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Getting
Beat By A Girl
By Scot Mckay
There's a lot of talk about "approach anxiety", and
for good reason. It has been optimistically estimated that over
80% of all men are terrified of approaching attractive women they
have ever met. And let's face it: without overcoming this fear
it's all but impossible for a man to experience any success whatsoever
in meeting great women, let alone attracting and keeping them.
Most of the information I've read on the subject centers around
teaching men to sack up and "get over it", using any
manner of Jedi mind tricks designed to help us "deal with
rejection", "visualize success", use "indirect
openers", etc. But I've read relatively little on the subject
that dives beyond the surface of the issue. Most of us are or
were at some point in our lives afraid to approach women. Instead
of being given a pep talk, I'd rather know WHY we as men are almost
universally affected by this, and HOW we fell into this trap.
From that position of understanding, it makes sense that we can
better figure how to dig ourselves out.
And it is absolutely a trap. It's an irrational fear for a man
to be "afraid" of women. After all, most of us as men
are not catatonic basket cases sucking our thumbs in a fetal position
when it comes to other aspects of our lives. We play football
in high school. We go downhill mountain biking, surf hurricanes,
get concealed weapon licenses, street race muscle cars, ask customers
for high-dollar sales orders, train pit bulls, get full-sleeve
tattoos, do third-gear wheelies on GSXR-1000s and remove offending
garden snakes from backyard sheds. Some of us even DAYDREAM about
things like making high-pressure 20-foot putts for birdie on the
18th green at Augusta National.
Yet, we cannot bring ourselves to go talk to an interesting woman
at a bar, an airport or even in our own dormitory at college.
To further underscore how bizarre this phenomenon gets, I remember
running with a crowd primarily composed of United States Marines
back when I lived in Yuma, Arizona. We'd park our sportbikes somewhere
to grab a bite, see an attractive woman and NOT ONE OF US would
talk to her. We're talking about guys who had VOLUNTEERED to risk
their lives for this country, and furthermore had just finished
a pavement blistering canyon run five minutes before.
What is going on here?
Here it is: it's not the WOMEN themselves we are afraid of. It's
our own egos that hamstring us. Allow me to elaborate.
We as men are competitive beings. When we're out with our buddies
it's one contest after another. That's all well and good, and
we like it that way. But deep in the soul of every man is a mortal
repulsion against getting "beat by a girl". Whether
women like it, understand it, think it's silly and/or can deal
with it is actually irrelevant. It's a fact. The archetypal shame
associated with it is wired into our XY genetic code.
Remember back in sixth grade when the girls were maturing and
the boys were, well
still looking like little boys? Remember
in gym class how some of the girls could run faster and throw
harder? It was a drag, wasn't it? When we as guys got older that
problem took care of itself for the most part
except in two
notable areas: the business world and, of course, the dating world.
In the business world women are going to get promotions and ascend
to positions of power with or without any input from YOU in particular.
If a woman "beats" you in that arena, you can either
accept it and stick around or find another job.
But dating is another story. The "competition" is mano-a-mano
when it comes to approaching a woman. And THAT, my brethren, is
where we as men let our egos betray us. We tend to see approaching
women as a COMPETITION. If you or I approach a woman with this
mindset, we believe someone is going to WIN and someone is going
to LOSE. If she REJECTS us, we lose-and we've been "beaten
by a girl"! And even if we DO get a smile and a phone number,
if she doesn't answer the phone when we call her we STILL are
getting "beat by a girl". Given this situation, it's
a no-brainer to see why most men don't even bother to talk to
women AT ALL. The risks to ones psychological well being are just
too great. Getting "beat by a girl" is more painful
than crashing and burning anywhere else.
So what's the solution?
The discussions I've heard about reframing the approach so as
to involve a QUALIFICATION PROCESS are the closest to hitting
the mark. Our problem as guys typically is that we've PRE-QUALIFIED
women before we've even met them based on their looks and/or how
they appear to handle themselves from afar. Having already decided
we like a woman before even meeting her, the insidious "contest"
is on. Every time.
Instead of approaching women with our approval already sewn up,
we need to start putting women to the test in the same manner
they famously test us.
Men are typically the CHASERS and women the CHOOSERS in this society
as a result of how men tend to view this stuff. Men who deserve
what they want and who refuse to "settle" need to start
raising the bar, refusing to offer up immediate approval to women
we meet until they have proven to be as attractive AFTER we meet
them as they were BEFORE we met them. Women instinctively evaluate
us when we approach them, as we know all too well. It's time for
us to start doing the same-which we have every right to do as
fellow human beings.
And look what happens in that case. The "competition"
factor has magically been lifted from the scenario. If we haven't
yet reached our own conclusions when we approach a woman, she
really can't "reject" us
or "beat" us,
as it were. She can only pass or fail our own evaluation process.
And as any man who conducts himself with dignity and refuses to
"settle" knows, women who are rude and/or quick to dismiss
us thereby fail the qualification process. The principle at play
is much the same as when a pushy or otherwise socially inept man
fails a woman's test
as well it should be. It's as simple
as that.
Simple, maybe, but not easy. It may take some time to unlearn
the poisonous habit of seeing the approach as a competition. But
the fact remains that we as men have the power to view things
in the more sober context of mutual evaluation rather than "winning"
or "losing". In doing so we overcome THE major contributor
to "approach anxiety". And I assure you the effort is
well worth it.
Strangely enough, the women will even appreciate you MORE as a
result. After all, women love real men.
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About
The Author
Scot McKay's dating strategies
are for those who refuse to settle for anything less than
the ULTIMATE relationship. Find
out more |
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