Please read. Significant change on the site that will affect compatibility [ Dismiss ]
Home ยป Forum ยป Author Hangout

Forum: Author Hangout

You must hate women?

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

I sometimes get comments from people that are disturbing and insulting. Most I can process and write off. This one I thought I'd share.

The author wrote it publically on my latest story:

It starts out just by grabbing all the tags. It seems he didn't read the story at all. There is absolutely no hatred toward women, no one forced, no one hypnotized, no one raped, no one tortured.

Tags: Ma/Fa, Fa/ft, School, Cheating, Slut Wife, Wife Watching, Incest, BDSM, DomSub, Humiliation, Light Bond, Spanking, Gang Bang, Swinging, Anal Sex, Analingus, Exhibitionism, Fisting, Masturbation, Oral Sex, Pregnancy, Babysitter, Big Breasts, Public Sex, Cat-Fighting, Porn Theatre, Prostitution

Sex

Oh man! You hate women!

my response:

That's not the case at all. I am sorry you would think that.

That's a bit like saying if you wrote a story about war, you must hate soldiers.

I love women and this story is a celebration of a girl who consented to all of this and seems to enjoy being a slut. You really should try to understand that you can write about all of the things above and not hate women.

I am going to leave your comment here - but it is quite disturbing and insulting.

Consider getting help (soon).

๐Ÿ—‘Was this fair as a comment?

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Eddie Davidson

That's a bit like saying if you wrote a story about war, you must hate soldiers.

Well, didn't you tell me that by writing a story about war, I'm glorifying war?

You perceived my excerpt your way. Your reader perceived your story his way.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Your reader perceived your story his way.

To be fair, I expect the 'reader' never read that particular story, and was commenting as if it was representative of the type of story that would have similar codes (IE a 'burn the bitch' revenge plot on the unfaithful female(s)...)

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

I love women and this story is a celebration of a girl who consented to all of this

Well, then write a story that is the reverse. Where it is a man that has submitted to all of that. Equal opportunity, and all of that.

Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

I love women and this story is a celebration of a girl who consented to all of this and seems to enjoy being a slut.

I suggest a different word than 'slut', at least in this context. Sexually free? Uninhibited? Neither carry the moral judgment of 'slut'. To me, that would help address the accusation.

That said, the accusation smacks of a prudish, moralistic judgment both against the female character and against you.

Remus2 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

To be blunt, you'll have to get happy in the same shoes you got pissed off in. Peoples perceptions are their own, and there is little you can do about it.

Rather than bitching about it, try turning it around to something constructive. By that, I mean trying to understand what about the story made them think that. You don't have to agree with the perception, but if you want to get better, you need to at least try to understand the reasons for it.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Remus2

By that, I mean trying to understand what about the story made them think that.

I'll side with Eddie on this one. The fact that the person (and I use the term loosely) quoted the story tags but not any of the story text supports the conclusion that the person leaving the comment didn't read the story.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

It starts out just by grabbing all the tags. It seems he didn't read the story at all.

Here is also one big difference between myself and others. I do not "comment" on stories I did not read. And to be honest, I would not read this. Far to many codes that I simply avoid. And yours are full of them. I am one of those that as more and more of the extreme codes get added, I generally assume that story is only targeted at those really into such fetishes, and therefore has little to no interest in reaching the more "mainstream" readers.

However, I am going to analyze this in a bit more of a context. First of all, the title of the story.

The Confession and Re-Education of a Perfect Slut

Well, re-education generally refers to a brainwashing. So can a person actually consent to being brainwashed? It is kinda like North Vietnam claiming that all those that went in for re-education after they won the war consented to it.

Then the description.

This is a story about trashy trailer park sluts, high school girls, redemption, betrayal, sex, coming of age, humiliations, bondage, trashy strippers, and it features the longest blowjob scene I've ever done. This is some of my best work

Once again, hmmmm. Yea, imagine somebody thinking it is not a celebration of women when it includes things like trashy trailer park sluts, humiliation, bondage, and the other stuff in the tags.

And of course, the other fascinating stories in the series.

My Mom Is a Whore on Twitter
Keeping My Sister in Line

Yes, clear celebrations of the power of women.

Which series is called...

A Keeping the Womenfolk In Line Story

Myself, I simply would not read it, has absolutely no interest for me at all, and a great many things that would keep me away from it. However, with all of that, I find it hard to imagine that the series and story are anything but intended to be demeaning towards women. As I said, reverse the roles, does it read the same way?

If a sissy was to have all this about him, and his submission, does it show how much the story is about how great men are?

This is simply something you will have to put up with when you write stories that have "squick codes" that set people off, and the more codes you add like that, the more likely it will happen. I had a laugh a while back by somebody that said something similar, because in a story it involved a lot of sex with an underage girl. Went on and on about how the character was grooming her.

Never mind that the character was a teen boy. And relatively inexperienced, while the girl was already quite accomplished.

So, was it a fair comment? From my reading, I would say it is. However, write what you want to write. Nobody has a right to tell you to not do so, and I would be the first one to stand up and defend your being allowed to write however you want.

But do not think that means that everybody has to agree with what you write, or that it means they can not comment on it, read or not. As I say, Freedom of Speech is not Freedom of Responsibility. In one instance, standing on a street corner and screaming about another race is your legal right. But it does not mean it protects you from somebody coming up and punching you in the mouth for it.

But fair, as in the "attack" was warranted? Well, I would say yes. Because everything about the title, the description, the tags, and the series screams it is demeaning towards women.

But feel free to be you pal. And realize I am not even judging YOU at all, just the contents of this single story and the others in the series.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

I would say 'hate' is the wrong word. I think the author worships women, to the extent he'd love to be one. And he writes about the sort of women he'd love to be.

Quite Mary Sue-ish.

AJ

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

Was this fair as a comment?

His, or yours?

Really, neither was, to be completely honest. He obviously made some assumptions (presumably that anyone writing about a whoring slut sees all women that way and/or is writing about some personal bad experiences) but you obviously assumed that he didn't expect that most of the non-cheating codes were meant as 'punishments' for the slut(s) that 'cheated'. I expect most stories with a similar collection of codes would revolve around such a revenge-style story, so his possible expectation makes a lot of sense.

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

Interesting takes.

I would like to clarify that you can be educated willingly.

I would also like to say that you can glorify war just like I glorify these activities. That doesn't mean that you hate soldiers.

The only issue I had switch blayde was you posted your story here, with no codes.

My story contains no revenge, everything was consensual. We focus on two young people learning about themselves and each other. everything is new to them. Yes they will make mistakes, yes bad shit might happen, But they overcome it. There is nothing about this story from my perspective that would indicate I hate women or feel that they are inferior to men. I really feel like the comment was posted by a troll who hadn't read the story. Reading your comments now though I see that some of my fellow authors seem to agree with him, which is disconcerting.

There was no revenge code selected.

As to awnlees comments that my stories are Mary Sue, I'm baffled as to how You could get there. All of my stories involve characters with intentional flaws. A Mary Sue is a perfect character who can speak seven languages, has several gold medals, is well-liked by all,idealized to the point of unrealistic. etc

Every single one of my main characters is literally a flawed person. I can't write any other kind of characters. I typically write either middle America or trailer parks as the setting. I never write any kind of fifty shades of Gray mansions the champagne and endless servants. That's simply not worlds that my characters live in.That's because they're not worlds I live in. I live in a trailer park so I write what I know. I don't hate trashy. I love it.

I'm not sure if it's more insulting. being told that I hate women by someone who did not read my stories or being told that I write Mary Sue characters by someone who didn't.

The girl in this story wants to make changes in her life and has a lot of fun with the adventure of becoming a slut. She embraces it, rather than feels ashamed of it.

If that makes me a woman hater, Im baffled because I know several women who have done the same thing.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Eddie Davidson

As to awnlees comments that my stories are Mary Sue, I'm baffled as to how You could get there. All of my stories involve characters with intentional flaws. A Mary Sue is a perfect character who can speak seven languages, has several gold medals, is well-liked by all,idealized to the point of unrealistic. etc

I believe that was posted in sarcasm, and not to have been taken seriously.

As for me, I am largely neutral. Simply that when somebody posts stories of a more extreme content, described and named in the ways that yours are, that is simply to be expected. If every single story I posted had the Ma/ft code, then it would be expected that somebody would claim I supported and endorsed underage sex with adults.

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Mushroom

We need some kind of tag or way to indicate sarcasm

/S

It's 2020 And it feels like constant stress. I write to escape it. Seeing things through the eyes of my characters allows me to get a visceral thrill from how things unfold. They are however pure fantasy and simply not something that I advocate happening in real life.

Stephen King write stories He doesn't necessarily want evil cars to come alive and cats to come out of graveyards and start killing us. These are stories to provide entertainment.

Reading that the characters are Mary Sue was definitely a strange comment. especially considering this is a collaboration story with Mike McGifford and not my own unique creation by myself. We both have been writing these characters. It would be reassuring to know that it was sarcasm.

It should go without saying mushroom That as an author You can tell a story without advocating it happening in real life. Stephen King would be in jail several times over if he advocated what happens in his stories. we are all adults here. We can play around with characters that don't exist in real life, in situations that don't exist in real life. I totally agree with you and sympathize. The Game of Thrones books have Sansa and her sister as much younger. Daenerys is much younger. They are fantasy stories. He isn't suggesting that it happen in real life.

I think one thing I've noticed is a commonality in this thread is that being submissive is seen as a weakness. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Writing a submissive character who wishes to submit, who has the strength to submit - to give pleasure to others without first the promise of reciprocation, to do for others, that takes strength. Some of the characters who submit my stories aren't motivated by those desires. But the one in this one is

Are there women that I hate? Yes. There are men I hate as well. But the comment that I must hate women because I write stories about submissive ones throws me for a loop. And I realize now that part of that is the impression that anyone who is submissive is weaker or unworthy.

Some of my stories have included revenge. Some of them have been dares or bets. Some have included mind control. I don't see any of these as being a statement about women. They are simply stories designed to entertain

Replies:   Michael Loucks  bk69  bk69
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

Stephen King write stories He doesn't necessarily want evil cars to come alive and cats to come out of graveyards and start killing us.

Are you sure about that? ๐Ÿคช

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Michael Loucks

Are you sure about that?

Actually, he has often commented on how he is not even really a horror writer. He is a suspense writer. Everybody knows of his killer cars and prom queen killers. But many of his stories do not even feature any monsters at all.

Some have a complete human enemy, who is just doing evil things. Stand By Me has no real horror at all, just kids on a quest in rural Oregon (Maine in the original story). 11-22-63 has the "enemy" largely being fate, not any real entity. Cujo was just a rabid dog, Misery was a crazy lady, The Long Walk was 100 teen boys walking along the highway until only 1 was left, The Running Man was a dystopian future. Rage was just a kid that snapped and started shooting up his school.

Even The Stand was less horror, as it was a modernized retelling of Revelations.

I have always read him as suspense, not actual horror. More akin to Hitchcock than Romero. But that is what he became known for, because those were his earliest books that were made into movies.

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

Even The Stand was less horror, as it was a modernized retelling of Revelations.

The Stand is my favorite book my him, especially the re-released unabridged version.

A nit: It's not 'Revelations' it's 'Revelation' or more completely 'The Revelation of Jesus Christ to John'.

The Greek word translated as Revelation is แผ€ฯ€ฮฟฮบฮฌฮปฯ…ฯˆฮนฯ‚ (apokalypsis), which is obviously 'Apocalypse' but which means 'unveiling' or 'revelation.

Replies:   LupusDei
LupusDei ๐Ÿšซ

@Michael Loucks

A nit: It's not 'Revelations' it's 'Revelation' or more completely 'The Revelation of Jesus Christ to John'.

The Greek word translated as Revelation is แผ€ฯ€ฮฟฮบฮฌฮปฯ…ฯˆฮนฯ‚ (apokalypsis), which is obviously 'Apocalypse' but which means 'unveiling' or 'revelation.

I like interpretation of that book as contemporary (to John) political rant against Rome.

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@LupusDei

I like interpretation of that book as contemporary (to John) political rant against Rome.

That is most likely what it is. The 'near/far' prophecy ideas of certain fundamentalist evangelicals to the contrary notwithstanding.

It's the one book in the Russian Orthodox canon which is never read in church, and is given wide berth by most Orthodox commentators.

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Michael Loucks

It's a very interesting conversation.

I think aligning with your main character characters is not "Mary Sue" at all but a natural state of any author. You need to see out of their eyes and from their perspective if you are telling their story.

Mary Sue is defined as :Mary Sue is a term used to describe a fictional character, usually female, who is seen as too perfect and almost boring for lack of flaws, originally written as an idealized version of an author in fanfiction.

An author who writes Mary Sue (unless as parody) is typically a poor author - so you can understand why I would take offense?

The term as defined has nothing to do with whether you relate to them or not.

That definition seems fairly cut and dry. As to motivations for submissive desires - well that one could fill up three message boards. You can ask three submissives and have four answers - yours and each of theirs.

Awnlee says it is a desire to be responsibility free. That is true for some.

In other cases, in 24/7 submissive/dominant relations the submissive has many responsibilities. They have a job, take care of the house, do for others. That is true for some.

Another person wrote that submissives are selfish. That may be true for some. I know many submissives who live for their Master or Mistress and are the most altruistic giving people.

we can all agree that there is no one definition of submissive nor is there any single reason or motivation that makes anyone interested in submission.

The most important point that I want to make perfectly clear is desiring someone to be in submission should never be confused with hating them or wanting to harm them or hating them- not in a healthy relationship.

Not all of my stories have healthy relationships. Some of them are dysfunctional - especially at first. That does not mean I advocate or propose people live in dysfunctional relationships. It means that I wrote stories about real life where dysfunction exists.

I am a huge fan of turnabout is fair play stories. As an example, a sister who teased and humiliated her brother for weeks on end will usually get her cummupance at the end of the story (or as the premise of the story). These are just stories but to say that I would hate any of my characters is simply false.

My only point about Stephen King was simply that his stories are not his pulpit to preach how to live - Mine aren't either. My stories are mind-candy of a certain flavor. It may not be for everyone. I accept that - but I don't accept the comment that I hate women simply because I write about submissives or trashy women.

Replies:   bk69  awnlee jawking
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

Another person wrote that submissives are selfish.

Actually, I said "maybe more prone to selfishness" - primarily because when specifically in-scene, it's all about the sub. Yes, the dominant is doing the whipping or whatnot, but the sub is just there free to experience without doing anything (beyond, of course, trusting the master not to exceed the agreed upon limits). Even among the Gorean community, the burden is on the master - the slave only has to follow orders and obey specific rules while the master must observe, punish, and push his slave's limits just enough, but not so far as to cause her to choose to leave.

As far as not liking women simply because you write about trashy women... that's ludicrous. Anyone who believes that needs to listen to Confederate Railroad.

Most relationships are dysfunctional at some point - oddly, usually at the points they aren't functioning.

As to Mary Sue - Conrad Stargard (from Leo Frankowski) was frequently regarded as a Mary Sue (although Leo pointed out he'd made the character fundamentally different from himself on a number of aspects) even though he had a number of flaws and most of his success was due to a combination of future knowledge and 'luck' due to 'gifts' from someone further uptime.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

As to Mary Sue - Conrad Stargard (from Leo Frankowski) was frequently regarded as a Mary Sue (although Leo pointed out he'd made the character fundamentally different from himself on a number of aspects) even though he had a number of flaws and most of his success was due to a combination of future knowledge and 'luck' due to 'gifts' from someone further uptime.

In that I do agree. Poor Leo was often misunderstood in his writings. He often griped at the accusations of Conrad being a Mary Sue. Even pointing out that he was a strong "Conservative Capitalist", while Conrad was a huge believer in Communism and Socialism, and often griped he was the richest person in Europe, even as he tried to make his realm a ":workers paradise". A devout Marxist, living in an actual feudal kingdom.

Or the attacks of "sexism", even though it was set in the 13th century. I never considered his writings sexist, and in an authentic 13th century setting his area would have been amazingly progressive.

Of course, the entire series kind of died when he and Jim Baen had a major falling out. It was an ugly mess, involving mail order brides, and Leo's drinking getting out of control (along with what some believe were micro-strokes causing Jim Baen to grow increasingly paranoid). Baen dropped him, and threatened to sue anybody that published another of his books. Which is why his last 2 were pretty much published by his estate.

It was almost SO levels of drama there. And yes, a lot of their final split had to do with Leo talking Jim into taking on a Russian mail-order bride, just as he had done.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

He often griped at the accusations of Conrad being a Mary Sue.

In fairness, I believe those 'fundamemntal differences' between Leo and Conrad were inserted after his writers group commented that Conrad seemed to be based largely on Leo. (And while Conrad claimed to be some idealistic Marxist, he was also a natural entrepreneur, and the 'observers' from the far future commented on the discrepency between Conrad's actions and claims.)

And yeah, Conrad treated females far better than was 'appropriate' for the time, including basically having them run a number of businesses and, I believe, even educating a number (and hiring based on merit). People that complain about a story set in the past not conforming to current social standards really need to be shipped to the period in the past in which the story is set. One way.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

Mary Sue is defined as :Mary Sue is a term used to describe a fictional character, usually female, who is seen as too perfect and almost boring for lack of flaws, originally written as an idealized version of an author in fanfiction.

I think many of the stories on SOL show a preponderance of male 'Mary Sue' characters.

The meaning has moved on since the definition you quoted, although the main thrust is still the idea of an idealised version of the author.

It's quite a common male fantasy that an idealised version of themselves would be female, especially in an erotic setting - a pair of breasts to play with, multiple orgasms, no refractory period and a supposedly large amoral male population prepared to service you at the bat of an eyelid.

AJ

Replies:   Mushroom  Eddie Davidson
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

It's quite a common male fantasy that an idealised version of themselves would be female, especially in an erotic setting - a pair of breasts to play with, multiple orgasms, no refractory period and a supposedly large amoral male population prepared to service you at the bat of an eyelid.

This is seen in a lot of games, where male players pick female characters.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

In actual RPGs, there's a couple other influences for that:
1. sometimes the concept for a great character just happens to include that character being female
2. female characters have serious advantages manipulating male NPCs (or members of the party, sometimes)
In videogames, it's either because females get special abilities or because it's a nicer view from the camera located behind your character

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

The main characters of my stories are always flawed and not great. They are often incredibly naive.

Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

other than you, who decided that the definition changed and you are the one using it correctly and I am not? I wasn't at that meeting

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

You were probably living on Mars for the last decade(s), in a cave, with your eyes shut and your fingers in your ears.
The fact is, yes, "Mary Sue" started out applying solely to characters exactly like the original Mary Sue used, but it widely grew in definition as it was used to apply to cases less and less identical, but still obviously based on some type of idealized self-image of the writer. In fact, at this point, one could claim that one of the more successful literary (to use the term loosely) characters of the last forty years was a Mary Sue - that being Dirk Pitt. (Although Clive's self-insertion cameos in those books does make that slightly less blatant.)

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

characters of the last forty years was a Mary Sue - that being Dirk Pitt.

Or in the case of many stories in here, Dirk Diggler.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Eddie Davidson

We need some kind of tag or way to indicate sarcasm

It's implied whenever I post.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

And I realize now that part of that is the impression that anyone who is submissive is weaker or unworthy.

I've not seen this implied anywhere. Submissives are maybe more prone to selfishness, but there's nothing inherently unworthy there.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

The only issue I had switch blayde was you posted your story here, with no codes.

It wasn't a story. Is was an excerpt of part of a scene to see if the battle made sense. And as I said, the finished story wouldn't have any of those tags. It's not a war story. It just happens to take place during WWII and the MC is in the war (in the beginning of the story, anyway).

And if I was glorifying anything, it wasn't war. It was the heroism of soldiers and their hardships. And in this case, the hardships of their wives.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

As to awnlees comments that my stories are Mary Sue, I'm baffled as to how You could get there.

I used the term 'Mary Sue' in the broader sense of the author wishing they were like the character they were portraying, whether flawless and superhuman or not.

Despite its low score, one of my most-reads-per-chapter stories is about girls abusing a boy. The desire to be submissive and responsibility-free seems to be more prevalent than most men would admit.

AJ

Honey_Moon ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

I sometimes get comments from people that are disturbing and insulting. Most I can process and write off. This one I thought I'd share.

I've been told several times that "I must hate men".

Replies:   Eddie Davidson
Eddie Davidson ๐Ÿšซ

@Honey_Moon

I've been told several times that "I must hate men".

Well, now I am curious about your stories. Not because I believe you do hate men - but because I'd like to see what was so provocative about them to produce that kind of response.

Replies:   bk69
bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Eddie Davidson

As a possible suggestion, from the description of one story universe: "[...]in the future, males would join the dinosaurs in extinction"

Doesn't sound very male-friendly, really. So it's understandable how some could expect that the content of stories reflects the beliefs and opinions of a writer. (Could also reflect the fears of the writer, or parody the beliefs and opinions of those the author dislikes, but let's not delve too deeply into the thought processes of creation, since it's the interpretation of readers we're discussing.)

Replies:   Honey_Moon  PotomacBob
Honey_Moon ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

As a possible suggestion, from the description of one story universe: "[...]in the future, males would join the dinosaurs in extinction"

Yup! That was it!
I thought it was really erotic. Lots of people thought I was bashing men!

PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

@bk69

So it's understandable how some could expect that the content of stories reflects the beliefs and opinions of a writer.

Is it ever safe to conclude from the content of stories that the writing reflects the beliefs and opinions of a writer?

Replies:   awnlee jawking  bk69
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Is it ever safe to conclude from the content of stories that the writing reflects the beliefs and opinions of a writer?

Not safe. But as novice writers tend to stick to what they know, it's probably not a bad first guess.

AJ

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Is it ever safe to conclude from the content of stories that the writing reflects the beliefs and opinions of a writer?

Safe? No. Hence the:

Could also reflect the fears of the writer, or parody the beliefs and opinions of those the author dislikes

But understandable how someone could jump to that conclusion.

Severusmax ๐Ÿšซ

Some folks think that if you objectify women at all, you hate them. Hardly. Women objectify men, too. Do they hate us? Objectification is a necessary and natural part of the human condition, and not just about sex. People use each other as money objects, security objects, political objects, etc. People need to get over that kind of PC crap in a hurry.

Also, there is a huge difference between using "slut" as a pejorative and reclaiming it as a term of endearment and free sexual expression. Frankly, I think that women are often their own worst enemies, attacking and slut-shaming each other with abandon because they fear that more promiscuous undercut their own efforts to play games with men and lure them to the altar.

Well, that's true to an extent, but such women are also a vital social safety valve, and frankly, many of us guys have wised up to the game. We're not gonna be dragged to the altar anymore in any case. Best to have women who are more compatible with our desires, such as the more lecherous types, just as we are available for their benefit as well.

Replies:   daisydesiree  bk69
daisydesiree ๐Ÿšซ

@Severusmax

Sorry to say but too many girls resent guys for being guys. You're visual by nature. We spend all this time looking attractive for you to be appealing then resent when you see as primarily by how we look.

bk69 ๐Ÿšซ

@Severusmax

Women objectify men, too. Do they hate us?

Probably not the best argument, since in many cases the answer to that question is Hell YEAH

Back to Top

Close
 

WARNING! ADULT CONTENT...

Storiesonline is for adult entertainment only. By accessing this site you declare that you are of legal age and that you agree with our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.


Log In