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The top ten things I dislike about Irish women

My top reasons to steer clear of the Celtic colleens


From fake tan to boozing - the top ten reasons why our boy has been turn off Irish women for good
From fake tan to boozing - the top ten reasons why our boy has been turn off Irish women for good
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I was inspired to write to IrishCentral after Colleen’s Harte’s piece on “Ten things I now dislike about Irish men”.

While it’s fair to say that for the most part we’re not all George Clooney-esque or anywhere near perfect, I thought it only fair that the Irish-American male’s voice be heard.

Although I’ve dated some great Irish ladies, who are feisty, fiery, smart and great fun this is not always the case. Irish women aren’t so perfect themselves and that’s why I’ll be giving them a wide berth on the dating scene. Frankly, recently, I find Irish women to be more trouble than they’re worth.

Here are my reasons why:

Fake tan

The smell of this stuff alone is enough to put you off any Irish woman for life. Their insistence to cover themselves in false tan in the hopes of turning themselves into a bronzed goddess, there really is no point ladies.

I have had to dump several sets of bed sheets after a strange orange  Shroud of Turin like imprint was left behind. Give me pasty skin any day over an orange umpa lumpa from “Willy Wonka”.

Drinking

When someone told me that any Irish woman could drink me under the table, I brushed it off as an urban myth. Years later drinking beer and shots of whiskey with an Irish lady friend, I learnt the hard way.

Yes, yes it’s honorable you have a good tolerance for alcohol, but that does not give you the right to harass the barman at 3am for more shots. Less is more ladies.

Paranoid

I swear, if I’d heard the phrase “what’s that suppose to mean?” one more time! Irish women seem convinced that all men are speaking in hidden meanings and are in fact always having a go at them. This is not the case.

Irish women need to relax and learn to be less paranoid. There’s no better way to start a fight than digging at innocent comments. Let it go. Even if you’re trying to be nice it can still back fire due to their paranoia.

Cannot walk in their shoes

Too many women move to New York with aspirations of becoming a character from Sex and the City. The Irish especially seem to have an affinity for Carrie Bradshaw and her sky-scraper heels.

It’s a simple rule ladies, if you cannot walk in them, leave them at home. You may not be the tallest breed of women in the world, but I’d much rather see you arrive in sneakers, than have to haul ass home with you strewn over my shoulder.

Bossy


After dating an Irish women for a while you’ll suddenly notice that please and thank yous go out the window. Even the most pleasant things like organizing a barbecue for friends begins to feel like a military operation as orders are barked at you and you are expected to obey.

Too feisty

I think I have only ever been slapped by two women in my life, one was my Irish mother and the other was my Irish ex-girlfriend.

Irish women are extremely feisty and while of course this can be endearing, when she starts screaming insults at a driver who just took her spot in  the car-park, all you can do is squirm and look away.

Talk too much

I’m not positive but I’m pretty sure that Irish women got more than their fair share of ‘the gift of the gab’. Irish women can literally ‘talk for Ireland’. It’s just as well someone invented Skype.

I women think nothing of an two-hour trans-Atlantic phone call but unfortunately it doesn’t end there. Irish women talk, and talk and talk unfortunately many of the women that I’ve met didn’t really have that much to say.

Not ladylike


What a turn off when the blue eyed, freckled Irish girl asks the barman for a big dirty pint when she looks like she walked off the set of “Sex and the City”. That little black dress and fake eyelashes should not be matched with a pint of beer.

If you choose to relocate to New York, at least try to feign sophistication.

Stuck up

Now this could just be me but over the last while I’ve noticed that when you’re talking to an Irish girl they immediately ask “What do you do?” It seems to me that Irish girls might put too much stock in the size of lads wallets rather than in their personalities (they will no doubt deny this emphatically).

A lot of Irish girls I have met seem to dream about moving to the U.S. and marrying a Wall Street banker.

Spend too much time shopping


On my life I’ve never met people more obsessed with shopping, store, bargains and labels than the Irish girls I’ve dated. They can waste entire weekends shopping and spend the rest of their week planning their next attack on the stores.

When they get off that plane they cannot seem to get to Macys or Jersey Gardens quick enough and the obsession doesn’t wane either. One girlfriend I had even got her mother to bring out clothes from a store in Ireland, as if there wasn’t a big enough choice here. Insanity.

It seems for Irish women, shopping is pastime.

So there you have it. Rest assured Irish women out there, that these are just my thoughts, although some of my buddies did agree with me on some of my opinions!

Oh and just one final pointer for the road, Irish women don’t take criticism very well and I imagine the response I will get to this article will prove my point!


See more: Irish Roots , Irish dating
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54 Comments

15 - 54 | See all comments

Is it me or have I seen this recycled IC story several times before? Must be running out of anti- Catholic stuff or gay stories or pro-abortion articles or something!
A few of my first cousins - one in particular - delights in emphasizing the 'drudgery and poverty', 'ignorance and superstition' of her parents because they were raised in Ireland. True, neither parent had eduction beyond the primary level, but her father became a successful businessman and made enough money to raise his 2 children in comfort. Her mother was a perfect housekeeper, an excellent cook and very good at needlework. Both parents set very fine examples for their son and daughter.
Seanmor, thank you; you should feel proud, also since you got the gist of what I meant.
Handsome: It makes me feel proud to read the praise you lavish on your dear departed parents, both of whom were Irish immigrants. I too never used the "f" word since I arrived in the U.S. before my 19th birthday, not even during the 4 years I spent in the Marine Corps.
I saw the effect the Celtic Tiger had on Irish women & believe me it was ugly.
Must say, this list is quite accurate. The phrase "Shanty Irish" comes to mind.
I do NOT know what exactly is meant by "Irish women" in this case. Does it include any woman with Irish DNA anywhere in the world or it it restricted to natives of the Southern Irish state? In either case, it does not include my wife, a New England Methodist and a D.A.R. member a bhfuil cúpla focal Gaeilge aice. Being a Gaeilgeoir makes her her very different from most women who were raised in Southern Ireland.
Truth be told, Mom was born in Ireland and lived there her first 25 years or so. Neither she nor Dad (to my knowledge) ever used the F word and they would not tolerate it if any of us 4 kids did. Nearly 70 now, I still don't swear, also since it sounds terrible, angry, and low-class. No one had handed anything to them either in Ireland or here in the USA, and so another thing Mom and Dad instilled in us was education. Prepared in and by the School of Hard Knocks, all 4 of us got college educations. Thanks Mom and Dad, and R.I.P.
Truth be told, Mom was born in Ireland and lived there her first 25 years or so. Neither she nor Dad (to my knowledge) ever used the F word and they would not tolerate it if any of us 4 kids did. Nearly 70 now, I still don't swear, also since it sounds terrible, angry, and low-class. No one had handed anything to them either in Ireland or here in the USA, and so Another thing Mom and Dad instilled in us was education. Prepared in and by the School of Hard Knocks, all 4 of us got college educations. Thanks Mom and Dad, and R.I.P.
Most of the items on this list apply to Pauline Wogan.
You're right -- I do like to hear myself talk, but I don't need to be posted twice. Delete one, also since I'm glad you didn't delete both.
Good, Sean, good. I mean, bad, Sean, bad. You write, "Irish women aren’t so perfect themselves .... " which is enough to get you excommunicated from women in general. Wait, I mean Jewish princesses, I get them confused. Different but strangely similar in that they are opposite sides of a coin. Keep up the good fight, Sean. You may stand and sleep alone for the rest of your life, but one must stand for something. And this is something. Incidentally, I am Sean too but I don't call myself that since am in NYC and only cops and firemen respond to the name "Sean" and I am neither.
Good, Sean, good. I mean, bad, Sean, bad. You write, "Irish women aren’t so perfect themselves .... " which is enough to get you excommunicated from women in general. Wait, I mean Jewish princesses, I get them confused. Different but strangely similar in that they are opposite sides of a coin. Keep up the good fight, Sean. You may stand and sleep alone for the rest of your life, but one must stand for something. And this is something. Incidentally, I am Sean too but I don't call myself that since am in NYC and only cops and firemen respond to the name "Sean" and I am neither.
Spot on sean, the paranoid factor is huge with them & always over the silliest of things. Very few with class. Drink like fishes & the fake tan is disgusting. Women have delicate feelings on the whole but Irish women take it to the max. Stubborn to the point of stupidity & talk absolute nonsense for the most part. The smell of guinness of a girl is disgusting to say the least.
while im posting kinda late on this subject, I must admit alot of this, except the shopping, is why I LIKE Irish ladies as much as I do. American woman are too timid alot of times, I like a girl who talks, ALOT, and can hold her own and then some at the bar and argues and fights back.




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