kirk
Established Member
- Reaction score
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It's because ginger hate is also a social construct. I had this talk about gingers with my girlfriend and she doesn't understand why they get so much hate.
She also see no problem with bald men. To her, there are just hot bald men and ugly bald men, like there are hot gingers and ugly gingers.
But yeah, the mainstream media wants to push these ginger-hate and bald-hate narratives.
You know how I feel about this, yes baldness makes you less attractive, but it never should be a deal breaker.
Yet it has become for the women in our culture, so much that even if they find a bald guy very attractive, they would say no simply because "get your crap together Sylvia, he's bald!"
And these situations can happen. How else would I have still gotten girls while being a slick NW5 in his early twenties? These girls were obviously attracted to me.
Even hellouser admits that there are hot bald men, and I mean in our everyday lives.
But the push from the media to hate bald men is so strong in our society that these men will lose opportunities with women.
It can go further, for example, there is also a push in the media to make women drool over men with dark hair and brown eyes. The famous tall dark stranger.
If you check Hollywood movies from the 80's and 90's (Top Gun, The Karate Kid, even Terminator 2): the bad guy always has blue eyes and blond hair.
I've heard girls say that a blue-eyed blond guy was just out of the question for them. How can they even claim that? What difference does it make?
This shows how much the mainstream media and Hollywood culture can influence women's preferences, or should I say women's demands in a man.
Yep. From my experience it's one of the socially acceptable things to make fun of, just like being bald. For me, it was worse when I was younger and just wanted to be like everyone else.
Even the teachers would get in on the jabs sometimes. I hated the whole 'red headed stepchild' ****. As I got older, I started feeling like it was a badge of honor. You can imagine the identity crises that ensued when I started going bald. As I Imagine we all feel to some degree.
Social constructs are brutal for some us and at certain points of my life I was only able to have 'red pill' type friends that could see thru the BS. One positive thing that comes from being messed with all the time (at least for me) is you don't do it to others. I never made fun of my bald uncle even though my brothers did as children. I learned that there are just issues too sensitive to bring up.
I also have a weird confession to make. I hate it when I see people dye there hair red if it's not there natural color. They did not do their time dammit! Anyways that's another story.