
DeathSigil
Unhealthy obsession with Yandere girls.
★
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2025
- Posts
- 1,508
To strip a man of his hope is the most brutal form of cruelty you can inflict upon him. It’s not just rejection; it’s the declaration that he is less than human. That his value is dictated by the aesthetic whims of others, that he is worthless because his face doesn’t conform to a high standard. To tell a man, plainly and coldly, that he is never worthy of affection is a sharp wound to the heart of any man surpassing any insult or affliction.
Women will eagerly share a good-looking guy in a situationship—fucking him and passing him around—just because he’s attractive. But if you’re not as good-looking? You get treated like absolute shit.
Women will flock to men who are openly dangerous—men who harm, men who abuse, men who have a truly vile nature. They will endure months, even years, of pain and torment, simply because these men are attractive.
I urge you all to search the threads titled "An ugly guy asked me out," and you’ll find a stream of insults aimed at these men. At best, some might offer a “let him down gently,” as if that’s supposed to help. Yet, contrast this with searching "My boyfriend abuses me," and you’ll be met with hundreds of these threads—often from the same women, bearing their pain and suffering.
Women will eagerly share a good-looking guy in a situationship—fucking him and passing him around—just because he’s attractive. But if you’re not as good-looking? You get treated like absolute shit.
Women will flock to men who are openly dangerous—men who harm, men who abuse, men who have a truly vile nature. They will endure months, even years, of pain and torment, simply because these men are attractive.
I urge you all to search the threads titled "An ugly guy asked me out," and you’ll find a stream of insults aimed at these men. At best, some might offer a “let him down gently,” as if that’s supposed to help. Yet, contrast this with searching "My boyfriend abuses me," and you’ll be met with hundreds of these threads—often from the same women, bearing their pain and suffering.
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