Modern Wisdom - #929 - Rob Henderson - The Psychology Of What Women Want
Episode Date: April 17, 2025Rob Henderson is a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge and a US Air Force Veteran. Who holds the power in modern dating? With growing gender divides and political polarization, it’s no wond...er dating feels harder than ever. So, how did we get here, and what’s the way forward? Expect to learn why political division between the sexes has grown so wide, if this is a reaction to the growing sex ratio imbalance of socioeconomically successful women compared to men, why so many men are dealing with ED and if men are to blame for women not being able to orgasm, the traits that predicts relationship satisfaction, what psychology teach us about how to choose a good partner and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount & free shipping on Manscaped’s shavers at https://manscaped.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM20) Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Left-wing women are learning to love right-wing men.
Political division has become a sexual fetish.
Today, in online political fandoms,
people behind enemy lines are often seen as potential sexual conquests.
Right-wing men want a liberal art hoe,
whereas some leftist women lust after the right-wing anon.
It's hard to pin down discourse like this sometimes,
but this trend is also substantiated in
studies about the dating patterns of progressive women. What do you think about that?
Yeah, you know, I wonder about these sort of media trends, these headlines,
because often the reason why they get so much interest is because they're sort of
at odds with our intuitions, right? And I know you've spoken with plenty of
people about this idea of assortative mating.
We tend to be attracted to people who are somewhat similar to ourselves.
So then when you have this splashy headline, you know, right-wing men want the left-wing
art ho, the left-wing art hoes want the Republican MAGA bro or something, you know, it's a little
edgy, it's a little catches us off guard.
But I think there's, you know, to the extent that it might be true, you know, if you think
about what are the qualities that women find attractive in men, sort of self-sufficiency,
ambition, income, all the kinds of qualities that are associated with sort of a masculine
guy. And then you look at sort of the voting patterns of men and you find that the predictors
of voting for the conservative parties also tend to be the traits that women tend to find
attractive. So if you look at
self-identified, if you ask men, you know, how masculine do you feel versus how feminine do you feel,
the higher men rate themselves as masculine, the more likely they are to support a conservative political candidate,
or the less masculine they feel, the more likely they are to support a left-wing candidate.
And you can ask other questions about income. There was a really funny study a few years ago in the UK
about height, that there's a sort of a small
but significant correlation between height
and voting for conservative political parties.
I don't know if that would hold up today.
This was like 2016, 2017, that period.
But, you know, and then there's like interesting
work around attitudes around like social dominance, orientation, and, you know, men who are sort
of sure of themselves confident, go out into the world, achieve something. They also tend
to like things like low taxes, and they tend to like things like, you know, a strong military
police, all those kinds of things kind of clustered together. And so it would make sense, I think, that women, regardless of political
orientation, even if they explicitly, when you ask them about politics, they're
going to say, I don't like this or that party, but then they start to list out
the qualities that they enjoy, you know, those just tend to cluster more on the
right side of the political spectrum.
I notice that they didn't use right-wing women are looking to date left-wing men as one of the
examples there?
Yeah, well, I mean, I think that makes sense in general.
You know, I saw this tweet going around the other day, got a lot of attention.
It was something like, you know, I want a boyfriend who looks like a Republican but
isn't one.
Something like that.
You know what? I think that's the dream is like, you know, you have all of the qualities of a
sort of prototypical Republican successful guy or whatever, but then like
they somehow still support the left-wing political parties, which I guess is like
that, that incentivizes, you know, this idea I'm sure you've come across it
called woke fishing of guys who conceal their political views.
Usually guys who tend to be on the right.
They will adopt the political beliefs of the opposing side simply to attract women.
And, uh, you know, that, that wouldn't be a thing unless it had some basis in
reality, unless, uh, you know, somewhere in the world that that actually
paid off as a strategy.
Yeah.
You wrote an article about Harry Sisson, this sneaky feminist
exploiting the dating economy thing. What's the story there?
Yeah, it was interesting. There was a big sort of splashy piece in the New York Post about this,
and a lot of people tweeting about this guy, Harry Sisson, who is, you know, he was referred to in the New York Post as a rising star,
rising Gen Z TikTok star for the Democratic National Committee or something like that.
He's just sort of a left-wing guy. But there was a sort of trend going on on TikTok of these girls
saying, oh, you know, I was, Harry slid into my DMs, we were talking and I was sending him nudes.
But then he turned out to, or he would say things like, you know, I'm interested in women more for their bodies. I like their minds.
He also said something like, I don't, I have no roster or something. I don't have a roster.
If you know the word roster, you have a roster.
Yeah, yeah, that's pretty good heuristic there. And then suddenly there's women, I'll discover each other and then come together uh, you know, come together, start posting these videos about how
Harry is kind of a duplicitous two timing guy or whatever.
And I thought there was something very Gen Z about all of this, because
from what I understand, he didn't sleep with any of these women.
They felt betrayed or duped or something because they sent him some nudes and
maybe some videos or something, but he, to my knowledge, uh, it's not been
reported that he slept with any of these women.
And so, you know, it's like they're feeling burned, but he, to my knowledge, it's not been reported that he slept with any of these women. And so, you know, it's like they're, they're feeling burned, but he didn't really cheat.
They were never official.
You know, he wasn't in a relationship or committed to any of these women.
Um, you know, he did explicitly lie to them, uh, you know, assuming all these allegations are true, but it's not like, you know, he, he violated any kind of law.
I mean, it's kind of gray area morally, I think.
I think the, the sort of the outrage doesn't necessarily match the transgression.
Yeah.
I wonder whether there is a, he set himself an incredibly high bar.
If it was Andrew Tate or some fucking guy from the right, would people be
quite as up in arms or is it the case that you've sort of proselytized about how pro-women you are and I'm softly
softly and look at my feminine bona fides and oh, hang on, you weren't living up to
them.
So there's a degree of hypocrisy between his public position and his sort of private
communication.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
So I guess the idea is like it's out of character.
You know, he portrays himself as very much a supporter of the Democrats
He's a left-wing guy. He cares about women and women's rights and then meanwhile behind the scenes
he's lying to women to get naked pictures of them and
I guess that that is kind of like the
Factor here is like they felt lied to and then the image he projects into the public versus who he really is
There's a mismatch there
But yeah, if you don't have that image that you project what you have is young projects into the public versus who he really is, there's a mismatch there.
But yeah, if you don't have that image that you project, what you have is young, pretty famous guy with lots of access to women gets lots of nudes from women and is a bit
duplicitous. Like that's not a story. It only becomes a story, I think, when you have somebody
who has positioned themselves as not that. Interesting. Yeah, yeah. So if he were, yeah, like you said, an Andrew Tate character,
or just someone who openly said, like, I'm kind of a hedonistic, pleasure-seeking guy,
and then he's doing all of this, I think, yeah, it wouldn't be a story. But it's the fact that
he says one thing, but then does another. There's the hypocrisy element that bothered a lot of
people. And it kind of reminded me of, you know, the whole like sneaky fucker idea in
evolutionary biology
The formal the more scientific term is kleptogamy of men who or males species who adopt the appearance of more sort of feminine
traits and then thereby
Sort of disguise themselves and this is sort of acts as a shield against more sort of dominant
sort of disguise themselves and this is sort of acts as a shield against more sort of dominant
Competitive rival males they think oh, he's just a soft, you know kind of a weak guy he's sort of a submissive feminine guy and they
therefore feel less less bothered if you see this weak guy hanging out with the women and
Then the woman then the guy this sort of sneaky fucker guy that gets gets to have his pick of the women here
And I think like a lot of a lot of guys are kind of adopting this.
You know, you can, if it's the case that women want the handsome guy, but then also sort
of politically left wing, and this is just going to incentivize a lot of camouflage,
I think.
Why is it that, what is it that you think
that's sort of allowing these guys to get in with women?
Is it a degree of safety and security?
Is it that this person doesn't seem like
that much of a threat?
Is it that they align with my political beliefs,
that they're going to be more sensitive?
Is he signaling long-term investment?
Yeah, I think all of the above,
you know, yeah, you're signaling that you're a reliable person, you're compassionate, you're kind.
Our mutual friend David Buss, his classic study found that the number one trait that
people search for, male or female, the number one trait that they search for in a romantic
partner is kindness.
And if you talk about equality and all those kinds of things, then, yeah, you're
signaling that you're a kind and caring and compassionate guy.
But I think social media, it's kind of, it's difficult to sort through the actual signal
versus the noise around it.
Because if you're a high profile guy with millions of followers, and you're talking
about equality and women's rights and all of these things, and then you as an observer
are seeing those comments receive lots of likes and shares and retweets.
And this guy's getting so much attention and accolades.
And you're thinking, well, he's saying this
and people are applauding him.
And I think this strengthens the belief
that what he's saying is actually what he believes.
That's actually what he supports
and how he lives his own life.
But there's often a mismatch, right,
between what gets attention and how people actually live.
So yeah, I think a lot of guys are wrestling with this.
Interestingly, I don't think this guy, Harry Sisson, he doesn't seem to have actually paid
any real penalty.
I saw some people online joking that this is just going to increase his notoriety and
perhaps even get him more attention.
That one I'm less certain about, but so far he doesn't actually seem to have suffered
in any real way. There was an interesting debate that you highlighted that I totally hadn't seen, which is a lot
of men, especially sort of red pillied men, would use evolutionary logic to explain how
somebody like Sisson is sort of wired to sleep around with lots of women.
But the same evolutionary logic also explains about why women who had been scorned by a
guy like this would use gossip and venting and interpersonal attack as a way to shame
them and to also ward off other women.
So I think you said, this isn't a bug in the system, this is the system.
That's right.
Yeah, yeah.
So the logic here is, the other example I pointed out was with
Leonardo DiCaprio where every six months it's like, oh, another, another flare
up online of, oh, Leonardo DiCaprio has another 19 year old supermodel girlfriend.
Cycled out someone who just turned 25.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, uh, yeah, he resets back, you know, rewinds the clock and then, um, and then,
you know, there's all this discourse online where, you know, speaking very
roughly, women seem to be more upset and men are like, hey, this is kind of evolutionary science, this is biology,
you know, a super high status successful guy, you can't really be that surprised that he'd
search for women who are young and youthful and all those kinds of things.
And then, and then women in response are trying to shame him and stigmatize this kind of behavior.
And there's an evolutionary reason for both of those things, right?
Like there is an evolutionary explanation for why men would enjoy being partnered
with an attractive young woman, because on average, attractive young women
tend to be more fertile.
And so, you know, if you average that out through the course of evolutionary
history, men who are more attracted to those types of women tend to have more
kids.
And then it's interesting if you look at, um, you know, research on, on, uh,
the ages that men tend to find women, the most attractive in all clusters
around 23, 24 years old, regardless of the male participant who's being asked.
So even a 13 year old boys, um, they say 23 year old women are the most attractive.
They're not saying other 13 year old girls.
And then, you know, you, you go all the way up to 70 plus years old and men tend
to say, oh, women physically are at their peak in their early mid twenties.
Whereas for women, it's a, it's a bit more sort of matched with their own age.
Um, and there's an evolutionary reason for that, but then for women who shame men
for, you know, as they increasingly grow older and continue to date young women,
there's, uh, the logic here is that, you know, you want to
stigmatize this kind of behavior.
You want to shame it.
You don't want other men to do the same thing.
You're basically trying to kind of police and confine men to be a bit more committed
as a caregiver.
And then when you have a super high profile person like Leonardo DiCaprio, you know,
you don't want that to become sort of normalized where every successful guy who women tend
to be highly attracted to every single one of those types of guys
are following the Leonardo DiCaprio model.
And this reduces women's chances of commitment from one of these prominent guys.
It's interesting how, if that's correct.
And if it is this unspoken price enforcement mechanism to try and demotivate
spoken price enforcement mechanism to try and demotivate the high value men from sleeping around, that this is kind of the opposite of a tragedy of the commons, right?
Because only one woman is going to be with him, at least at one time, right?
It's a very, very small portion of women that are going to get to date Leonardo DiCaprio,
but a very large portion of women who are shaming him.
So, you know, you kind of got this huge contribution, a lot of women saying, this is very, very
much bad behavior, but how many of them are actually going to benefit from the enforcement
of men going, ah, maybe I shouldn't go full Huberman-pilled on this one.
I might, you know, I might just play it safe.
Yeah, well, I don't think like, you know, these women logically in their
rational conscious mind, they're probably not thinking someday I'm going to
date Leonardo DiCaprio and I'm going to get him to commit to me.
Yeah.
But it could be more so like, I would like to date a high status man in
general and, you know, your odds are still low.
He better not behave like that and trade me up for some 21 year old.
So I had this idea, looking at sort of the rise of sneaky fuckers, the Harry
Sisson sort of thing of the world.
I wonder whether the increase in, I don't know whether we're seeing an increase in
that, but it wouldn't surprise me if we are.
I wonder whether that's a counter to the growing sex ratio imbalance of
socioeconomically successful women compared to men.
That this is a way for men to begin to level
the playing field of maybe not earning quite as much as their female counterparts,
and maybe not being quite as educated as their female counterparts.
That they can't show up in the typical sort of protector provider role.
So maybe they can get in there with like, um, procreator propagandist.
I don't know.
Interesting. Well, so the idea here is like as, as women surpass men and, and in one of the,
one of the pieces that I sent you that I wrote, it was something like, uh, in a
large, a lot of major metropolitan cities in the U S now Washington, DC, Boston,
Los Angeles, New York city, Americans under 30 women are, uh, performing as
well or even better than men in terms of earnings and income.
And so if women are outperforming men, then yeah, you're going to create these, you know, soft harem dynamics of women, you know,
basically being willing to date guys who may be dating other women.
And even if they don't explicitly know this or desire this, this is just sort of a natural outcome.
Yeah, I think like ideally everyone wants commitment, everyone wants someone.
But then I always think of this famous or this very nice line in Stephen Pinker's famous book, How the Mind Works.
And it's something like most women would rather share John F. Kennedy than have Bobo the clown all to themselves.
And, you know, the book was written in the 90s, so the references are a bit dated.
But the idea here is most women would rather, you know, maybe share a
Leonardo DiCaprio than have, you know, some, some, uh, some guy who's barely
scraping by, um, for their sole husband.
And I do wonder sometimes because like over the last five or 10 years, there's
been this discussion around, uh, poly polycules, poly relationships, open marriages, all
these kinds of things.
And maybe this is kind of the inevitable outcome of the deregulation of the
sexual marketplace of men falling more and more behind and, you know, people
seemingly, uh, unwilling or uninterested in, in sort of figuring out what's going
on there
and prove men's prospects and thereby that would actually improve monogamy.
Yeah.
You wrote about a men floundering women most affected.
I love that framing, dude.
I've got one.
I've got one that I want to give you in a second, which is even more spicy, but
men floundering women most affected was basically an explanation of sex
ratio hypothesis, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, that's the, yeah, that's, um, you know, whenever you see men falling behind,
uh, you know, often the, the headlines and the articles are framed as, well, women are
suffering because, you know, they're, they're unable to find a, uh, a desirable male partner.
But, you know, the, the logic is let's concentrate on the woman who's suffering when, when actually
the, you know, the reason why she can't find desirable male partners, because the men are
the ones who are like flound when actually the, you know, the reason why she can't find desirable male partners, because the men are the ones
who are like floundering and falling further and further behind.
Yeah.
It's a, I, I always find that framing very interesting.
And I think, um, it kind of shows who is still considered to be on top and who is
still considered to be on bottom.
You kind of beg the question, or you sort of reveal your priors when that
kind of framing comes around. And yeah, dude, you know, if you, as a woman of the internet,
perhaps who tweets things a lot or retweets things a lot, has an issue with the dearth of
eligible male partners, but also tweets about like these men are losers and incels. Why can't they pick themselves up by their bootstraps?
Like cause and effect are occurring in front of your eyes here.
That if most groups are falling behind, we spend billions and billions in
taxpayer funded money to try and work out what's going on and help them.
And we put committees together and we create new social movements.
We put title nine in, and we change the way that universities are structured.
And we do all the rest of it.
We don't tell them to pick themselves up by their bootstraps.
Like if women have a problem, or if any group,
except for men, have a problem, we say,
what can we do to fix society?
But if men specifically have a problem, we say,
what is it that men are doing where they don't fix themselves?
And this
sense that sort of
modern men are being made to pay for the sins of a patriarchy
that they no longer feel a part of.
And then also aren't getting the mating opportunities perhaps that they would
have been used to.
And much of that is laid at their feet, right?
Their socioeconomic status is theirs to own, is only theirs.
But when you're also being sort of lambasted, it's like, so you didn't get the benefits,
you were told that you did, you fell behind and then you were castigated for not having picked yourself up.
And then on top of all of that, the women were like, and I can't even date you.
I won't even, I can't even get, I can't even get myself to find it,
find an eligible partner.
You go, there's like a lot of mental gymnastics going on there.
I think to just hide the fact that all groups can feel bad and all groups need
sympathy and empathy and empathy isn't a zero sum game.
Yeah. Yeah. I think that was, that's well put. And if you look at kind of the, the research on
who people think deserve help or who would benefit most from help, those kinds of things,
it seems to be that especially on the political left, there's this belief that
historically mistreated groups, it's perfectly reasonable not to hold them responsible for their
misfortunes, but then historically dominant groups, you know, men and white people and
straight people and so on, that if they're struggling, if they're not doing as well in
society, then, you know, there's something wrong with them.
But if marginalized groups aren't doing well, it's something wrong with society.
And you know, it's interesting sort of if you break this down politically, there's a
really interesting book that just came out called Outraged by the psychologist Kurt Gray.
And he talks about what he calls like moral dyad theory and how, you know, we basically
categorize people into two different types, generally speaking, like not even people,
but just entities in general, including people, which he calls one group vulnerable feelers.
And these are people who are sort of exquisitely sensitive to suffering, into
pain, into anguish, constantly put upon and beleaguered.
And then he talks about what he calls thinking doers.
And this is the reverse people who are relatively unfeeling, but highly
agentic, you know, capable of strategizing, forming a plan, executing and so on.
And so like an example of a vulnerable feeler,
you know, the sort of the extremes,
a newborn infant is a vulnerable feeler.
We attribute basically no agency to the baby,
but we attribute a lot of vulnerability to it.
Whereas a highly successful CEO would be the reverse,
you know, highly agentic, but relatively unfeeling.
We don't think of successful CEOs as exquisitely sensitive
to pain and emotional suffering and those kinds of things, but they're really able to execute.
But then when researchers apply this moral dyad framework to human groups, basically
we see that political conservatives generally attribute both to most people.
Regardless of your background, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, we're all kind
of capable of being competent, but also sensitive and vulnerable. Whereas on the political left, they tend to
view sort of marginalized and mistreated groups as one or the other, or marginalized and mistreated
groups as vulnerable feelers and historically dominant groups as thinking doers. And so
a cop and a criminal, for example, political conservatives say, well, cops and criminals alike
can suffer, can feel pain, can plan, can execute,
are responsible for their own actions.
Whereas political liberals tend to say,
cops are these thinking doers,
these mechanistic highly agentic beings
and criminals are these vulnerable,
exploited people who are susceptible to being victimized.
And I think that actually kind of explains, you know, like why we see
relatively little concern for, you know, men.
And then when we talk about men, I find it interesting sometimes when you see,
cause I spent a lot of time in academia, you know, it's not enough.
Like I think left of center academics, when they talk about men in broad strokes,
I think there's this fear that they may be mistaken for talking about all men, including non-white men.
And so often they'll say, they'll specify, they'll say, well, these white men who are
complaining about being incels or these white men who are complaining about falling behind
in society.
And I think to myself, you know, it's not just, it's just not, it's not just white
men.
I was at this conference a couple of weeks ago
and this reporter for the New York Times, he was on stage
and he was a very interesting guy.
He was very balanced in his analysis
of what happened with the 2024 election.
And this white guy in the audience raises his hand
and he says, yeah, that's all really interesting.
But again, this is a white guy
and the reporter is a black man.
But the white guy is like,
don't you think that this was basically white
male toxic masculinity?
Um, you know, these guys who are talking about how bad they have at these white
guys and the black New York times reporter shoots back and says like, well,
those guys are upset, but it's not just a white thing.
Like if you look at the, the, the polling data in terms of who supported Trump,
like it was across the board, men of all races shifted towards the Republicans.
And the only, the only segment he lost in. Men of all races shifted towards the Republicans.
The only segment he lost in was white people.
Yeah, exactly. That's right.
And so, so I think like a lot of people, you know, they want to isolate it and
talk about the most powerful and privileged group, white men, but actually
it's a little more complicated than that.
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Can I give you my spicy?
We're about whatever, 25 minutes in.
So people that get mad at me have hopefully dropped off by now.
So I wrote this.
I was too scared to actually post this.
I wonder how often this happens with your newsletter, which by the way,
everyone should go and subscribe to Rob's newsletter.
I read it every week and it's amazing.
with your newsletter, which by the way, everyone should go and subscribe to Rob's newsletter. I read it every week and it's fucking amazing.
I wonder how many times you write something and you go, oh, too hot, like too spicy.
But this was one that was too spicy to go in the newsletter.
Men not erect, women most affected.
There is an asymmetry in the way the discussion is framed around men not being able to get
it up versus women not being able to reach orgasm during sex.
Women not being able to cum is often laid at the feet of the man.
Men need to learn how to work with a woman's body more, make her feel more comfortable.
Lol guys, just can't find the clitoris slash just use your vibrator queen, men are trash.
But men not being able to get it up is never the woman's fault.
No one is saying your head game is weak, Julia, step it up.
Both are the man's fault and neither are the woman's.
So I basically, it's not quite the same,
but I think it's the only equivalent that we can find that if
a guy has got erectile dysfunction and is
struggling to get it up in the bedroom,
the only close comparable situation
that women have to deal with is that they can't reach climax during sex.
And if it's really hard or if you need to, if there's like some fucking sequence of like
rain dance things that needs to, the moon needs to be in its sort of third fucking quarter and we
need to make sure that Mars is in retrograde and then, but that's laid at the feet of the man,
a lot of the time, that you need to make her feel more comfortable. What about during the day?
Did you send her flowers?
And yet if a guy's got erectile dysfunction,
it's never laid at the feet of the woman.
Although to be really compassionate,
I think a lot of the time in those situations,
women will feel it's all about them.
But if you look at the commentary that goes on online,
and men will also take ownership of like,
I'm not good enough, I can't, you know, I'm sort of sexually, uh, insufficiently capable to
maybe to help my partner get to orgasm.
But if you actually look at what's talked about online, it's guys, you're
broken because your penis doesn't work and guys you're broken because you
can't get a woman into this situation where she feels comfortable enough to come.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's what was it?
Men, men, not erect women, women, most men, not erect women. Most effective. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's men, men, not erect women.
Women, men, not erect women.
Most effective.
Yeah.
That's yeah.
That, yeah, that's an interesting point there that like, well, men aren't
direct, but then it's, you know, again, it's, it's the man's fault for being
unable to achieve an erection and that, yeah, who's, who's, who's really vulnerable
here, which is, yeah, it's an interesting framing there.
Like you mentioned that, uh, you know, often women do feel unhappy about this, that
they see it as a reflection of maybe their own attractiveness.
And you've probably seen some, some research going on.
I saw, I saw Ralph Dagan tweet something about this.
There was a study about how women essentially feel like extremely satisfied
when their male partner has an orgasm and they feel very dissatisfied when they don't.
Like they feel like the sense of accomplishment by bringing their male
partner to completion in the bedroom.
Which I guess like, you know, there's probably an evolutionary story you could
tell there that, you know, historically, evolutionarily, male orgasm is required
for the continuation of the species.
Whereas women's orgasm, you know, it's, it's great, but also, you know, not
necessarily, not necessarily for the continuation.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Uh, yeah, that's, that's an interesting one.
I certainly remember looking at some stuff around, well, if you think about it
this way, the bar, uh, men coming is typically quite mechanical.
And that can be the case too for some women, but not all women.
And if that's the case, the bar for I have been able, I have performed my duties as a woman in the bedroom is lower than it is for a man.
You know, you have a full spectrum of happens at the gust of a wind to never going to happen at all, even on my own for women.
Whereas for guys, this is actually, this is interesting.
This is probably one of the few areas where male variability is reduced.
Right.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so in, in this case, it's, um, kind of, uh, the, the complexity of your sexuality
and what would brings you to be aroused and to have an orgasm,
it's much more varied for women than for men, which is, yeah, that's at odds with what we usually see.
That's fascinating.
Novel, novel insight.
That's some fucking bro science for you, Rob Henderson.
That's really, yeah.
Dr. Rob Henderson.
Well, I remember seeing this study a while ago, and I think like it's funny, like, you know,
all of these stories about conflict in the bedroom and how you know I've seen articles that we need to
achieve like orgasm equity that it's unfair and women you know it's it's so
unlikely for them but then when you look at the data as far as like like in what
relational context women actually have orgasms let me see if I get these
numbers right. So when
women are in a committed relationship with a male partner, so this is heterosexual couples,
the orgasm is something like 70% of the time. But then when you look at hookups, like a casual
partner that you see on a somewhat regular basis, it drops to something like 25%.
And then for one night stand, it's like well into the single digits,
it's like 7%.
And so, you know, like, you know, one way that women might increase their odds of having
an orgasm is to get into a committed relationship.
There's something cosmically unfair that like when a man has a one night stand, casual sex,
committed relationship, you know, they usually make it work.
Whereas for women, like there's all these other, what was that term going around a couple
years ago?
It was like demisexual or something like I need to have an emotional connection.
Yeah.
I think that was, yeah, that was Demi.
And then there's sapiosexual, which is I'm attracted to your
intellect or something else.
Yeah.
I mean, the demisexual thing was hilarious.
Cause I think that was called just being a woman up until, just being
like a normal human up until not long ago.
Uh, yeah, I, I'd be very interested in the orgasm equity, orgasm equality act thing.
Um, you do have the equivalent of orgasm billionaires out there, which are women
who are just able to have orgasm after orgasm after orgasm during sex.
And, you know, as a, the guy's side of the fence might decide to fly the flag for
that and go, look, I, I come once and I fall asleep 10 minutes later.
So, you know, where's the fucking, you're the Jeff Bezos of fucking orgasms, darling.
Pass some of those back over our way.
But speaking of that, kind of the, I guess, topic of the internet at the moment, adolescence.
I only, I was away traveling basically from when it came out until yesterday.
I only got to watch, I've seen a few episodes,
but give me your take on that and then the subsequent fallout that's happened.
Yeah. Well, what's really interesting,
so the basic summary of the show,
I'm sure a lot of your listeners have seen it about this boy,
this 13-year-old boy kind of unpopular at school.
He goes to the, you know, he's a working class kid.
He goes to this rundown chaotic school.
Um, you know, one thing, a mutual friend of ours, uh, pointed out William Costello
is that like, cause he's worked in schools in the UK before and he says like, that is
what a lot of these schools look like to sort of utter chaos, teachers barely able
to contain the classroom and this boy, um, Jamie is relatively unpopular.
He's sort of at the center of the story
and the show makes references to how the kid listens
to Andrew Tate and how he, there were a couple of times
that he said something about like the 80-20 rule
about how 80% of women like 20% of men.
And so there are a lot of these kind of like
red pill, Manosphere talking points throughout the show,
basically suggesting heavily that this boy got like, of these kind of like red pill, Manasphere talking points throughout the show basically
suggesting heavily that this boy got like, you know, sucked into this online rabbit hole.
And then when this girl on Instagram, this girl he had a crush on in his class calls
him an incel, he lashes out gets mad at her, and then he stabs her. And then the boys arrested
and you know, there's this kind of
interesting scene of him the whole episode one of the episodes can consists of him speaking
with this I think she's a psychiatrist or something and they're going back and forth
about this and yeah it was um you know like it was it was interesting as a piece of entertainment
I thought it was beautifully shot but I don't think like there are a lot of things about
this series it's being treated as a documentary
But it actually doesn't really reflect what happens in real life, you know
Like like and if you look at the statistics for who commits knife crimes
It's not really like white 13 year old working-class boys
If you look at the statistics for who is most interested in watching Andrew Tate, for example
you know, there was this interesting poll going around that, um, they broke down the, the respondents by, uh, race or ethnicity.
And it was something like 41% of, uh, so this was in the UK, something like 41%
of black males in the UK said they were fans of Andrew Tate.
And then for, uh, what do they call them?
Like South Asian or something Asian men.
Um, it was something like 30%.
And then for whites, it was, it was like by far the lowest.
And yet when people talk about his fans, they often say, oh, these white male incels.
And then the other thing was, you know, that, that, uh, how he just, it was just, um,
you know, the whole incel thing, he's 13, the kid looks like he's 11 and a half.
His voice hasn't changed.
Like, it was just hard for me to, to, to fully believe that, you know, some, some like
prepubescent kid is really feeling so stressed out about, you know, being a
virgin or whatever, but William pointed out that actually what's interesting here
is that it's not so much that he's upset about not getting laid, it's about being
called an incel and this term has become a slur and this really embarrassed the
kid and so on, but you know, overall it was, it was fine, but very much sort of.
It's strayed a lot from, from reality and yet it's being received in a lot of
the mainstream media as like, Oh, it's this iconic series that's accurately
reflects what's going on with toxic masculinity and so on very unrealistic.
Yeah.
Art masquerading is reality.
And yeah, that was one of the things that struck me. I mean, what, one of the other things that, that struck me was beautifully shot,
adored it cinematography is fucking amazing.
It was shot in a DJI Ronin four, which is a really cool piece of kit that's
been around for a little while.
And I thought that was great.
I thought the acting was a little underwhelming actually, especially
from some of the kids and the acting was it's most underwhelming actually, especially from some of the kids.
The acting was its most underwhelming when they tried to shoehorn in anything to do
with mating psychology,
EP tangential stuff because it was so ham-fisted how they had to do exposition.
The Manosphere, the red pill, what?
Have you been watching The Matrix?
You're like, oh, fuck, here we go.
So it felt the exposition.
But I understand, this show is going to be watched by
people who aren't terminally online like me and you.
So maybe it needs that exposition,
but that just felt a bit like.
One of the interesting things, again,
I was away for all of last week and hadn't watched it,
but I must have been invited onto five, 10 different panel style shows
of varying levels, including like mainstream British TV, prime time spots.
And it was evident that they were just looking for somebody who could come on
and sort of fight the fight for the pro men's side.
First off, I hadn't seen it.
Secondly, that is a fight that you only fucking lose by going on and trying to
defend an imaginary child stabbing an imaginary girl about an imaginary slight.
Like, so what are we talking about?
I thought about this an awful lot.
What it seems like happened.
They invited me on the first night after adolescents sort of hit the news
headlines, and then we were able to track, Oh, that's the person that got on instead
of me because I said no and looked at that.
And that conversation was, you know, very placid and calm.
And then they emailed again the next day.
I'm like, Hey, yeah.
Um, you know, we really wanted a little
bit more sort of different insights.
I'm like, what you mean is you wanted to create a firestorm, but who's going to
come on and say, you know, we need more 13 year old boys that it's stabbing
imaginary 13 year old boys stabbing imaginary 13 year old girls.
Like it's not a position.
And then yeah, this fucking it's supposed to be shown in the house of commons.
We want to be able to stream this in every school.
Why?
As a cautionary tale?
As a cautionary tale for who?
Because by every metric, this fantastically shot, really beautiful, very
well put together, but like statistically pretty inaccurate.
I mean, we, there's fucking papers out there. How many times have I talked to you about
like the male sedation hypothesis?
Like if you look at how radicalized young men could and should be,
how little sex they are having,
how isolated and lonely they are by every metric,
how much they're falling behind socioeconomically,
the state of their mental health,
the online subcultures that help to sort of
ossify and make them feel worse about this. Like this isn't a request. This is not a
request and you're not allowed to cut this to make it into a request. But where are all of the incel
stabbings? Like where are they? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's interesting. There was that paper last year,
I think, with David Buss and William Costello, where they wrote, like, why is there not more until violence?
If you look at, you know, like, if you look sort of throughout historically, unstable
or unstable countries, communities where growing numbers of young men are not doing well, unable
to find partners, falling further and further behind, like, usually this leads to increased
violence, increased crime crime and so on.
And we're not really seeing as much as you would predict
based on the sort of historical trend and pattern.
And yeah, your male sedation hypothesis,
I think there's, that makes sense as a sort of explanation.
And yeah, it's weird that it doesn't happen that often.
And then there's this fictional portrayal of it.
And then that gets blown up and that like, you know, like serious people who
went to great universities and there were supposedly mature, sophisticated
adults watch a Netflix show.
And I just like, it blows my mind that you think like, oh, that's,
that's how the world is.
That's how the world works.
This thing, this four episode thing you saw on Netflix, that's where you're
getting your information about what's happening online, what's happening with
young men.
This is an accurate insight into what's going on with young men,
house of commons, high ranking politicians.
It's just insane.
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In the same way that you would say, you know, this is a cautionary tale against the problems that 13 year old boys are facing, like by that logic, Batman should be a cautionary tale against orphans and people that slip into wells. And I have heard that the original story that this was
born out of was a different demographic for the
perpetrator, that it was actually based on a real
life story and that had to be changed for probably
for a number of reasons.
One that it would be politically inconvenient,
but another one being that Stephen Graham fucking
wrote it and Stephen
Graham's as white as they come.
So if you want to be the main dad and have all of episode four be about you, you
kind of, unless you're going to, he's a totally normal boy that comes from an
interracial marriage like that, you know, but it was, I thought it was interesting
that they didn't have him come from a broken home, they didn't have him come
from an abusive father.
There was a lot of pushback in that way.
But I watched episode three last night, and that was the one I was particularly interested to get your take on.
Because that was obviously them trying to dig into what is the psychology, what is the ideology, the mentality of these young boys.
And I found that one really dissatisfying.
The way it was shot, the fact that they held it together for a full 60 minutes,
like a fucking scripted podcast was unbelievable.
Um, but they tried to sort of touch on, so what do you think about masculinity?
What do you think being a man is?
And at no point did they find really any tension in the, the boy wasn't really
able to give a particularly sort of strong answer to that.
The broken home thing didn't work.
There was some interesting stuff around the power dynamic between him pushing back against the woman
and him typically sort of being able to play.
But I didn't see that quite so much as some thinly veiled misogyny,
as it was just young, slightly shrewd boy or girl
knows the limits of a person in power
and is able to play with those
to make them feel uncomfortable.
You know, he even sort of comments on the,
like how flat chested she is
and whether she's pretty and stuff like that.
So, you know, there's always this like,
I know that if you do something to me,
that's not right, that I can kind of get you on it.
But yeah, what did you make of that sort of breakdown and the sort of masculinity,
fragile male ego discussion at large?
Yeah, well, I mean, as I was watching it, you know, I thought about all the research on
incels and how, you know, if you look at the mental health of incels, a lot of work
from our friend William Costello here about how 67% of self-identified incels
qualify for a clinical diagnosis of anxiety, severe-moderate anxiety.
And this is like roughly twice as high among incels as non-incels.
And so then when you see this kid and he's so emotionally fragile and kind of volatile
and, you know, he probably does, you know, it's his fictional and you know he probably does you know it's
fictional character but he probably would qualify for some threshold score
above a certain threshold for depression or anxiety and you know this
psychiatrist lady is trying to suss this out and try to try to pinpoint you know
what exactly went wrong. I did find it interesting that they chose to have this
character like you said raised in this intact family.
And so, you know, I'm trying to figure out like why that specifically, it
could have been a single dad that might've been interesting if what's, what's
the guy's name you mentioned?
Steven something?
Graham.
Graham.
Yeah.
So if, if, if this show had been, you know, he was a single father, you
know, working over time and his plumber job to make ends meet, and maybe he
wasn't always able to be there for his son the way that he should
have something like that, the fact that he had two parents.
And, and so then I thought, okay, well, maybe the message is this could happen to
anyone, you know, he's a, he's a nice boy from a nice family, but he just got
sucked into the incel red pill rabbit hole and he got brainwashed, but you know,
that like, we didn't really get an explanation here.
Maybe that's supposed to be the idea here is that there is no explanation other than
the incel, you know, online world.
But then you would expect, like you said, you would expect more of this kind of violence
because if even boys from good homes could, you know, become a criminal like this, then
you should see way more boys doing this and you don't.
Yeah.
What about the boys from bad homes?
What about the boys that don't have that good upbringing?
Why are they not doing it at three times the rate, five times the rate, 10 times
the rate?
I watched a couple of behind the scenes on YouTube that Netflix put up themselves
and Stephen Graham's explaining the script.
And he's talking about how he didn't want the excuse.
He didn't want there to be an excuse that it was because of abuse from the
family, which
constrains this sort of explanatory mechanism straight down onto this sort of aggressive subculture. But I've got episode four to watch this evening. Unless they actually show how he
becomes radicalized, like, you know, he was on Reddit and he was looking at these things and
he's doing all of the rest of this stuff. It's like, okay, so where did you learn about this? Or is it just, is the point really just the, the male ego and sort of male sexual
prowess and your mate value when threatened and specifically humiliated at large by
someone is a dangerous object?
If that's the takeaway, I fucking fully agree.
I fully fucking agree with that because I think, uh, humiliation is unbelievably
dangerous to anybody, but specifically to a young boy, and at least again, only
an episode three, um, if the story continues the way it does, it's like, Guy
didn't bring a knife, got it from his friend, just wanted to scare this girl.
This girl had bullied him like up until the point at which he brought a fucking knife to her. She was in the wrong
She'd been mean she'd been saying this stuff online. She'd derogated his status in a lot of ways
and then this situation gets out of control and
And fucking tragically again fictionally tragic
Like we must remember at no point do we need to defend or like try and
fucking prosecute anybody because nothing happened.
Um, but yeah, if that's the story and that's the takeaway, and maybe that's
the reason that it was left so open-ended that you didn't have this sort of concrete
explanation around masculinity, around what were the subcultures, you know, that
Andrew Tate shite is like a passing comment. But to anybody that has the fucking first idea about what the internet looks like,
I would guess that most incels actually despise Andrew Tate because he represents
an awful lot of everything that they don't agree with.
That they don't think like he's just going to be a symbol of all of the shit that they can't get.
So that plus red pill plus manosphere plus inside.
It's like, this is a fucking massive
world.
It's like, I'm sure it's the same when good meaning feminists hear, oh, she's a feminist.
You don't need to, you can disregard her opinion because of, you know, other friends like that
includes fucking pink pill and are we dating the same guy and r slash female dating strategy.
Like all of them probably can get lambasted under the rubric of feminist.
Oh, right. Yeah, there's that kind of outgroup homogeneity effect of like any man who comments on relationships or talks about women in a stereotypical way.
They're all part of that same Andrew Tate, Red Pill, Manosphere. That's all the same sort of collapse into the same group.
But yeah, I think that's right that like even even sort of politically,
you know, the those findings about how generally if you if you measure the political attitudes of
insults, they tend to lean center left. They probably don't really have sophisticated politics
in general, they're just kind of upset. They're falling behind in terms of status in terms of
income, they don't view themselves as particularly desirable or attractive. And you know, their
politics are probably like completely orthogonal, unrelated to
however they're feeling about themselves in relationships.
But it's just easy to sort of vaguely collapse Tate and Trump and everything
that you don't like into, you know, they're all just these domineering evil
men and also incels are in there too, somehow, even though Andrew Tate and
Donald Trump are like kind of the like literal opposite of incels and like every kind of way in
terms of income, in terms of success, in terms of women and everything else.
So yeah, it's, um, you know, the show was, and then like, you know, I think the
show, honestly, it could have been braver if they had an uglier kid.
The kid is like, he was a perfectly nice looking 12, 13 year old boy or whatever.
And if they had had an uglier kid, I think you would have felt like, I
think maybe it would have been dangerously close to making him too sympathetic.
You know, like, like, you know, it's like, oh, if he's like, if he's a good looking
kid, what does he have to complain about?
But if you had an ugly kid, you might actually feel like, yeah, it does kind
of suck being physically unattractive.
And then you might leap to, well, you know, he wasn't justified, but like, if
you're an ugly kid and you're being made fun of and, and, and then.
That's interesting. You know, he wasn't justified, but like, if you're an ugly kid and you're being made fun of and, and, and then.
That's interesting. So I wonder whether, I wonder whether we have an additional sense of.
Contempt or disgust or resentment or whatever for the kid that was called
it, but that we know they weren't now we're going really the casting directors
here, we're giving them an awful lot of fucking spare IQ points.
But let's just assume that they made this decision consciously, that you've chosen a
kid who facial symmetry, you know, like a normal, normal looking boy, like fucking middle
of the bell curve of a kid.
That kind of makes it seem like, oh well, you weren't sufficiently robust
psychologically to realize that all they were doing was teasing you and that it
wasn't actually an accurate assessment of your future.
You were almost certainly probably going to be, you had like two friends.
Um, you had an expensive pair of trainers.
You come from an intact home.
You've got an older sister.
Your parents seem to love you.
There's photos of them, uh, at this like party where they're all dressed up
at the beginning of one of the episodes.
So all of the things laid out there for you to sort of basically use your
own sense of self to push back against these kids.
And this is because you are deficient.
And the reason that you're deficient is that your sense of self is being
corrupted by these online platforms.
Oh yeah, yeah.
That's, that's yeah.
Well, there was that scene with him and the psychiatrist where he like asked like, do
you think I'm ugly?
And I guess that that is like an incel trope of like, you know, you're, you're every, you
know, you're all ugly.
If you're not in the top 20% or top 10%, then you're just ugly. You're invisible to women.
And he was trying to get this weird sense of validation from, from this woman,
the psychiatrist, um, asking her to give her assessment of him.
And he mentioned something about, oh, you're pretty.
And I think it would have meant something to this boy to have a pretty woman say,
oh, actually you're not ugly.
But I think she asked him back her, her response was, well, do you think you're
ugly? Cause she's interested in what he thinks.
But yeah, I think, yeah,
that would have been an interesting route to go
because there was nothing,
there was nothing like he didn't have a lisp.
He wasn't overweight.
Like there could have been something,
something that added a little bit more.
Injuries his character.
Yeah. But you're right.
I think there were, yeah, maybe
spare IQ points for the producers here.
But they cast like a very normal,
very nice looking kid with nothing apparently wrong with him.
And so then, you know, which I guess maybe there is a kind of a left wing sort of social
constructionist idea here where we're all good looking.
We're all above average.
We're all on the right hand side of the bell curve.
Unless somehow you receive this ugly messaging from society,
from the internet, from, you know, evil peddlers of, uh, incel ideology or
red pill ideology online.
And if we could just sort of get rid of those people, maybe silence those people,
remove those accounts from the internet, then we would all finally accept that
actually we're all beautiful and we, you know, there's no need to be so upset.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I guess as well, there is a question to be asked of, and I, the amount of bullying
you would need to go through to justify murder is essentially infinite.
So kind of, it's kind of a moot point, but there is a question of, okay, at
what point does online bullying and castigation and ostracization and being
disaffected and humiliated by your classmates, at what point does that in and
of itself independent of what's happening on the internet and ideology and all the
rest of it, like, let's just say that instead of using this like special coded
language of an exploding stick of dynamite and love hearts and all the rest
of it, what if people had just been saying, you're
ugly or you're, you're never going to get a girlfriend or nobody likes you.
What if it hadn't been coded from the internet?
What you end up with is bullied boy lashes out at the tip of the spear
of the people that are bullying him.
And that makes for a much less sex, but in terms of dynamic is kind of probably 80% of the way there.
Like they talked, speaking of 80%, like the 80-20 rule, you know, 80% of women are only attracted to 20% of men.
It's like, what, like what, how is that?
That's got nothing to do, at no point does he mention it.
At no point does it like, like other than it's this undercurrent of women are choosy, which like shock
horror, like that's every fucking romcom since the beginning of time.
I don't know.
I it's very, it's very interesting.
I've been, and I think what's more interesting is to me than the actual
series has been the response online.
Keir Starmer saying it needs to be played in the house of commons.
We're going to stream this in every in every school up and down the UK.
This is a caution retail.
Yeah, very, very interesting.
Yeah, well, yeah, if you're streaming it in the schools, I mean, yeah.
If the portrayal of schools in adolescence looks like that, good luck.
Those kids aren't going to be watching it anyway.
They're all going to be on their phones. And you play a movie in class luck. Like those kids aren't going to be watching it anyway. They're all going to be on their phones and you play a movie in class.
I know those kids are actually going to be watching it.
So, I mean, who's, who's that for exactly?
So yeah, I mean, I guess it makes people feel good about themselves.
You know, there, there's sort of the more quasi conspiratorial corners of Twitter
where they were like, you know, one point of this whole series is to essentially
help to create crystallize a consensus that we
need to, to increase the level of censorship online. You know,
if the if the belief among sort of policymakers and taste
makers and cultural influencers is, oh, like, you know, these
these accounts, this ideology is leading boys to stab girls,
then we need to start shutting down accounts, start, you know,
patrolling the limits of acceptable
speech online.
And I don't know if that was the intent behind like, let's make this show so that we can
silence voices or something like that.
But I do think that there are people who work in a lot of mainstream media outlets who don't
like certain influencers, certain social media platforms or what have you.
And if they can shine a light on the show and get it to become a thing
and help to contribute to this consensus, then they're basically, it's not,
it wasn't the original intent, but it's a happy sort of byproduct of the show
being around and being in a position to amplify its message and get people to watch it.
It's a useful popular political football that people can kick about.
Yeah. Okay. Going to the other side of the spectrum now,
what can psychology teach us about how to choose a good partner?
I read this phenomenal article from you a while ago and then reread it recently.
How can it help us?
Yeah. Well, one of the things that I point out right away in that piece, yeah, How to Choose a Romantic Partner,
is study after study finds,
you look at research on happiness, on wellbeing,
on life satisfaction, that the two biggest factors
are what you do for work and your marriage and family life,
your choice of spouse, and that makes sense.
I mean, if nothing else mathematically, it makes sense
because you're going to spend
most of your life on the job,
whatever job you work your career
and then with your family.
And that takes up the bulk of your time.
And so one thing that occurred to me
as I was writing that piece is just how much information
there is out there about, you know,
how to become educationally and occupationally successful.
Here are the steps you need to go to college. college here the steps you need to take to master job interview
you know here that here's the pathway to become a successful doctor lawyer what
have you
and everywhere you turn there's no shortage of advice and it's perfectly
kind of acceptable in the broader discourse
to you know but what what are you doing all i'm watching this youtube series on
how to how to improve my career that's fine
but if you were to say you know you're watching it you can say what are you watching like i'm watching this youtube series on how to how to improve my career. That's fine. But if you were to say, you know, you're watching it, you know,
I'm saying, what are you watching?
You're like, oh, I'm watching this YouTube series on how to be a better
romantic partner and attract someone.
Somehow that is like, you know, weirdly stigmatized.
We would think of someone like that as like, well, what's wrong with you
that you can't just find one.
We expect people to just enter the world knowing how to be an attractive partner
and to find a compatible partner for yourself.
But we accept that actually it's it's perfectly fine to sort of seek out information and knowledge and mentors and so on to succeed in career.
Why do you think that is?
I don't know. I mean, I think part of it is, you know, there could be this thing where if you are, if you require explicit advice on romance,
that this in itself is an indicator of low mate value
or that you're unattractive,
that if you naturally know what to do
and naturally know how to succeed
as a person in the romantic sort of dating market,
then that in itself is an indicator
that you're a worthy romantic partner.
But if you need to seek out information
and that suggests, oh, actually, like maybe you shouldn't even be dating in
the first place.
Whereas, yeah, for career, less so.
I mean, I still think that we, if someone effortlessly succeeds like in their career,
we do give them a bit of extra credit, but we're perfectly fine with, you know, people
who are trying to improve themselves.
We are willing to confer special praise to those people too.
So yeah, it's an interesting one.
And I think it's more so for men specifically.
Like I also wonder if, you know, because of the, you know,
the women are wonderful effects and,
and the sort of accompanying effect of we tend to be a bit
more suspicious of, of men,
that if you hear that a man is learning how to improve their
prospects on the dating market, our mind immediately leads to worst case scenario
of, oh, you're going to learn how to manipulate women.
You're going to learn how to...
Tiring system all over again.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And so we don't think, oh, this is just a guy who's really falling behind and wants
to learn how to have a good first date and find a girlfriend.
We think, oh, he's trying to hook up with as many women as possible and dupe all of
them or something.
friend, we think, oh, he's trying to hook up with as many women as possible and dupe all of them or something.
But this piece was basically about assuming that you want to find a good partner, what
are you actually looking for?
And earlier we talked about, we touched briefly on assortative mating, and that does seem
to be the case that if you look at measures of political orientation, religiosity, socioeconomic
status, earnings, educational attainment, that we tend to pair with people who are relatively
similar to ourselves.
There was an interesting statistic.
So this study was from 2005, which found that if your highest level of education is a high
school diploma, then your likelihood of marrying someone with a college degree is 9%. But if your highest level of education is a college degree,
then your likelihood of marrying a college graduate is 65%. I'd imagine that's actually
higher today. It seems like assortative mating is sort of tilting even further and further in
that direction. But what's interesting there is that the similarity, even though that's sort of descriptively true,
that is just the case that we tend to pair with people who are similar to ourselves,
when you measure levels of similarity within romantic partners,
similarity doesn't seem to predict relationship success.
And I was reading that paper and my interpretation of this is probably that
similarity is necessary but not sufficient for a long-term committed relationship.
Surely though, if most people are mating assortatively, you have a much smaller
sample size of people who have mated unassortatively.
Yeah.
And there's that, that issue of range restriction where if you're only looking
at couples, then by definition, most of them are already pretty similar.
And so does that extra similarity help?
Probably not.
There's probably that threshold
that's sort of necessary.
But not sufficient.
You're also not seeing how many couples
that were from different educational backgrounds
that got together, broke up,
and that shouldn't have gotten together
and sort of fluked their way into it.
That's kind of an interesting one.
What about personality traits,
similarities in being extroverted, being introverted,
propensity for low moods, blah, blah, blah?
Yeah. Well, the personality thing is interesting in that one thing that shocked me when I was looking at
the personality research and similarities in couples is that the correlations are remarkably small.
They vary around sort of point.1, 0.2,
statistically significant that if you're open,
your partner that you tend to pair with
will be a little bit more open than average.
Same with these other personality traits.
One that's a bit higher than the others
that I saw was for neuroticism,
which is about 0.2, 0.22, somewhere in that realm.
And this is consistent with other work
that people who are emotionally volatile tend to
be attracted to one another or find something interesting about one another, whereas people
who are more emotionally stable tend to seek out partners who are stable.
There was a really interesting essay a couple of years ago from our mutual friend, Scott
Barry Kaufman, and he wrote about people with dark triad traits
that they seem to find one another interesting and attractive.
Oh, fuck, they're welcome to each other.
Everybody that isn't dark triad is just going, please, for the love of God, date each other.
That's a great way to kind of quarantine everybody out there.
Yeah, get them out of the dating pool.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And yeah, which I think like, if you're, if, yeah, so people
who are sort of relatively narcissistic find other narcissistic people interesting and
attractive and those kinds of things. One thing that was interesting related to the
personality point is, is authenticity. That this really interesting paper found that people
who score highly on measures of authenticity within their relationship.
And so these were basically the extent to which participants agreed with statements like,
I'll usually tell my partner things that are on my mind, even if there's a chance he or she may not understand me.
And when people are more likely to agree with those statements, they also tend to correlate highly with levels of relationship satisfaction.
statements, they also tend to correlate highly with levels of relationship satisfaction. And interestingly, the reverse was the case too, that people who are low authenticity
also tend to pair with people who are also more deceptive or less authentic.
And so there really is that sort of assortative meeting they're going on too, which I guess
like one potential inference here is that if you want an authentic partner, if you want
someone who tells you the truth, you have to be a bit transparent.
You have to be open yourself in order to establish that trust.
What's that thing?
To be worthy of a worthy mate, be a worthy mate.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, yeah, the best, you know, that's why we call them honest signals, right?
Is that, you know, only someone who's truly authentic and truly whatever that, you know,
you're going to be the most likely to attract a partner with those kinds of traits as well.
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If, if authenticity is a big predictor for relationship satisfaction, is that a
vote in the box for oversharing, for being quite transparent about sort of what's going
on as opposed to keeping some stuff just for your journal and the therapist's room.
Interesting.
Yeah, I think generally, well, it depends on what the conversation is about.
You know, if you have your sort of most wild, extreme thoughts,
like, I don't know, maybe those don't always have to be aired.
Well, like, I'm going to punch a baby and put it into the road or...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, well, but I think, like, when it comes to issues around the relationship itself,
that maybe there's a way, you know, I think, like, it's better to generally over-communicate
rather than to let things slide and let resentments build up, and then it potentially explodes later into a serious argument, that, I think like it's better to generally over communicate rather than to let things slide and let resentments build up and then it potentially explodes later into a serious argument that, I
mean, there's a way I think to over communicate and a kind of diplomatic respectful way of just
like, why do you do that? That upsets me. Stop doing that. You know, that's probably not the
best way to go about it. But if you see something and you pointed out in a gentle way, and I think
that is probably a better approach than just like, yeah, letting it all build up over time.
What about the role of when we think we can't do any better?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's an interesting one.
Uh, yeah, our mutual friend, David Buss on this one was a fascinating paper here
about how, you know, there's this idea, you know, basically what are people
looking for in a partner?
Is it someone who just meets their relationship needs, you know, oh, like
here are my 10, uh, uh 10 list of demands for my partner.
Oh, you meet nine out of the 10 and this person meets 10 out of the 10.
And so I'm going to go with a 10 out of 10, that kind of thing.
You know, as if we're grading on some objective rubric, but that paper
suggested that actually we, we more so grade potential partners on a curve
where we are kind of putting together multiple things
in our environment.
First, the person that you're with,
how do they stack up compared to partners
that you could reasonably attract
in your social environment?
And what they found is that if your partner
is basically better quality than the alternatives,
realistic alternatives around you,
then people tend to be happy.
If the person is kind of less attractive
than potential realistic alternatives around you,
people tend to be less satisfied.
And that was especially true for people
who evaluated themselves as being more attractive
than their own partner.
And so I think that's,
that may be the most sort of dangerous situation here
is if, you know, if you're with someone
who views themselves as much
more attractive than you and also thinks, oh, well, I could also do better and I see all these other
people around you, that this could lead to a potential unstable relationship dynamic.
And so for a lot of guys, I think what they, if you ask them what they want, especially young guys,
like under 25, they just, I want the hottest possible girl, you know, physically perfect, 10 out
of 10, I want a dime.
But then, you know, if you point out to them, well, you know, if you're a pretty average
guy and you do happen to land a date with some supermodel who, you know, maybe in another,
you know, some other day of the week is going out with Leonardo DiCaprio on his yacht, that,
you know, that's probably not going to work out for you.
And that may be another reason why we tend to mate assortatively is gradually over time,
people kind of figure out where their level is
and find someone who's roughly the same level
of attractiveness as themselves.
But yeah, there is that point there that,
what predicts relationship dissolution?
And it does seem to be people thinking to themselves,
well, is this really the best I could do?
And this I think also has something to do
with what we're seeing with the dating apps.
Although I think this is sort of tapering off, but for the last,
basically since 2012 with the rise of Tinder,
I think that probably contributed to kind of relationship instability
is more and more people thinking that they could do better because of the apps,
and then a lot of people realizing actually that's not the case.
Yeah, Buss has got this line about mates once gained must be retained.
So for all that it sounds fantastic to get into a relationship with some
smoke show, especially when you think about, and this is Seth Stevens Davidowitz's insight,
lots of people are selecting their partners based on the same criteria that everybody uses,
but that criteria is not predictive of long-term relationship success.
So if you choose somebody that signals very high on a criteria that you know lots of other people are going to be interested in,
like hotness, for instance, but if you take the genuine red pill, which is hotness has basically zero predictive power
and relationship satisfaction
long term, as long as you're relatively sort of physically matched in terms of attractiveness.
What you get to do is tap into a blue ocean as opposed to a red ocean.
You get to be able to find people who are going to make you happy over the long term
and have the added benefit of other people kind of passing them by a little bit more.
Or the other approach is I'm going to choose somebody that everybody wants, but
all people would fucking hate to be in a relationship with.
And I'm aware that there's like a ton of gray in between those, those two examples.
But that is kind of the spectrum.
Somebody that signals something everybody is after, but that doesn't, that's not
predictive of long-term relationship satisfaction, high competition, low
happiness, and then on the other side, you have somebody who signals things that that's not predictive of long-term relationship satisfaction. High competition, low happiness.
And then on the other side, you have somebody who signals things
that genuinely do predict relationship satisfaction long-term,
but that most people don't realize.
You see that, you tap into that, and you actually get less,
insecurity, less make-guarding needed, less jealousy,
less all of that stuff.
So yeah, that's a good way to go about it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's, yeah, you can kind of like money ball your way into a
relationship by going for people who are attractive, maybe uniquely to you, but
that maybe others are overlooking in some way like that is, yeah, that's interesting.
I mean, on the personality point, I mean, it is the case that, uh, uh, similarity
in personality is relatively low.
I mean mean statistically significant
but small correlations, but then what does seem to predict satisfaction is regardless
of your own level of say conscientiousness, your partner's level of conscientiousness
does seem to predict longer relationship duration. Interestingly, it also tends to predict your
own level of career success. So you and many of your listeners are familiar with the fact that, you know,
obviously intelligence, IQ, that predicts career success, but then also conscientiousness
of the big five personality traits, conscientiousness has the strongest predictive power
for how successful someone's going to be in their career.
But what was interesting is in one paper found that even when you control
for the participant's own level of conscientiousness,
their romantic partner's conscientiousness predicts their own career success, which suggests
that if you have a partner who's hardworking, diligent, focused, and so on,
that that also somehow benefits you in your own life. Even small things like
making appointments, following up on emails, all of those kinds of things, you
know, that compounds over time having someone who's very switched on like that.
And then yeah, other traits as well.
I mean, for, for relationship satisfaction, agreeableness is one, uh,
low levels of neuroticism and, um, and then yeah, high,
high intelligence is, is another.
Um, and so it's interesting that even though the similarities aren't especially
high, uh, within couples, if you want a relationship to last, it's good to have sort of more rather
than less of many of these traits.
I had a tie to Shiro on the other week and he was talking about openness,
openness to experience and saying, you basically want someone that's moderate
or low, because as soon as you get above moderate, you're into sensation seeking.
And sensation seeking turns into, well, why don't we make this relationship open?
Well, why don't we, you know, like the weight is kind of hot.
Why don't we like add him in this evening?
They're more tempted to stray.
And I think it will be correlated
with a bunch of other stuff.
I'd heard you say before that impulsivity,
dismissiveness, aggression, and being flighty and unreliable
in addition to physical attributes like tattoos
or piercings and so on are all
indicators of sort of potential future mistreatment in a relationship.
Why those?
Why that suite of physical and mental traits?
Yeah.
I mean, all of those, you know, there's sort of volatility clusters around neuroticism
or low emotional stability.
And it's interesting, I'm reading this person,
it's called The Person,
A New Introduction to Personality Psychology,
new textbook sort of covering the latest
in that whole field.
And one of the things they point out is,
people who are highly neurotic, high on neuroticism,
they'll often complain about bad things happening to them.
And there used to be this question of,
well, are they basically overstating
their own level of suffering?
People who are neurotic,
are they going through the same thing as everyone else,
but because of that personality trait,
they are exaggerating the extent of their own mistreatment.
But actually there is a bit of that going on,
but additionally, when you look at objectively
what happens to people at higher neuroticism, they have more interpersonal conflicts, more issues with their friends, more arguments with their romantic partners, just generally more difficulty in their lives.
And so, yes, they may overstate what they're going through, what they are objectively going through worse sort of interpersonal disputes than the average person. And so, you know, if you want to avoid that, you know, you got to kind of avoid
sort of the aggression, the flightiness and all those kinds of things.
Um, the openness point is interesting.
I would imagine there is research indicating that that tattoos correlate
with openness to experience.
I would imagine the same goes for, you know, unusual piercings
and those kinds of things.
And so, yeah, if you, you know,
there was this study about this,
about promiscuity in tattoos,
that basically the more,
if you have a tattoo, you tend to be sort of more open.
What's the phrase?
Sociosexual orientation,
basically more interested in promiscuous sex.
Those things correlate together.
And then the more tattoos you have,
the more open you are to having open sex
with these unfamiliar people,
which lines up with the other research on tattoos as well,
that it's correlates with low impulse control
and those kinds of things.
And so, yeah, I mean, it's funny.
I had this tweet put out a while ago
with something like,
people put a great deal of effort into designing,
the phrase is don't judge a book by its cover.
And yet people put a great deal of effort into designing book covers.
This tweet is not about book covers.
In other words, we spend so much time adorning ourselves, the way we dress,
our haircuts, the piercings, the tattoos, everything else, and they are sending signals about who they are.
You know, there's a, there's a really great paper from a few years ago.
It was something like personality is revealed on the weekends and the
paper covered, you know, basically can cover frequency of going to the
movies, going out, how many social nights you have, you know, what your
bedroom looks like correlates with your personality.
So many things about you reveal this.
And so, yeah, all of that, you mentioned aggression, flightiness and everything else.
But yeah, but so you want someone with relatively low neuroticism and then yeah,
with education, with intelligence, those things as well.
That what's interesting about the intelligence one is that when you ask people,
and these are sort of hypothetical scenarios, sort of roughly what's the ideal level of intelligence
for your partner, people tend to choose around 120 IQ, which is roughly the 90th percentile
of intelligence.
And so people want someone who's like obviously smart, visibly intelligent, but they don't
want some super genius, maybe because of stereotypes about geniuses being, you know, kind of quirky or personality wise
being a little off.
But when you look at the correlation coefficients,
sort of how similar spouses are to one another
within marriages, there is a similarity in that,
you know, their IQs tend to correlate with one another,
but there's still about a 10 point IQ difference
between spouses on average,
which is smaller than it is for say, two siblings.
So this is all from Robert Plumman's work
that two siblings within a family on average
tend to have 12 point IQ difference from one another,
which is smaller than if you were to choose
two random people in the population,
the difference there would be about 17 points.
And so spouses 10 points,
I mean, that's even more similar than two siblings would be.
But one thing I've tried to track down is whether it's more likely that the, like in
heterosexual couples, is it the man who's more likely to have the higher IQ or the woman?
I think based on what we know about hypergamy and everything else, the prediction would
be probably the male has higher intelligence.
I remember I posted this poll on Twitter a couple years ago
where I asked people to imagine that they were a contestant
on who wants to be a millionaire,
and you have to choose who's going to be your lifeline
for the phone a friend option.
You don't know what the question is going to be,
and you can either choose who's gonna pick up the phone.
You don't know what the question is gonna be.
They don't know what the question is gonna be.
You can choose your mom or your dad,
and something like 80% of respondents chose
their dad.
So I think like, you know, I think people probably have this intuition that
within couples men have, you know, a bit more sort of varied knowledge
and those kinds of things.
Yeah.
What about other red flags, managing emotions, guessing game, character
assault, silent treatment, stuff like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's that, yeah, that was one of the most important kind of findings
as far as what to avoid for Red Flag.
You know, David Buss says one of the things you want to look for is are they able to,
or how quickly do they return to their emotional baseline?
All of us, regardless of our personality traits and our temperaments,
you know, we have a, you know, we were capable of getting angry or upset or irritated, but
some of us are able to sort of take a step back, take a couple of breaths and sort of,
you know, detach and think about the situation rationally and kind of calm ourselves down.
But other people, they kind of spiral out, like they get angry and then they keep, they
look for more reasons to get angry.
And then suddenly they're off on a, on a different path.
And so you want someone who's able to control their own emotions, who doesn't mean not be
emotional but just able to sort of understand that this is what I'm going through, that
they're able to identify and label their emotions.
This was an interesting finding from, I think the guy's name is Laurency and Reid, he's
a professor at NYU.
He talks about how people with borderline personality disorder, which
generally afflicts on average women more so than men, one of the hallmarks of borderline
personality disorder is the inability to understand and articulate and verbalize what you're feeling.
So these people are kind of like, I'm feeling this thing and like very clearly it's negative, but I can't tell the difference between, you know, ordinary anger or rage or irritation or just sort of being mildly or moderately upset that it's sort of all or none.
They generally know they're feeling good or bad, but then when it comes to sort of isolating, well, this is what I'm feeling and this is, you know, how you're making me feel.
And here's how it came about.
It's, it's difficult for them.
what I'm feeling and this is how you're making me feel and here's how it came about.
It's difficult for them.
And it's sort of a spectrum.
You gotta be careful, basically finding people
who are unable to do that.
And then, yeah, one of the green flags is
someone who's stable, someone who's able
to control themselves, who's able to communicate.
And one point I try to make in that piece is, you know, communication
is even more important during a period of emotional tension and dispute
and hostility of someone does something that upsets someone else.
That's when communication becomes even more important than it otherwise would be.
Yeah.
You know, uh, visa can Verasimi.
Do you know that guy?
He's great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's so, he's such fire.
And, uh, he says it's the lows, not the highs that make or break a relationship.
Why does so many people divorce someone they thought was their favorite person?
It's not really a mystery.
It's mostly because good times are a poor predictor of how you'll handle bad times
and the handling of bad times, it's much more important to the success of a
marriage, but as a species and as a culture, we have not truly internalized this.
It's also, it's the lows, not the highs, right?
That make a relationship.
Like it's really easy in the medium term to get hyped about a person who seems
to relate strongly in specific ways, but in the long term, it's really just how
you handle misunderstandings and conflict and confusion and disagreement.
Because insufficient good times may be a reason for a relationship to break up, but
I would wager that it's far more too frequent and too poorly handled bad times.
Like the highs weren't high enough.
It's like, no, no, the lows were too low.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, and the way that you, I think, reveal the other person's personality and learn about that person during those low times is basically to give it some time, give it some space, allow their relationship to develop.
Because, you know, when you're first dating someone that you like, you're on your best behavior. You know, you're, you're showing the best parts of yourself, the most
interesting, witty dynamic, everything you're trying to impress this person.
You want them to like you and they're doing the same to you as well.
You're showing each other the best versions of yourself.
But, uh, one thing that, uh, the psychologist Sean T Smith points out, he
wrote a book about commitment is that generally speaking, um, about a six
month mark, the rule of thumb is after about six months, you do start to learn about that person and basically reveal their true selves to you and how they're really like and how they handle pressure and what they're like when they're sleep deprived, what they're like when they're jet lag, what they're like when they're having a bad day at work.
And, you know, for the first couple of months, if you have a bad day at work, you still you're so excited to see the person you like that the bad day doesn't even bother you.
But after six months, after you sort of become accustomed to the relationship, then you are
more likely to expose those other sides of yourself.
So I think that's important too, is that I think a lot of people, they jump into a relationship,
it seems so exciting, and then they don't realize that people are different at different
stages of the relationship.
You got to give it time, you got gotta allow them to reveal themselves to you.
And then I think it also helps.
I can't remember who said this.
Might've been on your podcast.
Someone pointed out that a good way to see
what another person is like in a relationship
is to go on a trip with them.
That was Rogan.
That was Rogan on my episode that I did with him
the other week where he was like,
you gotta go on a long trip.
You gotta go on a long trip
and you gotta go somewhere stressful
and you gotta go on a long journey. Yeah, yeah go on a long trip and you got to go somewhere stressful and you got to go on a long journey.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jet lag, you know, yeah, yeah.
Maybe travel coach, you know, like, like put it, like put as much sort of like stress
test the relationship.
Navy seal hell week.
Yeah.
Yeah, there we go.
And then you'll see, you know, like, oh, that's what this person is like under
unpredictable circumstances out of the sort of rosy glow of everyday predictable
life.
Yeah.
You said, uh, clarity and inquisitiveness as well. out of the sort of rosy glow of everyday predictable life. Yeah.
You said clarity and inquisitiveness as well.
Inquisitiveness I thought was a really interesting one, but those two together,
that kind of goes back to the authenticity thing, right?
Like this is how I'm feeling, even if it might make you upset
or even if it might make me feel vulnerable or whatever.
So I can, and I guess that's a counter as well to the person
that gets so agitated that
they're unable to say, I don't know what I'm thinking.
I don't know what I'm feeling.
I can't talk about this.
I guess clarity and inquisitiveness are kind of the opposite of that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I guess, yeah, if you look at the opposite, so you're being unclear and un-inquisitive,
uncurious about the other person, but yeah, the green flag is, yeah, to be transparent, to say what you mean, to be clear about what
your intentions are, what you'd like.
And then, yeah, inquisitive of if you are uncertain, if there's an ambiguity in the
relationship, you don't know what the other person is thinking or feeling, that you ask
the person about it.
And then the other person, you know, ideally ideally they're not going to be upset with you.
That was one of the other red flags is basically forcing you to play
the guessing game of well, if you really cared about me,
you should know how I'm feeling.
If you really were paying attention,
you would already know why I'm upset.
But a more healthy relationship style would be to just say,
like, this is what I'm feeling,
this is what's upsetting me, and go from there.
And yeah, it's just, you know, all of these things, like it's interesting, there's like such a wealth of information
about sort of mating, mating psychology, what to look for, what are the predictors of a happy and healthy relationship,
and yet there's such little guidance on this point.
And then when ever anyone tries to point this out, especially if you try to promote anything resembling sort of conventional
committed relationships, people start to get wary, you know the slings and arrows
come out. There was that story more than 10 years ago now. The Princeton mom
letter. You familiar with this? No. There was this, so she was a Princeton alumna
whose daughter attended Princeton. I think this was 2013-2014. But this woman, who I Are you familiar with this? No, there was this, so she was a Princeton alumna
whose daughter attended Princeton,
I think this was 2013, 2014,
but this woman who I think was in her 40s,
Susan Patton, I wanna say,
she wrote this op-ed in the Princeton student newspaper,
basically imploring the young women at this college,
like, hey, you're surrounded by very smart, ambitious,
bright young boys, you should start thinking about marriage. Like you should start searching for a husband now. And then in response, she
got all of these criticisms from like big name mainstream media outlets calling her
anti-feminist and calling her a traitor to the movement and all these kinds of things.
And what she said was perfectly reasonable that, you know, she had a couple of interesting
lines in there. One was, you know, you was, you're never going to be surrounded by so many men who are worthy of you.
And then the other line was something like, if you are with a man who's less
intelligent than you, you're never really going to be fully satisfied.
And she was kind of pointing out, oh, generally that's true.
Like women do tend to want men who are bright and ambitious and intelligent
and all those kinds of things.
And your mating prospects change dramatically after college.
I mean, I've had so many conversations now
and I'm sure you have too with young people
in their early mid twenties.
And they're like, I didn't know how good I had it
when I was at college, when I was at university.
And it's like, especially if you're a man
and 60% of the campus is women and they're all young
and bright and ambitious and interesting and they're all, you know, young and bright
and ambitious and interesting and whatever.
And then you enter the workforce and it's like all your coworkers are older
than you and they're married and they have their own separate adult lives.
And it's just, um, you know, the, your, your, your mating prospects transform
and become generally less promising.
And, you know, no one, no one tells young people about this.
Louise Perry told me about that article the other week, and she uses
this really wonderful example where she says, um, if you buy a lamp before you
move into a house, it's quite easy to find a place within that house to fit the lamp.
But if you've spent a couple of decades creating the perfect house, finding a
lamp that fits all of your priors, as in your life is the house and your partner is the lamp.
It's way easier to build a house around a lamp than it is to find a
lamp that fits the perfect house.
And a lot of the time, if people have got deeper down into their careers,
in they're not growing with someone, they're trying to slot somebody
into their existing growth and you're more sort of cemented and
sort of, I guess in some ways stagnant, like you think you know what you like,
you don't develop what you like in partnership with another person.
You're trying to see will they fit this thing and this thing has become
increasingly more complex, increasingly sort of grander and bigger and less capable of
being changed.
So yeah, I thought that was another interesting twist on that essay.
Yeah, I've seen this kind of framework.
I think it was called, you know, two approaches to a marriage.
One is the startup marriage and the other is the capstone marriage.
And so the startup marriages, you're sort of entering together to build this thing,
this life together that, you know,
if you're in your early mid twenties or something,
you're young, you're just starting out,
but you find someone that you care about
and that you love and you get married
and you're sort of building the life together.
And then the capstone marriage is,
well, I've succeeded in my education and my career
and my income and everything else.
And now the final milestone is, you know,
now I'm gonna get married and bring this person in.
And, you know, I think both of those can work in different ways, but that's an
interesting, I like the analogy from Louise there that, yeah, you get sort of older, you get set in
your ways, you find it harder to, you know, introduce someone into your life. When you're young,
you're just more flexible and you're probably more willing to relocate. You're probably more willing to
maybe change up careers. There's so many other things you can do when you're
young that becomes harder when you're old or older anyway. But on the other
hand, I could imagine the argument going the opposite way where, you know,
when you look at, there was this interesting thing from the Institute for
Family Studies about sort of the optimal age for marriage to reduce likelihood of divorce that it was the case that if you get married very young.
Divorce rates are higher than average and maybe because you're immature because maybe financially strapped those kinds of things but then at a certain point it starts to sort of this.
sort of this, what is it, sort of a U-shaped curve here
where around 30 or 31, that was kind of the ideal as far as like the lowest likelihood of getting divorced.
And then once you sort of reach your mid-late 30s,
it starts to creep up again.
And so I do wonder, yeah, what's,
it could also be the case though, that like for most people,
if you haven't found a partner by your mid-late 30s,
that maybe there's something going on with you, um, that, uh, that makes
it difficult to, to find a partner.
Yeah.
There's a question of, well, why is this restaurant got no people in it?
Like if this restaurant was any good, it would be, it would be sold out.
Uh, yeah.
Well, I mean, look, uh, flying the flag for both me and you, two people who, uh,
I mean, look, uh, flying the flag for both me and you, two people who, uh,
maybe should have been married before we are.
Um, uh, I think.
It retrospectively, what you get to look at is what, what did I prioritize at what age, what stages of my life?
And there's certain people, at least I've realized this since being in Austin,
who, if you've got a lot of kind of upward mobility and if you've got things that you really want to do in the world, you end up, or at least those
people seem to be very, very good candidates for massive fucking midlife
crises because what you end up with is this like unrequited, unfulfilled
lack of validation from the world for me.
And I had to give up so much of me in order for
the world to, in order for this relationship to
happen, um, but then on the flip side, you know,
there was this, I asked you to send me that, uh,
free press article earlier on.
And I think it's a, a really, really good synopsis, which is, uh, do not mistake
side quests for the main story and just side quests, uh, things like, you know,
brunch with the girls and, and Vegas with the boys and the parties and the career
and all the rest of the stuff, like the main quest is the person that you're
going to spend the rest of your life with because a great career in a shitty marriage results in a pretty shitty life.
But an average career in a great marriage results in probably a pretty
fucking awesome life.
So ensuring that you get the priority of those the right way around.
And then on top of that, all of the other stuff that people, I mean, you've
seen the stats around why Gen Z say that they don't want to date, like just not
ready, um,
want time to work on myself.
It's going to get like why women don't want to have kids, like
can't wear cute heels.
Uh, like, you know, there's a lot of reasons.
Those are side quests.
Like, I think there's a good argument to be made that the place that you live
and the job that you do isn't a side quest.
It's certainly one of the main storylines, but wearing cute heels or
like fucking Vegas with the boys, those definitely are side quests. So yeah, ensuring that you stay on the main storylines, but wearing cute heels or like fucking Vegas with the boys does definitely our side quests.
So yeah, you stay on the main mission.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What is this all for that kind of thing?
Like, you know, eventually you're going to want family, you're going to want
kids and grandkids and all those kinds of things.
And yeah, I think it's, um, I wonder if like the reason for that for, for Gen Z,
like, where are they looking to as far as sort of role models and guidance?
And, you know, you mentioned sort of you and me, like I think that, you know, this,
this sort of path of, of, you know, prioritizing, if you have a kind of an
unusual career that requires a lot of time and a lot of commitment, a lot of
hours, and you also derive a lot of meaning and satisfaction for it, then
that's great.
That can work for a lot of people, but that's not going to work for everyone.
You know, Jordan Peterson points this out that for most people living
a conventional life is actually your best shot at happiness.
That for most people, you know, getting married, settling down,
you know, having kids, having a family, all those kinds of things like that
for most people is a good path.
Unless there's some extraordinary reason why that isn't the right path.
Maybe you have some extremely lucrative or unusual ability or talent or
skillset or something else, But we get these interesting messages because those people who tend to
have the spotlight, who did sort of delay
marriage and career and so on, often they will attempt to justify their own lives
and say, well it worked for me, this is a great life, you should prioritize your
career, this is how you get to where I am, that kind of thing.
And most people aren't like that though. You know, like by definition, if you do have a platform and you do have an
audience and those kinds of things, you're, you're very atypical.
You're an unusual, weird person.
And most people aren't that weird.
So you're selecting for the advice of people who are not like most people.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because if you're an ordinary person who's achieved happiness and success,
chances are you don't have this huge megaphone and you don't have a large
following, you're raising your kids and you're raising your family and that's where you're getting
your life satisfaction and your meaning from.
And I'm not even saying like one way of life is better than the other, but for most people,
the type of life that would lead to happiness, those messages aren't as salient because of
the very fact that those people aren't sort of out in the world the way that, um, you know, peculiar, psychologically atypical people are.
Fuck yeah.
Rob Henderson, ladies and gentlemen, Rob, you're awesome, man.
Where should people go?
They should read your writing because I read it every single week and then
shamelessly repurpose it on my own newsletter a lot.
Where should people go?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, Rob Henderson's newsletter.
I'm on Substack, uh, Rob K.
Henderson on Twitter, uh, can buy my book. It's out in paperback, troubled by Rob Henderson's newsletter. It's I'm on sub stack, uh, Rob K. Henderson on Twitter, uh, can buy my book.
It's out in paperback troubled by Rob Henderson and, uh, yeah, Rob K.
Henderson looked that up and I'm everywhere.
So damn right, Rob, until next time.
Appreciate you, man.
Thanks, Chris.
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