scrouds
Master Don Juan
We tend to do what we want done to us. We tend to see in others what we want ourselves. This is what I like to call the mirror fallacy.
For example if we want someone to be nice to us, we try and be nice to them. If we want people to hold the door open for us when we’re a few steps behind, we will do the same for others. You will see this in people that like you. They will mirror your actions, even drinking from their glass at the same time you do.
One of the bigger problems happens because we set up expectations. So called “pay it forward.” When the other person doesn’t reciprocate, we get pissed. We think they should do something. You’ll see this idea embodied in oral sex a lot. A guy will go down on a girl so that she reciprocates.
In this case, we project our male friendship model onto women, and wonder why they don’t measure up as friends. We then say they can never be friends. We actually are expecting them to act like us. And in that sense, no, women and men cannot be friends.
The AFC is actually the same thing coming from the other side. A woman treats him like a female friend, giving him attentions that he then misinterprets as interest and grows attached. She doesn’t treat him like a male friend would, so he doesn’t see her actions as friendship.
These 2 cases are male centric. There is of course the opposite side to both situations. I feel those still need to be explored. Then role reversal can be added to make a more complicated model. To take Str8up’s post, he’s playing with a goal that is different then the normal model of the female friendship. But it requires playing by the female friendship rules, not the male.
For example if we want someone to be nice to us, we try and be nice to them. If we want people to hold the door open for us when we’re a few steps behind, we will do the same for others. You will see this in people that like you. They will mirror your actions, even drinking from their glass at the same time you do.
One of the bigger problems happens because we set up expectations. So called “pay it forward.” When the other person doesn’t reciprocate, we get pissed. We think they should do something. You’ll see this idea embodied in oral sex a lot. A guy will go down on a girl so that she reciprocates.
In this case, we project our male friendship model onto women, and wonder why they don’t measure up as friends. We then say they can never be friends. We actually are expecting them to act like us. And in that sense, no, women and men cannot be friends.
The AFC is actually the same thing coming from the other side. A woman treats him like a female friend, giving him attentions that he then misinterprets as interest and grows attached. She doesn’t treat him like a male friend would, so he doesn’t see her actions as friendship.
These 2 cases are male centric. There is of course the opposite side to both situations. I feel those still need to be explored. Then role reversal can be added to make a more complicated model. To take Str8up’s post, he’s playing with a goal that is different then the normal model of the female friendship. But it requires playing by the female friendship rules, not the male.