OK - badly timed meeting. Back later.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:22 (twelve years ago) link
consciously and unconsciously
errr subconsciously
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:23 (twelve years ago) link
feeling guilty about that is just another way of internalizing anger and directing it at yourself imo. acknowledging that that's a reality of an unequal society in which women are objectified should ideally free you from feeling like it's your fault when it happens.
― horseshoe, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:24 (twelve years ago) link
lol go to your meeting!
like, there's a privilege involved in benefiting from male sexism but it's pretty limited and it seems like you're aware of it, which is what's important.
― horseshoe, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:25 (twelve years ago) link
i feel like i get treated as an "honorary dude" a lot - for better or for worse
― sarahel, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:32 (twelve years ago) link
This weekend I spent way too much time reading reviews of classic YA novels & now I feel nostalgic and horrible.
― tokyo rosemary, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:33 (twelve years ago) link
I know the feeling. Sometimes I feel like I could spend the rest of my life just reading old YA novels and be happy.
― Nicole, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:34 (twelve years ago) link
This guy was asking me if I could make a list of "chick" and "dude" traits, like just rhetorically, not that everyone has them but as they are stereotyped, and I said, "I like to drink beer, watch soccer, and work on bikes, so you might be asking the wrong person."
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:34 (twelve years ago) link
On that subject there's some really good stuff about "patriarchal bargains" out on the Internet that is really OTM. Also I've benefitted plenty from sexism, on purpose and unconsciously, I think probably everybody has. I can't judge other women for doing the same - I blame the patriarchy.
― thejenny, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:36 (twelve years ago) link
In retrospect if I even made him think just a little bit, it was probably worth it. He kept describing dumb dudes who get butthurt easily as "girls" and I corrected him to "babies" a couple of times, and my friend said, "You should appreciate how gentle she's being with you right now" and I was like "I'm just offering him an alternative to his regrettable word choice, so when he realizes he regrets it, he'll have another option." So mad.
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link
when you say "benefited from sexism" what kinds of things are you talking about? I'm trying to think of how I've benefited from it -- apart from like, not always having to carry heavy objects, or not getting punched when i tell off some crazy dude.
― sarahel, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link
occasionally i will let a man pay for me on a date, which is not very feminist of me and brings up all kinds of weird issues (does this person now feel like they are owed sex?) but i feel like it's justifiable to based on the wage gap and the fact that i foot the sexual health bill 99% of the time (birth control, visits to obgyn, treatment for the many things that can go wrong that aren't a problem for people with genitals on the outside of the body, etc.) so it's kind of a draw, i guess (i still offer to pay always).
― bene_gesserit, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:46 (twelve years ago) link
the only times in recent memory that guys have paid for my food/drinks were:
1. on my birthday2. lunch w/a male friend i was giving tax advice3. lunch w/my ex-bf
― sarahel, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:54 (twelve years ago) link
catching up . . .
btw Sarah the lipstain/card were mailed today :)
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:57 (twelve years ago) link
It's not really about that, I'm pretty sure, although the most common & accepted patriarchal bargain is probably the one in which women trade their fertility, sexuality, domestic work, personal assets, and emotional support for men's improved economic status, WHEN the exchange is primarily transactional.
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:58 (twelve years ago) link
Here.
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, 5 December 2011 19:59 (twelve years ago) link
Half the moronic male managers here have no idea how to interact with me because I have actual conversations & dont flirt in the office at all. I found out through a co-worket one manager was "scared" of me. As far as I know it's because I have politely disagreed with him in casual conversation. o_O
But there is no WAY i'd ever play the game needed to be accepted by that guy (professionally), or the management in general (90% old male sales execs). I know it hurts my "career" such as it is, but I'd rather be genuine & lower paid than be fake & flirt my way into an office with a window. I should be angrier, I guess, but I'm just glad I like what I do, can speak my mind & be mostly autonomous.
― VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 5 December 2011 19:59 (twelve years ago) link
i just feel like i'm atypical - though i'm probably not.
lol - i think i tried to make that patriarchal bargain, but it ended doing a lot for my improved economic/social status, and not as much for his, and the rest is tmi in the 77 break up thread on real ILX.
― sarahel, Monday, 5 December 2011 20:01 (twelve years ago) link
I just started reading Laura Kipnis’s latest book, “The Female Thing,” and her thesis is similar: That feminism and traditional femininity are at odds with each other, and that compliance with the traditional trappings of femininity only serves to keep women down. I’m not too far into it yet, but in the intro she points out that traditional femininity wasn’t directly put upon women, but created by women themselves as a rational response to their own powerlessness. She argues that, now that women have the same legal rights as men, we’re still choosing to embrace these feminine things, and that feminism has been complicit or even supportive of that embrace. And, in embracing these things, women are complicit in their own oppression.**Where Kipnis loses me is in her failure to recognize that women embrace the traditionally feminine because it still confers great benefits on us. It even confers benefits on us within the realm of feminist activism — just look at how Gloria Steinem was received as compared to, say, Kate Millett. Ridiculous and unfair? Yes. But no one has ever told me that I’m only a feminist because I can’t snag a man.
Where Kipnis loses me is in her failure to recognize that women embrace the traditionally feminine because it still confers great benefits on us. It even confers benefits on us within the realm of feminist activism — just look at how Gloria Steinem was received as compared to, say, Kate Millett. Ridiculous and unfair? Yes. But no one has ever told me that I’m only a feminist because I can’t snag a man.
From here.
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:09 (twelve years ago) link
i don't really feel the all consuming daily rage that you guys were discussing, but i also resist feeling rage in general when i could be using my energy to spread more positive things. not stupidly or blindly, but mindfully and intentionally.
maybe (probably) i am one of those annoying happy friendly people you were referring to upthread? who knows. sometimes i get mad, and when i do i say something. the other times i go into teacher mode and try to illustrate a better way to be.
― recently deposed application inspector for the (league of women voters), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:43 (twelve years ago) link
Yes. I think I am probably pretty similar to you in that respect.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:44 (twelve years ago) link
Although I'm not that happy/friendly all the time. Maybe like 70%.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:45 (twelve years ago) link
i don't really feel the all consuming daily rage that you guys were discussing, but i also resist feeling rage in general when i could be using my energy to spread more positive things. not stupidly or blindly, but mindfully and intentionally
In fact, I used to be a lot angrier but years ago realized that it was doing me a lot more bad than good on a personal level and decided to let go of some of it. In general but also in respect to the topic at hand. That's sort of what I was getting at earlier.
Also Jenny I'm sorry if I came off as ultra defensive and rude earlier. Obv a sensitive topic for me.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:47 (twelve years ago) link
well no one is happy or friendly ALL the time
― recently deposed application inspector for the (league of women voters), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:48 (twelve years ago) link
lol, I know! I was kidding about the 70%. I can get as grumpy anyone but I think I'm happier/friendly more so than not and if I'm angry or upset at something those emotions are directed at that particular thing/person in particular. Usually.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Monday, 5 December 2011 20:51 (twelve years ago) link
okay so i finally put my profile pics and background on okc on friday night and as of today i have two datesthis thing may actually work
― Dranke, the German Drake Impersonator (forksclovetofu), Monday, 5 December 2011 22:26 (twelve years ago) link
I was being sensitive, too! Angry, bitter, threatened are loaded words in this context so my first two thoughts were, roughly, "OMG! Battle stations!" and then "That's ENBB, I have to be reading this wrong."
A way in which I benefitted from sexism: hanging out with dudes and when they talked shit about various women for being sluts or prudes or too high maintenance or slovenly or too fat or always on a diet or being girly and shallow or manly and dykish, I would join in to differentiate myself from these other, inferior women and so keep these dudes from turning their criticisms on me. This was largely in high school/college but I retained tendencies to act like one of the guys because that tended to draw praise from dudes until law school when I made some brash, irrverant (I thought) comment about "What's wrong? Does your pussy hurt?" to a male classmate and my still good friend Emily was like "What the fuck is wrong with you?" causing me to reexamine my behavior.
I still cringe in embarrassment to think of that, but I appreciated the call out.
― thejenny, Monday, 5 December 2011 22:27 (twelve years ago) link
jenny that was me too
― VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 5 December 2011 22:28 (twelve years ago) link
i've also been there, and also cringe at it.
― bene_gesserit, Monday, 5 December 2011 22:41 (twelve years ago) link
Oh, here is a link that is relevant to some previous discussions: http://shakespearessister.blogspot.com/2011/12/impossibly-beautiful.html
― thejenny, Monday, 5 December 2011 22:48 (twelve years ago) link
Well, for one instance: You know the way men say, "Smile, beautiful" and in that and other ways try to make you interact with them as a happier/more agreeable person than you feel like? When that happens to her, she thinks, "That was nice of that strange man, he wants me to have a better day. I guess now I *do* feel like smiling!"
No offense to anyone but I can't imagine anyone reacting this way? Unless maybe James Franco said it? And then only maybe? Any time some strange dude tells me to smile it's GLOWER CITY, sir.
― not uplifting (Abbott), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 02:11 (twelve years ago) link
For reals. I swear.
― OH GNUS (Pyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 02:16 (twelve years ago) link
ENBB, the friend of mine that he's dating is sort of like you, in that respect: She never thought about it, because she never noticed anyone abridging her rights, because she just did what she wanted, cheerfully, anyway, and thought, aww wasn't it nice of that person to look out for me? Meanwhile hypothetical possibly-lechy older guy or whomever is left in her wake feeling lucky that she smiled at him so glowingly and asked for his help.
O_o
― Making like Melusine (Pyth), Monday, December 5, 2011 1:49 PM (7 hours ago) Bookmark Permalink
I'm still sort of bewildered by this one. I guess maybe I'm imagining her asking for directions or something and just really don't see many man thinking that way? Or, I mean if they did think that I don't really see how it's that bad? If an attractive/nice guy smiled broadly at me in a similar situation I would probably feel good about it too?
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 02:22 (twelve years ago) link
I mean, the answer might just a be a simple "it's totally different because it's a woman v. man" but I don't know that that is necessarily always true.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 02:29 (twelve years ago) link
I have a pretty and very charismatic friend who walks a very thin line between the kind of happy bubbly innocence Pyth is describing, and a knowing deployment of it to achieve things large and small. E.g. large = professional relationships, small = cheap drinks. I find it really hard to tell the two apart, but I do believe both are going on, the innocence and the deployment - sometimes together, but sometimes just one or the other.
― ljubljana, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 02:57 (twelve years ago) link
I appreciate ENBB's forthrightness itt. I'm pretty ignorant about feminist thought, and I don't pay as much attention to gender relationships as I should. I don't feel the rage, and I'm not sure whether that's a bad thing or not, but I know that I *do* like open debate in threads like this and I'm glad ENBB mentioned her occasional incomprehension, because I've felt it too and wondered whether and how to address it here.
― ljubljana, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:02 (twelve years ago) link
xxpost Abbs: a manager at work (who purports to be the nicest guy on the planet but who is really a douchebag in sheep's clothing) took one of my not-very-bright girl friends to task when she was working in his department, apparently because she did't say hello to people in the morning. He told her that if she initiated the "hello" she would seem more attractive and likeable. She told this to me proudly as something that changed her life, like 'wasn't that great of him to set me straight like that?". I was like, "NO!!!" She's the most attractive woman I know, she's friendly and sociable as it is, and she has always kicked ass at her job...but somehow she gets taken in by all this male senior management bullshit that she needs to somehow make herself MORE attractive to succeed. Makes me insane.
He also told another friend of mine that she shouldn't eat lunch on her own, because people will think she is a loner and not want to socialize with her.
― VegemiteGrrrl, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:07 (twelve years ago) link
oh and these are tidbits he only gives to women. Have NEVER in 10 years heard anecdotal evidence of him taking any of the junior male staff under his wing for protips on how to be more charming or winning at their jobs.
― VegemiteGrrrl, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:08 (twelve years ago) link
There may be many good reasons to say hello and friends you know & everyone you meet but that is not one of the reasons I would list.
― not uplifting (Abbott), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:10 (twelve years ago) link
I am having so much of an easier time being friendly to strangers now that I don't live in a place where men offer unsolicited comments in public. Before, the embarrassment and pressure I felt was twisting and killing a lot of sunnier feelings. Also when someone does make unwelcome advances, I don't see red as much & am more likely to be calm about confronting them in a non-angry way.
― OH GNUS (Pyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:13 (twelve years ago) link
Although I walked home a different way today and someone did say something. Not obscene, but not fun.
― OH GNUS (Pyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:14 (twelve years ago) link
My gym teacher once told me "consider the source and rise above" and I think that's good advice for dealing with bad advice of all kinds. Every once in a while I will get on a My Feminist This kick but I only have so much energy to lecture people and I kind of have to save it for my students. I figure I am not going to win anyone over by starting my sentences with "ACTUALLY,..." ***not*** that I am saying anyone here does that. But I sure have and it gets me no-where. I think maybe people change their minds about big issues by sudden surprise and the best way I can be a part of that surprise is just by living well for myself in an uncompromising way. I want to give others the room to do that, too (unless they are totally odious, ha ha). There are lots of different ways to deal with...everything...and many of them are good...so it's ok if people choose different things. Why am I saying all this???
― not uplifting (Abbott), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:15 (twelve years ago) link
My favorite way to deal with unsolicited comments is the over the shoulder flip-offf as I walk away. Don't even look back, just show them the bird. Oooh it burns them! It feels so good! A tiny part of me worries I am going to get my sassy ass beat to pieces one day tho.
― not uplifting (Abbott), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:17 (twelve years ago) link
Hahaha I've done that more than once! Just got me yelled at and called more names, because if a guy is aggressive enough to tell you about your ass in public, he's aggressive enough to resent that you don't want to hear about it.
― OH GNUS (Pyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:19 (twelve years ago) link
Yes, the yelling, I love it. I LOVE THE POST-RAGE YELLING. It's why I keep parking my scooter in this one spot I know will get me passive-aggressive notes. I just love seeing someone get so mad about something so simple and harmless that I have a right to be doing (having a body in public, parking at my apartment complex). This morning someone had written STOPPARKINGYOUASSon the dirt in the windshield and it made my day.
― not uplifting (Abbott), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:23 (twelve years ago) link
I don't know if it's the areas I lived in or what but I p much never get unsolicited comments on the street. Like maybe once or twice a year or something.
― ᶘ ᵒᴥᵒᶅ (~curious orange~), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:23 (twelve years ago) link
Hahah what? Stop parking, like, at all??? Anywhere??
― OH GNUS (Pyth), Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:24 (twelve years ago) link
when i yell at people these days it's not usually to try and change their minds in good faith, tbh; it's to blow off steam. i'm sure that doesn't speak very highly of me but what can you do.
― horseshoe, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:27 (twelve years ago) link
A funny vid on a particular type of racialized streetcalling:
http://www.racialicious.com/2011/09/12/stanley-kubrick-chopsticks-and-how-not-to-harass-an-asian-girl/
"Somehow, it never seems to matter what the woman likes or appreciates, which is this unexplored dimension of street harassment. If the objection to women protesting street harassment is that we should forgive a man’s clumsy attempts to pick up a woman he finds attractive, then wouldn’t not offending a woman be pretty high on that man’s priority list?"
― rayuela, Tuesday, 6 December 2011 03:29 (twelve years ago) link