Acronyms used in this article can be looked up on the acronyms
page. To get involved in discussions like this, you can join the mASF discussion
forum at fastseduction.com/discussion.
[posts in this section may be edited, but only for spelling corrections and readability]
mASF post by "Woodhaven" posted on: mASF forum: Advanced Discussion, July 7, 2005On 7/6/05 5:55:00 AM, giordino wrote: >On 7/5/05 11:17:00 PM, Woodhaven wrote: >>If you isolate the common >>elements of two seemingly >>different styles which are >>both effective, you eliminate >>the distinction altogether. >> >>-Spontaneity. >>-Mutual value escalation. >>-Congruence to intention. >>-Continuous flow of action. > >I have to disagree here. > >This is over simplification. If you are >only aware of these factors then I >suggest you have unconscious competence >in your successes with women, and as >such do not recognize the real life >experiences of those who cannot assume >attraction the way you suggest in this >forum.
LOL. Those are merely the fundamental commonalities!
I have mentioned nothing of technique and specifics which is an incredibly vast
body of work.
>Perhaps with your students woodhaven, >this is the most effective thing to tell >them so they can relax and not try so >hard. And in that way, perhaps it is >great coaching advice.
Indeed. The results speak for themselves, there are currently 7 lays on the Field Reports board which are based on those concepts.
>But for the analysis of the processes of >seduction (for replication of results), >I wonder whether you don't do more harm >then good by diverting attention to >something that is not directly conducive >to an understanding of women and the >process of mating.
So quick to come to conclusions, giordino! If my teachings were limited to
that 1 line post, there would be no need for workshops, would there!
Woodhaven
-- http://www.rapidsocialimpact.com
|
Unless otherwise noted, this article is Copyright©2005 by
"Woodhaven" with implicit permission provided to FastSeduction.com for
reproduction. Any other use is prohibited without the explicit permission of the
original author.