I've noticed this a few times now, particularly with older (and more left-wing) women, that they express hatred for the martial arts bordering on the vitriolic.
I was watching the UFC at my aunts house and she loudly expressed her disgust and said she didn't want it playing there. Another time I was talking about Muay Thai at a dinner party, describing some fights I had seen in Thailand. Two older women there became noticeably uncomfortable, expressed their disapproval and tried to change the subject.
I know first-hand that many women absolutely love watching fighting, they lap it up greedily and scream louder than most men in the crowd. I'm convinced there is some primal pull that women have where they love watching competition to see who will be the winner, it gets them horny.
So why are these women getting so uncomfortable about it? Here's my theory (ironically coming from an MMA perspective).
In MMA the advantage goes to the opponent who can keep the conflict in an area where he is more adept than his opponent. For example, an expert grappler would want to keep the fight on the ground while fighting an expert striker who has poor ground game.
In the social realm women have a natural advantage through words and controlling the narrative due to their ability to flip logic on its head and rationalize things very quickly. In the physical realm men have the advantage through superior hand-eye coordination, better logic and planning and brute physical strength.
The natural balance of power between men and women was traditionally maintained with men's physical power on one side and women's power of manipulation and logic-trapping on the other. In modern society men have been completely neutered of their physical power, making the battlefield lopsided in favour of the feminine.
Fighting makes these women subconsciously recoil because it demonstrates an area of conflict that they know they are outclassed in. By suppressing and demonizing physical conflict they are more effectively able to keep the social power struggle in the realm of words and their narrative, i.e. where they have the upper hand. Glorification of martial arts represents physical dominance in it's purest form, I think that's why it makes these women uncomfortable.
Interested to hear RVF's thoughts on this.
I was watching the UFC at my aunts house and she loudly expressed her disgust and said she didn't want it playing there. Another time I was talking about Muay Thai at a dinner party, describing some fights I had seen in Thailand. Two older women there became noticeably uncomfortable, expressed their disapproval and tried to change the subject.
I know first-hand that many women absolutely love watching fighting, they lap it up greedily and scream louder than most men in the crowd. I'm convinced there is some primal pull that women have where they love watching competition to see who will be the winner, it gets them horny.
So why are these women getting so uncomfortable about it? Here's my theory (ironically coming from an MMA perspective).
In MMA the advantage goes to the opponent who can keep the conflict in an area where he is more adept than his opponent. For example, an expert grappler would want to keep the fight on the ground while fighting an expert striker who has poor ground game.
In the social realm women have a natural advantage through words and controlling the narrative due to their ability to flip logic on its head and rationalize things very quickly. In the physical realm men have the advantage through superior hand-eye coordination, better logic and planning and brute physical strength.
The natural balance of power between men and women was traditionally maintained with men's physical power on one side and women's power of manipulation and logic-trapping on the other. In modern society men have been completely neutered of their physical power, making the battlefield lopsided in favour of the feminine.
Fighting makes these women subconsciously recoil because it demonstrates an area of conflict that they know they are outclassed in. By suppressing and demonizing physical conflict they are more effectively able to keep the social power struggle in the realm of words and their narrative, i.e. where they have the upper hand. Glorification of martial arts represents physical dominance in it's purest form, I think that's why it makes these women uncomfortable.
Interested to hear RVF's thoughts on this.
My blog: https://fireandforget.co
"There's something primal about choking a girl. I always choke a girl as soon as possible after meeting her, it never fails to get the pussy juices flowing."