes, Sun Tzu, to name a few.

Semper fidelis (which sometimes feels like a burden)

(in reply to shiftyw)
Profile   Post #: 383
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 12:52:00 PM   
shiftyw


Posts: 2837
Joined: 6/6/2013
From: The Shire
Status: offline
if you really wanted to torture me you'd give me uneven and non patterned whacks...
Now, no one else is allowed to post on this thread because it'll ruin it.

(in reply to ExiledTyrant)
Profile   Post #: 384
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 1:53:18 PM   
FieryOpal


Posts: 2821
Joined: 12/8/2013
From: Maryland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

I can see where some things are the same. After all, we're part of the same species, so we're more alike than different. But I can also see where some might believe the differences between men and women as a matter of socialization and conditioning from birth, not solely due to biology. Equality is more of an abstract principle, a human contrivance which doesn't really exist in a state of nature. Because of this, concepts of equality are often vague and imprecise, unable to mesh completely with the laws of nature. I think many people believe that society should still make an honest effort in striving toward equality, while realizing that it will never be perfect.

But some people insist that everything should be perfect, and are visibly frustrated when it isn't. That's where a lot of the consternation over this video seems to be coming from. The basic argument seems to be that these men in the video were bad people who shouldn't be saying or doing stuff like that, and that a woman should be able to walk down the street without being hassled, insulted, or molested in any way. Within that argument is an implied expectation of perfection which may be unrealistic.

Male rights advocates also advocate a similar notion of "perfect equality" from the opposite side. Both sides are frustrated because they can't get everything they want, and neither side seems willing to compromise. That's partly due to the overall society becoming more politically polarized, not something strictly related to gender issues.

What I was alluding to is more of a selective equality from those proponents. I am specifically talking about men who make excuses for socially unacceptable behavior towards women by purporting that women are the same as them, that we think with our sex organs like some males think with their dicks. That we don't value relationship because they (males) are not as relationship-oriented, therefore, we aren't entitled to expect men to rise to the occasion (no pun intended). That we use men sexually and sexually objectify them as much as they do us. That our minds are in the gutter as much as their are, so this gives men carte blanche. I see this is as the "All women are whores" mentality, with a modernized twist. Granted, I'm not denying that there aren't women who do engage in these same or similar behaviors, and that there haven't always been persons of both genders who are out to manipulate and exploit others for the purpose of furthering their own self interests and ego-aggrandizement. What I am saying is that as a whole we do not ordinarily think the same way, we do not have the same identical values or priorities in life necessarily, and I believe that people teach other people how to treat them. I believe that it is up to females to stand our ground and bring a civilizing influence to males, to show them how we want to be treated better - that ALL of us as a human race need to treat humanity better and with respect for basic human rights - not to stoop down to the lowest common denominator level of wallowing with the pigs in order to come out with a few slabs of edible bacon. (See, now this can turn into a bacon thread instead of a fat thread. )

quote:

Sure, I can understand that. But this may be where some of the confusion sets in, since the past several decades have seen women pushing to break through societal barriers which excluded women from all-male bastions and institutions. But once they broke through those barriers, there were obviously some things they didn't like once they saw things from the inside.

One thing about Just One of the Guys which I've found to be a relatively common theme in popular culture was the other character Rick, whom Terry starts to get sweet on and is seemingly a nice guy except that he wears dorky clothes (because he comes from a working class family and can't afford better). I don't know if it was unintentional or not, but I thought it sent an odd mixed message in that no one was really interested in Rick as a person. But once he got a better haircut and a set of fancy clothes, suddenly he was an item, even getting a date with the prom queen (at which point Terry started to get jealous).

Of course, he wasn't the geeky, wimpy kid in The Breakfast Club who ended up alone while the others paired off and asked him to write their essays because he was the one who was so smart. The criminal and the jock get the girls, but the brain who tries to be a good citizen does not. That's another bizarre theme which gained prevalence in popular culture.

Just like the base, more primitive character of "Fonzie" was far more popular with the females than the civilized "nerds" from the same show which coined that very term. To be sure, these are all just fictional presentations which should not be confused with reality, but it can't be denied that they've had some level of influence on how people think and see things in society. You ask why you should knock down a few notches to a baser, more primitive level, and I would ask the exact same question.

Aha, but Terry saw in Rick what the others didn't see. I think this was more of a statement about seeing through social trappings and into the heart, mind & soul of another. Rick just let the newfound attention get to his head and was ego-tripping there for a while before he came to his senses.

quote:

Yes, now that you mention it, I do recall that it was around that time. It's interesting to see commentaries about all those 80s era movies (and earlier) being looked at through 21st century eyes, with many of the younger crowd asking "Was it really like that back in those days???" If nothing else, questions like that might indicate that some progress has been made. It's not like society is standing still or regressing back to an earlier era (although there might still be a risk of that, if we're not careful).

We take two steps forward and one step backward. You will recall all the '50s nostalgia throughout the '70s, somehow the '60s got skipped, then in the '90s and toward the turn of the century, we were waxing nostalgic about the '70s&'80s. <--- (My response to this nostalgia craze, other than with the music of the '70s&'80s)

quote:

Perhaps some men became more timid, at least in some respects. I think men are probably more flexible and can conform within certain boundaries than many women might give us credit for, but our analytical side might still pore over the fine print and try to look for loopholes. In fact, the general subject matter and overall consensus of this thread seems to indicate that many men aren't very timid at all. But the situations described are not taking place at a job or school or some other controlled, structured environment. It's more out in the streets, in "open territory," so to speak.

As for sexual harassment, my understanding was that men weren't required to be more timid, but just more respectful. If a man makes advances toward a woman and she says no, then that's the end of that. It's when it becomes an ongoing, repetitive thing that makes it into harassment/stalking, not just a one-time faux pas. But if a man of good conscience is told in no uncertain terms that certain behaviors are unwanted, unwelcome, and not okay, then they may feel duty-bound to respect the rights of others. Some people disparage it as "political correctness," and I'll admit that it can get rather silly at times. But if someone is convinced that something is hurtful or offensive to other human beings, then it may be simply a matter of not wanting to hurt others.

I don't know about blue-collar workers, but I noticed there was a toning-down among my white-collar contemporaries, for better or for worse. One of the most frequent complaints we women had then was that men were not assertive enough about asking women out on dates. Although having said that, men of the older generations weren't as fearful of losing their jobs or hit with a sexual harassment lawsuit. I once went to work for the (married) president of a bank. For one day. When I was getting ready to leave and it was just the two of us there in the suite because everybody else had already left, and asked him in his office if there was anything else I needed to do, he came over to me and asked if he could kiss me since "you are so beautiful." I was so stunned by this, that I didn't know what to say. Typical case of vanilla unwillingness to give consent but giving it anyway. He cupped my face and kissed me on the cheek. I hid how flustered I was and left, shaken, never to return to my new job and went back to work for the bank where I had been previously employed as a bank officer.

quote:

Perhaps it might be slightly different nowadays, but it wasn't all that uncommon in the 70s and 80s for attractive women to pursue men they found to be attractive. But those who are attractive would already be accustomed to attention from the opposite sex anyway. That's why so many teenage boys dream of becoming rock stars, since they see all the screaming female fans at the concerts.

Because men became more hesitant and also wanted to keep the upper hand. I have many, many more, but I'll give you two examples. I have a male friend who never makes the first move. This way he can always say that he didn't make the moves on the woman, she made the move on him. Therefore, he wasn't the one who was skirt-chasing the age-inappropriate 18-year-old daughter of a family friend. She is an adult. He justifies in his own mind that he was not acting predatory by engaging in this one-night stand, and he is absolved of his personal responsibilities or any unethical conduct. What was he supposed to do? She threw herself at him like a gift-wrapped present waiting to get opened. Then there's the case of my older son who is close to 30. *Deep sigh* It isn't that he's romantically lazy, but despite being an outgoing extrovert who was always popular in school, he gets romantically shy. He goes for girls who throw themselves at him instead of going after a (higher class of) lady whom he really wants. So he ends up settling for whatever he can get. It's his choice, but I have to tell him I don't want to hear about it later when his girlfriend invariably uses him for whatever he's worth, derails the upward path he was on, or causes problems after he lets her move in less than 2 months later.

quote:

True, and there were a lot of disrespectful and ill-manner youth in my day too. I reached my teen years in the late 70s/early 80s when crime was higher and juvenile delinquency was the in thing. Back then, it might have been the case where we knew what the rules of polite society were, but openly flouted them anyway. Today, however, it seems that fewer people actually even know the rules, probably because of what our generation did to those rules.

We effed up, plain and simple. We let ourselves be influenced by the "Let It All Hang Out" hippie counter-culture spouting "Free Love" and "Don't trust anyone over 30" dribble. There are still these older baby-boomer hippie throwbacks among us. Most of them sold out to The Establishment by the '90s, the ones who didn't run off and join some religious cult on a commune out in the wilderness or on the outskirts of town.

quote:

I think religious mores have also played a role in how society perceives these things. Males are human, and as with all humans, their mentality is malleable and generally a product of the society in which they were raised. If religious-based societal conventions tell people that certain parts of the human anatomy are "dirty" and that "fornication" and "coveting" are evil sins for which someone will burn in hell for all eternity, then it may lead to similarly irrational reactions and attitudes.

But you have to ask, why would it become necessary for ancient societies to control the masses with sex-negative religious doctrines? Why is it necessary to have to control libido and to institute prohibitions, assuming that other than for economic considerations in getting married off, how else do you protect women and children from rogue men or from those of a more barbaric nature? You will note that even in cultures which allow polygamy, a man cannot take more wives than he can afford to support. In Africa, each wife is entitled to her own separate hut. There is a method to the madness, you just have to delve down deeper to find out what the causative factors are for ensuring a more stable, law-abiding society. Peoples have to work with what they have, within the limitations of what resources are at hand within the time period in which they live. You must streamline for the greater good.

quote:

Well, there's nothing wrong with speaking out against it, although it need not lead to any kind of physical confrontation, depending on how one expresses oneself.

Agreed. Men need to be accountable to other men outside the circle of their own families. Older and wiser men need to be better role models themselves in order to mentor younger males.

_____________________________

Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage. - Lao Tzu
There is no remedy for love but to love more. - Thoreau

(in reply to Zonie63)
Profile   Post #: 385
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 1:56:49 PM   
ExiledTyrant


Posts: 4547
Joined: 12/9/2013
From: Exiled
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: shiftyw

if you really wanted to torture me you'd give me uneven and non patterned whacks...
Now, no one else is allowed to post on this thread because it'll ruin it.


Gunna D everyone right into submission, aincha?

_____________________________

Gnothi Seauton
To lead, first follow: Aurelius, Epictetus, Descartes, Sun Tzu, to name a few.

Semper fidelis (which sometimes feels like a burden)

(in reply to shiftyw)
Profile   Post #: 386
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:01:52 PM   
camille65


Posts: 5746
Joined: 7/11/2007
From: Austin Texas
Status: offline
Oh thank god someone posted! Other than me lol. It felt like a dare "Don't touch, wet paint" which results in my getting paint on my fingers because I cannot resist. I felt so pressured!

Whew.

_____________________________


~Love your life! (It is the only one you'll get).




(in reply to ExiledTyrant)
Profile   Post #: 387
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:03:37 PM   
ExiledTyrant


Posts: 4547
Joined: 12/9/2013
From: Exiled
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: camille65

Oh thank god someone posted! Other than me lol. It felt like a dare "Don't touch, wet paint" which results in my getting paint on my fingers because I cannot resist. I felt so pressured!

Whew.


Now you've done it. Shifty is going to get all evil on you.

Jus sayin

_____________________________

Gnothi Seauton
To lead, first follow: Aurelius, Epictetus, Descartes, Sun Tzu, to name a few.

Semper fidelis (which sometimes feels like a burden)

(in reply to camille65)
Profile   Post #: 388
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:06:41 PM   
camille65


Posts: 5746
Joined: 7/11/2007
From: Austin Texas
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: ExiledTyrant


quote:

ORIGINAL: camille65

Oh thank god someone posted! Other than me lol. It felt like a dare "Don't touch, wet paint" which results in my getting paint on my fingers because I cannot resist. I felt so pressured!

Whew.


Now you've done it. Shifty is going to get all evil on you.

Jus sayin


I can take it! I'm way tough!


_____________________________


~Love your life! (It is the only one you'll get).




(in reply to ExiledTyrant)
Profile   Post #: 389
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:11:33 PM   
shiftyw


Posts: 2837
Joined: 6/6/2013
From: The Shire
Status: offline
For everyone who posts after this page I lose someone caning me. Sounds fair?

(in reply to camille65)
Profile   Post #: 390
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:12:40 PM   
camille65


Posts: 5746
Joined: 7/11/2007
From: Austin Texas
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: shiftyw

For everyone who posts after this page I lose someone caning me. Sounds fair?


Totally fair, and nice because I don't have to go all tough OR run away.


_____________________________


~Love your life! (It is the only one you'll get).




(in reply to shiftyw)
Profile   Post #: 391
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:13:47 PM   
ExiledTyrant


Posts: 4547
Joined: 12/9/2013
From: Exiled
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quote:

ORIGINAL: shiftyw

For everyone who posts after this page I lose someone caning me. Sounds fair?


Nope. The negotiations closed pages ago. Just suck it up buttercup.

_____________________________

Gnothi Seauton
To lead, first follow: Aurelius, Epictetus, Descartes, Sun Tzu, to name a few.

Semper fidelis (which sometimes feels like a burden)

(in reply to shiftyw)
Profile   Post #: 392
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:14:53 PM   
SweetnStormySub


Posts: 74
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From: Buckeye State
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I can't wait any longer...mute slaves in KY?! I know, I know, I am off topic but seriously, I am intrigued! Please, please, please, pretty please enlighten moi!!

(in reply to camille65)
Profile   Post #: 393
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:16:48 PM   
camille65


Posts: 5746
Joined: 7/11/2007
From: Austin Texas
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: SweetnStormySub

I can't wait any longer...mute slaves in KY?! I know, I know, I am off topic but seriously, I am intrigued! Please, please, please, pretty please enlighten moi!!


It was the most epic thread that ever epiced. I will attempt to find it but I'm awful at finding old threads.


_____________________________


~Love your life! (It is the only one you'll get).




(in reply to SweetnStormySub)
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RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:18:21 PM   
camille65


Posts: 5746
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From: Austin Texas
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Hot damn! Not only am I way tough but I'm brilliant in my modest way.

http://www.collarchat.com/m_790885/mpage_1/tm.htm

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RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:27:46 PM   
SweetnStormySub


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From: Buckeye State
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You ARE epically brilliant! Thanks.

(in reply to camille65)
Profile   Post #: 396
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/8/2014 2:28:50 PM   
camille65


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From: Austin Texas
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I actually thought it would be hard to find lol, but I will take epically brilliant any day!

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Profile   Post #: 397
RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/9/2014 5:14:11 AM   
Greta75


Posts: 9968
Joined: 2/6/2011
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quote:

ORIGINAL: GoddessManko
Just...OK. Race and geography have no bearing on ectomorph, mesomorph and endomorph. Muscle weighs more than fat, just so you know dear.

Size of bone Mass seem to be very race and geographically specific though.
Like it's impossible for me to find a chinese male of my bestestest friend's size.
You can find tall chinese males, like in the 1.9m and up region, but they still don't got big bones.

And I only like men who are tall, big wrists, big forearms, big butt and big thighs. Like literally non-existence in my race, although, yea, my x-husband was like 1 in the million of that description that is chinese, that's why I married him.


< Message edited by Greta75 -- 11/9/2014 5:20:39 AM >

(in reply to GoddessManko)
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RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/9/2014 9:56:23 AM   
MariaB


Posts: 2969
Joined: 4/3/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Greta75

quote:

ORIGINAL: GoddessManko
Just...OK. Race and geography have no bearing on ectomorph, mesomorph and endomorph. Muscle weighs more than fat, just so you know dear.

Size of bone Mass seem to be very race and geographically specific though.
Like it's impossible for me to find a chinese male of my bestestest friend's size.
You can find tall chinese males, like in the 1.9m and up region, but they still don't got big bones.

And I only like men who are tall, big wrists, big forearms, big butt and big thighs. Like literally non-existence in my race, although, yea, my x-husband was like 1 in the million of that description that is chinese, that's why I married him.



You like a big butt on a guy? If there is one thing that will really put me off a bloke its a fat ass. I saw George Clooney's bare ass last night in a film and omg he's no more the hot guy in my mind any more.

Good job we are all different.


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(in reply to Greta75)
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RE: 10 hours of walking in NYC as a woman - 11/9/2014 10:22:46 AM   
FieryOpal


Posts: 2821
Joined: 12/8/2013
From: Maryland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: MariaB

You like a big butt on a guy? If there is one thing that will really put me off a bloke its a fat ass. I saw George Clooney's bare ass last night in a film and omg he's no more the hot guy in my mind any more.

Good job we are all different.

I guess in order to get big thighs, you have to start with a big butt. I'm with you Maria, I'll take a nice compact ass any day. Gotta have some meat on those butt cheeks, though--no flat asses.
(Are we sexually objectifying men again? )

Please tell me it isn't so about George Clooney. Well, I was never into him, so it doesn't really matter.... But next movie he's in, I'll be checking out that part of his anatomy just out of curiosity.

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