overcompensating by being a mean B, especially the overweight ones. i had to work with one on more than one occasion, one as a lab partner, and 1 as a coworker. the lab partner was worst.
I disagree with the premise. For the most part, people don’t buy nice things to compensate for something - they do it to signal status.
Also, as asexual male, I always find it amusing when someone implies I’m compensating for a small dick with my truck, as if my dick size was in any way relevant to how I live my life.
they do it to signal status.
The need to signal status stems from insecurity, which can sometimes stem from a tiny stem.
Which is the fault of a culture that defined big dicks as good things. Most women do not care, and would pick smaller over painfully large.
The need to signal status is in our genes. Every single person on Earth does it. It’s what got your ancestors laid and their genes passed on to the next generation. This has been the case for as long as we’ve lived in groups - and it’s not even unique to humans. Just look at the peacock’s tail.
That sounds like pop psychology. Correlation vs causation.
It’s like saying being selfish is in our genes. And no, it’s a learned trait. Just like the need to jockey for status. It’s NOT natural. You’ve been programmed.
And I swear to god if you say the phrase “high value men” I’m going to laugh until I lose consciousness.
And I swear to god if you say the phrase “high value men” I’m going to laugh until I lose consciousness.
I don’t see what this has to do with anything I said.
“high value men” are ones who are held to some arbitrary macho standard, a big part of which is appearance. Big trucks are a part of it.
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Yay some random book.
I saw one that said I can manifest things! Must be true. They wrote a book about it after all!
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I think assuming men need to compensate for a body parts appearance they can’t influence is a pretty idiotic thing.
It’s just one study, but there is science to back that up
I looked through the study for fun, and it looks rather poorly made tbh. Also it’s a non peer reviewed preprint from 2023.
I’m curious what you identify as poorly made—I’m not a psychology researcher, but their methodology and statistical analysis seem basically credible.
I’m not at a computer rn, but to make it short:
The key experimental trial told participants that the average erect penis size of other men was either 18cm (small penis / low self-esteem) or 10cm (large penis / high self-esteem) and was always followed by rating of one of six sports cars. […] After the experimental trials, participants were told that some of the facts that they had been told were incorrect, and they were asked to give their estimates of the true values of these facts, including the true average penis size.
So if someone told me the average penis size is 18 cm I would call that bullshit. But let us assume all the 195 participants fully believed these numbers. They need to know their own penis size to make a comparison. Then this is about if “I feel I am below average”. Then they rated sport cars based on “how much they would like to have that product”
Sorry, but that does not sound very sound to me.
We increased our male participants’ desire for sports cars when we made them feel they had a relatively small penis. Why cars and why penises? These results raise intriguing questions for future research. Does penis size effect only ratings for sports cars, or other highly prized items as well? Does penis size have a connection to male self-esteem that just much stronger than the other factors we manipulated in this experiment. If we manipulated other equally strong factors – men’s beliefs about their intelligence or wealth perhaps - we would find a similar effect on product ratings? Or perhaps there is just something specific linking cars and penises in the male psyche. That hypothesis is supported by the data in this paper, and would explain the existence of the phallic car trope in everyday jokes, advertisements and academic discourse […]
What kind of conclusion is that? This is written like a blog article, not like a scientific paper. The conclusion has only 3 references. In total the paper is pretty short, but to be fair I don’t know what’s common in psychology either.
However what is most suspicious - this is a non peer reviewed preprint from 2023 and I cannot find the publication. So I guess it was declined, if it was even sent in
Wearing/buying luxury fashion goods.
I think this is a pretty dumb topic, because it really involves a lot of stereotyping and bullshit (like the other comment suggesting that fancy cars aren’t linked to penis size anxiety) but anyway…
If we take “penis size” as a metric that men believe is important to their sexual attractiveness, and the assumption that they buy expensive cars to compensate, then we could see the goal as increasing their diminished sexual value in an alternative way. A rich man with a small penis may (in this silly logic) be as sexually attractive as a poor man with a large penis.
So for women, what is a stereotypical number that they could worry about and try and compensate for? The two that spring to mind (in this clichéd view of the sexual economy) are age and weight. Weight feels different, as there are methods of managing it that are more effective than “this secret ancient method will grow your dong 3 inches!” but for many people it is not an easily controlled factor. Age is, chronologically at least, a one way street. For both of these, make-up and grooming are pretty effective at reducing the “negatives” (bleurgh!) of being old / overweight, but that would be the equivalent of men stuffing socks and salami down their pants. What is the equivalent of “I’m not conventionally sexually attractive, but I have other redeeming qualities, like a willingness to waste money trying to impress women”? I wonder if it’s “being kinda slutty”?
When I think of the equivalent to the cliché of the needy middle-aged businessman in his sports car, I think of the stereotype of the middle-aged, overweight, divorcée wearing too much makeup and dressing too young/slutty. She’s not really trying to pretend she’s young and hot, she’s visibly demonstrating that’s she’s willing to make an effort to attract a man “if I’m willing to look like this in public, think how much of an effort I’ll make on the sack!”
But I think this is a pretty silly topic, and making stereotyped judgements about other people is pretty bad. The “facists have small dicks” memes that kick about are kinda funny, but are really just reinforcing a body image problem that exists much more in society and the minds of men than it does in the tastes of their actual sexual partners. And women can be whatever age, weight or whatever else they want, and dress how they like. Some people just love leopard print! No need to project society’s ills onto them!
Check out the big virtue on Acamon.
It’s not the size of virtue, but how you use it. Or so I’m told.
I believe they measure the vaginal folds
No, we dont.
Is more or less better?
I believe it’s whichever amount allows for the loudest queef, or “maximum queefiness” as they say.
Yes.
I love the way you participate in toxic masculinity.
by being extra attitude problem.
Makeup.
Women might feel the need to “compensate” for their faces and overall bodies but there’s no dick equivalent. A flat chested cutie will still be many people’s cup of tea, but no one prefers a micropenis. I’m not sure the people who buy the big American trucks have small penises necessarily, they might just be overall insecure and need a very visible sign of status.
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There’s a difference between a small penis and a micropenis.
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as a woman
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I’m not OP. But if you’re trying to low-key make some sort of gender joke, take that shit elsewhere please.
“A female” is what incels use, it’s pretty disgusting and demeaning.
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How much clearer can “as a WOMAN” be?? Do you have a different definition of woman?
I’m sure this made a lot of guys feel better, lol.
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Eh… It can be a proper issue (I assume 👀), not everything can just be yapped away.
no bewbs
Tighter jeans
giant naturally gaping vaginas
As far as the eye can see
Wist i do agree the particular stereotype is a bit scathing, I think it is withheld discussing bodily insecurities.
I do think it’s more diverse in women as the don’t focus on this one aspect, in disregard for about everything, which is often the male problem.
Posturing and peacocking is however important. I think that a lot is body related with indieners paddling makeup, fillers and stuff like that.
Aside from that there’s not a simple set of items that define ‘the successful woman’ like expensive watches, fast cars ed. are for men.
But for most (and both sexes) the appearance of a successful relationship, a beautiful home, holidays and activities in line with their life philosophy seem prevalent in social media.
The appearance being the operative word, as it’s often more important than reality.
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