In defense of the sanctimonious women's studies set || First feminist blog on the internet

Friday Favorites

We’re instituting a new tradition here at Feministe: Friday Favorites. We’ll post some of our favorite things, and then you post some of your favorite things, and we will all share favorites. It will be fun and great and fun. And funnest of all, there are no rules! You can post anything that is a current favorite. So here we go with a few of mine:

Reads

Who wears the pants in this economy? Hanna Rosin’s book, “The End of Men,” is excerpted in the NY Times. I haven’t read it yet, because I am dreading reading it. But you should read it.

Did you see Clint Eastwood’s speech at the RNC last night? Oh man. You should see it.


Bill Nye the Science Guy challenges Akin to a duel of the minds
. Would have liked this much better if he hadn’t used the r-word, though.

This essay on violence is incredible and important and heart-breaking (major trigger warning).

If you only read one of the links posted here, make it this one about the children of rape (again, trigger warning for sexual assault, genocide and violence, among other things). The last paragraph is a particular gut-punch.

Me and You and Everyone We Don’t Know: A Reflection on Discourse

(Trigger/content warning: religious upbringing, childhood trauma)

The past week has provided the opportunity for a lot of unexpected self-reflection. While a guest at Feministe, I am navigating more exposure, and more feedback, than I’ve ever experienced. Most aspects of this have been wonderful and fun. Predictably, some parts have been harder to swallow. I had a long list of things I wanted to write about during my tenure here, but decided instead to take some time to mull over things, consider my role– as a mother, a woman, a girlfriend, a feminist, a writer!– and try to understand where I fit in, and what I have to offer (beyond clever dating tales.) Looking at my history as an example, I wonder if I might offer a point of view perhaps not often represented here, and hopefully pose some questions about education, discourse, community and our collective future.

These things happened recently, all around the same time:
1. An article over at Mother Jones discussed Louisiana’s recently approved voucher schools which will teach, among other offensive things, the cohabitation of humans and dinosaurs.
2. Todd Akin said really stupid things about rape.
3. I began to guest blog on Feministe, and my first few posts were met with significant criticism by the readership, as well as plenty of support.

Reading the article about the Louisiana voucher schools, I felt shocked and angry, sure… but I also experienced a different feeling: sympathy. No wonder people believe so many wrong things, and vote accordingly. I believed anything and everything my teachers taught me, especially in elementary school. I believed anything and everything my parents taught me, too. No wonder people are emerging from the American education system confused. How illogical and frustrating it must feel to learn things from those who you respect that are subsequently so thoroughly, vehemently disputed in so many social and political areas. It must feel like the world is unreasonable, and such a person’s sense of certainty, fortitude and defensiveness becomes at least a little more understandable.

For Todd Akin, I feel far less sympathy. He is old enough, and has certainly had enough access to information, to know better. He is in a position of power, and his ignorance is obviously far more frightening than that of misinformed children. Still, I believe there is a difference between ignorance and evil, and I think it is important to distinguish between the two, and to try to understand those we (so justifiably) disagree with. Akin represents a life-long embrace of misinformation, so often accompanied by a religious justification, which creates disastrous– perhaps even “evil”–effects, but to accuse him of having more agency than this is to miss the point, and causes a defensive backlash from him and his supporters. His crime seems to have been to actively deny obvious science and common sense in support of a political platform that he believed appealed to his base of supporters. This is terrible, no question, and it should be discussed and criticized on its own terms, but I think we do our own battle against ignorance a disservice when we lash out with material that vilifies Akin as being devious, or of having a conscious desire to subjugate women (or even implying that these particular remarks are representative of the all-too-real Republican war on women). This approach repels those who might yet crawl out of the bubble and actually learn something.

This is where I come in, hoping to offer some personal perspective. I lived in that bubble my entire childhood. It glittered with the poetry of Psalms, with prayer candles, sweet incense, with shiny shoes on Sundays. During the week, there was home-church with casserole buffets, and there were softball games against other churches on Saturdays, and in the summertime there were “house blessing barbecues” with holy water on the door frames. Christmas was the best because that’s when there were nativity displays with the little baby Jesuses, and an Epiphany play; one year my mother tied a fluffy lamb skin onto my back and I “baaaa’d” loudly when the Angel appeared to the shepherds.

On Halloween there was a big festival; the cake walk was my favorite event because you always won if you stayed in long enough. But we actually participated in Halloween without actually…participating. Most accepted facets of October 31st were seen as representations, if not literal manifestations, of The Devil. Ghosts, witches, those glittery red horns—anything which indicated a sin (including prostitutes, dead people, and aliens)—were forbidden. Instead, every member in my family chose a saint or Biblical character to emulate. One year I was Sarah, Abraham’s wife, based on my own illustrated Children’s Bible. I thought she was so beautiful. Another year I was Corrie ten Boom, a Christian who helped Jews hide and escape from Holland during WWII. She was captured by the Nazi’s in 1944 and sent to a concentration camp. I was 9 years old that time, dressed in black and white striped pajamas.

Inside the crystal bubble I listened to Amy Grant, and learned about a world created in 7 days. I believed that Noah’s Ark carried all the animals to safety, and imagined it would have been fun with the elephants, giraffes, anteaters, horses. I also believed in the Devil and I knew if I saw or felt the presence of him or his demons, I should say “In the name of Jesus Christ, be gone!” I knew– I knew— that if you didn’t invite Jesus into your heart, you would go to Hell, the burning fire place, for all eternity. In junior high I also believed in a physical, paradisiacal place called Heaven, and in the Garden of Eden, and in the huge importance of virginity. I loved summer camp in the Sierra Foothills, which included “Speaking in Tongues” as an activity (after archery, before rock climbing). Youth group was my favorite night of the week, where we played tag football and ate pizza with a hip pastor who taught us how to be good disciples of the Lord. I dreamed of becoming a missionary.

But before I could become a missionary, or a Republican, everything fell apart. There was trauma, and my sister could not recover. God did not save her, despite phone trees, holy water, hymns, and even sessions with a Christian therapist who suggested prayer circle exorcisms to eliminate the demons that were haunting her. Today, she still suffers from emotional, developmental, and psychological disabilities, some of which may have even been deepened by the methods intended to cure them. Soon after, my older sister became ill, and we were abandoned again; she died in 1997. The entire framework around which I had been raised dissolved away in a few short years. Reality flooded our existence. Betrayed and heartbroken, my mother walked away from the church, and she cannot sleep anymore. She struggles with guilt and confusion, especially about my surviving sister, and even a little about the way my own life has developed; as a good Christian woman, she loved her neighbors (John 4:7), but by doing so, inadvertently put her children in danger.

My adolescence was riddled with the chaos of grief, confusion and transition. I ran away into the arms of a 17-year-old boy who taught me about skateboarding, and Sublime, and keg parties, and how our parents just don’t understand. College offered further escape; I loved my classes at UC Santa Cruz and University of San Francisco, drinking up History of Consciousness, Psychology, Women’s Studies, Theater, Philosophy. Yes, I even turned my hair into dreadlocks, desperate for something– anything– that would differentiate me from who I had been for the first 16 years of my life. But it wasn’t enough; finally, cocaine and ecstasy and all-night dancing filled the confused space where I felt a different, more dynamic personality should have gone. I’d been cheated out of experience and information during my childhood, and I was determined to overindulge as recklessly as possible.

And then, right before the self-destruction overwhelmed me, I was pregnant.

It is hard to articulate tragedy as awakenings, and difficult to re-examine a life within the framework of “what if,” but for the sake of argument, I’m proposing we do so (my pregnancy turned out not to be one of these tragedies… but at the time, it certainly felt like it might be). If those things had not happened in my family and in my life, would I still have Jesus in my heart, espouse Pro-Life rhetoric, and teach my daughter about Noah’s Ark and God’s rainbow promise? I think it’s fair and honest of me to admit that, although I am an intelligent woman, the answer could easily be “yes.”

So, for better or for worse, I feel like I can almost understand a person like Todd Akin, and my heart certainly lurches out to those children in Louisiana. I can understand how much these beliefs mean to all of them, and I am so sad and frustrated when I see these no-doubt misguided, misinformed but nevertheless deeply entrenched beliefs manipulated by politicians for the benefit of the upper class. (Cool speech, Paul Ryan.) Contemplating my role, and my unique position as someone who straddles both worlds as part of her identity, I am left wondering how to bridge the gap between “us” and “them.”

Until very recently, I was too consumed with responsibilities to find much time for furthering my own education. Now that my daughter is older and my life has stabilized a bit, I feel I am re-entering the world with an eagerness to learn and a hunger for information and justice. Part of this experience has been the newfound willingness to say “I don’t know!” And part has been to accept who I am, and to not be afraid to step forward as a writer and participate in forums that intimidate me. Like this one.

I have a suspicion that I am not the only one out there (here). Whatever their path, there are people who are presently curious, who deserve the benefit of the doubt, who want to learn. And even amongst the people who “aren’t” willing, there are those who might learn if facts were explained to them without incredulity and sarcasm. I know I’m not the only person to come late to the education party; certainly, late is better than never…right?

I want to be particularly clear about a few things, just in case I have given the wrong impression: I do not believe my life has been any more of a struggle than anybody else’s, I am not trying to position myself or anybody else as being owed a course in sensitivity and diversity, and I do not think the personally negative comments a couple of my posts received are indicative of the overall tenor at Feministe specifically or of a progressive ideology in general. I don’t wish to be perceived as a victim in any way, or as someone above hostile feelings when it comes to subjects that are very personal to me. I am simply writing as a person who wants very badly to help progress the tolerance and mutual respect within our country and our world, and as someone that is very concerned about the disparity opening up between “the left” and “the right” (if you’ll allow me to be a bit reductive). I feel so lucky to have been exposed to this blog, and feel even luckier to have been given the opportunity to express myself so thoroughly here. But still, I’m nervous that some aspects of my Feministe experience so far reveal the ways we instinctively interact with the beliefs and expressions of other people, and how that response can potentially harm the conversation more than help it.

So, a few big questions.

How do we talk to the people who were educated incorrectly– who have Religion or Religious-based textbooks to support the wrong facts, who vote and behave accordingly– without putting them on the immediate defense? How do we encourage curiosity and welcome questions that may hurt/annoy/enrage us? How much intolerance are we willing to tolerate while we attempt to progress the conversation? How do we differentiate between hateful intolerance and ignorant intolerance, or does that differentiation matter? Is the element of religion too large to combat with information, exposure and conversation? Will this gap in our society eventually close on its own, as we are on the “right side of history,” or is it up to us to actively bring the conversation to the rest of the world’s population?

I have no clear answers myself… I know this post is imperfect. I envisioned it as a conversation-starter, and hope that’s the spirit in which it will be taken.

To the comments!! (?)

RNC Open Thread

Fat cat watching TV and drinking beer

Are you watching? I am watching. Why am I watching? I don’t even have a TV; I’m streaming it on C-SPAN. I hate myself.

People, Please Get Your Act Together (now with 53% more clarification!)

People today are self-absorbed. They don’t care what anyone thinks. There is less focus on discipline, integrity, boundaries, fairness, honesty, and respect. Living in society is not getting everything you want. It’s not about focusing exclusively on your own wants and needs. It is about being a useful and respectful person in society. Based on my experience as a legal adult for the past 13 years, I’ve found that about a quarter of people are self-absorbed, self-centered assholes and feel entitled to do anything they want.

Posted in Uncategorized

The Matinee Cure: A 1st World Solution to Heartbreak

(I am working on a bigger piece for Feministe, but thought I would post a few of my favorites from my “other” kind of writing in the mean time, which is to warn you that these are creative stories about dating, parenting, and other Los Angeles adventures.)

[Trigger Warning: Sexual Content]

My child’s classmates regularly turn a year older, as kids are wont to do, and their parents throw elaborate parties, as they are wont to do. I’ll spare you the details of societal traditions and modern obligations of inviting everyone in the class. I suppose it’s the thought that counts, and it’s supposed to be fun. But, honestly? I really hate spending money on a kid that I don’t know, and that my own kid may not even like, and I really hate spending time at these events, because no one talks to me. Okay, to be fair, occasionally someone talks to me. And it goes like this:

Other Parent: “Blah blah blah MY HUSBAND blah blah blah REMODELING THE KITCHEN, blah blah blah JULIA ROBERT’S LANDSCAPER blah blah blah WE DRIVE A PRIUS”

Me: Gosh, it must be neat to have a husband; do you two make-out? I haven’t made out with anyone in years. Also, I’m thinking of getting a new tattoo.

Other Parent: “WELL, WE DRIVE A PRIUS”

My daughter was super excited about this party in particular because it had a Super Hero Theme. While I am very much against this new modern thing of making your kid the coolest version of yourself, dressing them in miniature hipster shirts from Amer-Appar and teaching them songs by the Pixies instead of, say, Raffi, I have to say: I feel pretty lucky to have a little girl who loves super heroes and comic books. She dressed as the red Power Ranger, insisting that red is just like pink. We buy a Batman Toy of some sort, wrap it in Avatar wrapping paper of some sort, and go to the party.

It’s a pretty great party. Members of the Justice League were in line for face painting, X-men were rocking the egg-toss, there were miniature Avengers stuffing their faces with cupcakes, and my daughter – the only girl to dress up, by the way – fit right in with the other Power Rangers in a jump house. They even had a real live adult Spider Man come and play games like pin-the-pumpkin on the Green Goblin.

I brought a cross-word puzzle with me and sat in a corner.

But I didn’t get a single box filled out, across or down, because—I’ll skip the details, except to say he was the father of the birthday boy—there was Bob. 130 lbs of punk rock single dad-ness. Chuck Taylor’s. White tee shirt. Tattoos.

And—I’ll skip more details, except to say that he asked for my number right in front of his girlfriend in the guise of a “play date,” and then broke up with her later that night—we had coffee. And by coffee I mean that he also came over for some beer and we made out. And it was awesome. But also, it was like, awesomely confusing.

Hanging out with another parent is a TRIP. He could ask me if I wanted more children on our very first date and it was no big deal! We could talk about our exes and it didn’t mean we weren’t ready to move on! We could talk about the trials and tribulations and love of our children without freaking the other person out that it meant we just wanted to settle down already. Because we are. Already. Settled down. So this was all much more intense than I anticipated.

This thing was totally happening, and I was so overwhelmed and excited because I wasn’t expecting it, but also I was so totally overwhelmed because I wasn’t expecting to feel so SCARED. I was looking at him, and he’s looking at me, and I know we’re both thinking the same thing: PUNK ROCK BRADY BUNCH.

And, deep down, sure, maybe I knew that the coolest suburban fantasy to ever rock Silver Lake was possibly blinding us a little from reality, but in the moment, I was thrilled.

It all seemed too good to be true.

A few days later, very uninteresting, albeit technologically advanced, exchanges were had via “instant messenger.” I said I wanted to see him. “I would like to see you again.” He responded, seconds later. “Me too.” And so on, and so forth. A face to face meeting occurred . We had coffee. And this time, by “coffee,” I mean we exchanged real intimate vulnerabilities, and by THAT, I mean we had sex all night. It was fantastic.

Clarification: the sex was not fantastic. The light was on, and while I am not generally the hide-under-the-covers-kind-of-girl, I hadn’t expected the night to take such turns. I wasn’t shaved! I wasn’t waxed! And…his penis was too…big. (It IS possible.) But it was fantastic to be HAVING SEX with someone who UNDERSTOOD ME. Who I UNDERSTOOD. It was all happening.

We jumped up together at dawn and had coffee–real coffee this time–he had to get home and get his kids to school, I had to get my own kid to school, we talked briefly about play dates, homework and child custody, and then he kissed me on the forehead and zipped away, leaving me exhausted but blissful.

A few hours later, at 7:50 AM, while I was driving my daughter to school (the same school that she attended with Bob’s kids!), I received this text message: “Eve, for reasons I will not explain, I can no longer continue seeing you.”

So…that was that.

Man oh MAN. I was so shocked. I thought girls were only dumped after a night of sex in old 90210 episodes and in the Christian morality books my mom gave me when I got my period. Not in real life! And I was angry. And embarrassed (Was it the lights? Was it because I didn’t shave? Was my vagina too small?!) And hurt. And offended. And sad. And, like, so pissed. I mean, A TEXT MESSAGE?! And dumping ME?!?! I held it together while I dropped my daughter off, and then parked around the corner. Sitting in my car, I cried a little, and when that felt okay, I cried a whole lot, which felt even better. When I could catch my breath, I called a good friend, who is really more of a mentor. “What you need is the matinee cure.”

In between sniffles and gulps, I whimpered, “The matinee cure?”

“Oh, honey. Every girl needs to know the Matinee Cure.”

The Matinee Cure: A Sure-Fire Treatment for Dealing with Tragedy

1.Choose an early showing of a movie that demands your attention. Foreign films with subtitles are best, Wes Anderson coming in at a close second. Stay away from blockbusters like “The Expendables 2.”
2.To stash in purse: Non-Junk Food; protein and starch, for energy and dopamine. Water for hydration.
3.Call 5 good friends, and leave the following message: “I can’t talk right now, but I need some love later.” (If they answer, make it quick; avoid details.)
4.Turn your phone OFF and leave it in your car.
5.Park at least 5 blocks away. The walk will do you some good before having to face the box office.

Goddamit if she wasn’t right. Driving home, I could see my feelings for what they were, and see the Text Message Incident for what it was. There is no excuse for his method—I mean, really, WHO does that?—but it sure did answer questions about the unknown, about Bob’s character. And, really, it was mostly painless. Our relationship was only days old, so I had very little over which to reminisce, and he didn’t know anything about me. Not really. He knew about being a parent, that connection wasn’t unreal, but he didn’t know ME.

My favorite color is orange, and I love olive sandwiches. I love “Star Trek the Next Generation.” I take long baths, and I cry at movie trailers that I watch habitually on Apple.com. I have been through a lot in my life, including a childhood in an evangelical Christian home and the death of a sibling. The best year of my life was spent in France. I believe accidentally getting pregnant in college saved my life. I love dancing, and my dancing is terrible. He didn’t know ANY of that. He had nothing of me. My ego was bruised, but my heart wasn’t broken. I have a box of secrets, in which one will find that I am afraid of growing old alone, and I would love for someone to come take care of me. The Text Dumping Incident was a one-two punch. After the movie, though, it was easier to realize that although the wind was knocked out of me, I was alive and could fully stand up again. And I had—count them—five voicemails reminding me of how loved, and how NOT alone, I truly am.

I wish there was a matinee cure for everything, and I wish crises only happened during Oscar season. The movie, “Pineapple Express” (which may not have been as cerebrally challenging as one might hope but was good enough) helped me escape my Dark Dwelling Place for just long enough to remember what is important, and who I really am, instead of just how I feel. Yes, I was really dumped with a text message, but I am really better off without him, I am loved by amazing friends, and I can always bring a cross-word puzzle to the parties.