Self-improvement through femininity

Get in touch with your feminine side. Make a soup/stew with tofu. Because it lowers testosterone - helping reduce aggression and tension - and raises estrogen which unleashes feel-good chemicals in the brain. And put a bikini on too, if you're brave enough!

Parents
  • Well, I'm certainly not against that, as I live in a part of the World where tofu is a much more integral part of the diet. And having fairly recently had a testosterone test (as recommended by a GP who thought it might be a contributing factor) I can say that I seem to be in the usual range. On the other hand, I think you might say that I like to be in touch with the 'side' of me that favors informality and a distinct lack of flamboyance. I'm not going to call that my masculine side, because I think it is too much of a stereotype that a huge number of people  have never really fully related to. I kind of like my own changeability anyway. I suppose I nominally look like a person who favors the masculine side, and I do actually enjoy a lot of that, but perhaps it might be better to say that I favor my mechanic side.

  • That's fair enough. Do bear in mind though that most people respond positively to a touch of flamboyance. I think it's related to public relations and marketing. I was reading about a man who emigrated from Central Europe to America in the early 1900s and made a lot of money with a science magazine he produced. He managed to market it as something that would get studious, technical people prestige and a milieu to engage with. It had a lot to do with ham radio.

  • I suspect there are going to be quite a few people post-COVID who are going to be taking the attitude that their best career option is looking after their own life, rather than just remaining an easily discardable pawn of a worn-out economic doctrine. Perhaps an added benefit of that change might be that they will have more freedom and time to be a bit more flamboyantly themself, instead of just robotically going through the banal motions of what the system seems to desire of them. ;-)

    I remember meeting this Scouse guy many years ago. He always wore this amazingly colorful Paisley jacket. It just put other people in a very positive frame of mind as soon as they met him; which also allowed him to have an extremely rosy outlook on life. So agreed really! As for me, there is quite a lot of flamboyance in my changeability.

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  • I suspect there are going to be quite a few people post-COVID who are going to be taking the attitude that their best career option is looking after their own life, rather than just remaining an easily discardable pawn of a worn-out economic doctrine. Perhaps an added benefit of that change might be that they will have more freedom and time to be a bit more flamboyantly themself, instead of just robotically going through the banal motions of what the system seems to desire of them. ;-)

    I remember meeting this Scouse guy many years ago. He always wore this amazingly colorful Paisley jacket. It just put other people in a very positive frame of mind as soon as they met him; which also allowed him to have an extremely rosy outlook on life. So agreed really! As for me, there is quite a lot of flamboyance in my changeability.

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