Amen! Excellently expressed!
The elephant standing outside the room with the elephant is that, as much as each individual widow (along with whatever orphan children accompany her) may fantasize about being entitled to a life of comfort as she strategizes about whether or not she's going to attach herself to a potential future mate, the reality of the situation is that your
supposed lack of resources is a greater level of resources than the vast majority of women in her situation will ever be presented with being able to access. The elephant
outside the room is
bellowing the truth that, absent willingness to compromise on fantasies, most such women will continue living lives that combine low resources with ongoing challenging struggles to make ends meet and properly meet non-material needs of their orphan children. The elephant
outside the room
knows that only a very tiny percentage of women will have the luxury to successfully nab a high-resource-provider, while the rest are holding out in the deluded belief that they're entitled to just win life's lottery.
As
men, we're collectively responsible for
all of these women. While we mistakenly fall prey to being convinced that we must simply continually up
our games, millions of women remain without covering as they fail to up
their games or even acknowledge what men already bring to the table. My argument is two-fold: on the one hand, leftover women do not
deserve extraordinary men; on the other hand, while we're wasting time, energy and even resources proving ourselves worthy and/or building up our resources, leftover women remain . . . leftover.
Are they better off alone and poor with their fantasies? Or better off under the covering of men who will protect them, provide them due benevolence and very likely -- no matter how resource-poor they are -- even improve their material security simply due to economics of scale?
@The Revolting Man, what I say next I say with the full authority of having had numerous exposures to the actual Revolting Man and Windblown household:
don't kid yourself; while many women would indeed turn their noses up at you simply because your resources are
supposedly below average, the vast majority of them would look down their noses at over 90% of men, anyway -- they're not perpetuating their misery because men don't have enough resources; they're doing so because their expectations are unrealistic, because they value social approval over sanity, and because they are typically abominable at self-reflection. You are most
definitely not too poor to have another wife. If it isn't just women being foolish, then it's a matter of an unnecessary barrier you're placing in your own path. You are a
tremendously resourceful man, and, despite your imperfections given that you're not Yeshua, all of your children and stepchildren are testaments to that fact. I wouldn't even
begin to doubt that you're a great lover, and every woman who would shy away from joining your family because you're officially 'poor' is depriving herself of that, so isn't a woman who makes that choice the responsible party for choosing deprivation of lovemaking over the possibility of life being rough in between the great sex? Should someone rape or rob or murder her and/or her children, would she be better off because she wasn't living with you? -- and I assert she would
not, because it seems highly unlikely anyone would be fool enough to come after her on
your property!
Acquiring and retaining wealth is indeed a good thing, but is it more important than a woman being covered by a man? It seems clear to me that Scripture is much more heavily weighted toward asserting the latter than the former.
I think it's time for soft women to start watching
Little House on the Prairie episodes again.
The whole men-just-have-to-keep-demonstrating-increasing-worth conversation is a Big Lie, and, as men, what we're responsible for is whether or not we continue to reward women for having that delusion. All it's done is make life worse for men
and women.