Quote from: kkut on February 20, 2013, 01:25:16 PM
Elspeth, I agree we can't let others define us. The way your former psychologist described society seems a bit extreme, seemed pessimistic to me.
Not so much pessimistic. Society might change, and we certainly should try to make that happen, in the long run, along with our friends and allies (and we should have as many friends and allies as we can stand). I guess you had to be there.
For me it was really more just an affirmation that the problems I face, or that anyone faces, especially anyone who identifies with or gets identified as female, female-identified, feminine, femme, effeminate and any other variations on that, are just something that is there, it
is real, and it can be very frustrating and even disheartening at times. But knowing that it's not coming from me, that it's not my defect, and that it doesn't make me bad, evil, perverse (I might be, but that's really something else entirely)... knowing that it's external allows me to let go of it, and sometimes even allows me to make allowances for people who are mired in that toxic sludge, who are often in as much pain or more pain than I am, only they are handling it by projecting their pain and anxieties on me or any other available target.
He wasn't meaning it, or I was not taking it as a downer, just as an insight.
Here's hoping that makes it a little clearer? I do think that most women have had to come to that sort of insight at some point or another, if they are to avoid getting lost in what often seems like perfectly justifiable self-pity, doubt, self-hate, and so on that can express itself in all kinds of negative forms, if we allow ourselves to let it consume us. And sometimes, the bear just eats you anyway.