_meh
Grey(ogre)cel
★★★★★
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2022
- Posts
- 7,903
A lot of women are weaker than men (obviously), yes, but a lot of them have low standards of what strength is. If you can do a couple of push ups, carry a few shopping backs, and pick her up (even other women can carry other women) they'll think you're strong enough. Which a lot of men already surpass. The only two physical attributes they care about are simply face and height.
Women would find a pretty femboy twink lift weights lighter weights to be more attractive than an ogre lifting much more heavier weights.
Granted from this sexual partner and bench press max ratio graph. Yes, those that bench heavier may likely be fluffier or fatter, but let's compare those that bench 200lb/91kg and 300lb/136kg (which is a reasonable comparsion/metric). The one benching 200lb/91kg (which is pretty achievable in a few months) has more sexual partners than the guy who benches 300lb/136kg (who I wouldn't expect to be fat, still reasonably lean and 'strong').
Also, in our current modern society, especially those that live in the West (where physical strength isn't much needed anymore and obviously with technology). Physical strength and masculinity isn't really that heavily desired, if you dare to be yourself or behave like a man (as an ugly guy of course) you'll be punished for it. The West does not like physically strong and masculine men because they find them to be more intimidating. Even within the LGBT discourse, they want straight masculine man to tone down their masculinity because there are female-to-male transgenders that feel like they cannot live up to masculine male ideal.
Feminity is ultimately more desired in the West. This is obvious because of women's inclination to being bisexuals.
Overall, this is why having physical strength is detrimental in the West because they'll work against you. Even though the gym is becoming popular, but mostly people only go to the gym to look better or improve their looks, they still don't care about physical strength. A woman would have her eyes glazing over a pretty boy or Chad than an ogre lifting a shit ton of weights, usually, you would think it's the other way around (perhaps if we reverted and became more primitive), but it really isn't.
@ThisSongGoesVerHard
Women would find a pretty femboy twink lift weights lighter weights to be more attractive than an ogre lifting much more heavier weights.
Granted from this sexual partner and bench press max ratio graph. Yes, those that bench heavier may likely be fluffier or fatter, but let's compare those that bench 200lb/91kg and 300lb/136kg (which is a reasonable comparsion/metric). The one benching 200lb/91kg (which is pretty achievable in a few months) has more sexual partners than the guy who benches 300lb/136kg (who I wouldn't expect to be fat, still reasonably lean and 'strong').
Also, in our current modern society, especially those that live in the West (where physical strength isn't much needed anymore and obviously with technology). Physical strength and masculinity isn't really that heavily desired, if you dare to be yourself or behave like a man (as an ugly guy of course) you'll be punished for it. The West does not like physically strong and masculine men because they find them to be more intimidating. Even within the LGBT discourse, they want straight masculine man to tone down their masculinity because there are female-to-male transgenders that feel like they cannot live up to masculine male ideal.
Feminity is ultimately more desired in the West. This is obvious because of women's inclination to being bisexuals.
Overall, this is why having physical strength is detrimental in the West because they'll work against you. Even though the gym is becoming popular, but mostly people only go to the gym to look better or improve their looks, they still don't care about physical strength. A woman would have her eyes glazing over a pretty boy or Chad than an ogre lifting a shit ton of weights, usually, you would think it's the other way around (perhaps if we reverted and became more primitive), but it really isn't.
@ThisSongGoesVerHard
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