>>20184841Obviously thats only most. There of course are women that have gone through shit that broke their minds to a serious degree and they obviously werent protected (men like this exist too, but trauma on average is dealt with differently by men and doesnt really lead to questions about bears in woods). You ever met one of those women? if we re talking extreme cases, men (that arent psychopaths) will automatically register that something is very off and they automatically want want to help, programmed to protect. One of the subtypes is fawn. You know what they are NOT? Mentally weak. Fawns have a higher tolerance for any form of danger, their superpower is endurance. On the flipside though, they can endure, but not heal, unless theyre protected.
You know what these women usually know? That only a man can protect them from going through hellfire again, they arent the ones picking the bear, because theyve already met the bear in human form, and usually not once, but for a period of time. They are grateful for protective masculinity. Some stuff they cant tolerate and may ask you not to do, but they know theyre asking for favours, and when you do provide safety, they will be extremely grateful and they wont disrupt that safety by being aggressive bitches on tiktok.
At least thats my experience.
Thinking about the bear logicially doesnt make any sense, the bear isnt the one asking the question, and women arent asking because of logic anyway, theyre asking out of emotion, ironically out of ignorance of their own emotions more than anything else.
Like, men look at the question "this is the man answer, its logical, therefore youre wrong" kinda true but irrelevant. Diagnosis: autism.
Women look at the question and expect the woman answer based on emotion. Both sides think theyre right without realizing that the question isnt about men or women, or bears. its about the relationship between the sexes regarding fear. It has nothing to do with bears.