 introduce our next speaker, our first speaker kicking off the event, which is Socrates. I had the pleasure of meeting Socrates last year in Orlando. Got to hang out at his awesome place, spend some time with him. So I'm really excited to hear his speech. I heard it in Orlando. This speech is brand new and the title is Relationship Building in the Earthquake Landscape of Post-Feminine Culture. So what that means is the relationship talk your father never gave you. It's going to be awesome. A little bit about Socrates. He's a returning keynote speaker to the 21 convention. He's featured in the 21 convention documentary. He's a prolific blogger at ManningupSmart.com and he's been at this for over five years. So expert. Let's welcome Socrates. Hi guys. My name is Socrates. I'm a previous 21 convention speaker. Like Robbie stated, I do run a small blog for men regarding relationships at the ManningupSmart.com. And specifically, it was geared towards my experiences last year from the 21 convention. A lot of it had to deal with my personal experiences, my personal journey, collecting the information as I assembled, failed, collected friends and awareness and moved on. But also what happens is when you get together and are able to share ideas and are able to share, relate, project, make observances, get feedback from each other and pick up ideas and try them out yourselves, you learn a tremendous amount. And this is what one of these organizations actually do. It takes people of like minds and brings them together. And what I found during the 21 convention in particular was that there are a number of very common questions men are asking throughout all their age ranges that are not simply being answered by society today. And they're fairly simple questions. And in probably many ways they're going to be the questions of our age. Who do I want to be? What do I want to become? And what is the character and nature of the life I want to live? And they're terribly profound. And I'm going to later in my talk to be talking about and addressing some of those. But my blog was specifically geared towards relationship because it plays a critical aspect in men's lives, how we're cultured to believe ourselves, our cultural identity as men. And it propagates throughout our lives. And to get a handle on that aspect, or and I promise I won't try to use that word again, that focus of attention is one of those elements in which it concerns men because we don't do it well. We're not taught, we're not trained, but we're expected to know these things by osmosis. So my blog was a direct response to realizing I just didn't want to put out a thousand page document rant. I wanted to make it a little more concise, make it more organized and provide a resource available to the guys that I was talking to. My mistake was believing that it was going to be fairly localized. I put it out on the World Wide Web. And one of the first people to contact me, interestingly enough via email, was somebody from Australia. And the blog is specifically for men in the North American framework. And this was a woman in Australia contacting me about a relationship, took something to heart about what I wrote, applied it to her life and saw an immediate payback in return. I find that tremendous. I find it a fascinating concept that what we do today is now live worldwide, that we have an ability to communicate, relate and share with people we've never met, never crossed. But we can convey ideas in a manner that we were speaking face to face. So this, I think, is one of the best things about the 21 Convention. It's not about sitting out here and me speak or the other speakers are going to follow. But the fact is that we're all together in one room and we can share ideas on a number of different levels, on a number of different issues about men's relationships and men's relationships with themselves and their lives. So based on that, I'm going to be specifically talking about relationships. I'm an architect by trade and by profession. And to make it fairly simple, I'm going to actually frame my speech around what it's like to build in the built environment, to really take the idea of a parallel analogy of building a relationship in the sexual marketplace of today, the environmental context. And you have to understand the context in which you're going to be living, the forces that are going to be pressed upon it, what are your objectives, how to build appropriately, and then actually how to make actually architecture, you know, of making it really sing, making it tailored to you. And because if you don't do that, it's not going to be unique. It's not going to be individualized. And one size fits all doesn't work. You know, and we know that we want it to be specific for you. And there are a number of things we're going to be able to talk about that that are going to be negative. I'm not anti woman. I'm not anti relationship. But I think there's some things you need to go into these things with your eyes wide open. And I mean wide open. Based on that, I've been very fortunate. I've had real world examples of a number of friends, family, long term people I've known for probably better over 20 years that have really healthy dynamic, lasting monogamous relationships. It's kind of an anomaly. It's unfortunate, but we don't celebrate. I don't think that has to be the case. And by their example, I can look at a number of different factors of what they were able to do. And it kind of boils down to three things. In each case, no matter what age grain, what generation they came from, where they're at, they did three things that were synonymous to each of the relationships. They themselves were took finding their relationship and their partner terribly, terribly serious. They were not lax today's ill about their approach on developing a relationship nor their intent for relationship. They went into the relationship knowing that was what they're looking for. They screened their partner to make sure that they fit their objectives. They screened their partner, make sure that their objectives match their own. So you have two people going to the same goal. Most guys don't do that. All we're attracted to is a cute girl is paying attention to us. If your life objectives are not matching, you're not going to have a long term relationship. And it's foolish to get into a seriously committed relationship. I'm not saying not to enjoy that time period. But don't delude yourself. Don't delude her into thinking that this is going to be more than something that's not. The third thing is that in each case, both parties were willing to invest heavily in sustaining that relationship. And that is a critical part of actually a healthy relationship. It's not that you're perfect the way you are. She was perfect the way she is. It's that fact that you're both willing to work together to manage and maintain and to sustain that relationship over a course of period of time. And it's not just a period of time that's a factor. I know a lot of people misidentify longevity with a successful healthy relationship. That's not always true. If it's healthy and long, that would be successful. But the quality of that relationship is very much important. Okay, the stability of that relationship is very much important. Trust and respect in that relationship is absolutely fundamental. Alright, I don't care if you've had a long term relationship, if you don't have those things, you don't have a healthy relationship. The key is to create a healthy, sustainable relationship. And what we're going to use is a framework of architecture. And when we talk about that, one of the most important things to realize is the environmental context in which we're going to find ourselves. And as I step back and I was writing my blog, my involvement in the men's community in a variety of ways, talking to men in and out of my life, I was seeing a number of things. I was seeing more than a generation of men that were literally lost to the forces of nature that they need to identify properly, identify or properly recognize. They're subtly kind of aware of some of the influences, but they don't recognize it. The cultural framework in which they're existing is marginalizing the masculinity. It is telling their irrelevant and actually replaceable. And I mean utterly replaceable. Okay, the political and legal realms that follow that the bastions that follow the culture, cultural context are developing laws, regulations and procedures that are isolating men from their families, from their properties, from their marriages, that are actually removing a number of sexual health issues. For example, men typically have almost zero reproductive sexual reproductive rights. You know, you actually have more rights to your intellectual property rights than your own physical DNA. You know, and not only that, society is controlling our ability to communicate. Society does not want men speaking up. Feminism, in essence, is a single form of single gender politics with only one seat at the table. And women like it that way. And I'm not saying women just slander men a big picture, but the politics being driven by this is gearing to control men's sexual behaviors, sexual culture and control men in within that culture of providing for women in a number of ways. I don't mean just in a physical and a material way, but in an emotional and psychological way as well. We suspend accountability for women culturally. You know, throw all that on top of a very, very unchanging biological context. You know, we have not changed biologically for millennia. Our base nature hasn't changed. And so you're throwing all this sort of together in a way in which most men are unprepared for. We don't recognize what we're facing. So based on that, I'm going to start breaking some of that down as far as the context in an environmental context. One of the most important and the fundamental is identifying the age in which we live. If we're going to be looking at architecture, it's important to understand the timeframe in which it was created to understand why they were doing what they were doing, what solutions they were trying to meet, what were the programmatic objectives. And in that regard, we live in a fascinating timeframe. We live in the age in which men can ask themselves a probably the question of our era. Who do I want to be? Who do I want to become? What type of life do I want to live and the nature of it? And no other time in human history have men of any social standing, any social status, been able to honestly ask those questions. Typically those questions have been reserved for a very, very small minority of individuals on this planet. Today, everybody who's here and some of the people that are looking at this video now, can ask themselves that question. And I find that revolutionary. The second thing is to recognize not only do you have that privilege, but there's an expectation that comes with it. And it's a tough one. And this is where you're going to come face to face with the age. And that is physically it is almost impossible to leave your parents home, become a new quote, an age and adult, and have the knowledge and awareness associated with the information age. We live in a knowledge based economy, a service based economy. That requires a high degree of education, a high degree of education coupled with practical experience. That takes time. That takes effort. Back in the day they used to call it the 20, you know, the college years. All right? What they're finding is it's more dynamic than just going and getting a degree. It's not just a four year program anymore. It's closer to a decade. You need that practical experience. Not only that, practical education is now coming into question. It is completely possible to get a higher educated degree, a STEM degree, a science, technology, engineering, math type based degree, and still be completely unemployed in this age. Our context with our employer, our context within the business realm in which we're operating can pretty much guarantee you will have 10 to 12 jobs in a 20 year period. You know, if you're lucky it will be shorter. You'll have a longer stint in that. You'll have a little more stability. But we no longer have this expectation that you will work at a same job for 20 years and retire with a company you got your first job with. You are no longer brought up through the company. It is easier to outsource. It is easier to hire without and transfer knowledge based. You know, basically stair stepping. You got to start thinking that way. If you don't you're going to run into direct conflicts. You're going to have self crisis. You're not going to be prepared and it will play out not only in your own personal lives but the relationships you have in very profound ways. Add onto that complexity. There's no single route in which to achieve this. It's now new. It's the Wild West. You now have any number of ways to do it. College is not the only route. And it may not be the best route. It may be the worst route. Not only do you not get necessarily a healthy education, depending on which school you go to the quality of education, but you will leave indebted to a degree that will be hobbling. You know, you will be you'll become basically financially indebted to the point that you become masculine with innocence to your own freedom of choice. That's called slavery. Whether it's a physical shackle, whether it's a financial shackle, the results ends up binding you. Okay, it weighs you down. You ultimately are going to be responsible for your own education, your own self-development. That's true in relationships. It's going to be true in anything in life. Keep that in mind. But as we look at the information age in general, I want to take a bigger step back and look in the transition of mankind with social relationships, because that's what I'm going to be primarily speaking about. As we've gone through in a historical evolution, primarily three times. And this is not the first time we've had major social evolution or changes. The first time is when we went from hunting and gathering to agriculture. And what you have is a degree of specialization taking place. And it's a dramatic specialization. Unfortunately, most of those time periods are undocumented. We can look back at areas where they transcended a bit to see some friction, some conflict. But on a whole, we can only kind of empathize and imagine what that conflict was like. But we do know that there's a degree of specialization taking place. The second would have been when we went from the agricultural age to the Industrial Revolution. There we do have documentation. But the issue here is that it wasn't just that we have the documentation. The documentation tells us very clearly it was single gender specialization. Men got more specialized. Men's roles have been able to provide, became further specialized. Women on a whole, their dynamic role did not change. And as we go into the information age, we now have a significant change in the fact that we now have dual sex specialization. We talk about in a very kind of overt way about society becoming more feminized. And that is very true. And that is a direct outlay of the information age. But part of that feminization is realizing we have specialized roles where women are taking, fulfilling, and actually co-sharing in. Okay. And men have not adapted very well. Our psyche of belief has not actually kept up with the times. And if Darwin has taught us anything, it is the species that evolves appropriately for its time and the challenges its face that survives. And where men are failing, where men are feeling lost, they have not kept up with the times. We have not recognized that we have an increased in EQ or emotional quotient, as far as what we expect in relationships and jobs and everything else. We have old school models of what it means to be a leader, to lead and to manage. It's fairly direct. They're typically as far as referring to as hard skills. Women have brought in a whole series of other skills that are highly valuable to increase effectiveness, team building, networking, socialization, consensus building, collaboration, and overall a measure of diplomacy. You know, when you take this in an appropriate context, and these skills are highly utilized in business today. Alright, but we don't teach them in men in relationships, okay? Men who don't understand that, who don't learn that, who are not taught that are exposed to it, go into life at a deficit. And we need to realize we're at a disadvantage when we don't know something. And ignorance is no shelter from reality. It's a hard fact of life. You know, these sort of skills, and while we utilize them in business, really are perfect for relationships. This is where you start developing. You know, if you don't not understand how to set a boundary, if you don't not understand collaboration building in a relationship, or consensus building in a relationship, proper to lead and managing and maintaining a relationship, your share is held not going to do it in business. Interestingly enough, there are men that actually do it well in business and have horrible personal lives because they don't utilize it. You know, there's a direct correlation between them. So we need to understand and recognize that the information age has brought a total transformation in our social structure. It's opening new things. And we're not going to put this genie back in the bottle. And to be honest, I wouldn't want the genie to be back in a bottle. I love the hell out of June Cleaver, you know, leave it to Beaver, but I wouldn't want to be married to her. You know, I think there's some amazing dynamics involved. You know, there's some things I miss, and feminism has gone from one swing of the pendulum to June Cleaver to Kim Kardashian. The pendulum has gone too far to the one side. We need to take the value. Women don't have to give up everything. They don't need to be barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. They don't have to get rid of the domicile and the domestic aspects of being feminine and the things that naturally draw them into them. But we need to be aware of some of the issues that we're facing today as the age. The second element will be the cultural element of what we're going to be looking at. And culture today is about storytelling. It always has been. It's been with us for a long time. We're talking about the term of the term of eternity. You know, we can see it in K paintings and it's an element that codifies our culture of beliefs and values and gives us an indication of what we can expect and how to behave. You know, and what is society teaching us today? And I'm going to go through them really quick, because we're, you know, we just don't have time to cover them all. The first and primary is that you're not the favorite sex. We have a favorite child. It's not men. Okay. We guys it in a number of ways, but we make allowances for women. All right. The biggest and the most blatant is the fact that we openly value the dramatic disparities between men and women. We saw a prime example in this in Aurora, Colorado, the shooting. Your life is not worth as much as a woman's. Each and every one of you is expected to give up your life to a woman you don't know, just because you're male, to the extent that it cost you your life. By the way, there's no there's no reciprocation. The social contract, by the way, interestingly enough, was not that she gives her life up to provide for you and to protect for you. It's to nurture you. It's to nurture your children. It's to be the mother of your child and to raise your children. By the way, how's that social contract going? Are women today nurtures? Do you have any belief based on divorce statistics that you're going to actually have a relationship and a family still together after 15 years? When the divorce ratio is over 50%, 70% of the time women are filing. These are harsh realities. Second one is that society today is terribly misandric. And that is a phrase probably most of you don't know. If you understand what misogyny is, it's a hatred towards women. Misundry is the direct correlation opposite of it. It's the antithesis. It's when women hate men or men who hate men. We are openly misandric. So for example, a classic example, another recent occurrence, would have been an episode of The View. It's not that I hate The View, it's that you have a collection of women on national TV openly and without shame and unabashedly celebrating, laughing, mocking, and taking absolute sheer delight in a sexual molestation of a man in a sexual attack. A man who had the audacity to file for divorce because he wasn't happy, did so openly. No overt signs of abuse, no story along those lines, but she took a knife, mutilated his genitals, threw him in a garbage disposal, and to turn the sucker on. The women laughed and giggled at the fact that his penis went down the garbage disposal. Flip that on its head. Can you imagine a panel of men openly laughing about a sexual mutilation of a woman because she had the audacity to divorce a man and give herself the eat, pray, love tour around the world? Not that he had any attention of doing that. This is a world we live in. I don't think it's right. I don't think it's fair. It's not just. And men are starting to talk about it. The comments on culture is going to be primarily about men's rights. So the following ones that I'm talking about, if you have an interest in it, look up men's rights. The men that are going to be talking about have been damaged and hurt. They're angry and they have a right to be angry. They've been terribly damaged. Another element that we'll look at culturally is the fact that we suspend accountability for women. And we give them special privileges. The clearest example would be the single mother syndrome and is an immense syndrome today. Is the fact that we have a thing called deadbeat dad. The fastest way to cure deadbeat dad problem is for women to stop fucking deadbeats. These men just don't pop out of nowhere. They were fucking deadbeats to start with. All right? And it wasn't just that there were deadbeats. These women were attracted to deadbeats. What's that telling you about her character? What's that telling you about her makeup? Is it fair to sit down and say, what the fuck were you thinking when you slept with this guy? Okay? Honestly, we are not allowed to do that. You will be shamed, shut up in silence for even bringing that up. And by the way, there's a response to it. An entire community of men who've gone underground because they weren't allowed to be aboveground on it developed skills and reactions to get women they wanted to be with based on what women were choosing. This is a pickup community. Answering demand. Not answering the fantasy that women were portraying. I want a decent guy. I want a loving husband. I want a family. Meanwhile, she's getting her dick on. Now, the reality is these guys are giving back the men that they're actually choosing. They're getting smart about it. I don't think it's healthy for society. I don't think it's pretty awful that they end up having it. Alright. We can continue on. You know, we have a notion of the outlay of information age on society when women are getting more and more educated that women tend to marry up as a cultural model. Part of that is recognizing men provide which is another way of saying men marry down. Look at it that way. Men don't marry up. They marry down. Based on that and and women educated, she earns more, she has more independence, she's more secure, she's more independent. The pool of available men diminishes dramatically. Throw on that the notion of female entitlement, this notion of special privilege with entitlement and princessdom syndrome. You know, you have women that are saying never settle. And they have a right to never settle, but there are consequences. And for over three generations of women, women have been told, you can do anything, you can be anything, but there's that unspoken element, there are consequences. And up until fairly recently, the numbers have been small, and there's always been some other man willing to step in to provide. And we can look at the train wreck on those. But the reality is they're starting to become acutely aware that good men have left the building like Elvis. By the time you hit your late thirties, early forties, good men are no longer available. And what we have is not just a woman who's exercised that notion of education and developing herself in an appropriate way, but there's this delusion of entitlement that good men will be available when she's ready. The consequences is that they're not. And what we have developed is an element of new age spinsterdom. When you have smart, educated, good-looking women who are single, middle-aged, and they're not able to find relationships because they have not prepared themselves for it, they have not geared themselves for it, and they themselves have priced themselves out of the sexual marketplace. Women rather than working on their own development, their own skills, their own relationship abilities, start making bullet point lists of what the next man is going to provide. All she's doing is rotating cast of characters. And the list keeps growing as her market value plummets. This is going to play out in a social level. This is going to affect our society. The other one is a woman who exercises her sexual freedoms in a manner in a wanton way, who's able to ride the cock carousel in her 20s and early 30s, who all of a sudden decides to get off and realize after paying 15 years of the phallus field that she's worn out, used up, and men don't find her available. And not only that, she actually has an unrealistic appraisal of her sexual market value. A woman who's young, beautiful, and sexual can actually hit above her weight class. And by that I mean to be able to be sexually involved with a man who will exchange a relationship for commitment for sex on a temporary basis to get sex, to have access to her at a later time in which she won't be able to get because men won't put up with her behavior. And by the way, the same guy is now moving on to younger women. She's been replaced. And again, you have her slipping into this new age, spincerdome syndrome. Ultimately, the last one I want to bring up very briefly is the fact that women have privileges because of the youth vibrance and the value of sexuality in our society. Men have it a different way. We age differently. Our status rises later. Do not think just because women have sexual privilege and act on it on marrying up and society values it, and they can throw that out in the mainstream and be okay with it, that you can do the same when you exercise male privilege. Your male privilege is to get the highest quality woman you can at the best possible time in your life. And typically it's going to be when you're older. Do not think you won't be shamed when you act on it. Older men being sexually active with, marrying, and taking up sexual time with younger, vibrant women who are younger, fitter, hotter, and free of the social baggage of women his age. Do not think that's socially acceptable. If you doubt me, ask your mother. All right, moving on from culture, we also fall into politics. And this is where we get into the law of the land. And this is when politics lives downstream of culture. Culture will guide our laws. And if our culture was feminine based, awarded women special privileges, and removed accountability from it, what do you think our laws are doing? By the way, this is where men truly get hurt. It's not just that you're going to take a financial hit. It's that your sense of a man as being able to provide is actually under attack. You've been found to be unsuitable. All right? And because the marriage is truly only valuable in an economic sense, men are particularly hard hit by it, both on a psychological, emotional level and a financial level. And because that, we can see the astronomical increase in depression rates. We also see the astronomical rise in suicides. You don't see that correlating with women as emotionally distraught as they may be. All right? And so one of the things that we can look at as far as culture and what our politics and the laws are telling us is not just that marriages are disposable, and they are. They're readily disposable. You know, the running joke with lawyers is, you know, divorce is worth it because it's so valuable. You know, it's worth paying for. It's not just that it's disposable, but men taking one step back looking at the legal context in which they're living are really utilizing that marriage isn't necessary. It is completely not required to be loved, appreciated, to have a relationship, a lifelong relationship. It's not necessary to actually have children and raise healthy productive adults. It's advisable for a number of reasons in their studies, but you're actually better off not getting married because you're better protected outside of the law than you actually are as men. And that's a scary thing. You know, we can look at the divorce statistics. The secondary case would be child custody. 80% of the time women get custody, even though as men with higher EQ requirements with a greater demand of your involvement in your child's life as a father, emotional development, you're expected to be there. Our courts in the last 20 years have not changed in the percentage of awardees of child custody nor visitation. Gender rights have not kept up with the times. We can also talk about alimony. If marriages are disposable at will and merit elite and marrable marriage spousal supports obligation and at marriage, what is the point of actually supplying additional financial incentives and also reserves as far as funding their lifestyles after marriage? What is the point of actually doing it? In some cases there are actually some genuine ones, but overall this is not about keeping women afloat. It's not about, you know, the social contract and the construction which the laws were actually formed. They have not kept up with the time in which women are actually higher educated than men when women are actually making more money on per basis of job. They may have choose other careers that afforded them other lifestyle choices of comfort, of socialization, of a number of things, but that's a choice. Men typically sacrifice. So you have a causal effect that alimony is really wealth management, it's wealth redistribution. And we're not the only society that does this. In our NSNF skin and navy doesn't have that in many cases, you know, which is actually kind of a unique way of looking at things. The last one was will actually there will be two more. Another one is going to be looking at your sexual rights as far as reproduction goes. You know, I talked about you actually have more rights to your intellectual property rights than you do your DNA. Once you lose control of your DNA, it's over. A woman's body, a woman's choice, but a woman's choice can actually incur after it's no longer her body post delivery of the child. She has the right to be able to sign away parental rights and financial support arrangements. At will be able to give the child up for adoption. A man has no right to that. You are tied to her decision at no point anywhere in the process are you allowed to sign off on your rights and obligations to that child. Now I'm not saying it's right, but we don't have gender parity on this. Beyond that. A man who actually claims, lays claim to child custody for a woman who's given rights up to a child cannot sue for child support payments in a way in which a woman can. Again, non gender gender parity. And again, we're not even allowed to discuss these things, let alone come to conclusions. We're not simply allowed to discuss them. That's that there's no justice in that. There's no equity in that. And we can move on. The basics is that we have that the cultural context and political contexts are fueling the incentives for men to stay out of relationships. And then we come into a doozy. And that is going to be the biological context has very much has been unchanged. And there's going to be an elephant in the room. There's been an elephant in the room that we don't talk about that society literally drapes a sheet over. And that is going to be a term called hypergamy. And what we face with is a very real notion biologically is that men and women are actually the same creature. Men have a libido. We have a limbic system that where that drives a sexual air choice selection or desire of mates, so forth. Interestingly enough, behind that curtain, so do women. And it acts out. And there are three primary ways in which it acts out. By the way, ignore that. Ignore that elephant in the room and it will ruin your life. It will ruin the house you live in. It will ruin your relationship. And the three elements of hypergamy are going to be the sexual dive morphisms of desire and selection. The physical traits that trigger women's desires. This is going to be the elements of size, muscularity. When you look at agility, your general fitness level. The prime species of a man. The second is going to be actually a social behavior. These are going to be social traits of dominance, of aggressiveness. These are your alpha traits, alpha male traits. Socialization, boldness, assertiveness, self-reliance, so forth. The last one is going to be your social standing. And that is going to be based on your status, your ambition, what you've done with your life, where you aren't. The old hullbacks of power, wealth, fame, and money have doubled up on one. But those are the old hallmarks. They get mixed up into a variety of degrees. These get played out. Remove those from the issue and you're in trouble. Quite frankly, relationship equity. The amount of time you've been involved with her. The house you have, the cars you have, the matching black labs you have, the number of children you have, how nice a guy you have, the number of chick flicks you want. She doesn't care. She may not care, but on a base biological level she will actually act out. And people act on base biological needs before they will social conventions. And hypergamy is her baseline value and need as a human species. Individually, there'll be some other things. It'll be important to address those as well. So as we move into, for example, that's the contextual environment which we're going to be building. And it is a hazardous one. This is no land of milk and honey. This is why you need to be serious. You need to go in with your eyes open. If you're going to build in this environment, we need to be able to have a foundation that's going to be able to support it. That's going to be starting with you. You need to make sure that you are okay with you, who you are in your life, and to get right with that. Your sense of self-worth, self-esteem, and self-confidence in yourself will dictate the course of your life. The second part on all this is actually moving on to a bit to it. Let me grab a little bit of the drink. Pardon me. Is looking at yourself, if your self needs, your developmental needs. In a lot of cases, these are going to be dependency needs. These are things based on your developmental tasks as a child as you grew up, as you transitioned into an adult. Anytime there's a void, and because we know there are going to be voids because no parent is perfect enough to raise a child complete and whole, that you're going to actually have some of these and you're going to need to work through them, is that when you don't have some of these developmental tasks resolved, they become dependency needs. They become these elements where you have separation and anxiety. Anytime when you feel you have a need for a relationship, when you have a need that she completes me, that's a dependency need, okay? Notice those. Be aware of those. The second one, and it's going to be a real critical, it's subtle, is that we tell ourselves a number of myths growing up, whether they're childhood, young adult, of what our sense of reality is of our world. What does it mean to be a man? What does it mean to be love? What does it mean to be in a long-term relationship? And a lot of times we develop these frameworks and we never revisit them as adults. We never revisit these ideas back as grown adults to check it. In many cases, we've outgrown them and don't realize it, or they're no longer function in the manner in which we do, but we desperately cling to them. You know, personally I've spoken before about having heroes in your lives and my personal failures of an individual or a hero as a real man failed. A lot of them at times they can be imaginary. They could be, you know, fictional characters or these ideas of a, you know, I had a close friend that just idealized John Wayne. Not John Wayne as a man, but what he represented as a man. By God, he was going to go through the information age as John Wayne that never really existed, you know, from all the cowboy shows. It's affected his life. It's affected his employment opportunities. It's affected his education, the relationships he's in, all right? Realize that when your childhood missed, no longer meet to today's needs or your values today, and if you don't look at them, you're going into life at a deficit. You're going in with the deck stuck against you. And this is, by the way, something you control. This is absolutely something you control. The second is going to be a fairly simple one. We need to actively screen our partners. We need to look at our partners. We need to identify what their objectives are. We need to look and evaluate these women to find out what their dependency needs are, what their developmental tasks are that they need to be actually on. Because one of the things about a developmental task is a relationship can help resolve it. You can learn by develop, learn by to learn a particular developmental task within a relationship and grow from it. But once that developmental task is over, typically, so is the relationship. Unfortunately, we cling to it and we cling on to it too long. So understanding that if there's a, you know, the reason to be in a particular relationship is the developmental task and we're brought together because we're mutually trying to resolve these. And that's over. It's time to start looking to let go in an honest, respectful way. All right. Ultimately, your developmental tasks are your responsibility. But we need to screen our partners to make sure that we can handle what their developmental tasks are. Dating crazy is awesome. All right. You know, if for the excitement, but if you cannot handle it emotionally, if you cannot hold that woman as an individual and care for her in a manner in which she needs, it is going to play havoc with you. Go fuck crazy. Have a great time with crazy. Don't own it. Don't try to shelter. Don't try to corral it. All right. I know I wasn't prepared for it when I tried. And that's my fault. All right. The next, the next element we need to look at and this, this is key and this is going back to hypergamy. Desire and attraction are absolutely non-negotiable in relationships. You must meet base biological needs of attraction and desire. Without those, you are absolutely, you know, standing on one leg, you know, and probably even worse than that. Ultimately, what we're going to be looking at is the elements that wreck a marriage when we ignore it in, in relationships with hypergamy, whether it's your physical standing, like for example, I could drop 40 pounds and increase my sexual worth rather dramatically. Okay. I could sit down and learn, you know, dominant skills of setting boundaries, setting attitudes, learning to lead in developing consensus and development, socialization skills. These are going to be social standings. I can actually fire up my ambition. Okay. Take my career seriously. Look to provide. Be accountable. One of the most important, this is not sexy news guys, having six months to 12 months in savings as an emergency fund will prevent you from hypergamy. How? Lose a job and see how your anxiety goes through the roof. Your ability to quote provide for not only for yourself, but for the relationship. It's hard to be a man if you're not providing. And I'll even argue, you don't actually physically have to provide later on. All right. But having that as a backstop, it's conservative, but it answers the base biological need of security. And these Trump's social conventions, these Trump's social needs, it's terribly important. And of all the four social dynamics in the context in which we describe, whether it's the information age, the cultural response, the political response, or the biological response of the four, I was prepared to today to say, as men we can only affect one. Okay. And that's going to be biology. You know, either by learning game, getting in fit, learning social standings or so forth. But the reality is there are others. We can affect culture when we make each other aware of the non-gender parity in our culture. When we look at non-gender parity in our laws and we become aware. When you reach out and touch a thousand men and make them aware, we can affect culture. And culture, as we know, leads politics. And that's one of the things that I really, really value about the 21 convention. You have men who are coming together to actualize themselves, their lives, and the world in which we live in. So when we look at hypergamy, these are some of the things we can look at. But make no doubt about it. If you ignore that, it isn't going to last. No amount of wealth, fame, or power is going to be able to do it. Robert Patterson is actually a running example. Here you have a rich, wealthy, successful, famous man loses a woman because she acted on sexual impulse. He wasn't providing it. Doesn't make it right, doesn't make it fair, but this is what happens. People get bored, they're a sensation, they're just not happy. And she acted out, ruined a relationship. As we move on from the base core elements of those three, of working on yourself, developing yourself, screening, filtering your partner, and then working on the role of biology as being a critical component of relationship, we actually need to develop the vertical structure of our relationships. And these are going to have to be strung with to stand the cultural loads that we place on them and the dynamic loads placed within them, the relationship itself. And the primary of these are going to be three. There will be three of them. The relationship skills that we develop, the management skills that we develop within the relationship, and ultimately the maintenance skills that we develop within a relationship. Most men are not taught any of them, but they're all going to be familiar. None of these are going to be original. When we talk relationship skills, you're going to want to take a self-assessment. You're going to want to look at what you're going to be able to look at and where you're at. You kind of know where you're at already. Look at your aptitudes. What are your studying and behavioral patterns, like correcting those, all right? Then actually do an assessment of how is your interacting with other people. What is your sociability? Are you consciously of where I would like to do one thing, but I'm not actually implementing? The third is actually going to be self-educating yourself. Physically educating yourself based on what you know is available. If you want to actually be more empathetic and you want to learn to imply active listening, actually looking and researching and documenting active listening skills, finding those particular skills you want to learn about, document them, having a separate directory in your computer, noting and journaling, taking a daily approach to utilizing those skills and recording your experiences of it. What you did well, what you didn't do well, self-regulate, all right? The last one on that is going to be taking a relationship autopsy, and this is when you actually looked at failed relationship, because failed relationships are an inflection point when your skills at that time were not sufficient enough to command a healthy relationship. Where you had problems, where you failed underscored your lack of ability, actively looking back and reflecting upon those, what decisions were made because they were laced with value, tells you a tremendous amount, not only about yourself, but your skills and where you're at and what you could be working on. Analyzing those is self-educating is what you're going to have to do. We don't typically have coursework on this. Men are not taught that, so you have to self-educate. You have to relate with other men. All right? When we move on to management, and again, management is nothing more than an organized approach of people, resources, relationships, any number of things to have a desired objective. Going into a relationship, it is fundamental to know what is your objective. Ultimately, if you don't have a relationship objective, do not commit to one. Why are you committing to one if you don't have an objective? Most likely, it's going to be because of dependency need. You're exchanging sex for commitment, and you're not strong enough willed as an individual to stand on your own and live on your own in an autonomous way. And that is underlined a weak psychological structure. You're a weak individual. We need to be far apart ourselves. We need to be willing to really differentiate. We really need to look and say no. We're not willing to exchange that. Women are the gatekeepers of sex. Men are the gatekeepers of commitment. Start controlling that gate. Another part of relationship management is opening the lines of communication early. And it's not just communication. It's going to be communication in the critical realms of what does it mean to be in a committed relationship? What does it mean to be your sexual involvement and your intimacy level, finances, friends, both mutual and shared? All the common relationship elements are going to be there, all right? And we're going to need to be looking at those as well. And there are a tremendous number of other drivers we need to evaluate and discuss openly, all right? And we need to take a healthy approach to this. Unfortunately, I've run a little bit long on it. The last thing I want to talk about is we need to be able to protect ourselves as men. I'm going to jump way ahead of my talk. And part of this is if we're looking at marriage, we need to look and realize that marriage as an institution is primarily an economic one. And based on that, we need to have an economic response to it, not a moral, not a cultural one. Part of that is preparing yourself for it. Absolutely without a doubt, all right? The critics and pundits will sit out and say marriage is for the poor. Marriage is for men who can't afford the rent. Marriage is for men who can't afford the mortgage. Men is our marriage is for men who need to share the financial burden of housekeeping. All right? Marriage is for people who can't afford retirement benefits or insurance benefits or child rent capabilities. Men that can't afford either through cost or by intellectual decree the ability to outsource. The wealthy do for cause. Based on all that, and I don't necessarily agree with it, but there's a strong argument for we need to protect ourselves. The first is going to be a prenup dual agreement is going to be a must. Absolute must if you're going to protect yourself. And it's not just a security it's framing a discussion of relationship. The problem with prenups is the fact that it only directs towards assets and property division and spousal support. Under no circumstances does it involve children or child custody because it's up to at the time the child's best interest. You cannot have a legal element in family law governing them. Not only that, lawyers and primarily judges are actually playing loose with some of the standards and actually waiving some of that off based on outlandish lifestyle agreements. The second thing I would entertain would be something that we're not seeing today is that we actually formulate a partnership agreement. A legal structural element that you would see in case civil law of why you're being in the relationship. What's the point of this merit? If it's child-rearing family development, state so. What are your obligations? What are the things you're going to be able to do? What are the things that you're providing and why? Treat it as such. For example, when we look at Alamon, does it make sense that it's a two for one relationship as far as payment goes? For every two days you're with her, she gets a paid Alamon. So you imagine going to an employer working five years with foreign employer and getting two and a half year severance pay. That doesn't happen out in the economy, but it happens in family law. Setting the tone against a economic standard would dramatically transform them. The third one is I would look at putting incentives back into the marriage. And these are going to be kind of subtle ones. I would sit down and say self-perform marriage insurance where you both mutually add into the marriage based on a certain amount to actually augment the insurance on the damages that are included. The second one is under civil law, have civil penalties assigned to breaches of failure. We do it in business models. We should do it there. That would up cert the family law elements. And this goes for either sex. It needs to be mutual. Mutual compatible. I'm not just talking from a man's side. The third one, which I find entertaining as hell, is actually put out a co-signing parental performance bond. Is her friends and family, particularly family, willing to co-sign the marriage agreement? Willing to put good money up, not as a dowry, but as a risk. People are willing to put co-sign car loans for their child, co-sign mortgages for a loan, but we don't co-sign marriages. Why? Yet the first time the marriage is in trouble when there's conflict. What happens? The social support network is saying, get out of that marriage. Take the kids to get the money and get out. Rather than having a vested interest in making that marriage work. Having people work through the issue, not destructing the bonds. The bottom line is when we look at things, and I'm sorry to cut it short, is we need to actually look at a number of issues. We need to to understand the age in which we live in, the cultural, political, social, economic situations. We need to actually protect ourselves in a number of ways. And that is going by looking at relationship management, relationship maintenance. All right. And I know I skip maintenance. We'll talk about it later. And we need to actually actually take solid, concrete steps in actually protecting ourselves in the relationships we want. Ultimately, we need to put the incentives back in. And the best way to put the incentives back in is only to commit to women who are prepared, willing, able, and are able to actually foster the relationships we want. And that is by being very, very, very selective, by being discriminating, by taking it seriously and making sure she does as well. As men, we're gatekeepers to that commitment. I really want you to be a guardian at that gate and recognize that not only the choices that we make for ourselves, but the quality of the relationships determines our lives. So with that in mind, over the next three days, I want you to listen to the speakers that are going to come and speak. I'm going to want you to take notes, talk with each other, engage in the speakers, you know, and ask yourself the question, who do I want to be? What do I want to become? What is the quality in nature and make up the life that I want to live? And no matter where that takes you, contemplate that and choose and apply yourself. All right. Thank you. One, two questions. And by the way, I cut the speech short. And so if any of you guys want to take notes, we'll talk. I can talk about maintenance and management and some of the other things. I know I ran long. There's a lot more to talk about. And this is going to be one of the things I'm going to be around for the next three days. Please come see me. Love to talk to you. That's why I'm here. Five questions. First off, thank you. Thank you for having the balls to say something that no one else is able to say, especially on the web. But my question is, you stated how dependency is bad. And I think there is a level of dependency that's needed in a relationship. The boss asks the question. So can you just repeat it? Okay. Yeah, sure. People will understand. No, I get it now. Oh, you're good. Good. Can you just go deeper into really what level of dependency is bad? Because I feel like you need a level of dependency, but you stated that it's completely bad. Well, I'll differentiate probably what you're not saying is that with dependency and desire, there's a difference between desire and dependency. Dependency is when you actually need somebody. You're not functioning as a human being, that you're not able to make good choices for yourself or that are unhealthy in nature. All right. That's a dependency. When you have that sort of driven need, I don't think it's healthy because it ends up, it plays out in a number of ways. If you have a desire for somebody that you want, okay, it's completely different. And if we look at it, there's a difference between, for example, joy and pleasure. Joy comes from within. That's self-generated. And if you're autonomous and you're self-actuated, you can go through life alone and still be lonely, but you realize you can develop joy and have a want to be with somebody. Somebody that's not autonomous, that's pleasure-seeking, that's looking, that's an external influence because dependency needs are external driven rather than internal driven is that they have a need for it, that they'll be alone and they'll be needing. And they have not learned to differentiate the difference between an internalized sensation and state of being and something that's driving external. Anything that's external is not associated with you. And pleasure is very much an external thing. I love pleasure, but it's external. I find joy within. And when I'm whole and I'm self and I'm secure, I'm not dependent because I'm self-sustaining. My joy and sense of being is all internalized. And I'm able to go through life. I can want and desire things. But that's completely different than not being adequate. And actually, when you're not adequate, you will reach out. And we'll actually, interestingly enough, we'll develop relationships based on our own sense of development. We'll actually seek out people that you can help us along or people that will replicate that experience. And if it's a negative experience and it's a dependency experience, they'll be negative and unhealthy relationships. That's quite... You talked about women marrying up. Yeah. I was wondering, do you think that, in the cases that women make more money than the man in a marriage, do you think that gives them the right to be more dominant and have that more masculine role? Whereas a perfect example, like my neighbors, I know their wife is always yelling at her husband. She's like, Nick, blah, blah, blah. And it's just, it's kind of sad to see that. Do you think that maybe just because women make more money, they have the right to control the man in a relationship? That was a point that I actually cut out of the speech. Interestingly enough, making more doesn't give anybody the right. Okay. What you're hearing in that example is somebody that's lacking social skills. Okay. And in this particular case, it's coming from a woman. She's lacking social skills to appropriately do it. I will actually entertain this notion. I hope you guys do it. And if it's not in your reality, it should be. And keep in mind, if it's not in your reality, don't expect it to happen. We live in an age in which, for the first time in our lives, we actually have a choice of marrying up. Okay. And it doesn't mean you just become a say-at-home dad in your slag or anything else, but we can actually meet women's needs who are able to actually out-earn us or out-capable of ours and provide us a measure of wealth, life, and enjoyment that we couldn't necessarily earn our own. Okay. And we can exchange that for a number of ways. Flip it on its head. When you're with a woman, what is she providing you as a man outside of sex? By the way, sex is a major driver. Okay. Well-off, healthy woman loves sex. Are you able to meet those needs? Okay. It doesn't just mean to be the boy toy. Okay. Ultimately, a woman is going to be a little more judgmental and she's going to look for other based biological needs that need to be met. Sense of security providing. And when we look at relationships in which men are utterly failing at any measure, what we would measure is masculinity. Women in those relationships still define the man when they're outperforming and out-providing doing all the roles as the man and as the head of household. Why? Ultimately because back to your biological prerogative is to actually protect the woman, to protect the family. They're relying on that. Based biological need. If you can address more than that, find out what her specific psychological needs are. Okay. What's her life stories? What are those untold expectations in family history? Answer those questions and you will have something that nobody else will provide her. And that is has a tremendous value. It's no longer about just one provider. It's about nature of two people going through their lives together and what's the makeup of that life. But for the first time in history, men on a haul are able to look at that and evaluate it and say, I have an opportunity to marry up as well as married down. You know, or for that matter, grab a partner that's equal to. Put that concept because it's very, it's very much going to be our reality. Very much so. Okay. We got to end it. Thanks guys.