Men Must Suffer
screw the rules
from
JoeUser Forums
I don't know how far back it goes, but I definitely remember the first time that a guy told me he liked me, and I turned around and walked away... deliberately, even though I actually liked him. Of course, I was in grade school back then, but I am 100% positive that someone must have told me that this was the way to handle things.
Go into your closest Chapters, Cole's, or Indigo monster store (or whatever it is you have there in your hometown), and I'm sure there's an isle or two devoted to it: designed rules on how to behave in a relationship. Whenever I come across it though, I hurry by, the same way I do when I see the devout passing out phamplets, or shaking empty tin cans and singing. I'm not a believer. I don't think that I need some book telling me how to be happy being single, how to stop being single, how to understand the man I love, how to love the man I want to understand... and so on.
I don't quite trust the people who write these bulky tomes. In fact, for all those so-called Relationship Experts, I'm pretty suspicious towards them. I picture them as the people for whom the phone never rings, flowers never sent to, and as people who pine away for the one person they crushed on in Kindergarten. Link
And I have definite questions for the people who pick up the book entitled "The Rules" or "Redefining Mr. Right: A Career Woman’s Guide to Choosing a Mate". Why? Why would you need a book to spell out what you should be figuring out for yourself? I'm not saying I have all the answers. I don't know anyone who does. But how the bloody hell can a book help you decide what's right? How can a set of defined steps weed out the undesireable or reel a winner in?
All these phony tactics that encourage lying, disinterest, and a step-by-step blueprint in order to create a loving relationship is pure shite. The only thing that I'm certain of, when it comes to relationship advice books is to run when one is spotted on a bookshelf or coffee table. Not all reading material is good reading material, for sure.
Go into your closest Chapters, Cole's, or Indigo monster store (or whatever it is you have there in your hometown), and I'm sure there's an isle or two devoted to it: designed rules on how to behave in a relationship. Whenever I come across it though, I hurry by, the same way I do when I see the devout passing out phamplets, or shaking empty tin cans and singing. I'm not a believer. I don't think that I need some book telling me how to be happy being single, how to stop being single, how to understand the man I love, how to love the man I want to understand... and so on.
I don't quite trust the people who write these bulky tomes. In fact, for all those so-called Relationship Experts, I'm pretty suspicious towards them. I picture them as the people for whom the phone never rings, flowers never sent to, and as people who pine away for the one person they crushed on in Kindergarten. Link
And I have definite questions for the people who pick up the book entitled "The Rules" or "Redefining Mr. Right: A Career Woman’s Guide to Choosing a Mate". Why? Why would you need a book to spell out what you should be figuring out for yourself? I'm not saying I have all the answers. I don't know anyone who does. But how the bloody hell can a book help you decide what's right? How can a set of defined steps weed out the undesireable or reel a winner in?
All these phony tactics that encourage lying, disinterest, and a step-by-step blueprint in order to create a loving relationship is pure shite. The only thing that I'm certain of, when it comes to relationship advice books is to run when one is spotted on a bookshelf or coffee table. Not all reading material is good reading material, for sure.
