The New York-based organization is the brainchild of a sugar baby and her mentor

Jun 16, 2014 20:55 GMT  ·  By
Sugar baby Carla Abonia and mentor Alan Schneider have joined hands to create a so-called Sugar Daddy University
   Sugar baby Carla Abonia and mentor Alan Schneider have joined hands to create a so-called Sugar Daddy University

For those who think they have lived long enough to have seen and heard pretty much everything worth seeing and hearing, here is a piece of news that will bring home the fact that one is never too old to scratch their head in disbelief over how crazy the world we live in is.

Long story short, media reports say that the city of New York in the United States is now home to a so-called Sugar Daddy University whose working agenda boils down to teaching women how best to land a wealthy man.

What's interesting is that, apart from helping women find a man who is ready and willing to go to extreme lengths to spoil them, this New York-based organization is in the business of teaching men how to be successful sugar daddies.

Simply put, the University aims to help ladies who wish to become sugar babies acquire the right set of skills they need to successfully embrace such a career, and also teaches men how to behave to make sure that they spark the interest of a sugar baby.

According to Mirror, the Sugar Daddy University in New York is the brainchild of 37-year-old Carla Abonia, who is a sugar baby herself, and her mentor, a man by the name Alan Schneider, who apparently has loads of experience being a sugar daddy.

Carla Abonia decided to become a sugar baby after dating one too many men who were a tad challenged financially-wise and who failed to spoil her as she would have liked to be spoiled. “We want to be treated well and that is where the sugar way of life comes from,” Carla explains.

“I'm going to be teaching how to view the relationship so it can be prosperous and beneficial for both sides. I'll be putting all my experience together to help other babies appreciate the man they are with and let the daddies know how to approach us in the first place,” she adds.

Alan Schneider, who is also the creator of a dating site dubbed SugarDaddyForMe.com, agrees with Carla, and argues that, more often than not, relationships between sugar babies and their daddies are misunderstood and therefore unrightfully condemned by the general public.

“A lot of the sugar babies are 21-35, attractive, well-educated but struggling financially for one reason or another so want mentoring - the sugar daddies are like benefactors helping them,” he says. Furthermore, “We help them discover a spark, a real connection and many couples get married. Because of the understanding it happens more regularly than other marriages.”

In case anyone was wondering, the University teaches classes in intimate relations, understanding, reciprocity, generosity, and attraction.