Thanks for sharing. that post you shared was far more useful than I could have imagined from a single blog post . There's a book called "mate be the guy women want" that has very similar advice but goes into far more details and fleshes out a lot more things in a very similar vein. It includes the idea that men can overpower women but not as a viscerally as this gorilla analogy.
A word of warning the writing style stinks of PUA vibes. it's the kind of book where if you flip to any random page and read a paragraph you'd thinking it's disgusting but if you actually read it page to page you'll see it's similar to the post above
Right. There’s lots of books out there along these lines — not everything in the PUA community is wrong — some of this is basic seduction going back to the days of Casanova. But, like you, I think the key difference was Brangus’ framing using the gorilla analogy. It’s visual, visceral, and puts the guy reading it in a position of understanding power dynamics in a way that ‘you’re bigger and stronger, don’t be a dick’ probably doesn’t.
I’m glad you enjoyed the post, and thank you as always for reading and sharing such insightful comments.
Thanks for sharing. that post you shared was far more useful than I could have imagined from a single blog post . There's a book called "mate be the guy women want" that has very similar advice but goes into far more details and fleshes out a lot more things in a very similar vein. It includes the idea that men can overpower women but not as a viscerally as this gorilla analogy.
A word of warning the writing style stinks of PUA vibes. it's the kind of book where if you flip to any random page and read a paragraph you'd thinking it's disgusting but if you actually read it page to page you'll see it's similar to the post above
Right. There’s lots of books out there along these lines — not everything in the PUA community is wrong — some of this is basic seduction going back to the days of Casanova. But, like you, I think the key difference was Brangus’ framing using the gorilla analogy. It’s visual, visceral, and puts the guy reading it in a position of understanding power dynamics in a way that ‘you’re bigger and stronger, don’t be a dick’ probably doesn’t.
I’m glad you enjoyed the post, and thank you as always for reading and sharing such insightful comments.