EJCC
The Devil of TypoC
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2008
- Messages
- 19,129
- MBTI Type
- ESTJ
- Enneagram
- 1w9
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/so
Absolutely.If anyone thinks males are unemotional, just observe a bunch of guys watching the superbowl, or even competing over some attractive girl.
Guys are SO much more high-drama then they think they are.
I agree with this most of the time. I agreed with this 100% until I got to high school, and realized that my gender-neutral "I am who I am" view was not necessarily shared by most people I came into contact with. It's been worse since going to college; before college, I had about an equal number of male friends and female friends, but now everyone is so gender-segregated that I have maybe 80-85% female friends and 15-20% male. I miss having a big group of guy friends to shoot the shit with.Coriolis said:I'm neither happy nor unhappy with my gender. To me, it is just like my hair color, handedness, or physical build. It is what it is, and I will make the most of it.
Very true!Coriolis said:Every male F and female T who freely exercises and expresses their preferences makes the world a more hospitable place for those who follow. You don't have to be male to be T or have T values/qualities any more than you have to be white to be financially and professionally successful.
Yep. Men, I think, are more likely to get publicly angry, while women are more likely to get publicly emotional about something sad or heartwarming. That likely has more to do with T vs. F as well.My point here is that men display plenty of emotions, even T men, just not the same emotions in the same settings as the average (presumably F) woman.
... what the hell? Where do you get this stuff?I dont think the submissive housewife ideal has anything to do with feminity, rather just the arrogance of sensors.