Love

3 Little Lies Women Tell Themselves About What Men Want

Photo: CoffeeAndMilk, Rido, vkstudio | Canva 
Man thinking of beautiful woman

Maybe it started when your kindergarten friend pulled you aside and whispered a warning into your ear after seeing you dash across the schoolyard in a game of kissing tag at recess. Or later, when you told your best friend your most prized secret, that you’d had your first real kiss (with tongue!). Certainly, some helpful female family member or friend laid down the facts for you when Aunt Flow came for her first visit. And by the time you were a grown woman, adulting all over the place — dating, hooking up, and everything in between — you not only had the facts, but you were also doling out sage advice of your own.

We, women, have been cautioning each other and having each other’s backs about men since the beginning of time, but some of the things we share about what men want are just bald-faced lies (whether we know it or not). The real problem is this: These lies we tell make finding and keeping lasting love hard. Here are the top three worst offenders…and the truth about what’s going on with men of all ages.

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Here are 3 little lies women tell themselves about what men want:

1. Men only want to be intimate and they’ll do and say anything to get it

Translation: Men are liars and tricksters. They’ll pull out all the stops to snatch your snatch before you can even comprehend what just happened. There’s a second layer to this artfully frosted cake of a lie, which is that they don’t care about any other part of you. They picked you because they thought they could get one over on you, stupid girl. This line, often delivered by the well-intentioned among us, does more damage than it does well.

It has us fearing men as a pack and diminishing ourselves instead of seeing people as individuals and putting stock in our abilities to judge character. Being valued just for our bodies (as fabulous as they are) is not how most of us want to view ourselves. And besides, this one is just plain untrue. What’s charming and magnetic about a woman is what she’s passionate about, and guys are drawn to our authenticity, self-confidence, and passion. There. Glad we put that one to bed.

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2. Men are commitment-phobes

So, if guys only want to be intimate and intimacy is available all over the place, why would they ever want to commit to us? Surprisingly, no one gets together at all considering how bitter and untrusting this lie makes us. It’s not that guys are commitment-phobes; they just tend to have a different relationship and process to commitment. Have you ever met a woman who liked a guy and said "yes" to a relationship, but she also had a lengthy laundry list of things she’d need to change about him? You know this woman, right? Ever see her in the mirror? This is not the standard M.O. for most guys. They commit 100 percent to the entire laughs-too-loud, stays-up-too-late, is-grouchy-in-high-humidity, and is-an-over-sharer package or they don’t commit at all. And when someone else calls her on it in front of him, he says, "Yeah, that’s just how she is, but she’s adorable, isn’t she?"

   

   

Ever notice that when it comes to people trying to fix or change each other, the scales are heavily tipped to the female-doing-the-fixing side? This is where adages like "Get a man, keep a man and keep him in line" come from. Can you imagine what we’d do if the common phrase was "Get a woman, keep a woman, and keep her in line" instead? Can you imagine? Because I can. We would lose our minds. This whole changing and fixing business is why it takes men longer to commit. They need time to look and see if they are willing to commit to that whole package — and when they do, they’re in. No fixing is needed. Which is good news, and may calm your nerves for the last lie.

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3. All men want are young, hot girls and not women their age

You’ve watched it happen. Your contemporaries are divorcing after the kids are off to college and within the first year, he has a smoking-hot girlfriend half his age and she’s still single. It’s true, just like you’ve always feared: Men want younger (than you) women. If you’re married or partnered, does this have you wondering if you’re next? Fun fact: Women initiate 60 percent of divorces later in life. If you’re single, do you feel doomed that no man your age will want you?

   

   

"Am I attractive enough?" and "Is he still attracted to me?" are questions that plague most women throughout our lives. This myth could have you living in fear, or leave you angry and bitter. Hey, guess what’s super unattractive to men? An angry, bitter woman. When men get younger, it has everything to do with being able to impress her. What comes along with distinguished gray hair is the need to be admired, and men are pretty insistent about this as a core need of theirs. This is also not a need that women his age are often willing to pony up. So, when they start dating younger women, we’re stuck thinking, "I’m past my prime. He wants younger women and that’s it." But here’s the thing: He doesn’t care about how young the woman he’s dating is — he wants appreciation and playfulness.

If you got tangled up in these three lies, there’s hope! It’s possible to turn it all around. Replace these lies with some fundamental truths:

  • Men want intimacy (just like you do). They also want intimacy, connection, love, and companionship.
  • Men commit to the whole package. So, it takes a little longer for most guys to find their forever person.
  • Men want lasting love with someone who can be playful, admire him, and see and appreciate him for the man he’s become. When he’s met with that kind of respect and adoration in a long-term marriage or partnership, what he says next is, "I could have never done it without you."

Men aren’t a total mystery, but they aren’t the same as women, either. Our different chemistry means that men don’t always do things the way women would, which often leaves us feeling hurt, dismissed, unappreciated, or unseen. Taking the time to see and celebrate our differences can leave us in much better shape for each other.

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Wendy Newman is a media-celebrated author and dating and relationship expert who's led hundreds of workshops and changed the lives of over 70,000 women internationally.