https://bit.ly/3oxpRBU https://bit.ly/3pzdiWb https://bit.ly/3rK21VG https://bit.ly/3pBECDa https://bit.ly/3rGvf7F https://bit.ly/3dureLq https://bit.ly/3osRbBk https://bit.ly/3DxGf9J https://bit.ly/31u4clB https://bit.ly/3oxpXJM https://bit.ly/303BPd3 by a Taken In Hand reader on 2006 Aug 19 - 16:18 | reply to this comment Good line.. ..good line - ride them hard and put them away wet whoever posted it... VH, interesting issue whether the most dominant men probably deliberately choose the more male brain type careers than going off at a tangent from how they're made to take exams, work up an organisation and probably needing a lot of female skills in the process although I do think many of us cross over between male and female attributes depending on the person. I suspect dominant men and submissive women are at different ends of a scale and the male/female differences between them are particularly pronounced however. Baron Cohen - yes interesting stuff and his brother is Ali G and makes me laugh - a useful family all in all. Bringing up 3 sons compared to my older daughters gives me lots of chances to look at gender and individual differences. Submissive and indeed any women can hugely improve their relationships with men if they have some understanding of how the male brain works. by Hera on 2006 Aug 30 - 18:17 | reply to this comment Strains of brain One thing very attractive about you is your attentiveness to these differences and their dynamics. I am some sort of left-handed cross-over, throroughly male but of somewhat gay temperament in emotionality and capacity for esthetic-erotic absorption. I have no children but spend a lot of time with them. The yard where I have been harvesting corn and tomatoes abuts a classic american backyard playground always full of kids. The mother of the children and the neighborhood adoptees calls it my anthropology lab.