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<blockquote data-quote="Bullgrit" data-source="post: 6229820" data-attributes="member: 31216"><p>I think the 20-21% woman and the 9-10% man are the *most* attractive. But I think a woman is completey acceptably attractive from 14-15% to 25-26%, and a man from 6-7% to 14-15%.</p><p></p><p>From what I see in our media (including Internet comments), I think our culture expects a woman to be thinner than my preference.</p><p></p><p>I think my choice for most attractive woman is within the normal, (or maybe slightly under), the cultural average size for women. My choice for most attractive man is definitely, significantly under the cultural average size for men.</p><p></p><p>Definitely. For instance, the 25-26% woman would be called "fat" in most Internet comments, and that's just bad. And few people realize just how much work the 6-7% and 9-10% man shape requires -- not just dieting to get skinny like people expect of a woman -- yet it seems to be considered the baseline for male sexiness.</p><p></p><p>That is, it seems that in our culture, in general, a woman just has to be skinny, but a man has to be muscular. Some women can be skinny with no effort, but a man can't be muscular like that without a great deal of work.</p><p></p><p>Bullgrit</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bullgrit, post: 6229820, member: 31216"] I think the 20-21% woman and the 9-10% man are the *most* attractive. But I think a woman is completey acceptably attractive from 14-15% to 25-26%, and a man from 6-7% to 14-15%. From what I see in our media (including Internet comments), I think our culture expects a woman to be thinner than my preference. I think my choice for most attractive woman is within the normal, (or maybe slightly under), the cultural average size for women. My choice for most attractive man is definitely, significantly under the cultural average size for men. Definitely. For instance, the 25-26% woman would be called "fat" in most Internet comments, and that's just bad. And few people realize just how much work the 6-7% and 9-10% man shape requires -- not just dieting to get skinny like people expect of a woman -- yet it seems to be considered the baseline for male sexiness. That is, it seems that in our culture, in general, a woman just has to be skinny, but a man has to be muscular. Some women can be skinny with no effort, but a man can't be muscular like that without a great deal of work. Bullgrit [/QUOTE]
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