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Rob Henderson, psychologist and author of "Troubled," explores why having a boyfriend has become socially embarrassing among young women, particularly online influencers. The discussion reveals how female intrasexual competition operates through subtle reproductive suppression - where successful women discourage others from dating while privately maintaining their own relationships. (01:42) Henderson connects this to evolutionary psychology, arguing that elite women use cultural messaging about toxic masculinity and independence to reduce competition for desirable partners, similar to how dominant females in primate societies suppress subordinate females' reproduction through stress and intimidation.
Rob Henderson holds a PhD in psychology from the University of Cambridge and is a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He is the author of "Troubled: A Memoir of Foster Care, Family, and Social Class" and maintains a popular Substack analyzing social dynamics through evolutionary psychology. Henderson spent time in the Air Force before attending Yale University and Cambridge.
Chris Williamson is the host of Modern Wisdom, one of the world's most popular podcasts focusing on psychology, philosophy, and human optimization. He regularly interviews leading thinkers and researchers to extract actionable insights for high-performing individuals.
Henderson explains how successful women with platforms discourage dating and family formation among their followers while privately maintaining relationships themselves. (02:42) These influencers claim solidarity with single women but are actually engaging in subtle intrasexual competition by removing potential rivals from the mating pool. The strategy works because it appears compassionate while serving self-interest - similar to how dominant female primates suppress subordinate reproduction through stress and intimidation.
The messaging that relationships are embarrassing or unnecessary functions as a luxury belief - ideas that signal virtue among elites while harming those lower in the social hierarchy. (05:08) Henderson notes that fertility rates have declined most among low-income women, while college-educated women maintain relatively stable reproduction rates and have resources for fertility treatments and egg freezing when needed.
Women compete for partners through indirect methods like encouraging rivals to make themselves less attractive - advising short haircuts, promoting body positivity while staying fit themselves, or discouraging dating altogether. (16:46) Henderson contrasts this with male competition, which tends to be more direct and observable. The subtlety makes it more effective because it appears supportive while actually being exclusionary.
Henderson discusses how traditional societies created rites of passage because men naturally tend toward withdrawal and self-interest without external pressure. (66:06) Modern "toxic masculinity" messaging has eliminated these positive pressures without replacing them, leading many young men to simply opt out rather than develop into productive contributors to society.
The trend of women criticizing male partners who dress poorly reflects shifting economic dynamics where women increasingly out-earn men. (75:13) Henderson suggests that when men can't contribute financially, they need to compensate through appearance and style - but many haven't adapted to this new reality, creating tension in relationships where traditional trades no longer apply.