In short, to anyone with dating experience, “nice guy” sounds like “essentially lackluster, if largely unobjectionable male person.” And this is what you’re presenting as your best trait. This is what you aspire to. Now, I hear some of you complaining “women always say they want a nice guy.” I know lots of women — I’m even related to a few — and I can’t say I’ve ever heard any of them say that. I can’t prove it, but this sounds like one of those things stand-up comedians say about women and everyone else just repeats. I’ve also never known a woman who cries when she breaks a nail — although I’ve known a few who swear like a 15-year-old sailor in jail — and I’ve never had a woman ask me if her outfit made her look fat unless she actually wanted and subsequently appreciated my opinion. So either I’ve stumbled upon a secret trove of women who aren’t passive-aggressive sob machines, or you need to stop mistaking Dane Cook routines for peer-reviewed sociological studies. At any rate, if a woman does say “I just wish I could find a nice guy,” I would suggest this is the equivalent of “I’m so hungry I could eat a horse.” Which is to say, she’s not hoping you’ll say, “You’re in luck, I have a dead horse in my backyard!” The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis states that the way you use language shapes your perception of the world. (This should not be confused with the Sapir-Worf hypothesis, which states that the Romulans are lying and we should raise shields.) So maybe you’d become a better person if you started by not using such a flaccid, pallid term to refer to yourself. Here’s my suggestion: Instead of trying to be a nice guy, aspire to be a good man. You might be surprised at the results.
Alt Text: Taking Another Look at the Myth of the ‘Nice Guy’ | Underwire | Wired.com (via bulletinaweave)
I like this.
(via nautilid)
Yup, into this. I’ve said this many times, but I’m constantly annoyed with people who say, “You just need a nice boy” to single women, or “Why don’t you like him? He’s so nice!” to women who reject men. It’s also still a little weird to me when the first question people ask about my boyfriend is if he’s nice. I get the impulse of wanting to make sure someone’s partner is treating them well. That’s incredibly important, to be sure. But while my boyfriend IS incredibly nice, it’s far from being the only wonderful quality he has and if that were his only good quality, certainly I wouldn’t be dating him. And I just figure that should be a given, right? To respect that women have enough judgement of character to only date guys who are nice? Not that I haven’t dated some assholes but I’m not entirely sure that “nice” and “treats you well” are necessarily even the same thing…