Poll: Women like jerks?

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UsefulPlayer 1

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Maybe a appropriate test to determine "what quality a woman wants" would be to combine the test quality with ugly. For instance, a smart person that is ugly. A confident person that is ugly. But a jerk that is ugly?

I think anyone can reasonably believe a woman would want the first and second, but I don't think any woman would want an ugly jerk.

I would also reiterate the "interesting" quality other posters have mentioned. Some seemingly jerkish actions really just spark interest and humor, and should not be associated with actually being a jerk.
 

johnnyboy2537

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Nov 28, 2012
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To some extent. I think to those it's true for it mostly comes it being something they probably shouldn't do but get the urge to try or because someone told them not to. Most people get rebellious urges from time to time so it isn't that surprising. Some people just think people who more charming and confident are jerks though because they're jealous and tend to be too self-conscious and have low self-esteem.
 

Weaver

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Apr 28, 2008
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I know one woman who constantly dates jerks and is always like "Ugh, how do I always fall for guys who are assholes?"
I'm not sure why she keeps thinking these guys who basically have "right cunter" written on their forehead aren't raging dickheads, but that's her problem.

Most women I know don't have such issues.
 

Zen Bard

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Sep 16, 2012
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Kathinka said:
Talking as a mostly straight woman: To an extend.

Women like confident, assertive, high value guys.
This often overlaps with "jerks", or, more correctly the cocky-asshole, in a funny way, type guy.
We don't want guys that crawl to our feet, put us on a pedestal and do everything for us. This signals that the guy doesn't have many options, hence he can't have great value. Now if a guy teases us, challenges us and isn't afraid to upset us a little bit, not putting up with all of the little tests we girls throw at dudes, that guy clearly has other options, that's what we like.
And often, the jerks are just like that.
Best advice a man could get from a woman!

(And it backs up everything my wife's told me...thank God!)
 

Coruptin

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Jul 9, 2009
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I think people are misunderstanding the question. I thought the question was "is it possible for women to like jerks."
Some people seem to be taking it as "do women prefer jerks."

Could we get clarification OP?
 

EeveeElectro

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Aug 3, 2008
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Why do men think they can read women's minds? I'm a woman and even I don't know what goes on in my brain sometimes. If I started saying "Men only like dumb bitches!" I'd get slapped down within about four minutes.

It always makes me laugh when men insult the guy the lass they fancy is dating yet can never give an example of why they are a jerk.

A guy that isn't you =/= a jerk.
 

Erttheking

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Coruptin said:
I think people are misunderstanding the question. I thought the question was "is it possible for women to like jerks."
Some people seem to be taking it as "do women prefer jerks."

Could we get clarification OP?
I was mainly going along the lines of women preferring jerks, as that seems to be the implication when people say "women like jerks."
 

Inglorious891

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Kathinka said:
Talking as a mostly straight woman: To an extend.

Women like confident, assertive, high value guys.
This often overlaps with "jerks", or, more correctly the cocky-asshole, in a funny way, type guy.
We don't want guys that crawl to our feet, put us on a pedestal and do everything for us. This signals that the guy doesn't have many options, hence he can't have great value. Now if a guy teases us, challenges us and isn't afraid to upset us a little bit, not putting up with all of the little tests we girls throw at dudes, that guy clearly has other options, that's what we like.
And often, the jerks are just like that.
Just for the sake of curiosity, did your husband put you through any of these "tests", or was this more of a "the male has to prove himself to the female" kind of thing?
 

Callate

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BloatedGuppy said:
Randomly chides a forum full of people for their presumed opinions.

Supplies anecdotal, personal, emotionally charged evidence for why their presumed opinions are "wrong".

Submits a spiel about people assuming that they are "inherently correct in their assumptions", whilst making assumptions himself.

Sneers at the suggestion that making blanket accusations about women could be construed as misogynist, ends post with a diatribe about misandry.

I think that about sums it up.

Mate, I'm sorry for what the women in your family have been through and how that has shaped your view of relationships, but you appear to have a chip on your shoulder the size of Texas.
Point-by-point:

1. More directed at the OP, who quickly dismissed the notion as "rumor" within the first handful of posts. That was insufficiently clear of me.

2. What I see in "discussions" of these and related matters, repeatedly, is that on the basis of nothing more than the anecdotes of men frustrated with observing such male-female interactions, a great many people are more than willing to assume that the polar opposite of what the (sometimes hypothetical) anecdote-relater is telling must be the truth: they aren't actually nice, they're only interested in obtaining sex, that it isn't possible to be both kind and frustrated, that they're actually socially awkward and projecting malevolence onto their more successful peers.

More to the point, it is exactly on the basis of emotionally-charged anecdotes of their own that such reflexive judgments are made, leading them to quickly dismiss anything to the contrary out of hand. And if an across-the-board conclusion is put forward, a single counter-example is sufficient to indicate that the conclusion is wrong.

That said:

A UBC study concluded that, with regard to initial sexual attraction, women are likely to prefer men who appear prideful, guilty, or sullen over ones who were smiling.

One writer for Psychology Today citing a Buss and Shackelford study, accepts the notion that women are in fact sometimes inclined to accept ill-treatment if they feel their potential mate has other qualities, especially younger women and those who don't particularly value themselves.

And just for rounding things out, a relationship writer for The Telegraph just flatly states, "like many women, I have an illogical soft-spot for massive jerks."

3. I may have made assumptions about the attitudes and intentions of those engaging these questions. What I've seen here, along with past experience, led me to those conclusions. Again, mostly referring to first handful of comments.

As to the greater question, I only wish that there wasn't such a pattern of a dogmatic acceptance of a particular interpretation. It's a complicated question to which there's little evidence of a simple answer, and engaging it as if the matter was already settled is worse than useless; it's harmful and destructive.

4. Making blanket assumptions about women certainly can be misogynstic. But making blanket assumptions about men- particularly assumptions based only on the premise that their accounts must be contrary to the reality- is misandric.

I've become frustrated with the notion that there's an acceptable, even normalized blanket supposition that any man complaining about being "nice" yet being overlooked in favor of men who are distant, neglectful, and even abusive must be mis-stating the reality. And you know what? Some of them undoubtedly are.

But it's such a common complaint that it bears examination, not just dismissal in favor of a narrative that suits certain popular assumptions.

And the pattern that one side of an issue addresses the issue while the other gets to hold a referendum on the character of those who disagree isn't helping anyone. The constant refrain of "this is going to turn into a shit show because someone mentioned feminism!" instills everything with the idea that there is no discussion to be had, that there is only one acceptable line of thought and belief and anyone who strays from it had better stay home.

My actual opinion, if you care, is that this matter is two sides of a single coin, that coin being self-esteem and formation of identity, both of which are often still in turbulence in the teen-to-young-adult stage of one's life. The reality is that, while social mores are slowly changing, men are still usually called upon to initiate contacts and inquiries when a potential heterosexual romantic relationship, of any form, is being considered; women are put in the position of accepting or refusing such advances.

Within that framework, a man who seems distant and uninterested in the subject of his pursuit appears to be a man confident that he has other options, a view that makes a woman who thinks poorly of herself feel flattered and special that he bothers with him at all. Psychology is such that this can sometimes proceed even to the point of abusive behavior: someone who treats you that way must be worth it, because otherwise, why would you put up with them?

Conversely, a man who invests a lot of energy and consideration into a prospective relationship seems desperate, unconfident, and unable to find an alternate partner. No one's self-esteem is stoked by being, not the choice selection of many, but the only option someone thought they had a chance with. Indeed, the opposite may be the case: being able to reject someone re-affirms one's own value, one's own status as someone who has options.

Not everyone goes through this. If one believes one's own self-worth is not something that comes from others' reactions, it's much less likely that the attention of a male jerk or the rejection by the female potential partner is going to have a harmful effect on how one views themselves. And experience and age does, indeed, seem to temper these things, though some people never seem to leave such patterns (certain multiple-divorcees I know come to mind.)

I would really like to see fewer women and men going through this. Our advertising tells us that a man without a woman is less than a man. Crap like "The Secret" and "The Game" introduces another generation to "play hard to get" ideas that re-inforce the idea that no doesn't really mean no and displaying actual interest is a turn-off. "Fifty Shades" and "Twilight" show us that the really desirable guy is a moody stalker. And many "discussions" about this are basically telling a generation of young men not to even try being "nice" because it will be seen as a facade, and possibly reacted to with more hostility than actually being a single-minded predator.

But we don't actually do anything by saying "That isn't how things are, stop whining and shape up." People make self-destructive decisions and judgments. We need to stop condemning or affirming them and help them.

If I flew off in my initial response, I apologize. People, including people I care about, are getting hurt, and extremely facile assumptions are being used to quell contemplating the matter in ways that could actually stop it.
 

Jarek Mace

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Oh look, the fedora crew is back and bitter about beta.

It's easy to confuse confidence with jerk, and sadly - a lot of people do it.
 
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Callate said:
A UBC study concluded that, with regard to initial sexual attraction, women are likely to prefer men who appear prideful, guilty, or sullen over ones who were smiling.

One writer for Psychology Today citing a Buss and Shackelford study, accepts the notion that women are in fact sometimes inclined to accept ill-treatment if they feel their potential mate has other qualities, especially younger women and those who don't particularly value themselves.

And just for rounding things out, a relationship writer for The Telegraph just flatly states, "like many women, I have an illogical soft-spot for massive jerks."
Looking at these three links you posted: The first link emphasizes that this study only reflects first-impression attraction, and doesn't claim to say anything about whether they'd be interested in a relationship with the individual. Also, shame was listed among the attractive moods, something that is generally not associated with being a jerk.

In the second study I can't find the claim that you're saying it makes. Could you give the exact wording so I could Ctrl+F it? I can't find anything suggesting that women will accept ill-treatment, it seems to be exclusively contrasting the desire for the dependable long term guy and the short term heated fling with an attractive guy.

Reading the third article, the author is talking about how she is so attracted to certain qualities that it makes it difficult to recognize the bad ones. This is not a gender exclusive quality, when you're infatuated with someone you lose some of your ability to judge them in an objective manner.

Note that the author explicitly dislikes the abusive, sarcastic or selfish qualities in her partners. Those qualities won't make her like someone. It's that if they have the other qualities that she does like, and they're an asshole, she will have more difficulty recognizing that fact.

4. Making blanket assumptions about women certainly can be misogynstic. But making blanket assumptions about men- particularly assumptions based only on the premise that their accounts must be contrary to the reality- is misandric.
While I'm not generally a fan of trying to paint all "Nice Guy's" intentions with the same brush, there's a difference between making assumptions about a group of men who act in a certain way and making assumptions about men in general. The former is what is happening here, not the latter.
 

BloatedGuppy

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Callate said:
If I flew off in my initial response, I apologize. People, including people I care about, are getting hurt, and extremely facile assumptions are being used to quell contemplating the matter in ways that could actually stop it.
Genuinely classy post that you put a lot of work into. I concur that it is not a black and white issue and is easily dismissed as such. It's easy to get cynical and snarky, particularly when I can look back with dim favor on my own early 20's and time spent as a "nice guy" clamoring ineffectively for women's attention. I still feel that charges such as "All women do X" seldom come from a good place, but you are correct that amending it to "all self-described nice guys are cretins" isn't much of an improvement.

So, I'm sorry if I was snide in my response to you, and I applaud and appreciate your genial reply.
 

Lil devils x_v1legacy

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"Women" do not like Jerks, Jerks like Jerks, however, both men and women can not know someone is really a jerk until they find out the hard way. You live and learn.
 

Karadalis

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Depends on age. And its less "being a jerk" and more "being confident" wich sadly in young males does often translate to "being a jerk"

Then theres the whole "i can change him" real stereotype and the "hes nice to me" real stereotype going on and jerks finding jerks to be jerky together to others. Doesnt help that money + attractiveness seems to be a good way to become a jerk
 

Fox12

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I don't think I've ever met a person who made that claim that wasn't a total shitlord : /
 

Jux

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Sep 2, 2012
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erttheking said:
So I brought up women so I already doomed this thread to be a shitstorm but can we at least try to keep it to a minimum?

So I hear a fair amount of people claiming that women like, and by extension prefer to date, jerks. The thing that puzzles me is that this is one of those things I hear talked about a lot, but personally never see. Personally I have a bit of a hard time swallowing it. So, out of curiosity I thought I'd ask.

Do you think women like jerks? Why or why not? Personally I don't. It just doesn't feel real. I've never really talked to women who act like they secretly desire someone to treat them like shit.
I see this coming from two groups primarily. One, nice guys (tm), that are bitter and looking for an excuse why people, or more usually, one person in particular, won't date them. The other group being manipulative douchebags that prey upon peoples weaknesses and insecurities, then rationalize that people actually like them acting that way.