Manure Spherian
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2023
- Messages
- 1,259
- Reaction score
- 1,123
- Age
- 46
I have no doubt those sorts of stunts are pulled for media but high-status men are not womanless.
I have no doubt those sorts of stunts are pulled for media but high-status men are not womanless.
Of course. Even Epstein had Maxwell.I have no doubt those sorts of stunts are pulled for media but high-status men are not womanless.
She backs off you back off. She replies later you reply later. She’s busy your busy. She can’t make it you also can’t make it. Basically when she loses interest you don’t chase after her in every way. I’m taking this dead serious now.Hence it’s easy for him to say that. So long as he is not Quasimodo or socially stunted (and no man who owns a yacht is) a man who owns a yacht will have to fight women off!
What do you mean by chase specifically?
I love arguing with idiots. Why else would I post on SoSuave?Never argue with idiots.... it is a waste of time.
Tell her a little about yourself, but not too much. Maintain some mystery. Give her something to think about and wonder about when she's at home.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
The whole blood is thicker than water saying.As the title says.
For myself, after having lived at least two decades, with obviously still having very little to show for it, I reckon that sickness does tell you how short life really is (in my case, it nags me everyday). The more I learned about my disorder and being in a third-world country and needing to establish my own generational wealth (for my parents came from not-so-off households), the more I realize how much harder the challenges I have to face really are. The more reality hits me, the more I feel like I'm in purgatory, forced to compromise focusing on my health with making the most of college (this may be my last year or two before proceeding to a Master's degree).
I still consider myself lucky, but apparently my luck is not enough, and even hard work is not enough. I have a clear direction with where I want to go, but I need more long-term strategy in my life, in facing the unknown, and this is where I lack. Financially, it seems I need a miracle.
There are also some truths which beg my more immediate acceptance, but I guess the values and principles I grew up in and made me who I am, still hold me back.
What about yours? Which failures challenged you the most, and how did you change along the way, and what did you go through to accept the new reality?
Okay... you are correct, I will caveat...If you are arguing for entertainment then it isn't a waste of time.I love arguing with idiots. Why else would I post on SoSuave?
Joking aside, I really liked your post.
Anyone that brags about themselves on social media is full of cr@p. Real high value men don't do sh1t like this.I have no doubt those sorts of stunts are pulled for media but high-status men are not womanless.
Still, they all drool over Dan Bilzerian and Andrew Tate.Anyone that brags about themselves on social media is full of cr@p. Real high value men don't do sh1t like this.
What happens, IN HER MIND, is that she comes to see you as WORTHLESS simply because she hasn't had to INVEST anything in you in order to get you or to keep you.
You were an interesting diversion while she had nothing else to do. But now that someone a little more valuable has come along, someone who expects her to treat him very well, she'll have no problem at all dropping you or demoting you to lowly "friendship" status.
Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.
I believe that although some pull such stunts, high-earning influencers of all niches, some of whom make millions, generally do not have issues attracting women, as it goes for other high-status men.Anyone that brags about themselves on social media is full of cr@p. Real high value men don't do sh1t like this.
Yeah... I don't get it. I also don't get the mindless worship of celebrities.Still, they all drool over Dan Bilzerian and Andrew Tate.
And just when I was starting to like you.Humans are nothing more than advanced primates capable of rational thought... which frequently takes a back seat to emotional decision making. We want to follow others who we think represents our values... or what we wish we were like a tribe of apes fighting over bananas and tossing our poo at other apes we don't like.
I've used Mr. Wonderful's approach when a family member asks for money. When a relative asks for a loan I tell them that I'll gift them triple the amount, meaning that I don't want it back. I also want to know nothing about where it goes and we are to never speak of it again. The caveat is that this is a one time event, and any future asks will be ignored/denied. Of course there are people that will come back and ask again, but I find that doing this lowers the chances and keeps money from ruining family ties.The whole blood is thicker than water saying.
100% Pure BS.
Family will f*ck you over a lot quicker and with less remorse than friends or even a business partner. Something about, "Oh, it's only my (son, daughter, brother, sister, etc.) they don't need to be paid back. They'll understand." And on and on.
And if you do help a family member out once, now you're a savings and loan, or a hotel, or an emotional tampon, etc. They don't understand, or care, that you have a life too that's also full or challenges.
I'm not looking for sympathy but to validate my point, I had one parent take out two credit cards in my name and default on payments, had their bankruptcy end up on my credit report, "borrowed" all my lawn cutting money for the summer I was saving to buy a new bike (I was 13) and never repaid it, and asked me for money on the regular once I became an adult. The other parent started businesses and bought and sold houses but never offered one cent for my college education. This parent also used college tuition money that was willed to me as a minor on a business she started and failed with and never repaid the money.
Heed my warning.
~Dash
All a matter of the way in which one thinks of such things. They CAN be harsh, if one does what's currently en vogue right now, by endlessy thinking to themselves: "This is awful, horrible, and unbearable... The Satanic System we live under MUST be overhauled and rebuilt from the ground up, so that we can enjoy a Utopia, free of all suffering and injustice"I don't see most of these lessons as harsh
I used the wording in my question to invoke the feeling, because often the lessons we need to hear and learn are quite harsh - not usually aligned in our own way of thinking that is, in a healthy way, harsh to the ego, harsh to an old way of thinking, harsh for an old self that it must leave and be replaced by a new one.I don't see most of these lessons as harsh. In fact upon learning they will relieve you of a great burden. It's delusion that causes suffering.
How much better do you think, is a career in the West? Or at least what makes a career in the West more helpful? Speaking from your experiences and where you came from, anyway.Hi Inquisitor,
As if being born in a very poor Country isn't enough,you are burdened by poor health....Seems you have been dealt a poor hand in lifes card game,sadly you have no other choice but to make the most of it....As you have seen for yourself,your only way out would seem to be higher education,if you possibly can get out of the Phillipines,pleasant and kind as its people are,it is grindingly poor and corrupt...Are their any chances of a Scholarship in the West?....Have you wisely chosen your future career?....To what extent will your Health problems affect your emigration options?
OK grandad