FailedNormieManlet
NTmaxxed pajeet
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2021
- Posts
- 22,156
- Reputation
- 39,684
Picture this.
You are born as a curry manlet, your parents have drilled through your head the importance of getting a good job. You spend hours studying, neglecting sports and socialisation all throughout your teenage years (the years most formative to your personality and development as an adult), all these years spent in an unhealthy and dysfunctional manner in order to fuel the greedy capitalist system which we live in. But your parents and peers tell you of this magical light at the end of the tunnel, the light being a happy family. 2 kids, a white picket fence and a beautiful loving wife. We call this the American dream, but in reality this dream is shared amongst MEN of all cultures, races and creeds. It's the universal experience and suffering of raising a family which reminds many of us that our international and foreign neighbours aren't that much different to us, even our forefathers experienced something similar. This universal experience is an experience only men could ever experience, and it reminds us of our simple humanity.
You start college/university now, one step closer to getting that good job and finally being able to develop your life and like a bird, create your nest with the hopes of a female flying into it. But you slowly realise, all this slavery and work on your part. What are women bringing to the table? Your slavery has been romanticised and the bitter and cruel realisation that your toils aren't virtuous and that such actions are not noble hits you like a truck. Women bring nothing, while you are studying your future partner is riding another man's dick, while you worry and stress about your future, she is in bed with another man thinking how she will marry a rich man and be set for life, while you are lifting weights at the gym, she is being lifted onto another man's shoulders at raves and soon will get her back blown out.
This is the brutal reality for most, for pajeets and those raised in traditional cultures, this hammer which we know as the blackpill, hits even harder. Our fragile reality and narrative shattered into pieces by the blackpill. While some of us desperately try to pick up these pieces and attempt to glue them back together (Looking at you trad copers) some of us accept this fate and realise nothing can be done (blackpillers/incels) while others desperately try to adapt (self improvers) and the final group, the most sad group of all. Those who cannot handle it, those who rope in the end and meet death sooner than most.
I like @Xangsane and have nothing against him personally. But the story of his father marrying his mother - who supposedly had slept around with many black dudes during her uni days (I use supposedly as I'm not entirely sure, he can correct if needed). Is all too common amongst ethnic men who were thrown into this situation, while his father did things with the thought of "I need to work hard to raise a family" his mother thought different. This isn't a criticism of his mother, but a simple truth on women. Girls want fun during their youth.
The universal experience and brutal suffering which men face at the hands of women is what grounds many of us, it is the one experience which unites us.
It's over.
You are born as a curry manlet, your parents have drilled through your head the importance of getting a good job. You spend hours studying, neglecting sports and socialisation all throughout your teenage years (the years most formative to your personality and development as an adult), all these years spent in an unhealthy and dysfunctional manner in order to fuel the greedy capitalist system which we live in. But your parents and peers tell you of this magical light at the end of the tunnel, the light being a happy family. 2 kids, a white picket fence and a beautiful loving wife. We call this the American dream, but in reality this dream is shared amongst MEN of all cultures, races and creeds. It's the universal experience and suffering of raising a family which reminds many of us that our international and foreign neighbours aren't that much different to us, even our forefathers experienced something similar. This universal experience is an experience only men could ever experience, and it reminds us of our simple humanity.
You start college/university now, one step closer to getting that good job and finally being able to develop your life and like a bird, create your nest with the hopes of a female flying into it. But you slowly realise, all this slavery and work on your part. What are women bringing to the table? Your slavery has been romanticised and the bitter and cruel realisation that your toils aren't virtuous and that such actions are not noble hits you like a truck. Women bring nothing, while you are studying your future partner is riding another man's dick, while you worry and stress about your future, she is in bed with another man thinking how she will marry a rich man and be set for life, while you are lifting weights at the gym, she is being lifted onto another man's shoulders at raves and soon will get her back blown out.
This is the brutal reality for most, for pajeets and those raised in traditional cultures, this hammer which we know as the blackpill, hits even harder. Our fragile reality and narrative shattered into pieces by the blackpill. While some of us desperately try to pick up these pieces and attempt to glue them back together (Looking at you trad copers) some of us accept this fate and realise nothing can be done (blackpillers/incels) while others desperately try to adapt (self improvers) and the final group, the most sad group of all. Those who cannot handle it, those who rope in the end and meet death sooner than most.
I like @Xangsane and have nothing against him personally. But the story of his father marrying his mother - who supposedly had slept around with many black dudes during her uni days (I use supposedly as I'm not entirely sure, he can correct if needed). Is all too common amongst ethnic men who were thrown into this situation, while his father did things with the thought of "I need to work hard to raise a family" his mother thought different. This isn't a criticism of his mother, but a simple truth on women. Girls want fun during their youth.
The universal experience and brutal suffering which men face at the hands of women is what grounds many of us, it is the one experience which unites us.
It's over.