This video made me a believer:
She had all the glamour in the world: supermodel jet-setting lifestyle, plenty of millionaires (maybe billionaires) and pro athletes to date if she wanted, fame, beauty, and a seven figure salary. She was living the "dream life" that so many women with a whole lot less to offer sacrifice their souls for 24/7, spending much of their lives trying to mimic on facebook, twitter and instagram.
Instead of joining them in worshiping this silly glamour above all else, she somehow found a way to put her desire of family and motherhood ahead of all of that. Many women with MUCH less to lose (ex: not supermodels with bodies to match, no seven figure salaries, etc) are too selfish (or too tuned into the dominant feminist/anti-family and anti-male mantra) to sacrifice for a child/husband like that even if they have the means to do so. This involved taking time off from the jet-setting career, having to put her body through pregnancy (and recovering from it to get back to work), settling for a guy she loved who maybe isn't LeoNardo DiCaprio, Ronaldo, Adam Levine or some other mega-celebrity that could up her status/fame quotient (her DJ husband is a D-list celebrity at best, probably not even that).
It seems that too many western women, when given her choices, would continue living solely for MORE money/fame/status, etc, with things like children/marriage to be put off until way down the road as mere "distractions" to the greater goal of aggrandizing her celebrity lifestyle/image and climbing the hypergamous female societal ladder we all hate so much.
In a world where so many women with much less to offer are insisting on never letting anything get in the way of their "career", "fun" and "independence", Doutzen actually made room for other things in her life-a man she gave a fuck about (who isn't merely there to enhance her own status/image) and a child who she realized (at the age of just 24/25) would be more valuable than any wealth, random alpha cocks, or other silliness she could accrue if she didn't devote the time to having/raising him. That is a realization well over 90% of western women in her position could never make, and almost never seem to make.
Even now, her family is her central focus-she is career oriented, but the child's wellbeing is the main motive for that focus. This is the kind of career oriented/feminist outlook I could get behind. It is one that focuses on maintaining a family as an end unto itself rather than trying to discard/put the family (particularly the husband and men in general) aside as useless inhibitors and/or distractions (as is commonly advocated by western feminists) in favor of more time on the cock carousel or more time served in devotion to some corporation and the accumulation of more shoes/clothes and other useless crap related to that vapid (yet too often idolized) Sex and the City lifestyle.
This kind of selflessness is rare in a young woman-she's the anti-Carrie Bradshaw. Maybe I'm pedestalizing a bit here, but I'm glad to see such women still exist in the western world.
She had all the glamour in the world: supermodel jet-setting lifestyle, plenty of millionaires (maybe billionaires) and pro athletes to date if she wanted, fame, beauty, and a seven figure salary. She was living the "dream life" that so many women with a whole lot less to offer sacrifice their souls for 24/7, spending much of their lives trying to mimic on facebook, twitter and instagram.
Instead of joining them in worshiping this silly glamour above all else, she somehow found a way to put her desire of family and motherhood ahead of all of that. Many women with MUCH less to lose (ex: not supermodels with bodies to match, no seven figure salaries, etc) are too selfish (or too tuned into the dominant feminist/anti-family and anti-male mantra) to sacrifice for a child/husband like that even if they have the means to do so. This involved taking time off from the jet-setting career, having to put her body through pregnancy (and recovering from it to get back to work), settling for a guy she loved who maybe isn't LeoNardo DiCaprio, Ronaldo, Adam Levine or some other mega-celebrity that could up her status/fame quotient (her DJ husband is a D-list celebrity at best, probably not even that).
It seems that too many western women, when given her choices, would continue living solely for MORE money/fame/status, etc, with things like children/marriage to be put off until way down the road as mere "distractions" to the greater goal of aggrandizing her celebrity lifestyle/image and climbing the hypergamous female societal ladder we all hate so much.
In a world where so many women with much less to offer are insisting on never letting anything get in the way of their "career", "fun" and "independence", Doutzen actually made room for other things in her life-a man she gave a fuck about (who isn't merely there to enhance her own status/image) and a child who she realized (at the age of just 24/25) would be more valuable than any wealth, random alpha cocks, or other silliness she could accrue if she didn't devote the time to having/raising him. That is a realization well over 90% of western women in her position could never make, and almost never seem to make.
Even now, her family is her central focus-she is career oriented, but the child's wellbeing is the main motive for that focus. This is the kind of career oriented/feminist outlook I could get behind. It is one that focuses on maintaining a family as an end unto itself rather than trying to discard/put the family (particularly the husband and men in general) aside as useless inhibitors and/or distractions (as is commonly advocated by western feminists) in favor of more time on the cock carousel or more time served in devotion to some corporation and the accumulation of more shoes/clothes and other useless crap related to that vapid (yet too often idolized) Sex and the City lifestyle.
This kind of selflessness is rare in a young woman-she's the anti-Carrie Bradshaw. Maybe I'm pedestalizing a bit here, but I'm glad to see such women still exist in the western world.
Know your enemy and know yourself, find naught in fear for 100 battles. Know yourself but not your enemy, find level of loss and victory. Know thy enemy but not yourself, wallow in defeat every time.