Some of their most common complaints :
-Being a threat for their physical safety (rape and physical violence against women is much more common in India than in the West)
-Being only interested in quick sex with zero subtility or intrigue (guys inviting them to their room in the dating app chat or asking for nudes after 2 messages, stuff like that)
-Misogyny, treating women like shit in general
-Being clingy, insecure, jealous and overprotective in relationships
-Being mama's boys who can't take a decision without their mother's approval
All of this sounds bad, but Chase is right about stereotypes. If I were Indian, I would immediately frame myself as being a normal, laidback and cool guy who has his shit together, is not a psychopath and has a good track record of positive interactions with women
@Adventurer
Dude, your statement about rape being more common in India than the west is Completely wrong, you need look at these by percentages not actual numbers, you seem to forget India has more people than any other western country, and the rape percentages in India are the least on the planet when compared to the West.
All the other complaints you talk about are common in other countries as well, it's not something that is endemic to India,
I ask you to read the material in this
link and this
link with an open mind, then we can talk again unless I GET BANNED here FOR TALKING THE TRUTH.
No country in the world has gone through what India had to go through
Guys please, asian, Indian, Namek or from planet Orion. Show some pride.
@DarkKnight
I know you mean well, there has been a consistent attempt to eradicate, modify the Indian culture for more than a thousand years (1000+ years) it's happening even now but a lot more subltly, although the attempts have been unsuccessful it has caused plenty of damages and changes in more impressionable people, most people when they talk about India have no idea about the barbarism INDIA had to endure. I can assure you INDIANS ARE PROUD OF OUR CULTURE, OUR CULTURE WAS THE MOST GLORIOUS CULTURE ON THE PLANET and every empire wanted a piece of it.
I'm ~200% Mexican.
I'm a raw, pure, authentic Mexican through and through.
But Every. Single. Person. here...
Thinks I'm Indian...!!!
@ElChe The entire South America has forgotten the several millennia old connections with India, Our Indian Epics dating back to about 12,000 BC talk about these connections. This bond is ancient, we fail to see this bond, but others see it.
You're asking the right question.
Most of the Indian men you will meet in the West possess a noticeably self-consciously superficiality about them. Very status conscious; very focused on presenting themselves as superior, know-it-alls, etc. If they are wrong about something, rather than be chill and humble and gracious about it, they will get defensive or try to one-up you or claim that you are incorrect. They are the consummate
social ladder climbers. They tend to be extremely rigid in their worldviews, too; they are right, everyone else is wrong, and trying to talk with them about anything it is like your words just do not get through. People who don't share their background find all this behavior (know-it-all-ism, posturing, ladder climbing, rigidity of viewpoint, and so on) frustrating and off-putting, so you end up with these stigmas.
Some Indian guys are aware of the stigma, and self-aware enough to detect if/when they are doing it themselves and correct that behavior. The ones able to be aware enough of it to not be like the "stereotypical Indian" and instead be chill,
cool,
humble when it's appropriate, strong and confident without ladder climbing or status jockeying, open-minded and not so rigid, and so on, stand out a lot (and typically lay lots of tail).
If you can be like the latter guy instead of the former, you will absolutely slay overseas.
Chase
@Chase
I think what you say is true, and it is good feedback, has to be taken with a pinch of salt though cause I can see it being misused, and Indians are wary of non-Indians advising them on anything, because of our past experiences with them (1000 + years of invasions)
What you are saying can also be double edged sword, this can be misused, this is similar to labelling someone as "argumentative" irrespective of whether he is or not and when he fights back against the mis labelling people jump in to say exactly.
With the right people with good Intentions, I whole heartedly agree with you.
In my observations, Indian men have it even harder. I don't know how it is in other Western countries, but it feels like the American impression of East Asians is a little more favorable compared to that of Indians. The stereotypes Indians have in the US seem to be somewhat more sexually invalidating, such as the perverted Indian men who hit on Western women on social media (show
bobs and vegana, milk truck has arrived, etc.).
@Michael Chief
I'm not saying Indians do not have a lot to improve, true there is much to improve, but what I want others to Understand is that, 1000 + years of invasions has changed the psyche of India radically, it is going to take trust and time to change that image. We know media always portray a narrative, this narrative has never painted India well.
The accent might be a big one. The Western perception is that accents that emphasize vowels and have less stress on consonants are sexier. Accents that emphasize consonants and shorten the vowels are a turn-off. This is why French is stereotyped to be the sexiest or most romantic language. I'm not sure if there seems to be a higher proportion of East Asians in the US without an Asian accent compared to Indians without an Indian accent, but the American psyche has been exposed to the Indian accent so much with even more negative associations via scammers from Indian call centers and such. Fortunately, you can change your accent. A lot of people who have never met me but have heard my voice assume I'm white.
I had an Indian fraternity brother in college who did well very with women. Culturally, you could not tell the difference between him and any other American. He was muscular. He had absolutely zero traces of an Indian accent. He had confidence. He was masculine. He was social and smooth; he had game. If you saw him or talked to him, you wouldn't even think of the word "Indian." He did better with girls than most of us. There is no reason to have sympathy for him.
What you are basically saying is take an Indian, remove the Indianess or the Indian culture in him, aka make him "American" then the woman will accept him.
If an Indian wants to do well with woman outside of India, what you suggest might be the easiest way.
I ask you to go through this
link and this
link