Originally Posted by
bjf
Yes, this is true for
some. How do we use this information?
Say, for instance, it was true for all women, I guess that would
support using the average male phero signature ratios.
The ratios, though, are extremely high in A1 and not
all that conducive to positive results for us.
Rone sometimes is called "fatherly." I'm not sure if it
reminds a woman of her father or being with her father, maybe. In most cases though, the feeling of being with a
father probably includes such things as reliability, safety, leadership and intimacy (rone, a1, beta nol).
So how are these things waited in the board spectrum of preferences. How much danger (ie none) is
appropriate without scaring a woman off? Danger is sexy but only to a certain point.
The interesting thing to
also consider is whether using a number of pheromones projects a lot of different signals or whether they combine to
send one signal, one overall feeling.
Is it heterogeneous or homogeneous? For instance, a salad tastes like a
lot of different things in your mouth. A milk shake basically tastes like one flavor -- the different elements get
tempered by one another -- milk plus chocolate ice creme becomes something in between the two.
Maybe an
attractive trait like leadership isnt one pheromone per say but something like nol plus none in a general
ratio.
I guess I'm just looking for us to establish some basic ratios between the dark, medium and light
pheromones that we can use as a guide for recipe making. Back in the day people would mix none with none products. I
would do none heavy mixes. None was thought to be sexual so that was the overwhelming component of a lot of mixes
for some. Of course, myself and many others found it was too much Clint Eastwood for women to
handle.
Generally, nicer mones that mitigate some of the dangers of none improves things because, as the
study in the first post supports, women aren't looking for the most masculine guy as possible in mate selection, at
least for most of their cycles.
So, on average, how much bad boy, how much father figure and how much friend
makes the perfect man? Might be tough to quantify but I am sure there is a mathematical rhyme and reason to this.
I've heard they even have computer programs that evaluate whether a song will be a hit. As long as something is
predictable, there's a formula for it.
The computer program may not be able to tell if a particular person
will like a song but it can tell if it is conducive to being a pop hit to the general
audience.
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