all the paintballers I've met seem to have a stigma against anyone who wears anything more than a mask and love showing off their "battlescars".
Refreshingly I've never met any of those. Everyone's been sensibly covered in long sleeves and pants and face protection. The guys at work don't want to get messed up, and I'm going to guess that the kravvers have better ways to get bruised.
Chatting with a co-kravver yesterday about women who date fixer uppers. My reflexive generalisation is that women might date a bad boy and want to change him to have some of the good boy characteristics that are important to them (fidelity, etc.), but when dating the too-nice guy they're not trying to change him, and are more likely to be trying to convince themselves they should be dating him.
The above, of course, is not only a generalisation, but is applied only to certain women in bad-fit relationships.
Co-kravver said that women are just as likely to want to fix the too nice guy as the too bad guy. Opinions?
when dating the too-nice guy they're not trying to change him, and are more likely to be trying to convince themselves they should be dating him
I dated a guy like this for three years and it wasn't until I met Joe that I realized I was doing it. The guy just seemed like he *should* be perfect for me - smart, good-looking, responsible, but ultimately emotionally distant and dull.
The guy just seemed like he *should* be perfect for me - smart, good-looking, responsible, but ultimately emotionally distant and dull.
Those are the sort of guys my mother used to try and hook me up with. Luckily for me she's out of the biz. The arguments this would generate were so stereotypical it ached.
I've told this story before I think.
I was playing with a friends four year old after church.
Gillian: Trudy, when are you going to get married?
Now, said child had just been a flower girl two or three times and was likely looking for another gig. Her parents, however, are a mite old-fashioned so I thought I'd take this opportunity as a teachable moment.
Trudy: Not everybody GETS married.
Gillian: Really?
T: Nope, not everybody gets married. But I think one day I might
like
to get married.
G: Good. So who are you going to marry?
T: Well, that's a big decision. If I marry someone that means I want to spend the rest of my life with him. That's a lot of time. I guess if I got married he would have to be very very... [brain scrambling here, what do I SAY to a four year old about this particular topic]... nice.
G: [face lighting up like Christmas]
I
know somebody nice!
[Now I am a little terrified. Nice is all well and good, but he just has to be
old
to Gillian. This 'nice' guy could be anywhere between fifteen and eighty. I am pausing in terror. Fortunately she's had another thought. But its a sad thought. And she wilts in that way little kids do when they're disappointed.]
G: No... but he's
boring.
[in all wisom and earnestness] Nice, but NOT boring.
Broadly speaking, I'm not sure that women "like bad guys" so much as they want a little excitement. And if a guy is dull as dust I don't
care
how nice he is. Nice but not boring. They exist, they're just sorta rare.
A friend and I have recently coined the term "jackass-coated sweetheart." I think it maybe applies here?
Hee. Monkeys with phones!
Huh. Haven't read the linked article yet, but I had heard rumors that Bush was mad at Rove for the leak....
eta: Upon reading the article - it says that Bush made no specific mention of leaking Plame's identity....