Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Omegas


This post discusses omegas continuing on the expansion of the basic theory of relationships which explains all aspects of sexual relationships including: why you are attracted to who you are attracted to, why people get into the relationships patterns they do, and the long term ramifications. Go and read from the beginning to get the full picture.

Omegas are a different breed of people. Omegas never have sexual partners at all. Omegas are homogenous and the same whether male or female so are dealt with together. These people have a reason for being single. Sometimes that reason can be fixed with a little bit of ease, see the makeover shows that are flooding TV. It is easy to make someone more desirable when it is just a matter of minor appearance problems. This is the idea of chick flicks where a dork is turned into the most popular person in school. This is not the average omega though.

The real omegas who have problems are the ones that have no substance to them. People are attracted to others who have things going on in their life. If someone is 45 and still working at Burger King it is likely they do not have much to offer the general dating community. Omegas can get better a little at a time. Start reading books and the newspaper more. Learn a useful skill. Fix any social miscues. Try to get a good job. After awhile omegas will become more desirable. The problem with omegas is that they often do not recognize that they are omegas. They will ask “How come I can never find anyone, I go out but never get asked out.” The thing is they can not find anyone because they are not desirable.

Future postings will ignore omegas to a certain point because of the presumption that they do not take part much in the relationships scene. It is crucial for people to be honest with themselves though. If you are an omega you need to take steps to starts making yourself a more desirable match. With proper steps omegas will find new attention flocking to them.

The next posting will deal with the hybrid beta turned alpha.

For questions comments or concerns email me.




1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I stumbled upon this blog today, and found a lot of truth in each of the posts. I look forward to your next article, and to when you hopefully delve deeper into different dynamics between types.