Comments by "" (@The_NonDescript) on "GriffinMind"
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I would highly encourage homeschooling for anybody. If you think it's difficult due to finances, my parents were not wealthy when I was homeschooled, homeschooling was NOT popular decades ago in my region. Now there are more resources than ever thought before, regardless of socioeconomic status, it saves money, time, and headaches for school, plus if enough parents get together, you can start a co-op. It's 100% legal, you need no degrees, just do a Google search and see what works best for your child and you.
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Sorry, Griffin, but I gotta play your devil's advocate on "30s is too late for kids" bit.
While I'm sure most people would recommend waiting until your mid-to-late 30s for children, it's not an impossibility, nor is it "too late" to have kids of your own. If you are approaching 30, or are in your early 30s, however, it is definitely something that needs to be considered as a woman. Provided you take good care of your body, fix your diet (which solves SO many problems in the long run -- you can even intermittent fast for some time if necessary!), exercise in ways that are optimal for your body -- especially as women -- and keep in sync with your menstrual cycle (another super important aspect), it should serve you for a pretty long time.
Women, we are literally created, bioengineered to make babies! If you have the capacity to (barring medical anomalies or malfunctions, of course), definitely don't think you're "too late" because all your friends became parents by 25-30 and you're still single, or at least unmarried and have never gotten pregnant. Just think of the typical age of menopause, 30 is hardly "too late."
Signed, single, 30s, childless, woman who just befriended a late 30s new mom.
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The infuriating thing about modern women and is that I'm a woman, in my 30s, and I didn't do the whole body count thing ever. Never dated, focused on studies, dress decently, kept myself (let you figure that out), basically probably socially awkward and "nice." Started off skinny, but 0 female definition, so guys didn't want that. Now I've got all that and then some, still socially awkward, still "nice," still keeping myself, and I still can't even pull a date, meanwhile these 304s are pulling dudes left and right, using them, abusing them, and blackpilling the lights out of them. Don't go crying that you can't find women with some value, men, they're out there. The women prizes are out there, don't settle.
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@jimmcneal5292 Virgin and celibate (waiting for marriage). Not into polygamy or cheating at all. I have no problem with an average guy at this point, but yes. Because I waited so long to figure out how to socialize to work toward marriage, it isn't easy to begin with, plus who would believe a woman my age is a virgin, let alone celibate? I graduated in a job market crash and didn't even think about finding a man because I was concerned about my own finances. Not an excuse just facts. I'm not totally without possibilities, I presume, but I'm only mad at these young girls who go to the other extreme and live promiscuous lifestyles with a more entitled mentality who make it seem more and more like women like me burned themselves out already.
Thankfully, I can cook, and pretty well, too! No specialties, per se, but I can at the very least take a recipe online and enhance it.
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Advice for the men looking to go MGTOW/Passport: check out a local Church. I don't particularly mean these huge, production-style churches, necessarily (though there's no shortage of single women there, either), I mean a down-to-earth, smaller, more traditional church. Lots of single women are in Church, and in smaller, more traditional Churches, there are single women who want to be married, who want to be wives and mothers, hold traditional and Christian values / gender norms, and have strong fathers or father figures in their lives. Even if you don't find a woman you want, you can learn a lot attending the services that can help you grow as a man. Get involved in men's groups, if there are any. Good luck on your journeys, fellas!
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The biggest problem I'm seeing more and more with women, especially as a woman who's trying to transition out of this masculine rat race, is that women are defining education, resources and success with things that a man typically strove for. Instead of learning how to keep a good running home which is a whole thing in and of itself, we're trying to get higher degrees to get higher-paying jobs. Instead of learning how to be able to create good food, clothing, and some savings, we're trying to earn as much money as possible. Instead of working to be good keepers of the home and good loyal wives and strong mothers, we're climbing corporate and academic ladders.
These are huge sweeping general statements, and while it's not inherently wrong to strive for these particular goals as a woman, just know that not every man is looking for these things in a woman, especially if he's trying to gain these things as a man. He needs a supporter, not a competitor.
Just my 🪙🪙.
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