You'll sometimes hear advice on the forum along the lines of get rich/huge/famous. It's implied that the path to true success with women (and the rest of your life) is to become an exceptional man. An alternative position is that you can rely on tricks, routines and rules, and yet another position is that success is down to numbers and experience.
We should all probably be engaged in some sort of self-improvement, that's not in question. We can shoot for the stars but the reality is that most of us are going to remain pretty average; normal jobs, normal bodies, normal social status. I'm not trying to hold anyone back, begrudge anyone's success, or excuse laziness. If you want to move up to the ninety-fifth percentile, go for it brother, I'll cheer you on and in the mean time I'll be chipping away at my own goals too.
But we can't ignore the reality that most of us won't achieve phenomenal success, we won't do the things required or we might find contentment in the middle of the bell-curve. Significant and lasting change is really pretty rare, I don't think we ought to be basing Game around the flimsy promise of an exceptional future self.
Right, where's this going? I'm going to suggest that Game needs to square with reality and it ought to be about, and for the average guy and his average problems.The average guy also needs some honest self-assessment and realistic (possibly lowered) expectations about what Game is going to do for him.
Try this on for size.
The noob says "Hey, there's new speed humps in this road, they're really slowing me down and pissing me off." The guy at the top of his game replies "I used to drive that road all the time and I'm much faster than you because I have a Ferrari, you need to get a Ferrari."."But what about the speed humps?" asks the Noob. "Your problem isn't the speed humps," answers the vet "Your problem is that you don't have a Ferrari."
Ferraris are cool and we all eventually want to drive one but pretending the speed humps don't matter doesn't help the noob.
We should all probably be engaged in some sort of self-improvement, that's not in question. We can shoot for the stars but the reality is that most of us are going to remain pretty average; normal jobs, normal bodies, normal social status. I'm not trying to hold anyone back, begrudge anyone's success, or excuse laziness. If you want to move up to the ninety-fifth percentile, go for it brother, I'll cheer you on and in the mean time I'll be chipping away at my own goals too.
But we can't ignore the reality that most of us won't achieve phenomenal success, we won't do the things required or we might find contentment in the middle of the bell-curve. Significant and lasting change is really pretty rare, I don't think we ought to be basing Game around the flimsy promise of an exceptional future self.
Right, where's this going? I'm going to suggest that Game needs to square with reality and it ought to be about, and for the average guy and his average problems.The average guy also needs some honest self-assessment and realistic (possibly lowered) expectations about what Game is going to do for him.
Try this on for size.
The noob says "Hey, there's new speed humps in this road, they're really slowing me down and pissing me off." The guy at the top of his game replies "I used to drive that road all the time and I'm much faster than you because I have a Ferrari, you need to get a Ferrari."."But what about the speed humps?" asks the Noob. "Your problem isn't the speed humps," answers the vet "Your problem is that you don't have a Ferrari."
Ferraris are cool and we all eventually want to drive one but pretending the speed humps don't matter doesn't help the noob.