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Being asked what your star sign is

NiceGuy110

Space Monkey
space monkey
Joined
Aug 9, 2017
Messages
93
I know it shouldn't but this one pisses me me off. I get why women are more into it than men. I think boils down to the fact that they don't want the
pressure of making a decision, so it's easier to let star signs dictate.

Would it be any option to point out the foolishness of star sign crap in a playful way? Don't girls like being called out on their own bullshit?
And I mean the chances are that girls don't really believe it anyway.

Is it best to go with the "why don't you guess what it is" and after she gives her answer, you could then say "how did you know that? you have really
good intuition"!
 

Indian Race Troll (IRT)

Rookie
Rookie
Joined
Jan 5, 2014
Messages
3,353
Women are more open to believing in superstitious stuff than men are, we are more facts and data driven while women are more subjective in thought.

That being said, if you tell a girl you are any of the three signs you are SOL for some reason, heard nothing but bad things about men of the following signs:

1. Capricorn

2. Leo

3. Gemini

Leos seem to be the prototypical sociopath dark triad. Come to think of it, that was the sign of the scumbag at my last company who climbed to the top of the corporate ladder.
 

Fuck This

Cro-Magnon Man
Cro-Magnon Man
Joined
Jul 24, 2015
Messages
2,091
Flip the script. Tell them I am Orion, The Hunter...Then when you isolate her tell her stories about Orion. Take her outside to show her Orion in the sky...

Orion (Ὠρίων in Greek) is the most splendid of constellations, befitting a character who was in legend the tallest and most handsome of men. His right shoulder and left foot are marked by the brilliant stars Betelgeuse and Rigel, with a distinctive line of three stars forming his belt. ‘No other constellation more accurately represents the figure of a man’, says Germanicus Caesar.

Manilius called it ‘golden Orion’ and ‘the mightiest of constellations’, and exaggerated its brilliance by saying that, when Orion rises, ‘night feigns the brightness of day and folds its dusky wings’. Manilius described Orion as ‘stretching his arms over a vast expanse of sky and rising to the stars with no less huge a stride’. In fact, Orion is not an exceptionally large constellation, ranking only 26th in size (smaller, for instance, than Perseus according to the modern constellation boundaries), but the brilliance of its stars gives it the illusion of being much larger.

Orion is also one of the most ancient constellations, being among the few star groups known to the earliest Greek writers such as Homer and Hesiod. Even in the space age, Orion remains one of the few star patterns that non-astronomers can recognize.
 
the right date makes getting her back home a piece of cake
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