Bible_Belt
Master Don Juan
Men tend to view their friends as trusted advisers. Your friends are supportive of your life by being candid and honest. If you're about to do something stupid, you want your friends to tell you first if they see it coming. Valued advice can be both negative and positive. For example, if you're wearing a stupid hat that girls are making fun of behind your back, your friends would tell you to take it off.
Women and their friends are completely different. Women view friends as cheerleaders for their life. You go girl! needs to be the constant theme, or else the other woman is not her friend. Friendship is unrelenting positivity, and that is what it means to be a good supportive friend. If a girl is wearing a stupid hat that is getting ridiculed, her friends might think that and they certainly might say that behind her back, but they would never say anything negative to the girl herself - that's not what friends do.
So then in a relationship, both the man and woman want to be supportive of the other one, but the problem is that they define it very differently. It helps as a guy to stick with the rule that words don't mean anything. Whatever nice things a woman says about your life - she's probably telling you what she thinks you need to hear. That's being supportive.
It's a bigger problem for guys in regard to trying to be supportive of a woman. The most constructive and well-meaning criticism will inevitably backfire. And if it's all factually correct, that makes it even worse, because then you'll have the nerve to point out that what you are saying is true. How dare you! What an unsupportive a55hole you are. She'll need to tell all her friends the horrible things you said. They might be thinking you were completely right, but they'll never say that to her. They'll just agree that you are an a55hole.
A long time ago, my then-wife went on antidepressants and gained a bunch of weight. Eventually I just flat out told her that she needed to lose weight. Every single one of her female friends agreed I was just a d!ck. The one male friend she told was a gay guy, a childhood friend she grew up with. He said, "Honey I love you, but I gotta tell it to you like it is. You being fat is not what he signed up for. If you want to keep your man, you should try to lose weight." I never met that guy, but he was so feminine that I thought he was a woman when he called on the phone. But he still had a man's view of what it meant to be a supportive friend.
From now on, I am going to try to treat women like women treat each other. If I'm about to say something about any aspect of her life, her friends or family, or their relationships, and the theme of that statement is not you go girl!, then it's best left unsaid. Truth is for men; women can't handle it.
Women and their friends are completely different. Women view friends as cheerleaders for their life. You go girl! needs to be the constant theme, or else the other woman is not her friend. Friendship is unrelenting positivity, and that is what it means to be a good supportive friend. If a girl is wearing a stupid hat that is getting ridiculed, her friends might think that and they certainly might say that behind her back, but they would never say anything negative to the girl herself - that's not what friends do.
So then in a relationship, both the man and woman want to be supportive of the other one, but the problem is that they define it very differently. It helps as a guy to stick with the rule that words don't mean anything. Whatever nice things a woman says about your life - she's probably telling you what she thinks you need to hear. That's being supportive.
It's a bigger problem for guys in regard to trying to be supportive of a woman. The most constructive and well-meaning criticism will inevitably backfire. And if it's all factually correct, that makes it even worse, because then you'll have the nerve to point out that what you are saying is true. How dare you! What an unsupportive a55hole you are. She'll need to tell all her friends the horrible things you said. They might be thinking you were completely right, but they'll never say that to her. They'll just agree that you are an a55hole.
A long time ago, my then-wife went on antidepressants and gained a bunch of weight. Eventually I just flat out told her that she needed to lose weight. Every single one of her female friends agreed I was just a d!ck. The one male friend she told was a gay guy, a childhood friend she grew up with. He said, "Honey I love you, but I gotta tell it to you like it is. You being fat is not what he signed up for. If you want to keep your man, you should try to lose weight." I never met that guy, but he was so feminine that I thought he was a woman when he called on the phone. But he still had a man's view of what it meant to be a supportive friend.
From now on, I am going to try to treat women like women treat each other. If I'm about to say something about any aspect of her life, her friends or family, or their relationships, and the theme of that statement is not you go girl!, then it's best left unsaid. Truth is for men; women can't handle it.