No matter how many women write in to say, ‘I don’t do this!’ the fact is
many, many, many women practice the behavior that follows. Men have
complained about these problems in various male-oriented forums before,
but here, now, I drag their 10 biggest complaints into the daylight so
that everyone can finally see how women make complainers out of men.
You like to play coy.
If you like us, let us know. If you don’t, let us go. This
game where you pretend you don’t care and secretly hope we chase you
down is for teenagers. You think men like the chase? Perhaps. You think
we like guessing whether we’re wasting our time? No.
You fixate on what we’re thinking, when you should be watching what we’re doing.
You ask, “What are you thinking?” and we say, “Nothing.”
You figure this must be a lie, and decide that we aren’t willing to
communicate with you. The problem is, this is the wrong question to ask.
We’re action-oriented. You don’t need to ask what we’re thinking, just
watch what we’re doing. Coming home late every night? We’re not happy at
home. Uninterested in sex, probably crushed by stress. Not calling you
back even though we said, “I love you?” We don’t love you. You can save
the questions about musings until you see a change in our behavior.
That’s the surest sign that something needs to be discussed.
You don’t understand and/or like our need for alone time.
This often expresses itself with regard to hobbies. Say a
man likes to play golf and has played for years. Many a man has gotten
into a relationship only to have the woman complain about the time he
spends playing golf. She’s jealous of this time. Of course, if she loves
him she should know that he NEEDS this time on the golf course. It’s
his passion. It’s his release. Without it he will burn up with anxiety
and frustration over life’s little indignities. Why does she get
involved with a man who has a hobby she doesn’t like? See ”You see us as projects you can fix.”
You have a complicated set of double standards.
I could write a novel on this one. We only need look at the
example of going dutch on a first date. You offer to split the check,
and if we let you, you hold it against us. Really? You demand, quite
rightly, to be in on all important relationship decisions, yet when we
take you out and ask, “What would you like to do tonight?” you are angry
that we haven’t taken charge of the situation. It’s a confusing set of
double standards and antiquated rules that make it very difficult for us
to know which move is the right one.
You want us to change, and then lose respect for us when we do.
It’s an interesting phenomenon. When a man and a woman get
together it is likely that he will have some hobbies, tendencies, or
habits that she doesn’t like. For instance, I have a friend that met and
married a woman who wasn’t thrilled that he played in a band. She was a
bit threatened by the attention he received and his time spent pursuing
this. She told him, “I really wish you didn’t play in this band,” and
because he loved her, he quit. Within a few months this woman was
confiding to her friends, “I’m a little less attracted to him because he
quit the band, and just did what I asked. Now, he just hangs out at
home.” It’s a specific example, but a common problem. Clearly, the man
should do what he feels he has to do, but we try to be accommodating,
and to have that count against us is infuriating.
You see us as projects you can 'fix.'
You meet us. You like us. You date us. You marry us. And
somewhere along the way it might seem that you love us just as we are,
but rarely does it work out that way. Women see potential. They see
rough edges, and they want to sand them off. This makes us crazy. We
don’t want to change. We have chosen our car, hair, friends, home and
hobbies because we enjoy them. The knowledge that you are thinking, “If
he could only...” is a deeply disturbing thought, and perhaps more
sinister is the idea that this behavior is so common that even if you
aren’t the kind of woman who wants change, we expect that you do and are
only biding your time.
Your expectations are set by Hollywood and sky high.
Hollywood strikes again. I have a buddy that has plans to
attend a Nicholas Sparks book signing so he can tell the man to KNOCK IT
OFF! Most women know at an intellectual level that their man isn’t
going to be like George Clooney, or Brad Pitt or that Italian guy from
'Under the Tuscan Sun', but in their heart they want it. They’ve been
fed a fantasy about romance and passion for so long that when a REAL act
of love comes down the pike, he notices that the tread on your tires is
low and buys a new set, it hardly even registers.
You're always looking down the road.
Women tend to think about the next major step in life. Men
tend to think about the next major meal. Certainly part of this is
driven by biology. A 34-year-old single woman who wants to have children
has to think about the future. She has to think about finding a quality
partner, where they are going to live, is there enough room for the
baby in the study? A 34-year-old single man has far less interest in
planning or pushing towards some future major life goal. This difference
in priorities often leaves women in the unpleasant position of saying,
“next,” “next,” “next” when it comes to relationship events. There is a
female drive to get answers to questions like, “What ARE we?”, “Are we
exclusive yet?”, “Are we going to get married?” that makes it seem like
they aren’t enjoying the now and only worry about the future.
You use your emotions as a weapon.
You don’t mean to. I suppose it isn’t your fault that
during an important conversation about the future of our relationship
you start crying, but surely you understand that this derails the
ability to pursue the issue at hand. You’ve, essentially, played a kind
of trump card. If we continue to advocate our side, we’re bullies. If we
give in, we’re weak.
You have a tendency to be critical.
I’ve tried to avoid the word n-a-g, but there seems to be
some internal mechanism that makes women predisposed to criticism, in
the same way that men are predisposed to seek their man cave. It’s
almost a cliché -- the wife that complains and makes demands, and the
husband that just wants to be left alone to watch TV or work out in the
garage.
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