muHA!
(tangent) You know, I've never quite understood why anyone would ask whether something looked shitty and then been upset with a truthful answer. If I ask that question, I expect a truthdul answer.
How did that stereotype get started? Does anyone know?
Not a clue, Deb. I'm sure it's been around since cavemen first started wearing animal skins.
I'm sure it's been around since cavemen first started wearing animal skins.
Yes, but that presupposes that some cavewoman put on a mastodon miniskirt, asked if she looked fat in it, was told yes, and then beaned Thag with a sabre tooth jawbone or something.
My real bewilderment is at the idea that it got started because some women prefer to be lied to. Dude. Do I want to go out in something that makes me look like a tuba in stilettos? IOW, if I wanted to be lied to, why would I ask?
Never mind. I'm a freak, possibly.
Do I want to go out in something that makes me look like a tuba in stilettos? IOW, if I wanted to be lied to, why would I ask?
Because some women have absolutely no judgement about what looks good on them. They buy the most godawful stuff and then seek reassurance that they made the right choice. Personally, I tell the truth. If they can't handle it, they shouldn't have asked me.
I tell the truth if the questioner and I are in her room trying to decide what she should wear. I lie if we're about to walk into the party and it's too late to change anything.
Because some women have absolutely no judgement about what looks good on them.
That part, I get.
They buy the most godawful stuff and then seek reassurance that they made the right choice.
That part, I missed. If they know their judgment sucks - and I assume they have some clue about it, since they're asking for reassurance - wouldn't they take someone they trusted shopping with them in the first place?
Personally, I tell the truth. If they can't handle it, they shouldn't have asked me.
So do I. But I'm a whole nother deal from asking the man she supposedly trusts to not let her make a fool of herself by wearing something that looks like ass on toast points in public, and then punishing him for doing precisely that.
Do a lot of women do that? When did it become a stereotype? I'm puzzled by it, and I do mean puzzled.
I tell the truth if the questioner and I are in her room trying to decide what she should wear. I lie if we're about to walk into the party and it's too late to change anything.
Yes, I get that - but see above. You aren't her soul mate and the man she trusts to not lie to her.
I'm confused.
Maybe her definition of soulmate is the man she trusts to know just when to lie to her.
Deb, I think the problem is with the women's priorities in what they want out of a mate. They may value honesty, but they place a higher value on the man's ability to make them feel attractive. So, they put the poor schmuck in a bind of "which does she want tonight, honesty or comfort?"
Maybe her definition of soulmate is the man she trusts to know just when to lie to her.
Huh. Interesting idea. What happens to that trust when she walks into a party and forty people chorous at her in a single voice "JEEEEEZ, Lulu! Tony let you out of the house in that? You look like an elephant seal!"
edit:
So, they put the poor schmuck in a bind of "which does she want tonight, honesty or comfort?"
Same response. If he's lying to her in bed, I'd get it. But if they're going out and there's a chance the comfort is going to become ridicule...?
Nope. Still confused. Suspect my confusion isn't going anywhere soon.