glowIntheDark
I who have never known foids
★★
- Joined
- May 11, 2023
- Posts
- 4,197
So I was watching a documentary on Chechens of Chechenya which is a Russian state consisting of Orthodox Muslims as I was curious about that place as Islam Makachev my favourite UFC player is from there.
And idk something about the simple , meek , socially conservative life about that place hit me like a brick.
Most men r ugly truecels but it doesn't matter because in those regions men r raised to be men -- beauty doesn't matter -- they are taught to be fighters by their fathers.
The marriage is arranged with on average the women being 16-17 yrs and the man being 20-22 years.
Genders aren't allowed to socialise together heck it is considered taboo for men n women who r not married to even hold hands or look in each other's eyes.
Something about the concept that u being not only ur wife's first sexual experience but also the first to hold her hand/kiss her/look her in the eyes is a concept so out of the world so unattainable like unicorns or chocolate fountains
Men r pretty protective of women n after marriage (and tbf such traditional women do deserve chivalry)) women don't even come out of their rooms if the man has his male friends home.
Most of them live in villages often in joint families.
And before any feminist cuck brings shit up -- no most women r not opressed. They have their female friends to hang out with/ joint family Mother in Law's n sister in law's that help with the household chores n the women genuinely seem happy or atleast as happy as anyone would be in a war ridden region with high employment rates
I don't know man even on this account I have shit on Muslims/religious PPL many times and it's probably me romanticising a culture based on one documentary but something about a simple village life where u grow up as a man not caring about your looks , learning how to fight and be aggressive and assertive, no alcohols/drugs/weed, having a sense of community and beautiful mountains like that region has, then getting married to a woman at 22 who has never even held hands with another man and genuinely caring for each other and having lot of kids together and watching them grow up in a community of brotherhood and oneness just fills me with something unexplainable
And idk something about the simple , meek , socially conservative life about that place hit me like a brick.
Most men r ugly truecels but it doesn't matter because in those regions men r raised to be men -- beauty doesn't matter -- they are taught to be fighters by their fathers.
The marriage is arranged with on average the women being 16-17 yrs and the man being 20-22 years.
Genders aren't allowed to socialise together heck it is considered taboo for men n women who r not married to even hold hands or look in each other's eyes.
Something about the concept that u being not only ur wife's first sexual experience but also the first to hold her hand/kiss her/look her in the eyes is a concept so out of the world so unattainable like unicorns or chocolate fountains
Men r pretty protective of women n after marriage (and tbf such traditional women do deserve chivalry)) women don't even come out of their rooms if the man has his male friends home.
Most of them live in villages often in joint families.
And before any feminist cuck brings shit up -- no most women r not opressed. They have their female friends to hang out with/ joint family Mother in Law's n sister in law's that help with the household chores n the women genuinely seem happy or atleast as happy as anyone would be in a war ridden region with high employment rates
I don't know man even on this account I have shit on Muslims/religious PPL many times and it's probably me romanticising a culture based on one documentary but something about a simple village life where u grow up as a man not caring about your looks , learning how to fight and be aggressive and assertive, no alcohols/drugs/weed, having a sense of community and beautiful mountains like that region has, then getting married to a woman at 22 who has never even held hands with another man and genuinely caring for each other and having lot of kids together and watching them grow up in a community of brotherhood and oneness just fills me with something unexplainable