stacy- I wanted to share my first experience wrestling a jobber 'in real life' (cyberfight not being real life?). it was an experience I won't forget; and sure not the first or last time I was the source of general laughter by all present (none of them guys that day). I had just finished a very competitive match vs a woman that I enjoyed very much. I'm competitive and pretty intense. Msintense finally became my nick in this group; but at the time I was new to it all, and to this informal wrestling 'club'. A person asked me for a match. since most were getting ready to leave, and it was held at another's house, I decided to get in a bit more experience and said sure. My new opponent said nothing about her particular approach, so I figured it would be like the others.
But wow oh wow was I ever mistaken! It was like wrestling a practice dummy stuffed with mashed potatoes, and entirely 'yucky' to me. Every way I pushed her she went, every hold I tried worked with some slight resistance. At first I thought it was some weird strategy to lure me into a position where she could nail me. That never came, and I just stopped the joke of a match, totally confused. Amid the laughter I was called aside and got the explanation that she was and extreme jobber- though no one told me so in advance. They got their show, and the experience was actually repellant to me. As meg said above we had entirely different expectations what the match was about; and as Michelle said I should have asked some questions before getting on the mat, yet I was in a hurry. Another example that I never learn more than when I lose or something goes wrong!
I think losing is pleasurable for some, desired and expected. Maybe proving a self image as a loser. Perhaps they want the dominant wrestler to look great- doing the "job", the part of pro jobbers in scripted TV 'wrestling'. The beaten upon loser gets the affection, instead the bully villain of the pro this simple modern morality play. In a way then the jobber really wins- in their mind. And again they may think they are fighting hard in a real match; for the one's who don't identify themselves as 'jobbers'. The simple point applies to all mates: if your desires are in different places let it be known (or found out) up front. If it isn't mutually fun, play with someone else, but let that be made known with courtesy - YES EVEN IN CYBERWORLD, real people with real feelings! I repeat some of the above to say why jobbers might react as they do.