Online dating tips and relationship advice from Dr. Neder...
Do Men
Respect Women?
Dear Dennis:
I wonder about this from time to time, but I figure that I
need an answer from an insightful man in order to get a truthful
answer on this:
Do men
respect women in general? Do men pity women in general, because
of our vulnerabilities? Or do men
have a certain "hard-to-explain" admiration
for women at times and pity other times? What can a woman do
to get and earn men's respect in most cases? A lot of men speak
in a condescending way towards and about women. Can a woman
have a lot of sex and still get a lot of respect? Can a woman
talk about having a lot of sex and still get respect? Why do
many women seem to never grow out of that adolescent unsure-of-themselves
phase, while men tend to realize their strengths and utilize
them to their benefit?
Okay, it's
a lot of questions - but they all really center around one
general principle of respect. It
seems to me that
many women can't seem to get a grip on the power that they
possess, and forever see themselves as being in a position
whereby they have to compete and prove their worth - rather
than being in a position where they already understand their
worth and are just looking for a man who meets "their" standards.
I see that women constantly compromise, when they don't need
to - turn themselves into whores and fake bi-sexuals sometimes
- just to compete with ambitious attention whores.
What are your thoughts?
--------------------------------- Hello!
Yes, that IS a lot of questions! However, there is one simple
answer to them all: yes and no.
Some men
respect all women and some don't respect any women at all.
Many women ("feminists" in particular)
demand that all women (as a group) are given respect whereas
many
male chauvinists follow the policy of giving no woman respect
whatsoever. In fact, in every case these are all stupid and
ignorant philosophies!
I've done
many interviews wherein the interviewer (most often a feminist
herself) accused me of not "respecting women";
usually because they read some small part of my book or an
article that they don't like. My response is this: "You're
right!" In fact, I don't respect "women". I
also don't respect politicians or dog trainers or Christian
fundamentalists or boy scouts or school teachers or those in
the military or computer programmers or any other particular
group of people. I only respect individuals; and then, only
based on what they say and do. Indeed, there are many women
that I have absolutely no respect for, and some of these have
even earned my disdain. On the other hand, there are many women
that have earned my highest respect.
I would
never presume to speak for every man out there, but according
to my own research, and the huge
number of letters
I get everyday from readers, I believe that in general, most
men feel very good about women. Is this "respect"?
I can't say specifically, but I think there has to be at least
some respect involved in order to have these kinds of positive
feelings. If men are guilty of any respect-based crimes, I
think it's giving away too much respect too soon, but in fact,
this isn't a huge, rampant problem and most men learn to deal
with this early on.
On the
other hand, men view women very *differently* than themselves.
That difference in view doesn't mean that
they
don't respect women (or that they do either!), it's just "different".
For example, I'm sure that you know many women that also view
men differently than themselves. There's a reason why most
women prefer a man that's taller - it's because they view these
men as able to protect and even nurture them. This is a natural,
inborn need for these women in order to feel love. On the other
hand, they don't feel the same way about women that are taller
than themselves however.
Is that "respect"?
Not really. It's just a different way of feeling about the
opposite gender.
Respect may be involved,
but it's not the foundation of how they feel.
In my books, "Being a Man in a Woman's World I & II" I
talk pretty heavily about these gender differences and specifically
how they affect our relationships with each other. I want both
men and women to learn to play into these differences for their
own advantages. What you call "power" I simply call
natural advantage, and I believe that each of us possesses
different sets of these advantages in different measure. That's
a good thing - especially when we learn to use them to improve
our lives and even the lives of others around us.
It's because
of these differences however that I can't specifically answer
your questions! For instance, "Can a woman that
has lots of sex still be respected?" That's impossible
to answer generally. For me, yes, she can earn my respect since
the amount of sex she has had has no bearing on how I respect
her. In fact, I think that someone that is highly sexually
mature can be very respectable! What's more important to our
very beings than our sexuality? I don't know of any particular
attribute that is more foundational than our sexuality. Thus,
someone that has worked hard to build theirs in a healthy way
is someone that is likely to earn my respect. Likewise, someone
that has avoided building and understanding their own sexuality
is someone that is likely to NOT get my respect!
Other men
however see this either as a threat or view it negatively
for some other belief. They might very
well not give respect
for this. Is that "wrong"? To me it is, but that's
just one opinion. They feel it's perfectly right to believe
as they do.
What I advise people is to create their own yardsticks based
on their own beliefs, desires, experiences and philosophies
and to be clear about them. There's nothing wrong with adopting
a particular belief system that someone else creates as long
as they know WHY they believe as they do. Simply adopting something
to fill in a gap isn't a respectable action. Knowing why someone
believes in something and how it affects that individual -
and adopting it because it fits well their own belief system
- is.
Then, when situations come along, they can simply apply that
against their own yardsticks and see how they fit. If they
fit well, then this person might (based on many other factors)
be worthy of their respect. If not, they may choose to no respect
that individual.
Best regards...
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Have a love, relationship,
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to me at dwneder@beingman.com
for answers. For more information about my books, "Being
a Man in a Woman's World" (volume I & II), and other
products visit: www.beingaman.com.
Check out the discussion group at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/beingaman.
Copyright (c) 2004-2011, Dr. Dennis W. Neder
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