- Joined
- Aug 15, 2018
- Messages
- 563
Article.
Feedback. It's a cool personal story of how Chase coincidentally became better and better with women, so he could abandon his perfume (or deodorant?) and went all natural (no bad scent from nervousness), AND became a self employed entrepreneur at the same time, so he could not have to go to an office, so he could afford to go perfumeless and deodorantless. He has read quite the research as well.
But for most people, these two things (career and becoming Casanova) may not necessarily come hand in hand. Chase, while telling his personal story in the article, didn't really give practical advice to folks who, for girls, could go deodorantless and perfumeless, but for work, cannot.
- Because they like to work in the office, in a startup, they have a team they are passionate with and about their project
- Or they suit up and they sell real estate or whatnot, negotiate with clients, you get the idea
These are two different work scenarios by the way, where you probably shouldn't go completely deodorantless or perfumeless, regardless of how good you are with women. While folks who become better and better with women the same time they start to become more entrepreneurial and working from their home offices, sure, they can relate to Chase's post and may file it as actionable advice. I'm not 100% sure whether it's solid advice if you plan to work from co-working spaces, though.
Bottom line: recommended products for the above two categories of workers, assuming they are good enough with women?
Feedback. It's a cool personal story of how Chase coincidentally became better and better with women, so he could abandon his perfume (or deodorant?) and went all natural (no bad scent from nervousness), AND became a self employed entrepreneur at the same time, so he could not have to go to an office, so he could afford to go perfumeless and deodorantless. He has read quite the research as well.
But for most people, these two things (career and becoming Casanova) may not necessarily come hand in hand. Chase, while telling his personal story in the article, didn't really give practical advice to folks who, for girls, could go deodorantless and perfumeless, but for work, cannot.
- Because they like to work in the office, in a startup, they have a team they are passionate with and about their project
- Or they suit up and they sell real estate or whatnot, negotiate with clients, you get the idea
These are two different work scenarios by the way, where you probably shouldn't go completely deodorantless or perfumeless, regardless of how good you are with women. While folks who become better and better with women the same time they start to become more entrepreneurial and working from their home offices, sure, they can relate to Chase's post and may file it as actionable advice. I'm not 100% sure whether it's solid advice if you plan to work from co-working spaces, though.
Bottom line: recommended products for the above two categories of workers, assuming they are good enough with women?