Quote: (07-01-2016 06:02 PM)XPQ22 Wrote:
Felicia Day...
...A "5" is basically kinda like her, but with "regular" colored hair in a short hairstyle and like 15-20 pounds overweight.
That's a solid assessment, but I'd flip the hair color. Obviously fake dyed-hair has rapidly-become a signifier of either low sexual value for the fatties, or mental damage for the skinny girls, at least in Australia. Dying your hair green or blue also also now seems to be a very mid-forties thing to do.
This is how I think of it:
A 6 is just your average girl. This is the majority of women you'll meet out there. You might talk to her in a social situation, exchange a few words waiting in line for something, or charm her if she's working reception. You'd probably notice she's a butterface, or could improve her looks a notch with some styling effort, which suggest I'm still thinking of them sexually.
5 is usually-where short hair and dumpiness kicks in. 5 is the invisible side of average. Not noteworthy enough to be outright ugly, via age or excessive weight or disfigurement - just sort of dumpy, plain and there. With that, there's no longer any sexual appraisal from you at all the same way you wouldn't consider banging wallpaper.
Whilst there's something Mom-ish about them, you can't really imagine them as mothers. Instead, they give off an air of belonging on committees, organizing things.
You wouldn't make much of an effort in a social situation, and conversation is brutally-short and directly on point. 5's are the spot where men start treating women the way the majority of women treat men they have no sexual interest in - function-based and goal-serving, and once those needs are met, they cease to exist in your mind.
The 5's natural habitats are the Public Service, Government and Education. It's rare to spot a 6 somewhere like, let's say The Department of Housing, and you'll never see a 7 and above, because those women have no trouble finding private employment.
You'd never mistake a 6 for a trannie, but you might wonder about a 5 in the wrong light.