Principle 1
“Men and Women are
Different“
First of all,
let’s just get your (politely unspoken but nonetheless
predictable) reaction to the title line out of the way
here:
DUHHHHHH!!!
Who on earth
doesn’t know that men and women are
different?
It’s pretty
obvious, isn’t it? I mean, look at us. We even look
different: men are more muscular, with more solid bodies,
more body mass, wider shoulders, bigger hands and feet;
women are usually smaller, with a higher percentage of
fat (dammit!), slightly less muscle, smaller bones, less
body and facial hair – oh yeah, and we have breasts,
too.
You’d have to be
an idiot to mistake a man for a woman – or to treat a man
like a woman, too.
Or … would
you?
It’s easy to
consciously think to ourselves, “Men are different from
us.” But it’s also pretty easy to let that belief just
float up there in our conscious minds, without actually
allowing it to percolate through into our subconscious –
which is the deeper part of our awareness, the part of
our minds where the changes in our beliefs and
corresponding behaviors takes
place.
How often have
you, in the past, addressed a question or a comment to a
man, and been frustrated, irritated, or hurt when he
responded in a way that you hadn’t predicted or
wanted?
It’s gotta be at
least once (and that’s such a ridiculously conservative
estimate that I have trouble even typing it, to be
honest.) Realistically, if you’ve had any experience with
men at all – and I’m not even talking about romantic
experience here, I mean any experience of any sort – then
that figure will more likely be in the low-to-mid double
figures at the very least.
TAKE ME TO THE
BOOK
So it’s a fair
bet to say we’ve all experienced that frustration, pain,
or irritation at one point or another,
right?
This is because,
when we talk to men, it’s pretty commonplace to project
our own personalities and our own gender onto them. We
want them to respond to us in the way that we would
respond, were we in their
shoes.
So when we get a
response to the question that we don’t like – a response
that varies from what we’d expected - we get annoyed. Or
we get hurt. Or confused. Or we
sulk.
Something
undesirable usually happens – even if you mask your
reaction and pretend that everything’s fine, you still
know that, in your own reality, you would have preferred
a different answer.
We’ll look at
this in more depth in the next lesson, but for now, let
me just say this one
thing:
MEN ARE NOT
WOMEN.
They are not even
remotely like women.
It is not helpful
to project feminine characteristics onto a man, even
unwittingly.
For example, you
might wish that he’d respond to you more like your
sister, or your best friend, or your mother; but now ask
yourself this.
Do you want to go
home tonight and have mad, passionate sex (or make
tender, gentle love) with your sister, your best friend,
or your mother?
No. I didn’t
think so.
TAKE ME TO THE
BOOK
You are going to
need to embrace a simple – in fact, an almost simplistic
– fact. When you’re able to do this, you will be able to
relax a bit more.
You will be able
to stop trying to control other people’s behavior, and
you will be able to stop torturing yourself with the If
Only’s: “If only he’d just be a little bit more ___.”
“If only he’d stop saying ___.” “If only he’d stop doing
___.”
Here’s the fact:
men do not always make a whole lot of sense to
women.
That’s
it.
It’s as simple as
that.
This fact is an
unavoidable part of life – and in fact, I think it’s
actually something to be
embraced.
Here’s another
way of looking at that same fact: it’s quite likely that,
no matter how well you get to know a man, aspects of his
behavior will forever remain mysterious to
you.
And you know
what? That’s okay. Because you don’t need to understand
men fully in order to attract them – and you don’t need
to understand them fully to keep them,
either.
It’s quite all
right for you to be mystified by masculine behavior
sometimes. And the sooner you accept the fact that you
are going to be mystified by it – and the sooner you
learn to embrace that fact – the sooner your attitude
will adjust, and the sooner you’ll be able to comprehend
how to attract a man and how to keep him
committed.
More on this in
the next lesson. For now, let’s take a look at the third
part of your course, which is where we deal with
Principle #2 …
TAKE ME TO THE
BOOK
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