oldsoul wrote:
Men have said this to me many times over the years.
I always figured it was because I am straight and when out in public appear feminine on the outside. At the same time I am androgynous on the inside regarding my interests and things I know about, so when conversing with men I'm talking about more things that they are interested in than the things most NT women talk about.
And my androgyny makes me relate to men very well and not judge them the way most NT women do. I get them for who they are and don't have so many unrealistic expectations of them and what they "should" be.
I have to agree with what you're saying here- I'm also straight, and in many ways very much a feminine woman- however, unlike most women I am a predominantly thinking/rational type rather than an emotional, touchy-feely type. If you have taken the Myers-Briggs assessment you will probably find that you are a "thinker" rather than a "feeler." Most women are "feelers," and most men are "thinkers" but that generalization is not always true.
That generalization is true enough that I find relating to women extremely difficult because I have little in common with most women as far as interests go. I like documentaries, science, true crime, all things automotive, and off-color humor to name a few. I could care less what the Kardashians are doing or who's on what reality show (unless it's COPS.) I never saw what people found so fascinating about Dr. Phil or Oprah either. To me all that obsessing over celebrities and horrible soap opera type shows is vapid and inane.
When I was younger I had a tendency to take everything very literally. With age and time I have become much more guarded and pragmatic. I wouldn't necessarily take a comment, "you're not like other women," as a come on -or even as anything other than stating the obvious. I don't communicate or function like most women. I grew up in and around automotive shops. I'm comfortable with that language (often coarse...) and culture when most women would not be. I get along well with techie types but I am completely vexed over people who try to psychoanalyze every word I say, or who are so emotional they start bawling at TV commercials. Admittedly I miss a lot of emotional nuances (I'm really terrible with eye contact and body language in general- both sending and receiving) and the whole emotional system is not my preferred method of navigating the world.
During my senior year in high school, in the unofficial "Senior Will" I was voted "Least Likely to Get Laid." (This was 1986, so it was a different world.) The guys all knew I was "different than the other women," but even so, I was about as popular as body lice.
That changed somewhat as I got older, (not that I really give a hang about popularity, because I don't,) but most of my friends - who are mostly male- just look at me as "one of the guys."
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Intelligence is a constant. The population is growing.