Friday, 11 April 2014

“Women age like a fine wine” - Lies Men Are Being Told About Women

4 Lies Men Are Being Told About Women




As recently pointed out, women don’t handle rejection well. This
axiom is the manifestation of that reality. Women simply do not age
well. Sure, there are a few exceptions to the rule. If a woman takes
care of herself by staying fit, eating clean, not smoking, not drinking
excessively, not riding the cock carousel, and has good DNA
there’s a small chance she could look good into her early to mid
thirties. But odds are Father Time will collect his debt for having
afforded her a decade of absolute power over men.
That said, the idea that a 38 year old woman is more sexually
attractive than a 21 year old because she’s “like a fine wine” and has
“more experience” is laughable.




Regardless of how many women tell a 33 year old former party girl
she’s a great catch because of her great job, her impressive diversified
portfolio, and her Masters Degree, she knows that her SMV (sexual
market value) is determined by her physical beauty and not much else.
She also knows that each passing year lowers her SMV, which means she
will experience increasing rejection (directly or indirectly) from the
opposite sex. Her inability to handle rejection will push her to the
“fine wine” canard to cope with her decreasing desirability.




The problem with this coping mechanism is that it doesn’t apply to
her sex. It applies to men. Men age much better than women. Not only do
we age better aesthetically, our experience also increases our SMV as
the years go by. Sex, traveling, and education are just a few things
that supplement our increasing attractiveness as we get older. An older
woman with a PhD, thousands of frequent flier miles, and a porn
star-worthy notch count is far from being a fine wine. She’s probably
closer to a half empty domestic light beer that’s been sitting in the
fridge for a few weeks teetering on the edge of undrinkability.









Beta males would never argue against this motto in front of women and
more often than not they will outright support it while choosing to
remain ignorant of the fact that it applies to men. People don’t think
of men aging like a fine wine because wine generally has a feminine
connotation. Further, replacing the word “wine” with “beer” (which has a
masculine connotation) makes the saying false because beer does not age
well and is almost never referred to as “fine”. Mix that grammatical
breakdown with the typical mid thirties woman who, by this point in her
life has a well-fed entitlement monkey and a bionic rationalization
hamster, it’s no wonder no one has ever publicly challenged this
statement or turned it on its head.