It's by pretending to be something for an extended period of time (until the change takes) that you can become something else which might otherwise seem out of your ballpark. That, too, is a kind of freedom. There are women who are perfectly capable and intelligent who nonetheless enjoy behaving like uneducated immoral sluts. I don't mean that in ANY derogatory way, truly. Sometimes it's fun to step out of your usual realm and be something you aren't. Given enough time, it stops being an act.
I've never fully believed this. Yes, you can form personality habits, but I don't think it actually changes the core of who you are. And since you are now acting in a way that is different from or directly contrary to your true self, even though it is automatic, you risk inner conflicts that will spill out into the other aspects of your life.
Mind you, this is just how I perceive things. I'm not a psychologist, so I can't make any deeply founded statements on the nature of the beast. This is just a personal observation.
Girls who enjoy a lot of fucking are not bad people.
This... Doesn't really have anything to do with anything. Am I missing something?
Being a woman doesn't make her "all women" - one woman is not qualified to generalize about all women, nor are those generalizations inherently less harmful or incorrect on the basis that the speaker has a vagina or other feminine traits.
No, you're right, being a woman doesn't make her an official spokesperson for all her gender.
But I am fairly certain that the comment was only included because of the standard response we have when listening to someone talk about the opposite sex; namely that they're just blowing smoke and don't actually know what they're talking about.
It's an incorrect statement made to combat an equally misguided assumption. Don't put too much emphasis on it.
For reasons you may not understand, that girl who is excellent at CSS but nonetheless bimboes over to the jerkish guys and says "oh my, I can't computer, I might accidentally a nail" then goes home with one of them, might be pursuing her own perfectly valid interests. You might see it as a misrepresentation, or a lie, or anything else negative...but it's still not.
Okay, here's what I'm having difficulty understanding... How is that not a lie? How is it not a negative thing to use misdirection as a means of getting what you want?
Alright, so I do see a gray area here, but it's not the same one you're seeing. The one I see is the area of 'social games', wherein people will say any number of wild or untrue things as an
indirect method of communicating with the other players. While I still don't particularly care for this, it is debatable as to whether or not it's really lying, since the person doesn't believe it themselves and doesn't expect the other person to either.
Even if we decide to do away with lasting relationships and focus primarily on the sex (which seems to fascinate you for some completely obscure and unfathomable reason. I mean, it's not like us guys spend 100% of our time thinking about sex), I do maintain that it is quite possible to get into someone's pants without the need for untruths. Then again, maybe I'm just so awesome that I pull it off naturally.
Is it a lie when you go work for McDonald's and make a genuine effort to do well at the job, just because you aren't truly, deep down, the kind of person who wanted to work there? I know my example skews far away from what we're talking about, not involving sexuality and all, but please try and see the parallel I'm attempting to make.
I'm afraid I don't actually see the parallel you're drawing, because I don't consider those two aspects (taking pride in your work and wanting to work somewhere better) as being related. Some people (like me) just enjoy making the most out of what they do, and try do the best they can at whatever they're doing. They don't have to like what they're doing in order to like being good at it.
Now, fudging your resumé so you can get into a good-paying job?
That's a lie. It's still a bad comparison though, since you're not lying to yourself as much.
As a male, whenever I've gotten into a relationship with a girl, it had to start out with me "misrepresenting" myself by pretending to care about that girl's life, friends, feelings, and other things unrelated to me or my life. Eventually, that girl becomes my girlfriend, and I actually care. When I've met a stranger, I had to "misrepresent" myself by showing an interest in whatever they happened to be talking about. Eventually, I know that stranger, and it's less of a lie when I act like I care. Less of one, I stress that part. In any case, there are tons and tons and tons of guys and girls out there who may seem to have a questionable level of light in their hearts--I use that term to refer to the "goodness" we're all quick to claim we possess--who nonetheless want to find hope and happiness in their lives. The whole microcosm of their interactions might sicken you, from your ivory tower of moral superiority, but they are pursuing happiness the same as anyone else.
You are faking interest in someone. Not only are you lying to them by pretending to be interested, you're lying to yourself by making such an effort to be around someone you don't actually like talking to. You're right, that does sicken me.
Now I'm going to have to scrape vomit off the side of this tower for the rest of the week.
One thing is for sure. If I chose to greet this world with 100% honesty at all times and never pretend anything for the sake of others, I'd be in prison. I think a little make-believe is helpful to our ability to coexist as a society.
Is it Eurasia or Eastasia we're fighting with now, brother?