Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
8bitagent wrote:How is it possible that now and then you hear men and women complain about a woman acting domineering over co-workers, having a "man wrapped around her finger", having a really petty attitude, misusing her power as a cop/gym teacher/company head/etc if only men can be mean and nasty? I mean they are only rumors and whispers...but it can't be possible.
Btw, if there is going to be mansplaining...then there needs to be hagsplaining, hipstersplaining, yuppysplaining, ghettosplaining, backwoodsplaining, yogaaddictsplaining, potsmokinghippysplaining,
religiousplaining, etc.
jlaw172364 wrote:
BTW, I predict you'll ignore everything I've written because it doesn't fit into your reality tunnel.
How to spot completely miserable women
You can see it in the eyes. Vacant, sort of glassy, dark and distant as if staring into a cave full of nails from a thousand miles – and a million joyful lifetimes – away.
It moves on to the skin, pale and ill-fitting like a mannequin in a human costume, like it’s not the slightest bit comfortable in there, closing around a sallow tightness of the mouth and lips, maybe a severity of haircut, the sweater buttoned a bit too tight and the collar cutting circulation to the vital organs, but most especially and obviously, to the heart.
Do you see it? Do you see it, most frequently and with a tragic sigh, in the women of the GOP, from the senseless female candidates themselves (Hi, Ms. Bachmann!) to the sallow wives and disoriented daughters of the ultraconservative males who fear and detest everything real women represent?
You know the look. You’ve seen it a million times, this “Oh my God how did I get here,” this “How can this really be my life,” this look of deep and long-muted pain and/or dull resignation (Hi, Mrs. Vitter!), the long rusted-over knowledge that choices have been made and there was no other way, even though there was, even though there still is.
Know this now: I do not care a whit for Todd Akin, and neither do you. No one really cares about Todd Akin. He’s already a tiny political footnote. He joins a long line of GOP crackpots who believe the most inane things. He has made it fantastically clear he possesses the soul of rotten broccoli and his 2.7 minutes of fame are pretty much complete.
But Akin did a wondrous thing: He generously revealed a particularly cruel aspect of the dark heart of the GOP not normally so clearly revealed, by way of a fantastic blunder about “legitimate rape” that exposed so many layers of ignorance and misogyny it stunned even the most resolutely jaded Americans, even moderate Republican Americans. And that’s saying something.
News flash: Akin’s comment wasn’t really all that radical. It’s boilerplate GOP misogyny. Did you know Paul Ryan co-sponsored a bill banning the use of federal money for abortions except for those stemming from “forcible rape” (as opposed to the other kind)? Akin’s statement was GOP-approved; he just happened to state it more stupidly, more hatefully than most. There is no news here. Let us move on.
Behold, three of the most miserable women
you will ever see. (Photo by Jeff Roberston/AP)
Let us move on to… Akin’s wife. There is Lulli, standing next to her man as if dipped in concrete, tight-lipped and hard as a frying pan, looking for all purposes like someone removed her heart 40 years ago and replaced it with a brick.
Akin’s wife appears to us as a wan facsimile of a vibrant, authentic female, something not altogether real, unmoving and unblinking as her husband tries to backpedal violently, saying “No no no, of course rape is a terrible thing, of course women should never get raped, and that’s why I sure hope they stop asking for it very soon because angry Jesus does not like it one little bit.”
What do you think is going through Lulli’s mind in this photo? How many layers of willful denial, how many blinders must be in place in order to stand up there and not reach over and punch her husband in the face?
Is she truly proud of her man? Is part of her thinking, “Oh please, rape ain’t so bad, most of those hussies probably deserved it”? Is she thinking, “Dear God, what has become of my life?” Or is she thinking, maybe, with a hint of abject sadness, of the terrible icepick of fear and misogyny she and her husband have drilled into their six children, and particularly their daughters?
Oh my God, the daughters. Just look. Look at the two Akin managed to drag on stage with him. It is they who inspired this column. It is they who have a look in their eye like they’ve just been made to swallow a fistful of broken glass. Again.
It is impossible not to extrapolate, not to interpret those expressions as a kind of numbed-out revulsion. It’s clear they’ve been forced to get on stage with their father as a show of family “solidarity,” as if to prove that not all women detest Todd Akin, that, when it comes to the GOP, even a mildly powerful white man can still force women to do his bidding, even after insulting and demeaning them so horribly he should be ashamed to speak to his daughters for a solid year.
Their look is impossible to ignore. Are they plotting their escape? Are they devising ways to reveal Todd’s gay porn collection on Twitter? Are they wondering, deep down, what they did in past lives to deserve the karma of this one?
They are young. They perhaps do not yet know the true depths of their disquiet, how violently they have been misled. But it looks like they suspect it. They know something is deeply, deeply wrong. Tick tock, Todd.
Which of those girls, would you wager, will soon break away from this nightmare? Which one will grab the first opportunity to travel to San Francisco or maybe Paris or Tokyo and have her mind blown open by art and sex and love, wine and yoga and the madhouse kaleidoscopic offerings of the world? Which one will hence run screaming from the bitter shell of a life the Akins’ have forced them to live? Both? Let’s hope it’s both.
An all-time classic. David Vitter talks
about his fondness for hookers, as his wife
looks like she’s being beaten by 10,000 sighs
(Photo by Alex Brandon/AP)
Let us be clear. Let us be fair. Certainly not all Republican women – or daughters – are thusly repressed and miserable. Certainly many consciously, even enthusiastically choose their path, and many believe the Republican platform is righteous and good, despite how it hates them and believes they are lesser, weaker, ill-suited to play in the Big Game, much less make their own decisions about their vaginas, their identities, their reproductive powers.
Of course some Republican women lead full and terrific lives, run the household, are the backbone of their families, don’t care a whit that their rights and basic identities as women are sneered at by their party every day, so long as that party continues to protect the “sanctity” of the usual overbearing institutions: family, church, corporations, the military and the unborn Jesus fetus guns of intolerant married gay blah blah blah… wait, what was I saying again? Right. Who cares.
Hello, two young daughters of Todd Akin up there on that stage. I see you. We see you. And we here in the land of the messy and the free-spirited, the progressive and the open-souled, we hereby band together and offer up a prayer, a dirty, wonderful, wild, unfettered blessing to you. Ready?
It goes like this: We hereby hope you will soon find a away to escape, ignite your hearts and minds (and bodies), to blast it all wide open as you realize women are far more juicily, beautifully powerful than you’ve been taught, and that the world is not as small and terrifying as the Republican party would have you to believe.
One tip: Do not listen to your father. Do not become your mother. Come to the light side. Figure it all out for yourself in the most messy, confusing, luminous, smart, expressive, self-defined way possible. It’s completely worth it, more than you know. Just a humble blessing, from us to you. Good luck. You’re going to need it.
Krysos wrote:That article about Akin is incredibly hateful and presumptuous. And Vitter was cheating on a woman with a woman, no? It's not like the hooker was too concerned about his wife either.
Honestly, the complete disregard for all male suffering in this thread is systematic, disingenuous, and positively vicious.
compared2what? wrote:Krysos wrote:That article about Akin is incredibly hateful and presumptuous. And Vitter was cheating on a woman with a woman, no? It's not like the hooker was too concerned about his wife either.
The hooker presumably didn't take an oath that obligated her to Mrs. Vitter, though. So she and Vitter can;t really be said to bear the same responsibility to her as one another.
nashvillebrook wrote: 'Splaining in general says as much about how we legitimize ideas, as it says about gender/race/etc. It's a powerful notion that we don't actually require statements to correspond to reality to call them true. Rather, we require that the right people convey legitimacy to them.
And that's where gender/race/wealth/identity come into play. This manner of truth-seeking is easily corruptible with regard to political matters.
So, it's not about whether something is "explained." It's about who's perception is legitimate.
This isn't always about abuse or straight-line authority...it's about whether or not someone is being robbed of their point of view, their perception, and the validity of their experience.
The author of the article in the OP wants to have the political discussion about mansplaining...which focuses on the "who" of the matter. I think that by remembering what the "what" of the matter is, makes this easier to understand. The "what" is that: in a world where truth is fluid, power-over games can be deployed to rig the playing field. And so, it's a very radical and beautiful thing for a woman or person of color to stand up for their experience. It's not called em-power-ment for nothing.
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote: 'Splaining in general says as much about how we legitimize ideas, as it says about gender/race/etc. It's a powerful notion that we don't actually require statements to correspond to reality to call them true. Rather, we require that the right people convey legitimacy to them.
That and most people are usually blinded by confirmation bias. We note what confirms what we already know and literally do not experience that which is outside our reality tunnel.
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote: And that's where gender/race/wealth/identity come into play. This manner of truth-seeking is easily corruptible with regard to political matters.
Indeed. What's the antidote though? It cannot be anything other than knowing ourselves and operating from a provisional, fluid point of view. I don't think we can really know someone else's experience until we know our own, absent the confirmation bias blinders.
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote: So, it's not about whether something is "explained." It's about who's perception is legitimate.
True, but America is a patriarchal society (for that matter I guess damn near the whole planet is patriarchal) and men are conditioned to treat perceptions as subjective and therefore lesser than. The stereotypical gender roles reinforce this. To defer to someone else's world view (especially a woman's) and really try to understand where the other is coming from feels like weakness to most men. They are conditioned that way from preschool on. When men start to benefit from this they self servingly certify this as the natural order of things and never question it again. Even well meaning men who are given to introspection are deeply conditioned this way and under pressure will revert to what they learned on the playground without even realizing it.
I'm not trying to apologize for male oppression. I consider that beyond a certain age all human beings are responsible for their own thoughts, beliefs and actions. But it's worth looking at the childhood roots of misogyny, I think.
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote: This isn't always about abuse or straight-line authority...it's about whether or not someone is being robbed of their point of view, their perception, and the validity of their experience.
To deny the validity of women's experience of chauvinism by any and/or all of the convoluted methods available to the committed sexist (some of which are being brilliantly displayed in this thread) is dehumanizing and I imagine on the receiving end humiliating and infuriating. IRL I feel I've only got it when I can relate to those feelings. But when I do it it is difficult and painful to admit.
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote: The author of the article in the OP wants to have the political discussion about mansplaining...which focuses on the "who" of the matter. I think that by remembering what the "what" of the matter is, makes this easier to understand. The "what" is that: in a world where truth is fluid, power-over games can be deployed to rig the playing field. And so, it's a very radical and beautiful thing for a woman or person of color to stand up for their experience. It's not called em-power-ment for nothing.
True and they have to stand up for it in a context where they can expect to be attacked, ridiculed, marginalized, labeled as too emotional, given to subjective perceptions, crazy or just plain ignored. As a male I can relate to a certain extent, but I understand that I can never really walk in the shoes of someone not white and male, at least not in this culture. And the not white and male know this.
I put the following video in the Here and Now thread. I am curious to hear the opinions of the women on this thread about this session.
compared2what? wrote:Krysos wrote:That article about Akin is incredibly hateful and presumptuous. And Vitter was cheating on a woman with a woman, no? It's not like the hooker was too concerned about his wife either.
The hooker presumably didn't take an oath that obligated her to Mrs. Vitter, though. So she and Vitter can;t really be said to bear the same responsibility to her as one another.Honestly, the complete disregard for all male suffering in this thread is systematic, disingenuous, and positively vicious.
This thread, like all threads here, is not about the topic it's not about. The gender-based experience of women is distinct from the gender-based experience of men. If you want to talk about the latter -- which Willow and other women here have done, extensively, elsewhere here -- you're free to start a thread about it.
And if you want to see any number of versions of the above statement -- heartfelt, affectionate, annoyed, wordy, they come in all styles! -- complete with repeated, detailed demonstrations of sympathy for the gender-based burdens borne by men (as written many times by me and others), please check out any and/or every thread women on this board have ever started that was about female gender-based stuff.
Because some men on this board have flooded every one of them with unsourced quoteless laments about how badly they're being beaten up on JUST LIKE YOURS. Including when they hadn't even been mentioned AS A GENDER AT ALL.
The Misogyny Thread is probably a pretty comprehensive example. It was mad long. So just try searching for "Misogyny."
nashvillebrook wrote:
(I watched about half of this before I had to turn it off. I felt like I was watching a hideous experiment in dehumanization. I'll return to it and re-listen to his intro b/c I think what he thinks he's doing is very different from what he's actually doing.)
brainpanhandler wrote:nashvillebrook wrote:
(I watched about half of this before I had to turn it off. I felt like I was watching a hideous experiment in dehumanization. I'll return to it and re-listen to his intro b/c I think what he thinks he's doing is very different from what he's actually doing.)
I realize that I should have prefaced posting that video with the information that for many years, 20 perhaps, I highly respected Fritz. I still do to some extent. But I've got alot invested in Gestalt therapy. I had not seen this video until very recently when I dug it up for the Here and Now thread. When I initially watched it I found myself cringing at some of Perls' responses to Gloria's descriptions of her experience. But that's fritz' style I rationalized. He would do the same for a male I believe. But I don't know.
The dynamic in that setting is somewhat artificial to say the least, but nonetheless instructive and Fritz was not immune to ego inflation, methinks.
Famous male psychotherapist looking very freudian and academic, detached, clinical, authoritative and Gloria, evincing perfectly understandable nervousness, self consciousness, alternating defiance/deference, all while being filmed for posterity, which I assume was known to Gloria.
For all of Fritz' faults in his approach here (even agreeing to do this) Gloria does evoke and represent some of the ways in which women also are deeply conditioned in our culture. She does in fact revert to rather childish mannerisms as a defense mechanism. I think Fritz' intentions are good and I think ultimately all he really wanted for his patients is that they be themselves again. In fact, in Gestalt Therapy he says as much - psychological well being is nothing more or less than being authentically oneself. And that means, among many other things, shedding all the gender roles we've adopted. So his methods might be questionable in a therapuetic setting, but I think his goals were noble. Or so I like to believe.
ps... I work really long hours on the weekends so I probably won't be able to participate much, if at all, for the next couple of days.
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