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Topic: How Happy Are You In Your Current Relationship
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Fri 03/06/15 12:07 AM
I don't teach misandry to my daughter I teach her not to need a man, since they tend to be more of a liability than a support. This is not their potential it's just their practice. Of course I will teach my daughter valuable life experience and not feed her fairytales at a young age. This is why women end up hating men, they don't live up to the fairytales we are told from a young age, far from it.

messi_is_a_tim_1888's photo
Fri 03/06/15 12:11 AM

I don't teach misandry to my daughter I teach her not to need a man, since they tend to be more of a liability than a support. This is not their potential it's just their practice. Of course I will teach my daughter valuable life experience and not feed her fairytales at a young age. This is why women end up hating men, they don't live up to the fairytales we are told from a young age, far from it.
I said it before, it's a good shagging session you need, to put the smile back on your face? I nominate Red6mist and Romeo, to do the honours?

mikey5360's photo
Fri 03/06/15 12:25 AM


10....happy love .....
But our goal is 20....bigsmile bigsmile

10 wouldn't be enough to scale it...bigsmile

sooo, lets call it about 15....at this point in time...love bigsmile bigsmile

MadDog1974's photo
Fri 03/06/15 12:36 AM

I don't teach misandry to my daughter I teach her not to need a man, since they tend to be more of a liability than a support. This is not their potential it's just their practice. Of course I will teach my daughter valuable life experience and not feed her fairytales at a young age. This is why women end up hating men, they don't live up to the fairytales we are told from a young age, far from it.


You come on here sniping with your cheap shots, painting all men with the same broad brush, presumably because you parents told you about Cinderella and how she lived happily ever after. You say you won't teach your daughter to be a misandrist, yet you say that you'll teach her that men area liability, and that it's just the way they are. They have potential, but they just can't live up to it. It's hardly the fault of men in general that you weren't taught the difference between a fairy tale and reality. Plenty of girls learn all the fairy tales and don't grow up hating all men because they couldn't find that guy who fits the storybook image of Prince Charming. Here's a little secret that I taught my daughter. She knows all the fairy tales, but she also knows that the knight in shining armor riding in on a white horse has never been tested in battle. Maybe if you could grow up and realize that Prince Charming is just a character in a storybook, and stop holding every man to that standard, maybe you'll be able to find someone who can actually stand to be with you, and maybe, if you can put away the misandrist attitude long enough, maybe you'll be able to find who actually wants to be with you. But as long as you keep projecting the attitude you do here, you're going to remain lonely and your bitterness will only increase.

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Fri 03/06/15 12:39 AM

I'm on topic and men just cause so much unhappiness in relationships, most of them should be lucky any woman will put up with them at all really (although most of that is probably because the woman can't get out somehow or other, or even more women would remain single, even more divorces would occur).



noway

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Fri 03/06/15 12:53 AM


I don't teach misandry to my daughter I teach her not to need a man, since they tend to be more of a liability than a support. This is not their potential it's just their practice. Of course I will teach my daughter valuable life experience and not feed her fairytales at a young age. This is why women end up hating men, they don't live up to the fairytales we are told from a young age, far from it.


You come on here sniping with your cheap shots, painting all men with the same broad brush, presumably because you parents told you about Cinderella and how she lived happily ever after. You say you won't teach your daughter to be a misandrist, yet you say that you'll teach her that men area liability, and that it's just the way they are. They have potential, but they just can't live up to it. It's hardly the fault of men in general that you weren't taught the difference between a fairy tale and reality. Plenty of girls learn all the fairy tales and don't grow up hating all men because they couldn't find that guy who fits the storybook image of Prince Charming. Here's a little secret that I taught my daughter. She knows all the fairy tales, but she also knows that the knight in shining armor riding in on a white horse has never been tested in battle. Maybe if you could grow up and realize that Prince Charming is just a character in a storybook, and stop holding every man to that standard, maybe you'll be able to find someone who can actually stand to be with you, and maybe, if you can put away the misandrist attitude long enough, maybe you'll be able to find who actually wants to be with you. But as long as you keep projecting the attitude you do here, you're going to remain lonely and your bitterness will only increase.


I didn't mean men should be like a fairytale, I meant that is what is taught from early age to girls, but what occurs is so far from it. Men do not even behave with basic human decency towards women historically, theoretically or practically. Their intentions are not love but sex, and on and on treating women like objects. This is a harsh reality that I would not teach a child, but the last thing I would teach her about would be fairytales involving men. Having a nice life for yourself, and children of your own one day, sure. She can learn from an early age to be happy without a prince charming, a frog or anything in between. I think fairytales, religion and other forms of brainwashing are abusive to young minds.

MadDog1974's photo
Fri 03/06/15 12:58 AM



I don't teach misandry to my daughter I teach her not to need a man, since they tend to be more of a liability than a support. This is not their potential it's just their practice. Of course I will teach my daughter valuable life experience and not feed her fairytales at a young age. This is why women end up hating men, they don't live up to the fairytales we are told from a young age, far from it.


You come on here sniping with your cheap shots, painting all men with the same broad brush, presumably because you parents told you about Cinderella and how she lived happily ever after. You say you won't teach your daughter to be a misandrist, yet you say that you'll teach her that men area liability, and that it's just the way they are. They have potential, but they just can't live up to it. It's hardly the fault of men in general that you weren't taught the difference between a fairy tale and reality. Plenty of girls learn all the fairy tales and don't grow up hating all men because they couldn't find that guy who fits the storybook image of Prince Charming. Here's a little secret that I taught my daughter. She knows all the fairy tales, but she also knows that the knight in shining armor riding in on a white horse has never been tested in battle. Maybe if you could grow up and realize that Prince Charming is just a character in a storybook, and stop holding every man to that standard, maybe you'll be able to find someone who can actually stand to be with you, and maybe, if you can put away the misandrist attitude long enough, maybe you'll be able to find who actually wants to be with you. But as long as you keep projecting the attitude you do here, you're going to remain lonely and your bitterness will only increase.


I didn't mean men should be like a fairytale, I meant that is what is taught from early age to girls, but what occurs is so far from it. Men do not even behave with basic human decency towards women historically, theoretically or practically. Their intentions are not love but sex, and on and on treating women like objects. This is a harsh reality that I would not teach a child, but the last thing I would teach her about would be fairytales involving men. Having a nice life for yourself, and children of your own one day, sure. She can learn from an early age to be happy without a prince charming, a frog or anything in between. I think fairytales, religion and other forms of brainwashing are abusive to young minds.



And teaching the evils of an entire gender, thereby teaching the child to be a sexist isn't abusive?

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Fri 03/06/15 01:06 AM
I wouldn't teach a child anything about men good or bad, just that she only needs to be able to look after herself and maybe her own children one day. No fairytales about men for my daughter. She should focus on herself anyway, while she is growing up. Why do little girls need to think about men?

MadDog1974's photo
Fri 03/06/15 01:15 AM
So teaching her nothing about men prepares her for the world how?

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Fri 03/06/15 01:19 AM
Call me a hopeless romantic but no matter how much grief or heartbreak I have experienced in past relationships, I love men. :heart:

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Fri 03/06/15 01:21 AM

So teaching her nothing about men prepares her for the world how?


I mean what is there to teach her about men? Their anatomy is different and I think girls should learn a lot about science, so yeah.

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Fri 03/06/15 01:22 AM
Oh yeah, almost forgot. *cracks whip* :angel: devil

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Fri 03/06/15 01:25 AM

Call me a hopeless romantic but no matter how much grief or heartbreak I have experienced in past relationships, I love men. :heart:


Romance is good, there is romance in learning to dance, write poetry, and see all of nature as something we will never fully know but we can learn from it and wonder about it. That is romance. Men can be part of that or not, I wouldn't teach that sort of romance to a young girl or she will grow up being a hopeless romantic.

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Fri 03/06/15 01:28 AM
You will deprive your daughter of whip cracking. That is so wrong!!!

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Fri 03/06/15 01:30 AM

You will deprive your daughter of whip cracking. That is so wrong!!!


Maybe she can learn about carriage riding, don't they use whips?

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Fri 03/06/15 01:36 AM
Yes, but I was talking about a different animal.

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Fri 03/06/15 01:41 AM


I wouldn't teach that sort of romance to a young girl or she will grow up being a hopeless romantic.




If I were you I wouldn't teach romance to anybody oops








Argo's photo
Fri 03/06/15 01:43 AM

Call me a hopeless romantic but no matter how much grief or heartbreak I have experienced in past relationships, I love men. :heart:

*audible sigh* of the romantic man...

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Fri 03/06/15 02:01 AM
A goat? laugh

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Fri 03/06/15 02:34 AM

Call me a hopeless romantic but no matter how much grief or heartbreak I have experienced in past relationships, I love men. :heart:


I agree

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