A short, silly article that addresses a growing trend among men (and women too.)
I'm going to assume we've all seen it. The guy or meme complaining about being "friend zoned" (where friend zoned is defined as "NO SEX EVER") after being super "nice" to the girl. There is even an entire meme devoted to it "Friend Zone Fiona."
So what does this mean for genuinely nice guys/girls? The ones who don't equate being "nice" with getting special points they can save up and eventually cash in for some naked hump time?
Not sure. For one, I'd stop describing myself as a "nice" at this point.
I suppose the major problem is all those romantic comedies where the "nice" guy always gets the girl in the end. Maybe parents need to step in and say, "This is not how to get a girl. You get a girl (or guy) by being respectful, not making her feel obligated and not expecting the relationship."
Or is it more society's job to curb the this kind of behavior/mindset?
Or is it going to be more like "Make sure you take precautions against fake nice guys/nice girls?" where we seek to try and avoid the behavior/limit the effects of the behavior rather than addressing it?
Want me to blather on more? 'Cos I can! SPAMMYSPAMMYSPAMMY. (Sorry, I couldn't maintain the FOR SERIOUS attitude.)
I'm going to assume we've all seen it. The guy or meme complaining about being "friend zoned" (where friend zoned is defined as "NO SEX EVER") after being super "nice" to the girl. There is even an entire meme devoted to it "Friend Zone Fiona."
So what does this mean for genuinely nice guys/girls? The ones who don't equate being "nice" with getting special points they can save up and eventually cash in for some naked hump time?
Not sure. For one, I'd stop describing myself as a "nice" at this point.
I suppose the major problem is all those romantic comedies where the "nice" guy always gets the girl in the end. Maybe parents need to step in and say, "This is not how to get a girl. You get a girl (or guy) by being respectful, not making her feel obligated and not expecting the relationship."
Or is it more society's job to curb the this kind of behavior/mindset?
Or is it going to be more like "Make sure you take precautions against fake nice guys/nice girls?" where we seek to try and avoid the behavior/limit the effects of the behavior rather than addressing it?
Want me to blather on more? 'Cos I can! SPAMMYSPAMMYSPAMMY. (Sorry, I couldn't maintain the FOR SERIOUS attitude.)
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