Do You Agree?: Guy Explains Why Cross-Gender Friendships Don't Work
Why Cross-Gender Friendships Don't work - From a guy's point of view
It is weird that a lot of people see this question and answer that it is
selfishness (mostly on the part of the guys). People mostly believe
that at some point in a male-female relationship, the man gets attracted
to the woman and tries to take it somewhere he should not due to the
fact that he cannot control himself and that puts the friendship in
danger. The same thing also happens in a lot of relationships.
Women have come to call men inconsiderate and perverted because a lot of
men will not do anything for a woman without asking for some kind of
sexual gratification and it seems true as a lot of men can start with a woman as friends but along the line start acting funny.
This sounds selfish, it sounds like the guys don't want to do things
without strings but has anyone ever wondered what happens to make the
men change their atitude? It is not greed, selfishness or being a
pervert? It is simple balance.
It is not weird to hear guys say, I will rather spend or do this for my
(male) friends that a female one because when I am broke, the male ones
are the ones I can go crash with. The third law of motion is clear on
this "To every action, there (should be) is an equal reaction" and we
all know nature has a way of balancing things out.
When a guy and girl are friends, the girl runs to the guy for things
i.e, when she wants to change her tire, when she needs to move
furniture, when she needs his opinion on a project at work, an
assignment, she needs advice about her BF or she needs him to drive her
somewhere far away perhaps she even needs a favor very huge. Guess what?
The guy obliges and he does so only for him to get a miserable "Thanks,
you are the best".......the guy gets just that.
Oral appreciation and she thinks it is cool cos she has said "thanks"
and they are friends but there is no balance. Over time, this goes on
and the guy gives and give while she gives nothing and at some point,
the guy sits down and wonders to himself "Am I being used?".
It even becomes worse if the girl used to be single and then she gets
involved with another guy (the male friend might be interested but he
was willing to let it go) and then as a result of the relationship, she
stays away from him because "she wants the relationship to work" or "not
pass a wrong signal to her new guy" so the guy in a way gets dumped.
He now does not just feels "used" but "dumped". He sits back and wonders
what powers where at work when he sacrificed his time, maybe money,
mental ability and emotions to get her to this point and she goes off
prancing after another man and he thinks to himself "Never again".
He tells himself he would never allow any woman do that to him again and
since most times he needs help, he does not need a woman, he goes for
the next best thing SEX. When any girl asks for anything, he asks for
sex before doing it to avoid being used. Can we blame him? Of course
not.
Women need to learn that that a dude that leaves his friends to listen
to you talk can be somewhere else. He can be with his friends gisting
about Beyoncè's bossoms or J Lo's backside but he is there to "fix" you.
You don't have to kiss him but a CD of his favorite rap artiste once a
while, a pair of socks, a text once a while, remembering his birthday
and buying him something (even a card), making some stew and taking it
to him at home, a body spray.
The smallest things work wonders in making him feel appreciated and will
go a long way in making guys change their minds about female friends
being "useless" and "uncaring".
I don't even know why this should be said as it should go without
saying. It is not a crime to appreciate your friends. It is a crime to
not appreciate them as it just makes you a user and guess what? No one
likes a user but with a lot of guys, it goes beyond that. It is a matter
of "All girls are users". Hence your silly action of being
unappreciative is ruining the chance of another guy helping a girl who
is in need (butterfly effect. Topic for later).
So the next time that male friend you have always depended on starts
acting funny around you. Perhaps he starts giving cheeky excuses or
starts avoiding you, ask yourself if you have been a good friend back in
bringing something into the friendship.
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