• sumguyonline@lemmy.world
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    27 days ago

    2yrs ago I literally just said “you look nice, and it’s cold out so good for you putting in the effort” as I was walking the opposite direction as a strange woman. DO NOT DO THAT, recognize for yourself that they are there, but do not acknowledge people. She threw a hissy fit and tried to make it look like I was harassing her, her fat but much nicer friend whom I also complimented took it well and said “it is cold”, the pretty bitch literally started walking like a dinosaur and had a meltdown because I just left. You don’t need these people. Just act like they are an annoyance to even be in your presence and get a dog or two. It’s better that way, permanently.

    • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      Oops you fucked up a social interaction and converted your own fuck up to misogyny instead. Don’t do that. You’ll continue to fuck it up and forever reinforce your own downward spiral to misogyny.

    • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      27 days ago

      you look nice

      weird and creepy, but okay

      it’s cold out so good for you putting in the effort

      okay, you’re lucky you kept your intact nose that day

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      Uh, I wouldn’t comment on passing strangers like that, especially not wording it like “so good for you putting in the effort.” The issue of randomly bringing up their appearance aside, it sounds condescending.

      Like… just say hi.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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      27 days ago

      Probably next time just say ‘Hey, nice dress!’ or ‘You look stunning!’ and then just keep walking on.

      ‘You look nice’, in that context, a fleeting interaction, walking past a group of people you don’t know, who don’t know you, is creepy.

      Its like the stereotypical creepy guy thing to say.

      Following it up with a lengthy explanation and getting the whole group involved is even worse.

      ‘Good on you for putting in the effort’ is infantilizing, and implies that they normally don’t.

      I agree that throwing a hissy fit and stomping away is an immature, rude overreaction, but you did actually stop and continue the interaction with her friend, thus basically from her perspective being awkward, then insulting, then starting an argument, when her and her friend were presumably… going somewhere, to do something, probably within a specific time frame.

      You easily could have just kept walking (which ironically is the actual advice you end with), instead of trying to defend yourself… and you’ve got to be a bit more competent in formulating a succinct, quick compliment when the context is ‘randomly walking past a complete stranger.’

    • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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      26 days ago

      well i’ve made the experience that people who could be considered “pretty” by social beauty standards are more likely to be mean.

      the way i explain it is through the “ideal bonding distance” theory. in chemistry, if you have two atoms forming a molecule, they typically keep a certain distance from one another. In society, something similar is happening. People like to have a certain distance from one another. If it’s too big, they’ll try to get closer to other people. If it’s too close, they try to push other people away. Since “pretty” people make the experience a lot that other people try to come way to close to them (for their own liking), they develop a habit of, in general, pushing people away, thus the mean appearance. People who don’t build that habit (because they don’t need it), are nicer in general, i would say.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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        25 days ago

        I don’t think your analogy really works, its overly complex.

        You’re basically describing the concept of people being in, or out, of another person’s ‘league’, the idea that social dynamics can become unbalanced when there is a wide disparity in percieved attractiveness between members of a group, or relationship, which is more pronounced the more people judge/evaluate others more heavily by outward appearance.

        …but, it is an empircally validated fact that people who are percieved as more beautiful get more leeway in social interactions, have an easier time being hired, are used to receiving more praise, have an easier time manipulating others, have anneasier time making friends, are more likely to be forgiven or punished less for an offense than people who are percieved as unattractive.

        Being pretty doesn’t just directly cause narcissism at some kind of purely deterministic, genetic level, but the way that society treats prettier people encourages them to become narcissistic.

        But also, unattractive people who are narcissistic, manipulative and mean often figure out that prettier people have pretty privelege, and will focus on making themselves appear prettier, so as to have an easier time being narcissistic, manipulative and mean.

        There are pretty people who aren’t mean, but yes, in general, prettier people are more likely to be mean.