I actually believe that why women in general are the way they are today is because men abused their authority over them in the past. It's sad and unfortunate. In my last relationship with my ex, whenever we got on such a topic, I would say that the husband is supposed to be the head of the wife just as Christ is supposed to be the head of the man. Even though my ex would agree on this point she would completely disagree with me if I said something similar but apparently related to the Bible. If I said, "The husband should be the leader of the family," then she would go into defensive mode and say, "We're equal partners in Christ." And you know what? That's true, and that's something the husband should always keep in mind. But what the wife should keep in mind is that the husband is still supposed to be the leader. Why? Possibly because it typifies our relationship with Christ and the husband is supposed to be representative of Christ.
What this means to me is having the final say in all things (if that be his decision), but also valuing the input of his Beloved and making his decisions with such advice in mind. Unless men keep Christ as their head they have no right to be the head of a woman, and I think that's the problem that this nation has. God is a dictator, meaning he has absolute power, but he chooses to give us freedom of choice and I believe this should be the position of the husband in a marriage. What my ex was implying was that there should be no leader in the family and everyone should do their separate thing or else should try to work through their problems and compromise. However, the latter usually involved me compromising on my will and obeying her. It did not sit well with me. But I had already rejected Christ as my head and accepted the woman as my head by bowing to her seduction. That was my error and my authority was rightfully stripped from me. I don't mean to say all women are evil. I just mean to say that in my experience it has been quite the opposite of the presumed convention: women subjugate men and not the other way around.
This is a horrible distortion of the Scriptures, but I cannot say most men do not deserve it. I agree with Question Time on this one and believe that the media plays an important role in undermining that God-ordained authority vested in men.
Dread Zeppelin, I feel for you, because I know what you mean. So many women will even claim that they want a godly man but will then only devote their time to looking for that 'bad boy' persona. Then when they find him he cheats on them and they get mad at men and claim there aren't any good ones out there. And I don't mean to say that you cannot be a Christian while being cool, smooth, respectable, handsome, fun, funny and a leader. It's just that many people out there tend to blend ability with practice; if they can get lots of girls then they get lots of girls. If they can be a player then they be a player. So finding that 'bad boy' persona in a good Christian man is a hard thing to come by because so many people abuse such talent and class simply because they can.
Honestly, I look for someone who has the characteristics not of a teenage wench when I get to know them on the inside but of a lady: a refined humility which allows for humor (I'd hate to be with someone who could never poke fun at me because of some misguided notion of humility), intelligence, beauty (often natural - I love women who can live by natural beauty and not put a dab of makeup on themselves), politeness, respect, godliness, inner strength, optimism, gentle speech (this means not talking about how many guys you'd like to bang when your boyfriend is sitting next to you).