Are You Brave Enough to be Real?
I figured if I was nice, I would impress girls. If I was nice enough, I would get a girlfriend.
I’ve
 heard this so many times. And for the record, I think it’s incredible. 
How awesome does a human have to be in order to understand that basic kindness
 is the bedrock of all relationships? When young men say this to me, it 
warms my heart. These are lovely, beautiful people, and they’re going to
 do well in life.
But they’re not going to get a girlfriend. If they do, it’s likely to be shallow, unfulfilling and short lived.
That’s because ‘nice’ is what you do when you’re scared to be who you really are.
Nice is a Tool
Nice
 is a tool. It’s a predetermined set of behaviors that can be followed 
in casual social situations in order to avoid awkwardness and hurt 
feelings. It’s a default setting, and one that works really, really well
 for 90% of your life—in the office, going to the bank, meeting someone 
new, walking down the street.
Without nice, rudeness would
 reign in restrooms, yelling matches would pepper our time on public 
transport, and don’t even get me started on the damage the service 
industry would inflict on customers, unfettered by this do-no-harm 
social code. Sent a steak back to the kitchen? Prepare to be punched in 
the face by the chef. 
Nice 
prevents us from clawing at each others’ throats. It’s the lubricant 
that allows complex, weird, hurting people to have social intercourse 
without too much soreness afterwards. Emotionally, I mean.
Nice is a tool that we use to relate to each other and keep the peace.
Disowning the Shadow Self
It also separates us from the real, authentic
 experience we’re having in every moment. It gives us an excuse not to 
share that authentic experience with the people who are experiencing it 
with us. Because it’s pre-set and default, it’s autopilot. It’s a 
way for us to cop out. Nice is a way to momentarily disown the dirty, 
ugly parts of ourselves that we are so afraid others will see.
Nice is denying the shadow;
 the parts of yourself that you wish weren’t part of you. It’s 
pretending you don’t feel afraid, or inadequate, or sometimes lost or 
often lonely. It’s denying that you are a complex, weird, difficult 
person who struggles in the world and deserves to be wholly loved
 and accepted anyway. That means it’s denying others—especially romantic
 partners—the opportunity to know and love you for who you really are.
We’re
 all weirdos. We’re all hurting. We all have things about ourselves that
 we think are so awful that we aren’t even aware they are part of us, 
because we’re denying them so hard. Nice is one of the main tools we use
 to deny those things. “I’m not angry!” we cry. “I’m nice!’”
The Truth of You
The
 truth is, you’re neither. You’re much more than what you feel. There 
are real women in the world who want desperately to see the truth of you. Even the parts you don’t like.
While
 it makes sense to eschew our freak flags in favor of social niceties 
90% of the time, it is a terrible way to approach women you want to be 
with. It negates the possibility of real intimacy,
 stops the beautiful flower of connection from sprouting. We’re taught 
that we have to be nice in order to be worthy, acceptable, loveable. 
While it’s true that we have to be nice sometimes, in order to maintain 
social equilibrium, it’s also true that we can let our nice shield down 
with those who matter. Which is scary! Very scary! It’s the single most 
vulnerable thing a person can do.
We are yearning for your authentic presence. Can you provide it?
Can you be brave enough to do that for the women you care about? We are yearning for your authentic presence. Can you provide it?
A Cardboard Cutout
Some
 women want nice, and not just while you’re out at restaurants or 
meeting her parents for the first time. Those are the ones with whom 
you’ll eventually feel lonely in love, always a little bit separate from
 each other and from the real juicy wet sexy awkward moments of your 
life together. That’s because you’re helping each other maintain separation from your selves.
I’ve
 been there. I dated nice guys, and then wondered why it felt like I was
 dating a cardboard cutout. When these guys eventually, inevitably 
showed me who they really were, it was with resentment: they had held 
back, denied themselves, and all to please me. It hurt them, and they blamed me for that hurt. It’s hard to come back from that in a relationship.
Acting from the Heart
What
 women—evolved, mature, powerful women—actually need is a man who 
embodies the divinity of manhood. This may sound mystical, but it’s not.
 Every man is sacred, can touch the sacred masculine
 within him, can be a man who stands in compassion, loyalty, and honor, 
who cares enough to realize that only his true, unfiltered presence is 
good enough for this world. A man with a powerful heart, who can hold a 
woman in his presence, who can weather her emotional storms, who is 
nourished by being near her, and sees her divinity, and gives endlessly 
of himself.
That may seem
 like nice, and it’s true that they have a lot in common. But it’s 
different from nice in two critical ways. First, Nice is pretending. 
Nice is prefabricated, sterile, and not from the heart.
 If you’re acting from the heart, then congratulations—you’re much more 
than just nice. Most men who are motivated to be kind and caring are much more than nice.
The second part has to do with masculine energy. Yang,
 Mars, active, hot; cultures around the world have used many different 
words to describe that certain masculine something which is definitely 
not nice…and definitely something straight women crave. I’m talking 
about physicality, competition, lust. A demanding, sensual, immediate, 
winner-takes-all, intense…oh my. I’m getting turned on just writing 
about it.
Not the Bad Boy
Embodying
 that energy may seem like being a jerk. In the ‘bad boy’ archetype, 
where that energy isn’t tempered by the loyalty and compassion
 that’s also integral to the sacred masculine, it does play out as guys 
being assholes. Women go for bad boys because at least they know a bad 
boy can ravish them.
But these two halves of masculinity are compatible. They can meet and make a whole, when a genuine, caring man also owns his lust, his insatiable, raw, unapologetic fire and desire. That
 is what women need, what we find irresistible, what we daren’t dream of
 in our wildest darkest hour of yearning…but dream of anyway.
So Much More than Nice
It’s
 so much more than nice. It’s like a gourmet feast, and nice is just the
 appetizer; meant to whet our appetites and hint at the glorious, 
terrifying, powerful man who’s taking the time to be nice to us.
Some women genuinely seek out jerks. Some men do this, too. That’s because they’re playing out childhood trauma, acting out past hurts and confusions to try to make sense of them. It’s not because all women want, need or love jerks.
We don’t.
We
 want guys who are nice. But we need them to be more than that. We need 
men who aren’t afraid to stand in their power with us. Who are brave 
enough to cast off the trappings of nice, be authentic, be imperfect,
 have needs, and share those needs with us. Men who are brave enough to 
stop hiding behind nice, and show us who they really are.
If you can do that, you’ve got me. You’ve got the girl. And she’ll never let you go.


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