T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
546.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:28 | 14 |
| It's not a case of forgetting, it's a combination of being unaware and
the grooming being difficult. No, they're not really visible in most cases.
The trimmers on men's shavers don't work and using scissors is difficult and
in some cases dangerous. There do exist special-purpose trimmers for the
nose and ears, but I imagine most men don't bother to buy one.
If a woman came up to me and said something like that, though, I'd really
have to wonder about her. Or perhaps I should mention her moustache.
If it's someone you're close to, find a tactful and non-threatening way of
mentioning that it bothers you. Obviously it doesn't bother him. If it's
a casual acquaintance, perhaps you need a hobby.
Steve
|
546.2 | so what? | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:31 | 13 |
| I would try to help her with this problem that she has.
Men are hairy. She has some kind of unrealistic
expectation that they are going to cut certain hairs
to a length that pleases her.
Personally, I think guys with bushy eyebrows, thick
hair on their head, etc, are "allowed" to have hair
about anywhere they like. But that's my personal view,
and I sure as heck wouldn't try to tell it to anyone.
And if the inside of his nose is the only place that
a guy can grow his hair and he likes it there, so be it.
;-) Wil
|
546.3 | "My *what* is too long?" | SWAM3::ANDRIES_LA | and so it goes ... | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:33 | 5 |
| Until I read this note, I never, EVER thought about length of my nose hair.
Maybe that's why I've yet to meet the woman of my dreams.
LArry
|
546.4 | Can you say Neanderthal? | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:05 | 8 |
| I am very concious of nostril hair. I have to get a pair of scissors
and trim it once a week. Not all, just a couple that grow long. I have
never noticed ear hair on me. That would truly be difficult to trim.
The difficult ones are the ones between my eyes. No I don't have one
big eyebrow, just a few that frow in there and I have to shave them.
Phil
|
546.5 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | constantly making exciting discoveries | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:08 | 9 |
| Well I do recall once seeing a man who had curled his nose hair
into a sort of a mustache...that kind of put me off my feed a bit..
but normal hirsuitness of the ears and nose in a man doesn't bother
me one way or another. Most men who have extra hair here tend to
be men who are bald on top and extra hairy on the rest of their
body. It is all of a package with the hormones that cause male
pattern baldness.
Bonnie
|
546.6 | | BOSOX::HENDERSON | Faring thee well now | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:27 | 8 |
| Yikes!! Something else to worry about :^/
Jim
|
546.7 | Nair Nasal Spray? Nair Ears'n'Shoulders? | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Tue Jan 08 1991 17:55 | 16 |
| On the other hand, I remember (vaguely) from my youth the occasion when
I found myself in passionate embrace with a woman who had a dozen or so
inch-long hairs around each of her nipples. I was taken aback and
suggested that she might remedy the situation. She took umbrage:
"They're NATURAL!"
Nose and ear hairs may be much the same thing: they're not expected,
particularly among the young who are held forth as the standards for
beauty.
If we men were more like most women, then we'd sit around chatting and
watching the football game and clipping each other's hard-to-reach body
hair, like women doing each other's coiffure. "Did you SEE the HIT on
that RECEIVER!!! Ooooh, you've got a real long one on your ear here!"
- Hoyt
|
546.8 | I don't mind being reminded | SALEM::KUPTON | Cancel Everything | Tue Jan 08 1991 21:22 | 11 |
| I shave my ears because the hair grows very long. I gave myself one
hell of a razor slice once and like to have cut my my ear in half!!!
Scared the bejeebers outta my son when he walked in on me trying to
stem the red tide.....
I've also snpped my nostrils on more than one occasion......hurts
like the dickens!!
My wife always lets me know when to groom...
Ken
|
546.9 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jan 09 1991 04:09 | 3 |
| I find they are hardly noticeable since they blend in with my
moustache. My wife has much more serious things to complain about in me
than quantity or location of hair.
|
546.10 | ? | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:59 | 10 |
| I would't say anything... it is nobody's business, anyway. The
"recipient" could feel hurt, or angry, at that intrusion of privacy...
what or whose guidelines are to be used to follow?, and what is good for
one is not for another, so, the most intelligent thing to do is...
do nothing about! appreciate the person for what that person IS, what
that person is WORTH, not for how he LOOKS... beauty is in the eyes
of the beholder. There are many great men in this world with heavy
moustaches and hairy, and many equally great with almost none and both
look pretty groomed up to me... may be because I don't find hairs
offensive but a natural attribute of men (and less, of women).
|
546.11 | membership denied | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Jan 09 1991 15:47 | 15 |
|
>> Yikes!! Something else to worry about :^/
I hope you guys who ** don't ** have nose hair and ear hair
are getting properly worried. This is serious.
The proper amount of nose hair and ear hair, properly
trimmed, is at least as important as whether or not your
left thumb can be bent back to touch your left forearm,
or whether or not your kneecaps (patellas) are loose enough.
Please don't ask how loose patellas should be. If your high
school coach did not explain that to you, you are already
lost, and need not apply for membership.
Wil
|
546.12 | please! Clip that hair! | BROKE::FEBONIO | | Wed Jan 09 1991 17:30 | 11 |
| What about women shaving their legs all the time! The least men can
do is clip their nostril hairs! Beauticians will also be happy--well
maybe happy's a bit of an exaggeration--but they will clip men's ear
hair.
Afterall, how would you men feel about going out with a woman who had
tufts of hair growing out of her nose and her ears?
Sorry about the rathole.
SS
|
546.13 | Fond recall: all of us hairy in Ann Arbor in the 60's | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Thu Jan 10 1991 08:09 | 4 |
| I still remember the STRANGENESS of the first woman I "knew" who shaved
her legs. Bizarroville.
- Hoyt
|
546.14 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Second opinion limbo specialist | Thu Jan 10 1991 12:47 | 8 |
| Geezo,, this is a problem,,, and here I thought it was a fashion statement...
looks like I'll have to tell dad he's grossing people out!!!!
and derned the luck, nay I have no 'El-nostril-la-harington problemo....
Must be the chemicals in the water...............
|
546.15 | | USWS::HOLT | ATD Group, Palo Alto | Thu Jan 10 1991 16:34 | 4 |
|
so howdya get rid of them?
burn them out with a bic?
|
546.17 | Ouch!!! | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Fri Jan 11 1991 00:13 | 1 |
|
|
546.18 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Makaira nigricans mazara | Fri Jan 11 1991 08:37 | 1 |
| Snort drano.
|
546.19 | | USWS::HOLT | ATD Group, Palo Alto | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:48 | 3 |
|
Ahh, relief ...
|
546.20 | | DUCK::SMITHS2 | | Fri Mar 01 1991 10:47 | 7 |
|
Actually, I know a woman who has black hairs growing out of her nose,
and although I wouldn't dream of saying anything about it to her, it is
most unattractive!
Sam
|
546.21 | seems to me... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | when I get you on my wavelength | Fri Mar 01 1991 15:34 | 8 |
| I bet none of the men who responded here would dream of dating a woman
with long hairs sticking out of her nose and ears. As usual, men think
it's okay if they look like hell but they expect their girlfriends
and wives to all look as good as Julia Roberts. The most unkempt of
men still expect the women in their lives to be beauty queens.
Lorna
|
546.22 | | USWS::HOLT | | Fri Mar 01 1991 15:56 | 5 |
|
what on earth is wrong with nose hairs?
they serve as a filter for soot, dust, nuclear waste, and whatnot..
|
546.23 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | when I get you on my wavelength | Fri Mar 01 1991 16:09 | 4 |
| re .22, they look icky.
Lorna
|
546.24 | | SOLVIT::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Fri Mar 01 1991 20:36 | 22 |
| RE .21
> I bet none of the men who responded here would dream of dating a woman
> with long hairs sticking out of her nose and ears.
Most women I know (women in general IMHO) don't have these
characteristics. Men on the other hand, especailly dark skin/haired
ones tend to have these characteristics and on their backs too.
>As usual, men think
> it's okay if they look like hell but they expect their girlfriends
> and wives to all look as good as Julia Roberts.
Actually, in Europe, some women don't shave their legs/armpits and that
is considered normal/desireable. To each their own...
>The most unkempt of
> men still expect the women in their lives to be beauty queens.
Probably true.
Steve
|
546.25 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Mar 01 1991 20:38 | 6 |
| Lorna,
If she keeps them clean, I wouldn't mind. If she cleans them with her tongue,
I'd consider it a plus.
-- Charles (tongue in cheek [nose?])
|
546.26 | "Tish! That's French!" | STAR::RDAVIS | Untimely ripp'd | Sat Mar 02 1991 11:05 | 6 |
| � Actually, in Europe, some women don't shave their legs/armpits and that
� is considered normal/desireable. To each their own...
Not just in Europe, bucko!
Ray (Patti Smith fan from '75)
|
546.27 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Mar 02 1991 17:26 | 13 |
| Re: .21
I dunno - what does Julia Roberts look like? But I think you'd lose
your bet, Lorna. There are some of us who don't insist on
beauty queens, preferring instead to find the inner beauty that
others might overlook.
Of course, there are also quite a few women who insist that their
boyfriends and husbands to look like Kevin Costner (or pick your
own favorite Hollywood hunk). Shallowness is not the exclusive
domain of males.
Steve
|
546.28 | | RAVEN1::PINION | Hard Drinking Calypso Poet | Sun Mar 03 1991 23:38 | 5 |
| re: -1,
Well said steve!
Capt. Scott
|
546.29 | Consider their Self Esteem (or Lack of it) | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Mon Mar 04 1991 10:38 | 21 |
| > I bet none of the men who responded here would dream of dating a woman
> with long hairs sticking out of her nose and ears. As usual, men think
> it's okay if they look like hell but they expect their girlfriends
> and wives to all look as good as Julia Roberts. The most unkempt of
> men still expect the women in their lives to be beauty queens.
Kinda makes one wonder about what sort of self esteem these women
have, who would stoop so low as to date or even "uggghhh" marry or
copulate with men with an attitude like this ....
One needs to remember what she was portraying in her "best" film ...
"Pretty Women" and what sort of person (qualities) displayed ..
It may well be true the comment about where most mens brains reside
... considering the number of them that actually get married ..
;^)
Bob
|
546.30 | here's to the blob in yer', matey! | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Mar 04 1991 11:06 | 8 |
| Then there are those men who never KNOW first-hand the woman who dates
only the HUNK Steve alluded to... certainly I am one of them... because
we *aren't* hunks.
Thank God for women who accept us as we are. We love 'em!
tony
(who's more like a blob than a hunk)
|
546.31 | Beauty is important, but is in the eye of the beholder | AKOV06::DCARR | If U dont start drinkin (lefty:-)... | Mon Mar 04 1991 13:14 | 42 |
| Lorna,
I've enjoyed reading your notes in here, but I have to disagree with
.21....
> I bet none of the men who responded here would dream of dating a woman
> with long hairs sticking out of her nose and ears.
Well, not with this part, :-) but,
> As usual, men think
> it's okay if they look like hell but they expect their girlfriends
> and wives to all look as good as Julia Roberts.
I _do_ disagree with THIS part... When I go out on a date, I certainly
take extra time to make sure my nails are clean, my hair actually does
have some semblance of a part, I've brushed my teeth, washed my face,
showered, used deoderant, maybe sprinkled on some cologne, and that I'm
wearing a shirt and pants for the first time :-), etc...
In other words, I certainly wouldn't expect my date to approve of my
looking like hell!
As to the second part, I expect my date to do the same. And that
means, basically, to look as good as YOU can. We are not all endowed
with the pure beauty of the Hollywood set, but, to me, the important
thing, as far as looks are concerned, is to take the time to look YOUR
best. It's a simple matter of respect, for yourself and others.
> The most unkempt of
> men still expect the women in their lives to be beauty queens.
I guess it would be tough for me to comment on this, as I don't
consider myself an unkempt man (unless you mean the condition of my
bedroom :-). But, I will grant you that, for me, if everything else is
equal, I would prefer the company of the more attractive woman - but
the important thing here is, that while I consider my 'ideal' to be a
petite blond, others may certainly find some other 'body type' more
ideal - in other words, I think EVERYBODY prefers a better looking
partner - but the only place it matters is in THEIR eyes!.
Dave
|
546.32 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Mon Mar 04 1991 16:12 | 34 |
| re .31, I didn't mean to imply that all men are unkempt! Thank
goodness that isn't the case! :-) What I did mean to say is that it
has often seemed to me that even men who are unkempt, or not very
good looking physically for one reason or another, still often seem to
expect that the women they date will be attractive and well-groomed.
My personal experience still indicates to me that most men place what I
think of as undue significance on the physical appearance of women.
For example, I never hear men raving about how beautiful a certain
woman's soul is! (Unless they're talking about their wives.) But,
let's face it, I've never heard guys standing around at work saying
things like, "Have you talked to the new FA yet? My god, that woman
has a beautiful soul! I sure would love to spend some time listening
to her views of life!" No, it's more likely to be something along the
lines of, "Have you checked out the new FA yet? Is she hot looking or
what? I wouldn't mind trying her out for size! ha-ha" etc.
I haven't seen any cubicles that have calendars up with pictures
of women with beautiful souls for each month - Mother Teresa, etc.
You wonder why some women (me, for example) think physical appearance
is so important to men. One reason are the comments we get in the
course of our lives. For example, I recently spoke with a man I had
worked with 5 yrs. earlier and hadn't seen since. He made the comment
that he thought I was attractive and went on to say that he didn't know
why he didn't notice I was so attractive when he worked with me 5 yrs.
ago. Then, he went on to say, "But, then look who I sat next to back
then! "X" (the woman who sat next to him 5 yrs. ago) was *so* striking
that compared to her *any* other woman would be second rate." :-(
I felt like saying, "Gee, thanks. I guess I'm lucky she isn't standing
next to me now, huh, or I guess you still wouldn't find me attractive!"
Lorna
|
546.33 | I'll take one with personality and spirit hold the BS | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Alas, babylon... | Mon Mar 04 1991 20:44 | 9 |
| re-.1
I never look at a womans soul or sole for that matter for me it is
personality all the way. I have dated some very beautiful women over
the last 17 years and i find the majority of them very shallow and
demanding. It is as if they expect to get by on their looks.
-j(who's pretty average looking himself)
|
546.34 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Mon Mar 04 1991 21:57 | 6 |
|
> -J(Who's pretty average looking himself)
Gee I always thought you were kinda cute Jerry.:-) :-)
David
|
546.35 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Mar 05 1991 08:58 | 17 |
| Appearance can be assessed from 20 feet away, in a few glances.
Demeanor can be assessed from 10 feet away, in ten minutes of
observation.
Personality can be assessed from 3 feet away, in an hour's
conversation.
Strengths, weaknesses, drives, desires, fears can be
assessed only in many, many hours of conversation.
Soul comes still later.
It's hard to talk about soul and grooming in the same breath.
Wil
|
546.36 | Computers will solve this problem, too (what a nerd!) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Tue Mar 05 1991 09:48 | 31 |
| Nice observation, Wil! Sounds accurate to me...
We necessarily make inferences from what we see, and what we hear in a
bit of conversation. I recognize a certain curling-ironed hair-style,
for example, as characteristic of a working-class background, and the
crew-neck-sweater-with-white-turtleneck look dominates Harvard Square
on Head of the Charles day, symptomatic of a higher economic class. I
tend to associate some Boston accents with low educational attainment,
though this guideline has MANY exceptions. These short-cuts are helpful
because there are so many people and so little time, as the bumper
sticker says.
In my personal science fiction world, a place made of dozens of
never-written stories, there are superior devices for making these
rapid assessments, e.g. a "social credit rating service" which
maintains and distributes data about social behavior analogous to
credit bureaus: "he's violent and beats up women - avoid at all cost"
or "he's tender in bed but will never commit - avoid if seeking a
permanent relationship." Or personal identification "smart-cards" which
two individuals can juxtapose to get a read-out on "activities/interests
in common" and the "Nelson Compatibility Correlation Coefficient (tm)" --
kind of a completed-in-advance singles-services questionnaire you can
carry in your wallet.
In the meanwhile, we make what inferences we can. "He shapes his nose
hairs into shapes reminiscent of walrus tusks -- probably not my kind
of guy." Grooming is one of the things we can observe, like weight,
posture, and facial expression, when we're making that lightening
judgement which may or may not lead to learning more about the person.
- Hoyt
|
546.37 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Tue Mar 05 1991 10:01 | 13 |
| re .36, I *must* know - what is a "curling-ironed hairstyle" that
immediately marks a woman as having a working class background? (I also
can't help but wonder just what you assume about people who come from
working class backgrounds...not worth your while or what?)
I come from a working class background but I'm not sure if I have the
tell-tale "curling-ironed hairstyle" or not, since I don't even know
what it *is*!! I do, however, own a crewneck sweater and a white
turtleneck! It does get complicated making flash judgements about
people doesn't it?
Lorna
|
546.38 | From the intelligent to the neanderthal | AKOV06::DCARR | If U dont start drinkin (lefty:-)... | Tue Mar 05 1991 13:43 | 42 |
| I think Wil makes some good points, Lorna (and sorry for putting words
in your mouth in my previous note)... If I may place another slant on
it:
- EVERYONE has a certain mental image of a potential mate. This image,
I would contend, gradually moves from purely physical, as
adolescents, to include the less physical, as we age (personality,
charm, wit, grace, humor, perhaps social standing, common interests,
'comfortable' feeling, good cook, good wife, takes care of children
well, faithful, etc., all play an increasingly important role ...).
So, while that aspect fades over time, I believe that people still have
a mental image of a mate that includes some measure of physical
attractiveness.
Therefore, because this is the most readily determinable 'trait', this
is often used as the 'first criteria' that determines if we might like
to invest the time to determine the other qualities, as Wil observed.
It also seems likely that this 'shift in mental imagery' occurs more
slowly in some males, and may be seen as a sign of a certain maturity,
or self-confidence. Those that haven't reached this level, the
'neanderthal man' if you will, may lead you to conclude that 'men', in
general, only look for physical attractiveness...
In the group setting you described (men talking about a woman), our
'group neanderthal level' feeds off the individual level, for some
reason which I'm sure would take decades of study to determine :-)
As someone that doesn't classify himself in the neanderthal category,
I have to admit that I have certainly participated in 'group
neanderthal activities'! :-)
But, of course, in general, all men are pigs, and all we want is sex,
so we talk about, and look at, what reminds us of sex! :-) (so much for
the above analysis :-)
Dave
PS, I hate to say it, but I know exactly what the previous noter means
about the 'curling-ironed hairstyle' :-) But I'll let him tell you
about it...
|
546.39 | Sociology goes to the mall | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Tue Mar 05 1991 14:00 | 33 |
| Re "curling-ironed hairstyle" -- it's sort of bent away from the face
toward the back of the head, forming a shape around the face similar to
the collars affixed to plow-horses :). See the Assembly Square Mall for
more details. And I appreciate that crewnecks and turtlenecks are only
indicators, far from definitive. If you want to see the general
tendency, take notes at the Assembly Square Mall, then proceed to the
Chestnut Hill Mall. We did that one Xmas shopping expedition, and the
difference in the dress and shape of the shoppers was startling.
Re people from working class backgrounds: I'm of mixed mind. I assume
I'm like other people in that I seek friends who are similar to myself,
in terms of attitudes and values. My background is working class, too,
and I'm LESS comfortable among folk who attended prep school, drive
Jaguars, and discuss the bond markets. On the other hand, I'm from Ann
Arbor where I learned to detest racism, and in the Boston area, I think
racism is most visible in working class neighborhoods. Looking over my
set of friends, I'd generalize that they come mostly from the middle,
neither working class or upper class. There are exceptions, however, and
I find them to be extremely interesting people, providing glimpses of how
the other +/- twenty percent live.
I don't mean to place over-emphasis on grooming or dress; of course
those are inappropriate bases for valuing people. When you're in a room
of people at a party, however, and you're deciding who to introduce
yourself to next, then you apply SOME criteria, and the information
that comes through our eyes is decisive. I'm old enough (circa 40) that
my contemporaries show a better signal, frequently: do they have smile
lines or the unpleasant opposite? Someone who smiles and/or laughs
enough to mark their face is my kinda person!
- Hoyt
|
546.40 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Tue Mar 05 1991 14:54 | 11 |
| re .39, I still don't know what hairstyle you're referring to...
Sorry! I'm not familiar with the Assembly Sq. Mall and rarely go to
the Chestnut Hill Mall. It seems like a go to all the other malls in
east central Mass though - Copley Place, Natick Mall, Shopper's World,
Burlington Mall, Auburn Mall, Emerald Square Mall....not the 2 you
mentioned, though! :-) Also, I grew up in a small town 45 miles from
Boston and even though we were working class we weren't racists. BTW,
I'm 41 and I have smile lines. Not sure about that hairdo, though!
Lorna
|
546.41 | what it sounds like to me... | WMOIS::B_REINKE | The fire and the rose are one | Tue Mar 05 1991 15:54 | 10 |
| Lorna,
I *think* he means the kind of hair do that you get when you roll
your hair backwards on rollers, so it curls back and then forward
around the face at the ears?
It was the style that many young women wore in the late 50s and early
60s some teased more or less..
Bonnie
|
546.42 | | SSGBPM::KENAH | The man with the eyes of a child | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:21 | 10 |
| Nah --
I've heard it called the "big hair" look. It's the standard hair style
you'll see on just about every teenaged female habitu� of just about
any suburban US mall.
Mousse and/or styling gel is an essential ingredient for maintaining
"big hair."
andrew
|
546.43 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Don't Bogart That Globski... | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:27 | 2 |
| Yeah, I've noticed that intelligence seems to be inversely proportional to
the size of the hair, as well... :-)
|
546.44 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:30 | 32 |
| It sounds to me like what is currently described as "Big Hair" or "Mall Hair".
Backing up a bit, I want to point out, Lorna, that you changed your
position in .32. Previously, you had claimed that men only considered
appearances when choosing romantic partners. Then in .32 you argued that
men will comment on the physical attractiveness of strangers - quite a different
thing!
Women too, of course, do the same thing. Their heads turn when a set of
"nice buns" walk by, and they will discuss amongst themselves the relative
physical attributes of men they have seen. The only difference is that
our society is willing to admit that men will "scope out" attractive women
but that it isn't (quite yet) willing to admit that women "scope out" men.
(As for gays, society still isn't willing to admit that they exist at all,
so it has no official opinion on their actions. :-))
However, it would seem that many more women are "attracted" to a man who
has a big bulge in his pants (the wallet, that is), than there are men
who consider a woman's financial position when choosing a partner.
One interesting aspect of "electronic relationships", and getting to know
people via NOTES and MAIL, is that we can form an opinion of another
person's "inner beauty" without even knowing what their external appearance
is. If one is sufficiently open-minded about acceptable physical appearance,
this method allows people to get together and form relationships who might
never give each other a second glance if they had first met in person, say
at a party.
I will agree with Lorna's earlier comment, though, that far more men have
poor personal grooming and hygiene habits than do women.
Steve
|
546.45 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Tue Mar 05 1991 16:50 | 16 |
| re .44, I didn't change my position. I commented on a couple of
different things, that's all. I didn't say that all men only consider
physical appearances when choosing romantic partners, or at least
that's not what I meant to say. I meant to say that most men consider
physical appearance to be the most important criteria when choosing
romantic partners, or at least that's the way it has always seemed to
me anyway.
As far as the big hair look goes, I really don't think that's an
indication of a working class background, or stupidity, as much as it's
an indication of a girl or woman attempting to be both in style and
attractive to men. My daughter has girlfriends who are A students who
try to fix their hair that way. It's just in style.
Lorna
|
546.46 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Wed Mar 06 1991 08:28 | 1 |
| "In style" means "everybody else is doing it."
|
546.47 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:40 | 31 |
| Re: .45
Personally, I find "big hair" hideous.
As for most men using physical appearance as the most important criteria,
I disagree. Sure, there are some men who do this, but I don't think
"most". If that was so, there's be an awful lot more un-paired folks wandering
around out there.
The thing is, there are women out there who are quite attractive, physically,
but who have an extremely unattractive personality. I know a woman who is
actually quite good-looking, but being around her is like having fingernails
drawn across a chalkboard, as she never seems to smile and is always
putting herself down. Who would want to stay around?
I also know a woman who goes through boyfriend after boyfriend, always
insisting that each one be a "hunk", and not caring at all about
whether they share interests, or whether his values are compatible with hers.
There's a guy around who worships the ground she walks on, and she agrees
he is "very nice", but though he's NOT ugly, he's not the "great buns"
type she has selected for herself, so she ignores him.
One thing I've noticed over the years is that if a person really likes
themself and is sensitive and cheerful towards others, they become more
attractive, even if their physical features haven't changed. Likewise
even the most fabulous Playmate-type can appear unattractive if she
gives off "bad vibes". (The same goes for men, of course.)
It's all in the attitude.
Steve
|
546.48 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Wed Mar 06 1991 09:59 | 16 |
| re .47, well, I realize most men don't wind up with physically
beautiful women because there just aren't enough to go around, and
maybe you're right. Maybe most men don't consider looks the most
important thing in picking a romantic partner, maybe only some men do.
But, it is still annoying to me how often so many men rave on and on
about how good looking some women are, never mentioning any other
qualities. Maybe it's all talk, but I'm sick of it. I'm sick of how
much of a big deal men make about really good looking women. It makes
me feel bad when I hear it because I know I'm not way above average
looking. It makes me feel like physical looks are so overwhelmingly
important to men and there's no way I can possibly compete with
beautiful women because I'm just average looking and nothing else
counts. That's how it makes me feel when I hear that kind of talk.
Lorna
|
546.49 | Jack Lalaine School of Beauty | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:22 | 12 |
| The beauty standard represented by "Pretty Woman" is an artifact of
genes, good nutrition, and possibly orthodontry. There's another kind
which I appreciate more and more as I age (and thicken; and mature): the
sheen of physical fitness. I see people (men and women) who's features
aren't special, who may have narrow shoulders (men) or big butts (men
and women) -- but they are FIT and they are beautiful. There's little
or no extra flesh. They walk with a certain carriage and energy. It's
obvious that their self-image is holding up as well as their chins.
This is the standard to which I can aspire, with my mediocre genes. It
is within the grasp of all of us (barring debilitating disabilities).
- Hoyt
|
546.50 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:31 | 10 |
| re .49, you really think that having "no extra flesh" is within the
grasp of every single adult regardless of age? I don't think that's
the case and I'm speaking as a 95 lb. 41 yr. old. I think some people
would always have a little extra flesh on them regardless of exercise
and eating right, and it's not their fault. You might not like the way
they look, but it still isn't their fault.
Lorna
|
546.51 | Tell me Katherine Hepburn isn't (still) a beauty | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 192# now, 175# by May | Wed Mar 06 1991 10:53 | 19 |
| Ah, an opportunity to employ the sophistry of economics professors,
where "profits are driven to zero under capitalism" but the *observed*
profits are simply the requisite return on capital, not REAL profits...
Let us define "extra" as that flesh which could be omitted by proper
nutrition and exercise. Let "additional" describe flesh which is NOT
"extra" yet is more than the "Pretty Woman" standard; additional flesh
exists because of genetics and because we're not nineteen and besides
that woman isn't really a member of our Earthly species anyway (I
inspected a People Magazine close-up and she has 54 teeth! :).
My point was that actually hip diameter, measured in inches or meters,
is less relevant to beauty (of a particular sort) than the fact that
the person takes good care of him/herself, is fit, and has the energy
and posture of a fit person. Fitness is actually a lot more than weight
control: I know one budda-like figure who moves around the tennis court
like a cat, and *he is beautiful* (IMHO).
- Hoyt
|
546.52 | | KHUMBU::SEVIGNY | Titan | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:51 | 9 |
|
It is quite simple. Men are more visually stimulated, whereas woman
are (in general) more emotionally stimulated.
I think that is the explanation for women worrying more about looks
(they need to appeal to the visual demands of men) than their male
counterparts.
|
546.53 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Mar 06 1991 16:09 | 3 |
| RE: .52
Thanks for the clarification. I didn't realize it was so simple!
|
546.54 | aside! ;-) | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Wed Mar 06 1991 20:24 | 5 |
| Lorna, ;-)
I know lots of people who think you are well above average in looks!
BJ
|
546.55 | Its not what I heard (re: .54) | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Thu Mar 07 1991 09:07 | 12 |
| >Note 546.54 Good Grooming 54 of 54
> -< aside! ;-) >-
>
> I know lots of people who think you are well above average in looks!
> BJ
From what I've heard, I thought Lorna was intelligent and had a
great personality !! ;^) ;^)
-BobE
|
546.56 | :-) | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Thu Mar 07 1991 09:15 | 5 |
| re .54, .55, gee, thanks, guys! :-) I guess I'm not stupid and homely
with a rotten personality anyway!! :-)
Lorna
|
546.57 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:22 | 7 |
| >> I know lots of people who think you are well above average in looks!
>> BJ
> From what I've heard, I thought Lorna was intelligent and had a
> great personality !! ;^) ;^)
D) All of the above. :-)
|
546.58 | My two cents | SELECT::RIVERS | The flag is up....! | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:37 | 22 |
| I think it's even more simple than .52 put it. It's not idealogically
correct (IC? :), but hey, people is just people.
Men *and* women are visually driven critters. It's just the way we be.
We are attracted to things by visual impact. We take notice of red
Lamborghini's far more than we take notice of a brown Chevrolet
Cavalier Station Wagon. Each car has it's merits and faults and
practicality, but still, most folks, most of the time will stare at the
red sports car and not even notice the brown station wagon. Ya know?
It's often unfortunate that first impressions (and this brings the
whole argument back to the topic at hand - good grooming) make such
lasting impressions, but they do. I know if I meet someone and I look
like sh*t, they are going to think, hey, she's a dog. (And I don't
need any help to elict that response!!!) If I look good, they'll get
an entirely different impression.
I really don't think men or women are *really* any different in
physical appearance having importance. It just seems that way.
---kim
|
546.59 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Wed Apr 03 1991 20:17 | 21 |
| I don't know how many times I've mistaken a smiling woman for an
attractive woman. My wife always corrects me. "She isn't really all
that good looking, she just smiles alot." So I must be a "smile man".
Most men aren't stupid enough to think that all the man-talk about
women (Va, va, Vooom), really means anything. In the end a man will look
for a woman who is as attractive to him in as many different ways as
possible (i.e., she's alot like his mother :^). I'm sorry if women are
offended by the lounge lizard kind of talk, but I've certainly heard
enough women doing the same kind of thing. (Come to think of it, I find
it kind of offensive. I'm with you Lorna.)
I was always told that women don't make themselves attractive for men,
but for other women. Is that a myth? I know for a fact that my wife
does not make herself up for my benefit. She's always dressed to
someone else's standards than my own. I wonder who it is? :^)
I might drive a brown Chevy Cavalier Station Wagon, but not one that
had nose hairs.
- Vick
|
546.60 | | BHUNA::PDUNN | | Fri Apr 05 1991 06:24 | 11 |
|
> I was always told that women don't make themselves attractive for men,
> but for other women. Is that a myth?
Certainly not, IMHO. This reaches the pits at weddings, where what people
wear receives more attention from women than the people themselves !
It was a revelation to me to listen to the comments on our wedding
photographs. Maybe I should go and stir it up in the Weddings notefile
instead ?
:-) Peter
|