Do men like submissive women?
Do some men like submissive, push over, door mat women?
9 Responses
Sam
31 Aug 2010
chode
31 Aug 2010
I like chicks that put out
joris14us
31 Aug 2010
submissive woman is not the same as a door mat or a push over , some people like to be submissive ( like in the bed room ) but they would still be strong in the rest of the household
and to answer your question , yes some man like that
Eric
31 Aug 2010
I prefer dominant women in bed
infantrywife132
31 Aug 2010
I run the house. the finances. i raise our daughter. i am very much a strong woman, who knows how to take care of things.
however, i take care of my husband. i make his dinner, and do his laundry, and i give him whatever he wants in bed. i don’t think that makes me submissive though. i just love him, and want to make him happy.
santobugito
31 Aug 2010
Some do, but what fun is being a doormat?
The kind of man that likes a woman who is a pushover, is the kind of man that couldn’t handle an assertive woman and will more than likely take advantage of the situation.
Deacon
31 Aug 2010
Infantry rocks again! LOL
Poppet
31 Aug 2010
I see you’ve met my father-in-law. Probably why he doesn’t like me much because I don’t roll over and take his cr*p.
Jimbo73
17 May 2011
Your measure of psychosexual health as a man is reflected by how submissive you like your women. Likewise, women who are submissive by Cattell personality criteria are healthier, more fertile and score more highly on indices of physical attractiveness. This is not a very PC statement, but is empirically supported.
Feminists have contrived the argument that only weak men are attracted to submissive women, claiming that it is an indication of weakness in themselves. However, all the psychometric evidence would suggest that a patriarchal (dominant man, submissive woman) relationship is actually the form that is biologically normal and healthy, and that men who tend to deviate away from this standard are predisposed to paraphilias, gender identity disorders and other psychosexual/physiological problems.
In context: we live in a gender dysfunctional society where biological norms of gender specific behaviour are suppressed for a political agenda and for social engineering purposes.

some do…but, not me.
Why would you even ask such a rhetorical question?