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- Jan 24, 2021
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Seduction is at its core about self-expression. Creating a bubble of your own self-expression in which a girl can express herself more freely than she could with anyone else. Self-expression, because it is made up of emotions, is contagious.
Have you ever seen someone at a party do something a little crazy and out there, and suddenly everyone flocks around and becomes animated and tries to join in? This is because being around that person, feeling their lack of inhibition and willingness to show the world who they are, creates the same impulse in the crowd.
But what about when you go to a party, or go out to meet girls, and you cannot get anyone to engage with you? Their expressions flicker with alarm when it looks like you might be about to interact with them, and they will close off their body language and move away. Or maybe you can start a conversation, but there is no intimacy, you cannot create any impulse in them to come closer and open up to you, and they appear to dither on the edge between walking away and continuing to talk with you. No matter how much you talk, things go nowhere.
The overwhelmingly common reason behind this is because of your internal conflict. Internal conflict is absolute poison for seduction and any kind of social interaction. And on the other side of the coin, uninhibited, free-flowing self expression is like a magnet, a hypnotic attractive force that creates an often unconscious desire in others to come closer and express themselves in kind.
…
I don’t want to get too much into the weeds of social dynamics, but the way I see it, one of the primary driving forces behind any kind of social attraction is emulation. Human beings socialize in great part in order to experience new things through others. When someone appears happy and carefree, people gravitate toward them in order to experience being happy and carefree. When someone opens up and allows their self-expression to come through, others gravitate toward them so that they too may feel the wonderful release of social constraints and experience the expressions and impulses that they are forced by social convention to keep hidden throughout the rest of their lives. This does not require convincing – it feels so good that the mere exposure to an authentic example of it is enough to make someone feel strongly compelled to the same.
But what about when someone, instead of releasing their self-expression, hides or represses it? To begin with, this act usually produces a mounting feeling of agitation or anxiety in them – the opposite of the pleasure that is experienced by releasing it. A person in part knows themselves through their own expressions, and when expressions are repressed, a person can quickly lose sense of themselves, creating confusion and desperation as their reality becomes more and more unstable. Their identity is pinned down, unable to move.
Even if they were able to prevent negative emotion, they would not be able to remove the rigidity and deadness of their lack of expression. Because the human being is an effusive object that throws out multitudes of signals (mostly unconscious) out into the world that are picked up on and interacted with (also mostly unconsciously) by others. A lack of signal is in itself a clear and strong warning that something is amiss.
…
So when someone represses their self-expression, they are typically overwhelmed with a feeling of anxiety and/or agitation. In social settings, they will work hard to push back against these negative emotions in order to appear attractive and approachable. But human beings are hardwired with an incredible ability, almost from birth, to decode facial and bodily expressions in order to understand the people around them. It is virtually impossible to conceal an emotion, especially one that is strongly felt. And the primary indicator that someone sees, is the appearance of internal conflict.
But why is internal conflict so bad for social settings and seduction in general? Even someone in a bad mood, or sad, or even aggressive, can be socially attractive in certain contexts. But internal conflict gets no pass, ever.
The reason, as you might have deduced, is that a bad mood or aggression are also forms of self-expression. No one is ever always happy – and being able to release negative emotion can be very pleasant. Sadness and aggression can be uninhibited and cathartic. But inhibition itself, by its very nature, cannot be uninhibited. Especially inhibition produced by fear and trauma is poisonous to everything around it, including the self. Because it is not the expression of anything, but the obstruction of the expression of something fundamental to the identity.
Internal conflict is the appearance of one fighting oneself. This is what inhibition is, fighting back one’s own desires, impulses, drives and affects. When this happens, it produces a strong repulsion in others, who of course desire to do the opposite, and wish to avoid the suffering of the inhibited person.
…
But how exactly does internal conflict arise to put a spanner in the works of a social interaction or seduction? It is often not simple to understand where it might be coming from – because part of relieving the suffering of one’s own inhibition, especially inhibition that is created by trauma or some other involuntary origin, is creating the illusion that it doesn’t exist.
People who have spent a long time with trauma or self-denial of some kind have literally spent years fabricating the best possible illusion in which to spend their everyday lives. The denial has become so embodied in their identity that even if they realize its existence, they cannot find any corner of it on which to pull in order to begin to remove it. Because the denial is so deeply entrenched that it is no longer clear which part of their identity is reality or illusion. This is very unnerving and difficult to deal with, but though difficult and time consuming, it can be teased out in various ways, by allowing self-expression to come through – the good, bad and ugly, all mixed together at first, but eventually coming into focus in their separate elements, over a long period of time, through actuation in the expressions of the body.
There is another obstacle with repressed emotion in the context of social interaction or seduction. And this is the fact that in creating a desire in someone else to become intimate with you and open up to you, you must experience that same desire yourself in relation to them. After all, seduction is done not by command but by example. And so in opening up the lid of your own emotions (so that she can do the same), you release the forces of repression, and the negative emotions spring up and overwhelm you. So you are forced to slam it back shut in the fearful realization that you are unable to deal with them. And of course, this makes her slam her own lid shut, and after something like that it is virtually impossible for things to recover.
…
Internal conflict is the death sentence of social interactions or seductions. The only people who can bear you in these instances are those who have loyalty to you – your family and close friends – and even they may struggle to maintain the desire to be around you.
This is because the currency of social interactions is the contagious set of experiences that someone can have by being around you and interacting with you. And if all you can offer them to emulate is the profound suffering of the unexpressed emotional mind, they will steer clear of you no matter how much you think you want to have a good time with them.
If you want to avoid this, there is no room for illusions. For the one who suffers most is the one who has not only inhibited themselves, but denied the reality of this inhibition, so that they cannot see in the negative reactions of others anything but abject malevolence and rejection of their value as a human being.
If you wish others to meet you, you must meet yourself first in the way that you wish to be met, and receive yourself in the way that you wish to be received. The mind cannot hold contradictions.
Have you ever seen someone at a party do something a little crazy and out there, and suddenly everyone flocks around and becomes animated and tries to join in? This is because being around that person, feeling their lack of inhibition and willingness to show the world who they are, creates the same impulse in the crowd.
But what about when you go to a party, or go out to meet girls, and you cannot get anyone to engage with you? Their expressions flicker with alarm when it looks like you might be about to interact with them, and they will close off their body language and move away. Or maybe you can start a conversation, but there is no intimacy, you cannot create any impulse in them to come closer and open up to you, and they appear to dither on the edge between walking away and continuing to talk with you. No matter how much you talk, things go nowhere.
The overwhelmingly common reason behind this is because of your internal conflict. Internal conflict is absolute poison for seduction and any kind of social interaction. And on the other side of the coin, uninhibited, free-flowing self expression is like a magnet, a hypnotic attractive force that creates an often unconscious desire in others to come closer and express themselves in kind.
…
I don’t want to get too much into the weeds of social dynamics, but the way I see it, one of the primary driving forces behind any kind of social attraction is emulation. Human beings socialize in great part in order to experience new things through others. When someone appears happy and carefree, people gravitate toward them in order to experience being happy and carefree. When someone opens up and allows their self-expression to come through, others gravitate toward them so that they too may feel the wonderful release of social constraints and experience the expressions and impulses that they are forced by social convention to keep hidden throughout the rest of their lives. This does not require convincing – it feels so good that the mere exposure to an authentic example of it is enough to make someone feel strongly compelled to the same.
But what about when someone, instead of releasing their self-expression, hides or represses it? To begin with, this act usually produces a mounting feeling of agitation or anxiety in them – the opposite of the pleasure that is experienced by releasing it. A person in part knows themselves through their own expressions, and when expressions are repressed, a person can quickly lose sense of themselves, creating confusion and desperation as their reality becomes more and more unstable. Their identity is pinned down, unable to move.
Even if they were able to prevent negative emotion, they would not be able to remove the rigidity and deadness of their lack of expression. Because the human being is an effusive object that throws out multitudes of signals (mostly unconscious) out into the world that are picked up on and interacted with (also mostly unconsciously) by others. A lack of signal is in itself a clear and strong warning that something is amiss.
…
So when someone represses their self-expression, they are typically overwhelmed with a feeling of anxiety and/or agitation. In social settings, they will work hard to push back against these negative emotions in order to appear attractive and approachable. But human beings are hardwired with an incredible ability, almost from birth, to decode facial and bodily expressions in order to understand the people around them. It is virtually impossible to conceal an emotion, especially one that is strongly felt. And the primary indicator that someone sees, is the appearance of internal conflict.
But why is internal conflict so bad for social settings and seduction in general? Even someone in a bad mood, or sad, or even aggressive, can be socially attractive in certain contexts. But internal conflict gets no pass, ever.
The reason, as you might have deduced, is that a bad mood or aggression are also forms of self-expression. No one is ever always happy – and being able to release negative emotion can be very pleasant. Sadness and aggression can be uninhibited and cathartic. But inhibition itself, by its very nature, cannot be uninhibited. Especially inhibition produced by fear and trauma is poisonous to everything around it, including the self. Because it is not the expression of anything, but the obstruction of the expression of something fundamental to the identity.
Internal conflict is the appearance of one fighting oneself. This is what inhibition is, fighting back one’s own desires, impulses, drives and affects. When this happens, it produces a strong repulsion in others, who of course desire to do the opposite, and wish to avoid the suffering of the inhibited person.
…
But how exactly does internal conflict arise to put a spanner in the works of a social interaction or seduction? It is often not simple to understand where it might be coming from – because part of relieving the suffering of one’s own inhibition, especially inhibition that is created by trauma or some other involuntary origin, is creating the illusion that it doesn’t exist.
People who have spent a long time with trauma or self-denial of some kind have literally spent years fabricating the best possible illusion in which to spend their everyday lives. The denial has become so embodied in their identity that even if they realize its existence, they cannot find any corner of it on which to pull in order to begin to remove it. Because the denial is so deeply entrenched that it is no longer clear which part of their identity is reality or illusion. This is very unnerving and difficult to deal with, but though difficult and time consuming, it can be teased out in various ways, by allowing self-expression to come through – the good, bad and ugly, all mixed together at first, but eventually coming into focus in their separate elements, over a long period of time, through actuation in the expressions of the body.
There is another obstacle with repressed emotion in the context of social interaction or seduction. And this is the fact that in creating a desire in someone else to become intimate with you and open up to you, you must experience that same desire yourself in relation to them. After all, seduction is done not by command but by example. And so in opening up the lid of your own emotions (so that she can do the same), you release the forces of repression, and the negative emotions spring up and overwhelm you. So you are forced to slam it back shut in the fearful realization that you are unable to deal with them. And of course, this makes her slam her own lid shut, and after something like that it is virtually impossible for things to recover.
…
Internal conflict is the death sentence of social interactions or seductions. The only people who can bear you in these instances are those who have loyalty to you – your family and close friends – and even they may struggle to maintain the desire to be around you.
This is because the currency of social interactions is the contagious set of experiences that someone can have by being around you and interacting with you. And if all you can offer them to emulate is the profound suffering of the unexpressed emotional mind, they will steer clear of you no matter how much you think you want to have a good time with them.
If you want to avoid this, there is no room for illusions. For the one who suffers most is the one who has not only inhibited themselves, but denied the reality of this inhibition, so that they cannot see in the negative reactions of others anything but abject malevolence and rejection of their value as a human being.
If you wish others to meet you, you must meet yourself first in the way that you wish to be met, and receive yourself in the way that you wish to be received. The mind cannot hold contradictions.