"I don't have patriarchy in my home."
"I don't have patriarchy in my home."
I was following a very well written feminist on FB who actually addressed male violence statistics and such and truly thought this woman "got it". Turns out she doesn't. At all.
She made an AMA post so I asked how can I as a woman relax and truly rest when misogyny is everywhere and we can't escape it. I mentioned how it's in every tv show I try to watch, in books, in places I join to interact with others with my hobbies, podcasts, everywhere.
This woman I respected, who has a husband and a male child, literally told me she doesn't have that problem bc she doesn't watch tv. She literally said "I don't have patriarchy in my home". Someone laughed at her and asked "So you have no husband or children?" and she replied that yes she does but it's an EGALITARIAN RELATIONSHIP and he RESPECTS HER and that's when I realized she was just a slightly more educated than normal libfem and I felt so betrayed.
When I told her that I wasn't meaning just tv but in ALL media one can consume as well as in conversations with friends, literally everywhere she doubled down and said "I don't use screens to relax". Like okay. Got it. You go to work and come home and stare at the wall with your totally equal in every way husband and then you go to bed. Thanks.
This was over a month ago and every time it pops into my head I get angry all over again. She clearly had no answer and instead of admitting that she said that screens are not necessary to relax and it's my fault for not unplugging. I was dogpiled on by other women saying the same thing. Just don't watch it! Screen time is bad! Resting doesn't involve watching screens!!
I made a comment saying that I am disabled and currently basically trapped in my apartment so I rely on books, magazines, podcasts, movies, tv, etc as well as hobbies that don't involve screens to keep myself busy bc it's all I have in my life but they wouldn't have it. I'm so embarrassed for them all.
It is so frustrating to me when people use these kinds of conversations for some kind of status-seeking. 'I'm better than you, I have an 'egalitarian relationship' and don't consume popular media' is just an embarrassing take.
This is also why I avoid conversations about 'beauty' practices - 'I do/don't wear makeup, have long hair, shave my legs and arms, wear dresses' - these conversations (at least to me) seem to always get into who's more high-status by avoiding various choices/behaviours.
(Feb 12 2025, 10:25 AM)Sunny This woman I respected, who has a husband and a male child, literally told me she doesn't have that problem bc she doesn't watch tv. She literally said "I don't have patriarchy in my home".Someone laughed at her and asked "So you have no husband or children?" and she replied that yes she does but it's an EGALITARIAN RELATIONSHIP and he RESPECTS HER and that's when I realized she was just a slightly more educated than normal libfem and I felt so betrayed.
(Feb 12 2025, 10:25 AM)Sunny This woman I respected, who has a husband and a male child, literally told me she doesn't have that problem bc she doesn't watch tv. She literally said "I don't have patriarchy in my home".Someone laughed at her and asked "So you have no husband or children?" and she replied that yes she does but it's an EGALITARIAN RELATIONSHIP and he RESPECTS HER and that's when I realized she was just a slightly more educated than normal libfem and I felt so betrayed.
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover "I want freedom from patriarchy."
"We have freedom from patriarchy at home."
The freedom from patriarchy at home:
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover "I want freedom from patriarchy."
"We have freedom from patriarchy at home."
The freedom from patriarchy at home:
(Feb 12 2025, 11:41 AM)drdee It is so frustrating to me when people use these kinds of conversations for some kind of status-seeking. 'I'm better than you, I have an 'egalitarian relationship' and don't consume popular media' is just an embarrassing take.
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover "I want freedom from patriarchy."
"We have freedom from patriarchy at home."
The freedom from patriarchy at home:
Well, I get how maybe it might feel that way for her, it really didn't help answer your question. And it's really—I guess maybe patronizing is the word—how they dismiss your concerns about so much media being misogynistic with just "I don't use screens to relax." It feels like these women are dodging the question. They don't have a good answer I suppose for acknowledging how much misogyny there is in media, so they deflect by saying they just don't "have screens."
(Feb 13 2025, 12:44 PM)komorebi Sunny: to answer your original question, it sure ain't easy. Spend more time with other like-minded women; be extremely selective about the media that you engage with. Prioritize female creators wherever possible. And when it gets to be too much, disconnect and go for a walk (if that's possible—I read that you're disabled so might not be an option for you 😔).
I stopped watching TV years ago because in general I found it to be so painfully sexist and racist, but I personally have much better luck with other media. If you like reading comics/manga, I know some good ones!
(Feb 12 2025, 11:41 AM)drdee It is so frustrating to me when people use these kinds of conversations for some kind of status-seeking. 'I'm better than you, I have an 'egalitarian relationship' and don't consume popular media' is just an embarrassing take.
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover "I want freedom from patriarchy."
"We have freedom from patriarchy at home."
The freedom from patriarchy at home:
Well, I get how maybe it might feel that way for her, it really didn't help answer your question. And it's really—I guess maybe patronizing is the word—how they dismiss your concerns about so much media being misogynistic with just "I don't use screens to relax." It feels like these women are dodging the question. They don't have a good answer I suppose for acknowledging how much misogyny there is in media, so they deflect by saying they just don't "have screens."
(Feb 13 2025, 12:44 PM)komorebi Sunny: to answer your original question, it sure ain't easy. Spend more time with other like-minded women; be extremely selective about the media that you engage with. Prioritize female creators wherever possible. And when it gets to be too much, disconnect and go for a walk (if that's possible—I read that you're disabled so might not be an option for you 😔).
I stopped watching TV years ago because in general I found it to be so painfully sexist and racist, but I personally have much better luck with other media. If you like reading comics/manga, I know some good ones!
(Feb 12 2025, 10:25 AM)Sunny This woman I respected, who has a husband and a male child, literally told me she doesn't have that problem bc she doesn't watch tv.The patriarchy would be solved if only all these whipper-snappers stopped being glued to their SmArTpHoNeS all day 🙄
(Feb 12 2025, 11:41 AM)drdee This is also why I avoid conversations about 'beauty' practices - 'I do/don't wear makeup, have long hair, shave my legs and arms, wear dresses' - these conversations (at least to me) seem to always get into who's more high-status by avoiding various choices/behaviours.Well, the women who refuse to engage in beauty practices are actively refusing to take part in furthering patriarchal views of women being sex objects first, and anything else second, usually to extensive pushback, dismissal and against a lifetime of socialisation. That is more "high status" within feminism for a reason.
Quote:"So you have no husband or children?" and she replied that yes she does but it's an EGALITARIAN RELATIONSHIP and he RESPECTS HER
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover And it's really—I guess maybe patronizing is the word—how they dismiss your concerns about so much media being misogynistic with just "I don't use screens to relax."
Ah yes, #NotLikeOtherGirls combined with "This only happens to bad and stupid women", as if the patriarchy is some self-induced thing you can avoid by just playing your cards right, and other women have only themselves to blame if they don't.
(Feb 12 2025, 10:25 AM)Sunny This woman I respected, who has a husband and a male child, literally told me she doesn't have that problem bc she doesn't watch tv.The patriarchy would be solved if only all these whipper-snappers stopped being glued to their SmArTpHoNeS all day 🙄
(Feb 12 2025, 11:41 AM)drdee This is also why I avoid conversations about 'beauty' practices - 'I do/don't wear makeup, have long hair, shave my legs and arms, wear dresses' - these conversations (at least to me) seem to always get into who's more high-status by avoiding various choices/behaviours.Well, the women who refuse to engage in beauty practices are actively refusing to take part in furthering patriarchal views of women being sex objects first, and anything else second, usually to extensive pushback, dismissal and against a lifetime of socialisation. That is more "high status" within feminism for a reason.
Quote:"So you have no husband or children?" and she replied that yes she does but it's an EGALITARIAN RELATIONSHIP and he RESPECTS HER
(Feb 12 2025, 11:55 AM)Clover And it's really—I guess maybe patronizing is the word—how they dismiss your concerns about so much media being misogynistic with just "I don't use screens to relax."
'That is more "high status" within feminism for a reason.' LOL in that case I'm the most high-status feminist of them all, rarrr! (but it's entirely because a) my employment doesn't depend on my appearance and b) I have no current or potential males that it's necessary for my financial/emotional wellbeing to be attractive for)
Women being forced into these arrangements for survival or a sense of normalcy doesn't erase their negative impact on women in any way, in fact it reinforces it. Failing to acknowledge that makes you end up with libfem/choice feminism conclusions where things like surrogacy, prostitution, being a housewife, kink, really any kind of patriarchal pandering is empowering because the patriarchy rewards obedient women with money or psychological comfort within said patriarchal system.
Many women are tied to overt patriarchal limitations, but many have options, they're just afraid of rocking the boat and they don't think they're good for anything else. When you're raised all your life, literally since you were a baby, to think your primary worth is in looking nice and being servile to others, is it any wonder that you find jobs or lifestyles that prioritise that more attainable? The same ones that end up sending all those women into the meat grinder of objectification and telling them they chose it? You can't avoid the patriarchy but you can at least do whatever you can to minimise its damage by not pandering to it.
I had to do with many pickmes and among them a social worker who was really this typical rude b/tch - the rude pretty girl from school once. Now she has husband (psychiatrist) and two sons. I feel I was right all along, the cruelest girls in school are often those that go this route for money, fame, security. We stared at each other because sadly, our bodies had similarities and it was so hurtful to see how her mind was so rotten. I assume from what she told me and how she looked at me, and her behavior she is a rightwing woman. As I saw her in the eyes I saw this anger or contempt and I thought 'wow Andrea Dworkin wrote about this in her book Right Wing Woman, exactly this'.. I saw it in her filthy-brown dark eyes. she choose this path, because she believes in it. She was a very normal woman and highly passiv aggressiv towards me. She hated that our bodies had similarities, because she dislikes lesbians, disabled, weak, ugly women. I am lucky I survived her. She is similar evil as her man. And their sons if they age into teens and adults, be sure they do damage. I hope such families get what they deserve honestly.
@Hazard, please go over our forum rules & guidelines. Rule 3 is no slurs, which includes "btch," and it doesn't matter if it's censored -- do not call other women misogynistic slurs.
Also keep in mind our fifth guideline [i]"Attack patriarchal structures, not fellow women." There is no need to refer this woman as a "typical rude b[/i]tch" or referring to her eyes as "filthy-brown dark eyes." It is valid to feel hurt and betrayed by fellow women, especially those in positions where they are meant to help those who are struggling, and it is okay to write about those experiences here, and at the same time it is not okay to hurl misogynistic insults at them while doing so.