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Men, game, and social media strategies

theredquest.wordpress.com/2017/07/09/men-game-and-social-media-strategies/

As far as I can tell, there are two good, functional social media strategies for
guys thinking about the game. Strategy one is the one I follow: no or
minimal presence. I have an Instagram account but don’t use it and have
never used it, despite my interest in photography. I have a Snapchat
account but only use it for 1:1 communication. Facebook is there mostly so I
can chat with women, again 1:1. Some women who disappear on text will
reappear when contacted through other mediums, and this has led me to
some lays. Less is more with any form of communication (which is a form of
scarce, valuable attention).

The other strategy is to fully play and invest in the social media game. That
means consciously only posting pictures that demonstrate higher value,
which usually means action shots, or shots of you with lots of different
pretty girls who provide a form of social proof. To me this looks hard to pull
off, try-too-hard, and exhausting, but it seems possible to leverage this
when it’s combined with other game. I don’t think the cost-benefit is there,
but I know a couple guys who seem to work this angle. Don’t know how
successful it is because everyone lies about their sex lives, but I suppose it’s
possible to generate lays via social media for some guys.

In either case, public interaction with a girl’s statuses or pics should be


minimal or nonexistent. You’re a busy guy living in the real world who isn’t
here to water thirsty women. We’ve all seen the thirsty “like cascades” any
moderately attractive woman gets when she posts a basic pic of herself in a
dress or bikini. Those “likes” are obvious demonstrations of lower value. I’d
love to omit this paragraph as being bloody obvious but these things
happen all the time. I rarely use social media and even I see them. Facebook
and Instagram appear to be the worst platforms for attention-seeking girls.
When I hear girls talking about them I like to poke fun at their interest in

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lame guys who are creeping on them online all day. Usually this gets laughs
and good engagement. Girls know the validation is shallow but they crave it
anyway.

Most guys I know seem to choose neither good strategy. They use social
media way too much. They post dumb shit that demonstrates lower value.
They toss off thirsty “likes” and compliments. They’re promiscuous,
unconscious users who don’t integrate any strategy into what they do, and
in the process they waste their effort. Don’t be those guys. Most of the
guys I work with, especially the ones who aren’t getting ahead, do this. Guys
who give their attention away show that their attention has no value.

Everything you say, write, or post on social media can come back to haunt
you. I’ve seen this happen.

Someone just posted about the value stoicism has in their life. I loved that
post. Social media is usually the opposite of stoicism. Before you post, stop
to ask: 1) will this post help move me toward getting laid? 2) what good
thing can happen as a result of this post? 3) what would Marcus Aurelius do
this position? 4) what does the man I admire most do on social media (I
thought hard about this one… the guys I admire most, who I actually know,
don’t have much time for this shit, and they know it’s not going to get them
laid).

When you check social media and post there, what are you not doing?
You’re not thinking for yourself. You’re not at the gym. You’re not learning
new skills, like Shibari or riding a motorcycle or photography. You’re in an
intermediate state that is neither being nor doing. The guys who pursue
the second strategy I mentioned above are at least consciously pursuintg
their goals via social media. I’ve read guys saying social media is poison and
while I don’t 100% agree they have a point.

Social media is video games for women. I think guys should not play their
game. Most guys have a short window (one month at most, often just a
week) between meeting a woman and getting her in bed. Social media
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interaction is not a good way to spend that time and if anything
demonstrates lower value.

Plus: “The only guys who like your pictures are the ones you don’t want to
like your pictures.”

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