And also I think particularly as a female, you're taught to be defensive your whole life. You're taught not to be aggressive.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Everyone has a different training style and being a female, sometimes you find you have to get really aggressive. Some people respond really well to aggression, some people don't.
I understand aggressiveness in only one way: being prepared to hurt yourself, not someone else.
I'm not an aggressive person at all. But I know how to fight.
Aggression is something that is a part of me, and I'm never going to take that out of my game.
Speaking as a biologist, I think women are less aggressive than men, and they play a larger role in the early education of the young and helping them overcome their genetic heirloom.
The more potent, unasked question is how society at large reacts to eager, voluntary violence by females, and to the growing evidence that women can be just as aggressive as men.
The denial of female aggression is a destructive myth. It robs an entire gender of a significant spectrum of power, leaving women less than equal with men and effectively keeping them 'in their place' and under control.
Perhaps the strongest evidence that women have as broad and deep a capacity for physical aggression as men is anecdotal. And as with men, this capacity has expressed itself in acts from the brave to the brutal, the selfless to the senseless.
Women find men attractive who are aggressive... but later on, they get worried that that aggression, that alpha energy, is going to be turned back against them and their children.
I think if a woman is feeling aggressive, she should be aggressive and not hold back.