Um... can we not do that? The whole adding words to what people have said to paint them in a bad light thing? It isn't conducive to a mature and friendly discussion.
They were such comments on page 1. Maybe it was a little bit of sarcasm, but the jist of it is all there.
You don't want them to call you shallow - so try to do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Okay?
Grave error; I actually referred to myself as shallow on the first page of this thread. I think I'm also made it abundantly clear that I love the super-skinny chicks and am all over
Vogue putting waifs on their covers. In addition, I clearly have an enduring girlcrush on Elizabeth Taylor. I like looking at attractive people; I wouldn't base a friendship on how sexually attractive* the other person is; but the pursuit of a relationship? Partially.
Honestly, my feelings aren't hurt when one calls me shallow.
However, I do - like some of the posters here - believe comments about 'I'm not looking for someone I'm sexually attracted to and I don't expect my spouse to find me sexually appealing...' to be utter poppycock at best, and borderline masochistic at worst.
First, I have no idea who those people are. And I don't feel like googling them. Not everyone on this board is a pop-culture know it all.
I don't think it's out of line to expect the average person to have an
idea of who Serge Gainsbourg is, nor do I think knowing who he is makes one a master at Trivial Pursuit or a 'pop-culture know-it-all.' But, moving on.
Good. I don't think anyone has said that anyone has said that. (And no, that sentence does not contain a typo).
Mine did though, a fact of which I'm embarrased about.
I think that what some people have said is that they believe sexual attraction can be based on non-physical attraction and is for them. So while I may not find Joe Bob to be all that attractive physically, I may still have a desire for him because of the attraction to his personality.
I'm not saying that I think it's all that common, nor am I saying that it is for everyone... just that it does happen.
I don't disagree with either point.
So if someone answers the question in the OP with a "yes" there's no real reason to believe that person is fooling him/herself or just trying to appear super-virtuous.
I don't see what saying 'I'm don't notice looks' proves other than one is a) perhaps lying to themselves or b) very virtuous, in which case, congrats. But one pretending that they don't notice when someone physically attractive passes by seems again, like utter poppycock. I'm thrilled again if they don't steal a second glance, but I think most find this situation highly unlikely.
*assuming sex appeal is based 50% on what one has got, and 50% what everyone else thinks you've got.