I did not invent the ideas discussed herein. These principles are well known and well documented by others. What I want to do is merely reflect on the topic as well as my own personal in-field experiences. Hopefully others will interject (which people tend not to do in my threads .. ?).
Reactiveness is a central concept - one of the most important if not THE most important. Even the budding new "PUA" - fresh off the boat so to speak - has typically read some of the basic advice. "Be the prize", "Be willing to walk away", etc. .. add any other number of catchy phrases. But what does it all really mean?
The basic premise :-
[b]In any given social interaction one person will [usually] be reacting more [to the other person].[/b]
YOU <-- ** reacting ** --> HER
I don't know about you guys but when I started out in all of this I was a reacting machine. Put me in a busy bar/club and I was anything but in my own comfortable little world. I realized very early on that my brain - my hard wired instincts - were the culprit. This caused my BL to be reactive and therefore diminished my value - both to women who otherwise might have considered me attractive and in general.
A hot girl walked by .. I looked. Girl wants to pass through the crowd via our group .. I'd smile and politely move out of the way. The list goes on and on. If I was physically touched by a girl (key point) my body reacted, almost without me having any control. I won't go into detail with specific examples on this public forum but you get the point. There are primal reasons for this.
Picture a person who has value bestowed by situational circumstance. E.g. a club host, celebrity, HOT CHICKS IN A CLUB... It is all situational however the value is real and displayed by people REACTING to them and them being UNREACTIVE back (in the context meaning not necessarily rude but playing to the role). Example as per Tyler is the creepy Denny's manager who has fucked 75% of the waitresses on shift. An example from me might be David Kraddick, local radio person, up in the VIP at Aura. The concept is the same. In both examples the value is entirely based in reactiveness.
** side note: Understand I am not saying it is ideal to become "blanket unreactive" in all social situations. It is definitely better than blanket "reactive" and can work initially to break the habit but the skill is way more subtle. I hate to say this but you have to go out and practice, practice, practice. Never give anything value without good reason (benefits you). You can watch this in action at any club any time. Watch the hot girls and the value bestowed to them by guys "reacting" .. I could point it out to any one of you in any busy bar. Be the hot girl. **
My own personal practice came in [progressively more] uncomfortable venues. Initally I was just trying to get my head to stop reacting to all the information shooting about. To filter out the useless and *bad* fears that manifested from being in such environments without situational value.. This was stage 1 for me. It was hard work and painful at first. Very uncomfortable and the internal voice is in a paranoid frenzy. But you are in control end of the day.
Ironically (and logically) I was able to tell when I improved by how others reacted to ME, in particular women. I might have gotten early clues from a situation where before I would have reacted to a random girl or group in my vicinity and instead I recognized the feelings/fears/whatever and just slightly turned my BL away or whatever. Now I was able to see how she reacted TO ME. The results were staggering. To the point where all openers now are basically off the cuff and unreactive to key targets (men or women).
Experience has proven to me that this attacts women. No doubt about it. Just for an experiment try this some time. When a girl you just met grabs your arm don't react. Don't give it a thought at all. Imagine your mum is grabbing your arm. Don't pull it away or move in or do anything. Just be unreactive and MAKE HER WORK .... in a charming way. Easier said than done I know. It took me forever to get it right.