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one (a fine specimen of humanity, of course!) is attracted to a seemingly suitable person of the opposite sex, but said person of the opposite sex seems to be incapable of loving anyone who doesn't beat him/her up, either physically or emotionally.
Some DU men have encountered this type of woman and concluded in their adolescent way that "all women want to be treated like crap." But that's simply nonsense. No emotionally healthy person wants to be treated like crap, and besides, it's not an exclusively female trait.
When I was in college, living in an all-women's dormitory with two phones per floor (this was back when hippies and dinosaurs roamed the earth), we all remarked on the fact that our bitchiest, most cynical, cruelist neighbors got all the phone calls from men, while the rest of us spent our Saturday nights eating popcorn in front of the TV. These young femmes fatales used to come back from dates boasting about mean they'd been.
Even now, I see both men and women married to unfaithful, emotionally unstable mates who make unreasonable demands on them and have them under some sort of spell in which those unreasonable demands seem like the only alternative. I listen to the excuses that they make for their spouse, and I ask, "Couldn't you have done thus and so?" And they look startled and say, "I never thought of that."
I don't know what makes a person want to be dominated. As one who had to struggle to escape from a domineering mother and grandmother, I'm overly sensitive to this, and some of my early problems with relationships came from fear of being under someone else's control. However, I have relatives whose parents were even more domineering than mine, and they never escaped, even though they had the financial resources to do so. Seeing that they never escaped far enough to get into a serious relationship, I'm not sure that having a really domineering set of parents is the reason for desiring to be dominated in a relationship.
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