The Other Worlds Shrine

Your place for discussion about RPGs, gaming, music, movies, anime, computers, sports, and any other stuff we care to talk about... 

  • I don't feel like writing six separate messages, so I'm going to reply to everybody's concerns below in one swoop.

  • Somehow, we still tolerate each other. Eventually this will be the only forum left.
Somehow, we still tolerate each other. Eventually this will be the only forum left.
 #16481  by Agent 57
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 12:01 pm
<div style='font: 9pt ; text-align: left; '>I'll start with what Sine said about my old relationship.

<i>"I saw two problems with your relationship. One, it sounded like it was based around attraction. Stuff like "we get blown away by this cute new transfer" or "I had another beautiful girl chasing after me" or "full-fledged puppy love". That's all fine and dandy, AS LONG AS SOMETHING ELSE IS THERE! I didn't hear anything like how she had a great personality, or sense of humor, or the things you share. Being there as a boyfriend and being there as a husband are two different things. It's deeper. It's not puppy love, like you refered to it. It's knowing that no matter what, she will be there for you, even if you are maimed for life or lose your job or whatever. It's trust. It's devotion. It's domestication, the thing you so feared."</i>

First, I was describing the bare outlines and history of the time we spent together. I didn't have time to include every single detail when the more important thing I was trying to do was empathize with Eric and show him that I was as deep as he was and I turned out okay.

Second, you did a fantastic job of reading selectively, only focusing on the first part of the description, and then missing the point completely. Did you miss the part about how I spent every waking moment taking care of her when she was sick? Did you miss the part where I helped her move and stored half of her stuff in my car all summer? I also didn't mention that from the moment we started discussing marriage we were ostensibly living together - we didn't officially have the same rooms on campus, but we spent every night together, left stuff in each other's apartments, did each other's laundry, etc. I also didn't mention how we sang in our groups together, watched all 95 episodes of Rurouni Kenshin together, spent major holidays together...I could go on and on.

The point which I was trying to make clear to Eric in my original post and that you missed <i>spectacularly</i> as evidenced by the last sentence of your paragraph, is that I *did* domesticate myself for this girl. Completely and totally, <b>because I didn't know then what I know now</b>. And I ended up getting burned because when I did that, I domesticated myself to the point that there was love, but no attraction.

What I've just realized while writing this is that I think the reason you are disagreeing with me is that you seem to think that attraction and love for the same person are mutually exclusive. They're not! And that's really the whole key to what I was trying to tell Eric in the second half of my original post, although it's obvious I didn't make myself clear. The process that I was trying to describe to Eric, and that I myself am trying to use in my search for a relationship, is:

1) meet and attract
2) fall in love
3) keep doing the things that attracted in the first place

And step 3 does not mean never doing the dishes or refusing to settle down. Being attractive in a relationship is all about the "inner game" - your attitude and personality. Here's an excerpt from one of the newsletters I get from David D. that might help explain what I mean:

<b>1. Most men behave like WUSSIES when it comes to women and dating.

2. Women NEVER feel the powerful and magical emotion called ATTRACTION for WUSSIES.

So let's take them one at a time.

WHAT exactly IS a WUSSY?

A Wussy is a guy who kisses up to women.

A Wussy is a guy who does whatever a woman wants him to do, and doesn't even know if or when a woman is testing him.

A Wussy is a guy who accepts manipulative behavior from women, and doesn't care if a woman flakes out
on him, takes advantage of him, or acts overly dramatic around him.

A Wussy is a guy who has no backbone, and caves when challenged by a woman.

A Wussy is a guy who feels that he needs to BUY or PAY FOR a woman's attention and affection with
gifts, dinners, compliments, and other forms of payment and flattery...because he can't imagine that a woman
would want to be with him just for HIM.

In short, a WUSSY is a submissive man who tries to compensate for his lack of ability to attract women
by being overly accommodating and generous.

NEWS JUST IN: MOST MEN ACT LIKE WUSSIES!

And if that wasn't bad enough, here's the REALLY bad news: Women will NEVER feel ATTRACTION for this
kind of behavior, or this kind of guy!

(If you even doubt what I'm saying for a SECOND, then try this simple test: Find 3 attractive women,
and ask them if they ever feel a gut-level ATTRACTION for guys who kiss up to them and act like Wussies, and
watch what they say.)

Want some even WORSE news?

When this kind of tactic doesn't work for a guy, he'll usually TRY HARDER, and become even MORE of a
WUSSY to make a girl like him... and the more a girl runs away, the more a WUSSY most guys become.

YOU DO THE MATH and figure out the outcome of this equation.

It totally blows my mind how a guy will kiss up to a woman and watch with HIS OWN TWO EYES as she
becomes more and more distant... and instead of him realizing that it's his own WUSS behavior that's causing
the woman to run away he just keeps doing it... AND EVEN INCREASING IT!

And I think that MOST guys go their whole lives without realizing this critical insight.

[...skipping ahead a bit...]

4. Men are NOTORIOUS for showing their "non-Wuss" side early on, but then somehow turning into a woman's
worst nightmare Wuss Boy as the relationship progresses.</b>

Okay? Do I make any sense now? What I was trying to say, based on what I read of Eric's post and my own experience, is that after we fell in love with our respective girls, we domesticated ourselves to the point of turning into Wussies, and ended up losing them because there was love, but no attraction. Eric and I trusted our girls, yes, but our trust was based on incomplete information. If you don't know that attraction is more powerful than love and you don't know that acting like a Wussy will kill any attraction your lover has for you, you're leaving the door open to the possibility of being hurt.

One of David D.'s favorite expressions is "Attraction is not a choice." Acting on it when you're already in a committed relationship is (from what I gathered, however, Eric's girl broke up with him before she did anything besides have feelings for this other guy), and I do of course place some fault on the girl for that. All I said was that it wasn't ALL her fault - if Eric had done what I should have done and not turned into a Wussy, there would have been attraction for Eric in this girl as well as love and she wouldn't have been tempted by the other guy in the first place. Eric agrees with me, why can't you?

Regardless of what the majority of player literature has to say (which you are incredibly prejudiced against, for no reason I might add, since it's all advice and can be taken however the reader wants to take it), what I'VE learned from studying seduction is that you can be in a committed, loving relationship WITHOUT being a Wussy.

Which brings me to another point...

<i>"The trick is getting the right types that would actually go for the long haul. In that respect, chasing after the bombshells isn't the best idea. In general, the level of commitment (and personality/intelligence) is inversely proportional to how good her body is.</i>

That is <i>bullshit</i>. That's the kind of self-limiting, stupid bullshit that causes guys everywhere to settle for less. When they're ready to go long-term, guys who think like you figure "well, regardless of the problems we have, this is the best I'm going to do, may as well stick with it instead of a girl I'd rather have who I might be even happier with." Hell, it's guys believing crap like this that fosters situations ripe for male infidelity (for those who have less self-control than you, of course). The point here is that if you know how to keep a girl attracted to you after you've fallen in love - i.e. if you know how to not act like a Wussy - if you and your girl are truly compatible, you never have to worry about losing her.

Okay, that's the first part taken care of. *phew*

<hr>

Next, Seraphina. Let me give you a hypothetical situation.

Let's say I'm standing in a gigantic parking lot, with cars stretching as far as the eye can see, and I need to take the front tire off a car until I find a tire that I really, really like. When I first showed up at the parking lot, somebody handed me a socket wrench with a socket already attached to it, and there's a box with the rest of the sockets on the ground next to me. I try my wrench on a whole bunch of the cars around me, but it doesn't work on any of the bolts - not only that, most of the bolts seem to be the same size.

In this situation, would you suggest I wander aimlessly around the parking lot until I find a car that my wrench just happens to fit, or should I go back to the tool box and change the dumb socket?


Here's another, possibly more apt example. You're raising a child who behaves incredibly rudely in social situations. Do you change his behavior so that he's suitable for company, or do you let him ruin function after function until you find a group who laughs and says "What a cute little tyke?"

<hr>

Kupek...

You seem to be focusing most on taking what I intended to be generalizations and discounting them completely because they're not infallible or don't precisely apply to a particular situation. Of course what I'm talking about doesn't apply to ALL women and ALL men and ALL relationships. But it does apply to MOST women and MOST men, and David D. says so repeatedly in his materials (heck, he even says it in the excerpt I clipped above, which was part of the email I forwarded to you).

Perhaps I phrased things wrong when I mentioned that these are theories. The people I've read and learned from didn't learn all this stuff by sitting at home and making guesses. They <i>talked</i> to women. They've figured things out from countless conversations and experiences, and yes, even sitting down and brazenly asking women "So what kinds of things do you find attractive?"

You've been quick to discount all the things I've been saying, and you've been backing yourself up mostly by saying "I don't think..." As I stated when I made my initial rebuttal - you are ONE person. I've read and learned from the experiences of HUNDREDS of people (as has David D., he used to be a poster on that newsgroup I mentioned, remember?), and from my point of view, you thinking that your experiences and opinions on this subject are automatically somehow more valid than a large group of people's who have spent at least a million times more time and energy actively studying that subject than you is the height of closeminded arrogance.

I mean, from what I can tell, it's like you're saying that because you changed your oil yourself a couple times, you know more about cars than the entire team of mechanics at the Daytona 500. (I just picked up my new car last week, that must be where all these car metaphors have been coming from.)

There. I've made my replies. Do with them what you will.

Regards,
<i>-57</i></div>
 #16483  by Kupek
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 12:30 pm
<div style='font: 10pt verdana; text-align: left; padding: 0% 10% 0% 10%; '><i>But it does apply to MOST women and MOST men, and David D. says so repeatedly in his materials (heck, he even says it in the excerpt I clipped above, which was part of the email I forwarded to you).</i>

Which I didn't get. My VT account gets insane amounts of spam, I don't really check it anymore.

<i>you thinking that your experiences and opinions on this subject are automatically somehow more valid than a large group of people's who have spent at least a million times more time and energy actively studying that subject than you is the height of closeminded arrogance.</i>

You can believe it's arrogance, but I don't think it is. I think that fundamentally, I'm looking for something different. I reject the idea that we need to (or should) come up with game plans and strategies in order to find someone we love. I know how <i>I</i> am, and how <i>I</i> want to be. Is it arrogance to recognize that something is not for me? As you've noticed, yes, I am drawing on my own experiences and ideas. I don't see anything wrong with that. I don't think that we can learn how to be in a relationship from someone else. It's something we have to learn through experience. You seem hooked up on the concept of attraction in a relationship, while I consider communication the most important thing.

Also, be careful of the "hundreds of people can back this up" line of thinking. Be skeptical of "experts," particularly those that are charging money for their information. There's no rigor behind whatever it is they've come up with.</div>

 #16487  by Eric
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 1:51 pm
<div style='font: 11pt ; text-align: left; '>I'm glad my love life started a Rumination, lol....Ahhh how long before I start naturally laughing again?</div>
 #16488  by Agent 57
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 2:22 pm
<div style='font: 9pt ; text-align: left; '>Here, let me quote something for you.

<b>"I really believe that most men ULTIMATELY want a GREAT relationship with a beautiful, interesting, intelligent woman.

The REASON most guys learn to be more successful with women and dating is to find a GREAT one... not just so they can date a million women.

Sure, some guys just want to date a lot of women, and aren't "relationship" material.

But I believe that probably 90% of guys who study this area of life do so because they want to have OPTIONS when it comes to women and dating... and they want to be able to meet and date more intelligent, attractive, and interesting women... but ULTIMATELY I think that most guys would like to meet a really nice, attractive woman to share a great relationship with."</b>

The previous passage was taken, verbatim, from one of the newsletters, and I agree with it wholeheartedly. Now, forgive me, but if you want something *fundamentally different* than a "GREAT relationship with a beautiful, interesting, intelligent woman," then I don't know what the hell you're on about.


On to something else you mentioned. You say you reject the idea of deliberately learning how to find someone to love. Why? Here, let me quote you something else:

<b>"When it comes to meeting women, a lot of guys seem to be stuck on the concept of "manipulation".

I get a lot of emails that say things like:

"David, your ideas sound like they'd work, but I don't like the idea of "MANIPULATING" a woman..."

"I want a woman to like me for "who I am"... I don't want to be pretending like I'm someone else..."

"I want to "be myself"... I don't like the idea of pretending to be someone that I'm not..."

And I'll tell you, these are all valid points.

I can remember years ago when I was first learning this stuff about how to be successful with women.

I didn't like the idea of trying to become someone that I wasn't just to meet women. Many of the things I was learning didn't feel "natural" to me.

But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that...

I WAS ACTUALLY MANIPULATING WOMEN EVEN WORSE WITH THE THINGS I WAS DOING TO BE "MYSELF."

Let me explain.

Here's a list of some of the things I did in the past when trying to attract women:

1) Buying food
2) Buying flowers
3) Buying <A TITLE="Click for more information about gift" STYLE="text-decoration: none; border-bottom: medium solid green;" HREF="http://search.targetwords.com/u.search? ... >gift</A>s
4) Acting "nice" even when I didn't feel like it
5) Accepting manipulative behavior from women
6) Letting women talk me into things I didn't want to do
7) Taking women places to impress them
8) Kissing up to women to get their approval
9) Listening to women's problems when I didn't want to

And the list goes on and on...

My point is simple:

I (AND MOST OF THE GUYS I KNOW) HAVE BEEN DOING THINGS TO MANIPULATE WOMEN ALL OF OUR LIVES, BUT
BECAUSE MOST OF THESE THINGS ARE SEEN AS "SOCIALLY ACCEPTABLE", EXPECTED BY THE WOMAN, OR AS "BEING
OURSELVES" WE DON'T SEE IT FOR WHAT IT PLAINLY IS:

MANIPULATION."</b>

I was also the same way as you when I first started studying - when I read my first player guide, in fact, I was horrified. But after doing a lot of reading, I started to come around to another point of view.

Here's yet another metaphor to illustrate what I mean:

Two guys, who both want to quit their jobs and work the stock market for a living but need a million dollars in capital to start, each suddenly inherit $10000. One of them takes the money and goes to work building his own business, learning economics and marketing, strategizing about how to best grow his money, and he works at it, steadily. The other guy sticks the money in the bank and goes about his life as normal, wishing that he had that million dollars. At the end of five years, the business has earned the first guy a million dollars in profit, while the second guy's bank makes an error and one day when he checks his balance, it tells him he has a million dollars.

They now both have a million dollars. Is the business owner's million somehow tainted because he didn't just *happen* to get it? Is the second man's million worth more because it just sort of came into his life?

I would say no. In fact, I would say that the business owner would appreciate his million even more because he deliberately worked to get it, and his effort produced what he wanted in life. And, on the contrary, the second guy doesn't even know how he got his million dollars in the first place, doesn't know any legitimate way to ensure that he keeps it, and the bank could find their error and take the million away at any time.

The same thing applies to relationships, but the social programming most guys grow up with for some reason has the situations reversed - we think that the guy who just happens to find a wonderful girl who happens to like him enough to start a relationship is the way to go, and somebody who puts conscious effort into improving himself and finding a mate is doing it unnaturally. As I've tried to explain through the above metaphor, <i>this makes no sense</i>.


I'd also like to respond to your point that I seem hooked up on attraction. The reason why I mention it so often is because the concept of ATTRACTION (the capitalized version) is completely foreign to guys who are either not good with women in the first place or have gotten burned in long-term relationships like Eric and I. The reason why I haven't mentioned communication is because it's a complete no-brainer in just about any relationship, and that includes something as simple as friends. Communication, trust, devotion, and all those sorts of things are things that are always present in any long-term relationship, but more often than not it's a lack of attraction that causes relationships to get boring and, ultimately, to fall apart, and no amount of communication is going to save a relationship where there's no feeling of attraction.

Why do you think the stereotypical depiction of marriage is boring, sexless routine? Why is the divorce rate so high? Because most men, who don't know what ATTRACTION is, don't know how they attracted their spouses in the first place, and just sort of lucked into their relationships (as you seem to want to do), also don't know how to elicit attraction in their lovers when the early excitement of the relationship wears off. It's really that simple.


Finally, I'll respond to your skepticism of my sources. The seduction newsgroup I used to read is completely free - it's just a community of guys trying to learn from each other. The moderated version that I visited was particularly strict about who they let post what - they bitched out and/or deleted any posts/posters who didn't bring anything constructive to the discussion.

David D., as I've mentioned at least twice, was a poster on that newsgroup, and his materials are almost unanimously recommended by the posters there. Here's the important thing about his stuff: his newsletters are also absolutely free. True, a little while after I signed up I bought his $40 ebook, but I haven't really read it in quite a while because it has more in the way of specific things to do and say, while the newsletters do a very good job of outlining the important concepts which I feel is the most important part of what he has to say.

Okay. I've listened to your objections and stated my case. What you do from here is up to you. I would recommend you go to doubleyourdating.net, sign up for the free newsletters, and read them for a month. After a month, if you still think that doing things your way is the way to go, then I wish you good luck (you'll need it).

Regards,
<i>-57</i></div>

 #16489  by Lox
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 3:21 pm
<div style='font: bold 9pt ; text-align: left; '>I signed up for the newsletter out of curiousity. I'll give it a try just to see if it'll help me keep my relationship with my g/f strong.</div>
 #16491  by Shellie
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 6:56 pm
<div style='font: 10pt georgia; text-align: left; '>
Next, Seraphina. Let me give you a hypothetical situation.
Let's say I'm standing in a gigantic parking lot, with cars stretching as far as the eye can see, and I need to take the front tire off a car until I find a tire that I really, really like. When I first showed up at the parking lot, somebody handed me a socket wrench with a socket already attached to it, and there's a box with the rest of the sockets on the ground next to me. I try my wrench on a whole bunch of the cars around me, but it doesn't work on any of the bolts - not only that, most of the bolts seem to be the same size.
What was wrong with the original tire? It got you where you needed to go. Whats different about the tire you really want? Is it flashier to impress your friends? That original tire may have not been as flashy as the new one, but how do you know if the new one will be dependable and not blow out on you at the wrong moment?
In this situation, would you suggest I wander aimlessly around the parking lot until I find a car that my wrench just happens to fit, or should I go back to the tool box and change the dumb socket?
I really, really hate analogies...you cant compare women to tires...

Here's another, possibly more apt example. You're raising a child who behaves incredibly rudely in social situations. Do you change his behavior so that he's suitable for company, or do you let him ruin function after function until you find a group who laughs and says "What a cute little tyke?"
</div>

Now, granted if you're a homicidal maniac, yeah, you might want to change that before attempting to get a wife/gf/whatever. But, if youre the nerdy type, vain, lazy, just a little too thrifty, or whatever...find someone who suits you and meshes with you well. Because in the end, you cant really change what has been embedded into you. You will fall back into whatever bad habits you tried so hard to change in the beginning to attract the girl. You think breaking up after 3 years is bad? Try further down the road when you have kids and a house.

However there are always exceptions to the rule and I have no idea what specific things you changed about yourself.

Even if you feel there is something about you that you need to change, change it for yourself, dont change because of some girl.

This also applies somewhat to what you were saying about guys trying to "buy" his girl to keep her happy which I do agree with what you said. Flowers were a nice gesture when we were dating, but after 3 years, if you really want to do something nice for me, do the dishes for me, or let me watch my show instead of the show you want to watch but know I hate. That's worth more to me than a fancy necklace or a dozen roses. That can also be abused though and the girl shouldnt demand to have everything done for her, and dominate the household(I think this is what you mean by a guy being a "wussy" or "pussy whipped").

The newsletter and everything you said about changing yourself and not being a wussy..it reminds me of that movie Magnolia:

Respect the cock! And tame the cunt! Tame it! Take it on headfirst with the skills that I will tech you at work and say no! You will not control me! No! You will not take my soul! No! You will not win this game! Because it's a game, guys. You want to think it's not, huh? You want to think it's not? Go back to the schoolyard and you have that crush on big-titted Mary Jane. Respect the cock. You are embedding this thought. I am the one who's in charge. I am the one who says yes! No! Now! Here! Because it's universal, man. It is evolutional. It is anthropological. It is biological. It is animal. We...are...men!</div>
 #16492  by Shellie
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 7:01 pm
<div style='font: 10pt georgia; text-align: left; '>
Next, Seraphina. Let me give you a hypothetical situation.
Let's say I'm standing in a gigantic parking lot, with cars stretching as far as the eye can see, and I need to take the front tire off a car until I find a tire that I really, really like. When I first showed up at the parking lot, somebody handed me a socket wrench with a socket already attached to it, and there's a box with the rest of the sockets on the ground next to me. I try my wrench on a whole bunch of the cars around me, but it doesn't work on any of the bolts - not only that, most of the bolts seem to be the same size.
What was wrong with the original tire? It got you where you needed to go. Whats different about the tire you really want? Is it flashier to impress your friends? That original tire may have not been as flashy as the new one, but how do you know if the new one will be dependable and not blow out on you at the wrong moment?
In this situation, would you suggest I wander aimlessly around the parking lot until I find a car that my wrench just happens to fit, or should I go back to the tool box and change the dumb socket?
I really, really hate metaphors...you cant compare women to tires...

Here's another, possibly more apt example. You're raising a child who behaves incredibly rudely in social situations. Do you change his behavior so that he's suitable for company, or do you let him ruin function after function until you find a group who laughs and says "What a cute little tyke?"
</div>

Now, granted if you're a homicidal maniac, yeah, you might want to change that before attempting to get a wife/gf/whatever. But, if youre the nerdy type, vain, lazy, just a little too thrifty, or whatever...find someone who suits you and meshes with you well. Because in the end, you cant really change what has been embedded into you. You will fall back into whatever bad habits you tried so hard to change in the beginning to attract the girl. You think breaking up after 3 years is bad? Try further down the road when you have kids and a house.

However there are always exceptions to the rule and I have no idea what specific things you changed about yourself.

Even if you feel there is something about you that you need to change, change it for yourself, dont change because of some girl.

This also applies somewhat to what you were saying about guys trying to "buy" his girl to keep her happy which I do agree with what you said. Flowers were a nice gesture when we were dating, but after 3 years, if you really want to do something nice for me, do the dishes for me, or let me watch my show instead of the show you want to watch but know I hate. That's worth more to me than a fancy necklace or a dozen roses. That can also be abused though and the girl shouldnt demand to have everything done for her, and dominate the household(I think this is what you mean by a guy being a "wussy" or "pussy whipped").

The newsletter and everything you said about changing yourself and not being a wussy..it reminds me of that movie Magnolia:

Respect the cock! And tame the cunt! Tame it! Take it on headfirst with the skills that I will tech you at work and say no! You will not control me! No! You will not take my soul! No! You will not win this game! Because it's a game, guys. You want to think it's not, huh? You want to think it's not? Go back to the schoolyard and you have that crush on big-titted Mary Jane. Respect the cock. You are embedding this thought. I am the one who's in charge. I am the one who says yes! No! Now! Here! Because it's universal, man. It is evolutional. It is anthropological. It is biological. It is animal. We...are...men!</div>

 #16493  by SineSwiper
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 9:34 pm
<div style='font: 10pt "EngraversGothic BT", "Copperplate Gothic Light", "Century Gothic"; text-align: left; '>This sounds more like a religion than advise.</div>
 #16497  by the Gray
 Fri Jun 04, 2004 10:26 pm
<div style='font: 12pt ; text-align: left; '>But does anyone else besides me feel that age plays a BIG part in this issue?

Damn, I'm only 6 years older than Eric, but I am attracted/interested in a whole different type of female than I was 6 years ago.

Looks, yeah it'll still catch my eye. But it's the substance that carries a whole lot more weight for me now. And not the superficial shit. I'm not an idiot, I know what's an act and what isn't. Or replace act with sincere.

If you're just out to hookup for a night, then yeah this guys theories might be of use. i've never been into that, even when I've had the chance. Tempting, oh so tempting, but I realized it wasn't what I really wanted. And it's not that fuck buddies aren't fun either. I HAVE had those. But there's nothing emotional there, it's a mutually benefitial relationship with no strings attached. Good for relieving stress, but you don't get a lot besides your rocks off once in awhile.

Damn where am I going with this....

Basically, know what type of relationship your looking for.</div>

 #16500  by Kupek
 Sat Jun 05, 2004 1:50 am
<div style='font: 10pt verdana; text-align: left; padding: 0% 10% 0% 10%; '>That similarity struck me as well.</div>

 #16502  by SineSwiper
 Sat Jun 05, 2004 4:46 am
<div style='font: 10pt "EngraversGothic BT", "Copperplate Gothic Light", "Century Gothic"; text-align: left; '>Yeah, age seems to be a huge factor.</div>

 #16504  by Ishamael
 Sat Jun 05, 2004 8:10 pm
<div style='font: 14pt "Sans Serif"; text-align: justify; padding: 0% 15% 0% 15%; '>An unfortunate SIDE EFFECT is the POINTLESS capitalization of RANDOM words. I THINK I'm s</div>

 #16505  by Ishamael
 Sat Jun 05, 2004 8:10 pm
<div style='font: 14pt "Sans Serif"; text-align: justify; padding: 0% 15% 0% 15%; '>An unfortunate SIDE EFFECT is the POINTLESS capitalization of RANDOM words. I think I'm starting to understand how things like Jonestown happen. :)</div>

 #16527  by Gentz
 Sun Jun 06, 2004 12:58 pm
<div style='font: 11pt arial; text-align: left; '>Actually, that's really not bad advice</div>

 #16548  by SineSwiper
 Mon Jun 07, 2004 12:02 am
<div style='font: 10pt "EngraversGothic BT", "Copperplate Gothic Light", "Century Gothic"; text-align: left; '>Funny that I spotted this guy on Bullz Eye. That's like getting relationship advise on Maxim.</div>