Roober
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2016
- Messages
- 2,383
- Reaction score
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I have always wondered how you know if you are a good kisser or not? I would like to think I am good, but who knows...I'm telling men to be unapologetic in their masculinity, be confident in their sex appeal, practice being comfortable interacting with women and I'm using examples to demonstrate what that behavior looks like.
Guys here sometimes say act like James Bond too. He's fictional. I mean if you want to be a ball player you go to a pro's workshop right? You don't consult the Pop Warner league.
That's all. The right attitude and the way a man carries himself is so much of the battle.
Have I personally dated very good looking men? Yes. Do I understand the player type? Yes.
My whole point was that the man I married was not one of the best looking if you took a cross section of men I dated...nor was he the most wealthy or successful out of the group I dated...but he is the man I picked...and I was a woman men wanted.
Sex appeal gave my ex an edge over better looking more successful men.
The man I dated (and who I left) before my ex husband was a professional model (with terrible insecurities) and car dealer. The model was gorgeous, always swimming in hot girls vying for his attention.
The attention from the other women never bugged me, that was a given, but his insecurities and neuroses were a turn off. My ex was nice looking but not professional model good looking...but he was secure in himself and great to be around. I remember after I got engaged model guy came in the club and was going on about my ring...he asked was I seriously getting married and went on about it.
I heard along the way from mutual acquaintances later on that he was bummed he missed the boat with me. He was a cool guy too, smart, ambitious. Insecurity was his undoing. It led to the player lifestyle (and eventually led to his death).
I'm just encouraging men to embrace their desires and up their comfort level around women and improve their sex appeal in that way.
To say looks are everything is inaccurate. That is a cop out.
I've had dates with men who were or are great looking but not good with women as far as I was concerned.
I can think of guys who were too timid, many who were too sexually aggressive too fast, some who were horrible at kissing (that's a different topic but an immediate NEXT!) several who were square/awkward & several who were indecisive, several who came across as too boring/nothing in common.
So much of this is subjective as you can see but upping comfort level interacting with women as well as sex appeal will help men overcome many of the turn offs I noted above through better calibration with women.
You can't win if you don't try. You can't improve if you don't try.
To categorically throw in the towel as per the OPs attitude is self defeating.