And oh, of course you'd prefer camelot, you have the word "sir" and "knight" in your username =.=
Argument invalidated.jawakiller said:There is a word in my vocabulary for women like this. A *****.
It's not wrong, after all you didn't choose that attraction. If anything you unconsciously bought into an ideal which is out of date, and I don't think anyone can accuse you of misogyny just on those grounds. But..Dragunai said:Am I wrong to maintain my old definitions of what makes a feminine woman?
I wouldn't use the word except as an insult. It has very uncomfortable associations for me.Dragunai said:Men - What do you consider a feminine girl to be?
I would like to note that I feel a bit of a connection between longer, flowy-er dressesand and a more infantile approach to relationships with others.evilthecat said:Argument invalidated.jawakiller said:There is a word in my vocabulary for women like this. A *****.
It's not wrong, after all you didn't choose that attraction. If anything you unconsciously bought into an ideal which is out of date, and I don't think anyone can accuse you of misogyny just on that grounds. But..Dragunai said:Am I wrong to maintain my old definitions of what makes a feminine woman?
I wouldn't use the word except as an insult. It has very uncomfortable associations for me.Dragunai said:Men - What do you consider a feminine girl to be?
For one, it comes across as 'girly' or infantile. Feminine women, to my mind, either reject or play down their own intelligence and independence, because neither meshes with a gentle or sweet persona. They seek to engage with men as substitute fathers rather than equals, even their appearance is just a display to attract the male attention they feel they need in order to be complete human beings. I guess I can understand why some guys like that kind of thing, but to me it's infantilism which reduces beauty to the status of simply being neotenic.
For girls I actually like, I greatly prefer the word 'femme', which has stronger associations to me. A femme woman to me is not required to act or behave in a certain way or to refrain from certain acts or emotions, her defining quality is that she is sensual as opposed to instrumental. She cares about appearances, not necessarily because she is shallow but because beauty and aesthetics are important to her. She is receptive in that she likes to receive attention, but not because she is pliable and docile towards men.
Most importantly (and this is where the lesbian meaning really helps) femme women do not necessarily define themselves in relation to men at all. The prettiness does not have to be a display to attract male attention, it can be adopted from a position of independence with which both men and women can engage in equal partnerships.
It's the way you phrased it.Sir John the Net Knight said:Why are you seeing this as a bad thing? Like you've never been annoyed by something in your life? I'm not petitioning to force women to wear skirts and dresses, I'm saying that if a women is out in baggy sweatpants and a hoodie, I'm not likely to have my eyes draw to her. Similarly if she's walking around in a little more than a few pieces of string. I won't find that attractive either.Whargarble said:So... You get annoyed because girls wont wear what you want them to because they don't like it? I think that's a perfectly valid reason for someone choosing not to do something. Some girls like skirts, others don't. Comfortable clothing can be attractive, but if you're someone who doesn't like jeans on girls you wont see it regardless.Sir John the Net Knight said:I admit get annoyed at the constant excuse that girls won't wear dresses or skirts to do them being uncomfortable. I guess a lot of people didn't get the memo that comfortable clothes are usually not attractive.
It's personal taste, and no one should get offended by it.
Pretty sure most females dress codes are governed by other women. Yes they like attention from males, yes feeling of empowerment and sexuality etc etc but at the end of the day women compare themselves to and judge and police other women. Two very simple lines: If a rival female is getting too much attention from her dress? "What a slut". If a female needs to be put in her place in the pecking order? "What are you WEARING?".evilthecat said:She is receptive in that she likes to receive attention, but (and this is where the lesbian meaning really helps) it is not specifically male attention. The prettiness does not have to be a display to attract a male counterpart who can plug the gaps in what is essentially a socially approved case of arrested development, it can be adopted from a position of independence with which both men and other women can engage from a position of relative equality.
Just because it's a "brand name" doesn't make it douchey... I wore everything from Wal-Mart to Target to Costco brand and yes, I wore RL and CK...Ambi said:It's all the same brand name douchebaggery.ks1234 said:Seriously, When I was in highschool that was all people wore and I had more refined tastes and people thought that garbage from A&F looked better than Ralph Lauren or CK.
And then I grew up and got into bodybuilding and none of that shit fits anymore.
Anyway, Touche' my friend, touche'
Maybe knight's friends also didnt explain "uncomfortable" not just in the "restrictive" sense, but also means you risk flashing people if your dress flips up/you stand over a heat vent/you fall on your face. I know when my friends have had to explain their tomboyish clothing choice to males (how galling!) that's what they really mean. Plus dresses and skirts don't go with sneakers so she won't be able to run (away screaming from the guy asking about her clothing choices) lol.Sparcrypt said:It's the way you phrased it.Sir John the Net Knight said:Why are you seeing this as a bad thing? Like you've never been annoyed by something in your life? I'm not petitioning to force women to wear skirts and dresses, I'm saying that if a women is out in baggy sweatpants and a hoodie, I'm not likely to have my eyes draw to her. Similarly if she's walking around in a little more than a few pieces of string. I won't find that attractive either.Whargarble said:So... You get annoyed because girls wont wear what you want them to because they don't like it? I think that's a perfectly valid reason for someone choosing not to do something. Some girls like skirts, others don't. Comfortable clothing can be attractive, but if you're someone who doesn't like jeans on girls you wont see it regardless.Sir John the Net Knight said:I admit get annoyed at the constant excuse that girls won't wear dresses or skirts to do them being uncomfortable. I guess a lot of people didn't get the memo that comfortable clothes are usually not attractive.
It's personal taste, and no one should get offended by it.
It's not an 'excuse'. It's a reason. Big difference there. For instance, I don't wear ankle socks because I find them to be unconfortable and I prefer full length sports socks (I'm a guy). This is not my 'excuse' for not wearing ankle socks as seems to be the trend these days with a lot of guys - I just want to be comfortable. That doesn't mean I dress like a slob however, I dress to look good according to my own tastes.
Plenty of girls I know wear jeans or pants and look very nice while doing so - just because your taste doesn't extend to those kind of girls doesn't mean they're thinking up excuses not to look good.
I think you kind of said it yourself.lovetropicana said:Pretty sure most females dress codes are governed by other women. Yes they like attention from males, yes feeling of empowerment and sexuality etc etc but at the end of the day women compare themselves to and judge and police other women. Two very simple lines: If a rival female is getting too much attention from her dress? "What a slut". If a female needs to be put in her place in the pecking order? "What are you WEARING?".
Not true. Recent studies published in Nature have instead linked testosterone to behaviour which was geared to attain a certain goal. The assumed link with testosterone has arisen due to animal behaviour and anecdotal evidence of violent habits. This is because the environments in which those things are observed are more succeptable to violence, as indeed may be the case referenced in your assumption. Testosterone perhaps fuels the desire for status but not aggressive behaviour. Do remember that aggression in animals such as lab rats is not the same as aggression in humans. In the latter case, aggression causes an increase in testosterone to occurr, not the other way around.FaithorFire said:Louder, aggressive, "tougher" behavior is a direct result of higher amounts of testosterone.
1. This is what I mean by normalising. It's something that has been so repeated, so ingraned that it becomes automatic and the connotations and meanings are forgotten. I don't consider it a particularly sterling excuse.Sir John the Net Knight said:Three things I'd like to point out.
1. I use the word girl as an informal noun, nothing else. I'd probably use that term for women up to age 40-45. To me it doesn't mean anything more than that. Much to me an equivalent to calling a man a guy.
2. This is not a matter of characteristics as I see it. To me the style of garb is simply of matter of preference and taste and not indicative of a certain personality. I do not intend to suggest that any style of dress is a lone determinant of a person's worth, attractiveness or qualities.
3. I'm well aware of the denigrative nature of certain aspects of gender roles and how they relate to people who don't follow them. I myself would probably be classified as a "sissy boy" to some.(And have been told so, in no uncertain terms.) It's an unfortunate fact of life, and it's not going to go away anytime soon. Not that I think that's a good thing, it's just something that sucks and we have to just deal with. Again, I don't really think that this is something that I would link directly to dress style, as to me it simply a matter of taste.
As much as one would generally assume nitpicking to be a bad thing, it remains to be one of the three major functions of the internet. The other two being swapping porn and stealing music. /rimshot