that PUAs who use tricks and lies get women who don’t believe they deserve anything better than tricks and lies.
I don’t think this is true.
I think your line of thinking is like this: if girls can figure out when guys are pulling tricks, than those who actually respond to the tricks are knowingly responding to tricks. Therefore, they will pursue guys that they know are doing tricks because they feel that’s what they deserve.
The flawed assumption is that ANY girl can pick up incongruity (false body language). Thing is, the more attractive the girl is, the more “tests” (commonly called “shit tests”) she puts the guys that approach her through. They test to see whether that man is really an alpha male.
A less attractive girl, who rarely gets approached, wouldn’t bother putting the guy through a shit test and would prefer to give him the benefit of the doubt. Or, they just don’t look for any faults in the guy. Because he is the only guy that approached them, they may have a momentary halo effect with him and completely disregard any incongruity.
So I wouldn’t say they knowingly choose guys who are pulling tricks on them.
So I wouldn’t say they knowingly choose guys who are pulling tricks on them.
That’s not what I said. I said:
You can’t trick your way to sleeping with a woman who really has higher self-esteem than you
A significant number of PUA manipulation tricks rely on hooking a woman’s need for self-esteem validation. Those tricks won’t work on someone who doesn’t need the validation, whether they notice the trick as a trick or not… they may simply not take the bait.
By analogy, in Star Wars Episode I, Watto doesn’t notice at first that Qi Gonn is trying a mind trick on him… he just disagrees with the statement, treating it as if it were part of the conversation, i.e., “No, I won’t.”
A person with sufficient self-esteem will respond in the same way to many types of manipulative gambits—not seeing it as a trick, but also not responding to it. For example, see Neil Strauss’ stories in The Game about his girlfriend Lisa—the few manipulation tricks he tried on her just fell flat, because she didn’t need any validation from him.
As the Jedi say, “it’s easy to fool the weak-minded”. But that doesn’t mean you want to date them, if you have any self-esteem of your own. So people tend to end up in relationships with people at compatible levels of self-esteem, regardless of whether one of the people is a PUA .
A significant number of PUA manipulation tricks rely on hooking a woman’s need for self-esteem validation.
Much less than you think; the “neg” is only a small and unnecessary part of structured game.
I am actually in the process of becoming an instructor for natural game. I don’t even condone “negging” and actually recommend against it (I can tell you why if you want).
Much less than you think; the “neg” is only a small and unnecessary part of structured game.
I wasn’t thinking only of negs, but also of freeze-outs, compliance frames (e.g. “introduce your friends, it’s the polite thing to do”), qualification hoops (“so what makes you so special?”), etc. Even the use of lock-in props can be tied to self-esteem (“you’re not a thief, right?”).
This is what I’m referring to, in that women with higher self-esteem have a lower tolerance for these things, when used by someone who lacks an adequate sense of humor or self-esteem of their own. Whereas women with lower self-esteem will feel more compelled to respond and jump through the hoops, not because of the guy, but because her own emotions give her no other choice—even if she then hates herself afterward for her actions.
Self-esteem of course is just a convenient buzzword; it may not precisely refer to the personality variable I’m describing. One author calls it “differentiation”—the ability to separate one’s self from the opinion of others, and notes that relationships between people with two widely-separated levels of differentiation won’t last long. I’ve experienced it myself, both from the high- and low-differentiation positions.
It’s technically possible to have low self-esteem in some ways, and yet still have high differentiation, so self-esteem is probably the wrong word to use. I just didn’t want, early in the discussion, to have to spell out the definition of another word when self-esteem was reasonably close.
Anyway, this is what I was trying to say: a low-differentiation PUA will get low-differentiation partners, because those are the only ones they’ll be able to hook and keep. And the field of game training has moved increasingly towards teaching things that increase differentiation: i.e., non-reactivity, lack of outcome dependence, strong personal frames, etc.
And the field of game training has moved increasingly towards teaching things that increase differentiation: i.e., non-reactivity, lack of outcome dependence, strong personal frames, etc.
This is exactly what I am planning on teaching. I believe that structured game is mostly for people who already have these things, but are at a loss when it comes to what they need to do once in front of a woman. But the majority of people who need help lack skill in both areas.
Another personality variable that might come into play is a person’s self-monitoring behavior.
Yes, that makes a lot of sense. Looks like a useful site, too.
I believe that structured game is mostly for people who already have these things, but are at a loss when it comes to what they need to do once in front of a woman.
Perhaps, but from a marketing perspective, even the guys who don’t have those things look for “magic pickup lines” first before considering improving themselves.
But this is wandering way off topic now, especially since we now basically agree. ;-)
I don’t think this is true.
I think your line of thinking is like this: if girls can figure out when guys are pulling tricks, than those who actually respond to the tricks are knowingly responding to tricks. Therefore, they will pursue guys that they know are doing tricks because they feel that’s what they deserve.
The flawed assumption is that ANY girl can pick up incongruity (false body language). Thing is, the more attractive the girl is, the more “tests” (commonly called “shit tests”) she puts the guys that approach her through. They test to see whether that man is really an alpha male.
A less attractive girl, who rarely gets approached, wouldn’t bother putting the guy through a shit test and would prefer to give him the benefit of the doubt. Or, they just don’t look for any faults in the guy. Because he is the only guy that approached them, they may have a momentary halo effect with him and completely disregard any incongruity.
So I wouldn’t say they knowingly choose guys who are pulling tricks on them.
That’s not what I said. I said:
A significant number of PUA manipulation tricks rely on hooking a woman’s need for self-esteem validation. Those tricks won’t work on someone who doesn’t need the validation, whether they notice the trick as a trick or not… they may simply not take the bait.
By analogy, in Star Wars Episode I, Watto doesn’t notice at first that Qi Gonn is trying a mind trick on him… he just disagrees with the statement, treating it as if it were part of the conversation, i.e., “No, I won’t.”
A person with sufficient self-esteem will respond in the same way to many types of manipulative gambits—not seeing it as a trick, but also not responding to it. For example, see Neil Strauss’ stories in The Game about his girlfriend Lisa—the few manipulation tricks he tried on her just fell flat, because she didn’t need any validation from him.
As the Jedi say, “it’s easy to fool the weak-minded”. But that doesn’t mean you want to date them, if you have any self-esteem of your own. So people tend to end up in relationships with people at compatible levels of self-esteem, regardless of whether one of the people is a PUA .
Much less than you think; the “neg” is only a small and unnecessary part of structured game.
I am actually in the process of becoming an instructor for natural game. I don’t even condone “negging” and actually recommend against it (I can tell you why if you want).
I wasn’t thinking only of negs, but also of freeze-outs, compliance frames (e.g. “introduce your friends, it’s the polite thing to do”), qualification hoops (“so what makes you so special?”), etc. Even the use of lock-in props can be tied to self-esteem (“you’re not a thief, right?”).
This is what I’m referring to, in that women with higher self-esteem have a lower tolerance for these things, when used by someone who lacks an adequate sense of humor or self-esteem of their own. Whereas women with lower self-esteem will feel more compelled to respond and jump through the hoops, not because of the guy, but because her own emotions give her no other choice—even if she then hates herself afterward for her actions.
Self-esteem of course is just a convenient buzzword; it may not precisely refer to the personality variable I’m describing. One author calls it “differentiation”—the ability to separate one’s self from the opinion of others, and notes that relationships between people with two widely-separated levels of differentiation won’t last long. I’ve experienced it myself, both from the high- and low-differentiation positions.
It’s technically possible to have low self-esteem in some ways, and yet still have high differentiation, so self-esteem is probably the wrong word to use. I just didn’t want, early in the discussion, to have to spell out the definition of another word when self-esteem was reasonably close.
Anyway, this is what I was trying to say: a low-differentiation PUA will get low-differentiation partners, because those are the only ones they’ll be able to hook and keep. And the field of game training has moved increasingly towards teaching things that increase differentiation: i.e., non-reactivity, lack of outcome dependence, strong personal frames, etc.
I agree with you.
Another personality variable that might come into play is a person’s self-monitoring behavior.
This is exactly what I am planning on teaching. I believe that structured game is mostly for people who already have these things, but are at a loss when it comes to what they need to do once in front of a woman. But the majority of people who need help lack skill in both areas.
Yes, that makes a lot of sense. Looks like a useful site, too.
Perhaps, but from a marketing perspective, even the guys who don’t have those things look for “magic pickup lines” first before considering improving themselves.
But this is wandering way off topic now, especially since we now basically agree. ;-)