May 17, 2008...5:14 pm
200. What daughters never hear—Section 2
♀ Commitment made before conquest fades or dies afterward. A man’s devotion dips a little after conquest but returns.
♀ Everything looks and tastes better when you’re grateful.
♀ Selfishness interferes with gratitude, the absence of which causes unhappiness.
♀ A man’s devotion depends on his respect for a woman, which mostly floats on her wavy ocean of self-respect, exceptionalness as a female, feminine virtue, and likeability as potential mate.
♀ A man’s enduring love is built upon his respect for women generally and respect and likeability of one in particular. Need for her intensifies his devotion.
♀ After conquest a woman ceases to be a challenge, because a man’s most pressing goal has been accomplished. He moves on to his current mission in life, whether she’s his keeper or a dumpee.
♀ Modest attire sends the message she’s interested in long-term relationships. Immodest attire signals she’s interested in a man, period.
♀ Christian men complain that young women and girls dress so seductively for church that they discredit God and steal male attention away from church teachings. Church-going men usually make good husbands, but they must be proud of how their wife appears in public.
[More that daughters never hear can be found at post 183. Scroll down or search by the number with a dot and space following it.]
1 Comment
June 16, 2008 at 11:53 am
You’re right that clothes send a message. They attract attention and that can be good and bad.
And who needs the bother of constantly having to make sure something that’s borderline hasn’t crossed the line and become immodest?
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