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What is the deal with guys and machines?

Started by Julia1996, June 30, 2017, 11:49:12 AM

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chastitydomme

The societal gender lines, are thankfully getting blurred.

Chastity
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Kylo

Quote from: rmaddy on July 05, 2017, 12:13:37 PM
I disagree.  I think we are seeing changes in society as a result in changes to socialization.  What you're looking at is an incomplete transformation.  True, young women are being told that they can do whatever they want now, but not until they've fully mastered being a princess under the near constant references to their beauty, which start even before they are born.  Dismantle that, and you'll have a blended society.

In your view women still have no agency to choose for themselves and if we tear down "female beauty" everyone will think the same?

People do have the freedom to choose here, though, isn't that good enough...? Nobody can escape how their parents socialize them in whatever capacity, but when we are old enough, we all can.

Quite honestly I think if you try to meddle with the idea of women being beautiful you're going to come up against a lot of women who want to be beautiful no matter how much you tell them it doesn't matter. And who is anyone to tell individual people what they should and shouldn't find interesting? By all means show kids of both genders all the possibilities they could achieve in a lifetime through a range of interests. But I'm not up for telling people whether they should or shouldn't pursue beauty. Just about everyone thinks about wanting to be beautiful at some point or other, it's human. "Dismantling" the idea doesn't sound like a good path to me as it will lead to banning of imagery of women of a certain weight, or look, etc. (already proposed in London on the buses thanks to the mayor) and it sounds far more totalitarian to me to begin telling people what is "realistic" and "unrealistic" an expectation of them, and to begin actively tearing down or to start shaming people for liking certain beauty standards over others. I would much rather we didn't go down the road of policing ideas about beauty and instead just taught children to think for themselves.

Even then, I do think women on the whole have a tendency - across all cultures, and including the female-minded but still male-bodied - to think about (and to want to think about) being beautiful more than men do. You can see it all over these boards and it makes people happy to feel beautiful... you don't see people here saying they specifically desire to be beautiful because society demands it, or because men want it... but because they want it. Is this some social construct they are obeying like robots, or more likely part and parcel of the enjoyment of human sensuality?

I honestly don't know a single adult woman who is pursuing unrealistic beauty standards or trying to be a "princess" - not saying that doesn't happen at all but I certainly don't see it "all around" me.

My younger sister is a mother of two; wants to be a make-up artist and enjoys making herself up... she had the exact same upbringing as I did - gender neutral, with academic parents who encouraged her to read over watching TV. She was socialized at a young age largely by me, the older sibling, to climb trees, fight, make bows and arrows and raise hell. But once grown up, what happened? She and I couldn't be more different, and she does what she does now because she enjoys it. That's who she is, what she likes and chooses to be like. If someone came along and told her she's doing it because society or upbringing, she would laugh.

What if... there is a biological component to the desire to be beautiful? Men will often try to compete with each other to become successful in a particular field because that tends to make them more desirable as mates. While women don't have to make themselves up to remain desirable as mates, making themselves up undoubtedly appears to make them even more desirable as mates. If this behavior and response is biological in origin - no amount of social engineering is going to get rid of it.


"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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Kylo

Quote from: Jane Emily on July 04, 2017, 08:48:17 PM
I would argue that it is relevant.  What better long-term, longitudinal studies could social scientists devise than a population of women (i.e. transgender women) who were raised and socialized as men, and forced to live as men by the stigma of transphobia?  And lo and behold what do we find?  Women who enjoy, succeed, and thrive in male dominated industries, the military, IT, the trades, mechanics, etc. This would suggest it is the early societal socialization and social pressure that steers women toward stereotypically feminine pursuits and men toward stereotypically masculine pursuits.

Yes, though you have to take into account the fact that lots of transwomen say they went into these trades not necessarily because they enjoy them. There are people here on the boards talking about going into the military because it's a job and an easily available option, for example, rather than something they are truly passionate for. When socialized as men, how many went into those trades out of practicality but might have gone into stereotypically feminine ones if the choice had been there? Who knows.

Of course I am not saying they don't enjoy these things they do and have done. But the circumstances we find ourselves in in life doesn't always mirror our preferences. Lots of people here talk about wanting to be pregnant, to be a mother, etc. It doesn't seem a stretch to think lots of transwomen would - if they could - choose feminine roles in life, too.   
"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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Gertrude

Quote from: Viktor on July 06, 2017, 11:32:09 AM
In your view women still have no agency to choose for themselves and if we tear down "female beauty" everyone will think the same?

People do have the freedom to choose here, though, isn't that good enough...? Nobody can escape how their parents socialize them in whatever capacity, but when we are old enough, we all can.

Quite honestly I think if you try to meddle with the idea of women being beautiful you're going to come up against a lot of women who want to be beautiful no matter how much you tell them it doesn't matter. And who is anyone to tell individual people what they should and shouldn't find interesting? By all means show kids of both genders all the possibilities they could achieve in a lifetime through a range of interests. But I'm not up for telling people whether they should or shouldn't pursue beauty. Just about everyone thinks about wanting to be beautiful at some point or other, it's human. "Dismantling" the idea doesn't sound like a good path to me as it will lead to banning of imagery of women of a certain weight, or look, etc. (already proposed in London on the buses thanks to the mayor) and it sounds far more totalitarian to me to begin telling people what is "realistic" and "unrealistic" an expectation of them, and to begin actively tearing down or to start shaming people for liking certain beauty standards over others. I would much rather we didn't go down the road of policing ideas about beauty and instead just taught children to think for themselves.

Even then, I do think women on the whole have a tendency - across all cultures, and including the female-minded but still male-bodied - to think about (and to want to think about) being beautiful more than men do. You can see it all over these boards and it makes people happy to feel beautiful... you don't see people here saying they specifically desire to be beautiful because society demands it, or because men want it... but because they want it. Is this some social construct they are obeying like robots, or more likely part and parcel of the enjoyment of human sensuality?

I honestly don't know a single adult woman who is pursuing unrealistic beauty standards or trying to be a "princess" - not saying that doesn't happen at all but I certainly don't see it "all around" me.

My younger sister is a mother of two; wants to be a make-up artist and enjoys making herself up... she had the exact same upbringing as I did - gender neutral, with academic parents who encouraged her to read over watching TV. She was socialized at a young age largely by me, the older sibling, to climb trees, fight, make bows and arrows and raise hell. But once grown up, what happened? She and I couldn't be more different, and she does what she does now because she enjoys it. That's who she is, what she likes and chooses to be like. If someone came along and told her she's doing it because society or upbringing, she would laugh.

What if... there is a biological component to the desire to be beautiful? Men will often try to compete with each other to become successful in a particular field because that tends to make them more desirable as mates. While women don't have to make themselves up to remain desirable as mates, making themselves up undoubtedly appears to make them even more desirable as mates. If this behavior and response is biological in origin - no amount of social engineering is going to get rid of it.

I have 4 daughters aged 12-20. I don't discourage them from anything and yet they are all different and gravitate towards different things. People have their preferences in learning styles and strengths and weaknesses with different subjects and work types. I agree that we should allow them to figure it out instead of forcing something based on an agenda which won't make them anymore happier or fulfilled, but instead serves someone else's purposes. It's kind of like indoctrination and religion. Kids need a smorgasbord to dine on without some telling them what to eat. They find their way.


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rmaddy

Quote from: Viktor on July 06, 2017, 11:32:09 AM
In your view women still have no agency to choose for themselves and if we tear down "female beauty" everyone will think the same?



We develop agency over time.  Those ideas in which we have been bathed prior to our maturation can be harder to throw off at a later date.  For example, the next religion that tries to convert me won't capture a minute of my attention, but extricating myself from the one in which I was indoctrinated was horribly painful.  I don't dispute that many men and women like the gendered state of affairs as is.  What I say is that if we dispensed with the "You're so pretty/You're so tough" dichotomy with toddlers, we wouldn't end up with a society in which someone can make millions by contending that men and women are from completely different planets.
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Kylo

I get your point, but think peer pressure from other girls/women affects girls far more regards beauty standards than does upbringing or parental opinions about beauty. And I imagine that has always been there in all societies all through history, not just now with the ultra-skinny model types or the plastic surgery generations, because women often want to 'fit in' with other women.

It wasn't until the late teens when I noticed girls in school stared caring about shaving or make-up, because other girls were shaming them for not caring about it. Till then, none of them had been socialized to shave or get made up as kids, either by parents or the TV. It was the teenage/young adult peer pressure that affected them most strongly, and where that came from seemed to be from the female group itself, which had decided these things and bullied the girls who didn't conform... younger girls and older women were less affected apparently because either side of this phase they didn't care about fitting in to this particular group.
"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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Jin

Because...machines are wicked cool!

and fun to mess with.
I yam what I yam, and that's all what I yam.
-- Popeye

A wise person can learn more from fools than a fool can learn from a wise person.
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Gertrude

Quote from: Viktor on July 07, 2017, 04:01:27 AM
I get your point, but think peer pressure from other girls/women affects girls far more regards beauty standards than does upbringing or parental opinions about beauty. And I imagine that has always been there in all societies all through history, not just now with the ultra-skinny model types or the plastic surgery generations, because women often want to 'fit in' with other women.

It wasn't until the late teens when I noticed girls in school stared caring about shaving or make-up, because other girls were shaming them for not caring about it. Till then, none of them had been socialized to shave or get made up as kids, either by parents or the TV. It was the teenage/young adult peer pressure that affected them most strongly, and where that came from seemed to be from the female group itself, which had decided these things and bullied the girls who didn't conform... younger girls and older women were less affected apparently because either side of this phase they didn't care about fitting in to this particular group.

Peer pressure does, but having open dialogues with them helps. too many parents are disconnected from what their kids are doing or feeling. Luckily, my daughters are very individualistic and different from each other. They are a joy for the most part. Before I was married, I thought I would prefer boys. No way.
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Kitty June

I like machines because you can get performance and beauty.
I have an external hard drive from 2001.
It's like 250gig and it scares me that I still use it, but it's pretty for a hard drive.
I think I look at machines the same as architecture. It doesn't have to be bland to be a quality building.
I'm also a musician and I like the pretty lights on my amp, but I made sure it works well too
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Bari Jo

It's not just guys  I know several girls that are into robotics and machines.  I like them too.  It's one thing I'm carrying over in my transition.
you know how far the universe extends outward? i think i go inside just as deep.

10/11/18 - out to the whole world.  100% friends and family support.
11/6/17 - came out to sister, best day of my life
9/5/17 - formal diagnosis and stopping DIY in favor if prescribed HRT
6/18/17 - decided to stop fighting the trans beast, back on DIY.
Too many ups and downs, DIY, purges of self inbetween dates.
Age 10 - suppression and denial began
Age 8 - knew I was different
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Lyric

Technophilia is not gender-exclusive, though males have dominated it in the past. Some people believe there is a natural tendency of the female to have a greater interest in the overall, while males tend to focus on the specific. I rather think culture has a lot to do with this, though. In recent years there has been a rapid rise of females going into technology fields. And, as this forum demonstrates, there has also been a rise in genetic males expressing interest in  the "feminine".

I've certainly known plenty of men who had little interest in machines. For some reason my male friends always seem to be the type who call me to come change their flat tire for them. Go figure.
"Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life." - Steve Jobs
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Chloe

#51
Quote from: Julia1996 on June 30, 2017, 11:49:12 AM
Can anyone explain why guys like cars and machines so much? I really don't get it.

Julia! Where do u come up with this stuff????

I positively ADORE, LOVE my '06 379  Peterbilt with it's 9speed (+deep reduction and tandem interlock) twin-turbo C13 CAT (engine that is, a classic, that one cannot get anymore!) 7 MPG & no DEF (diesel exhaust fluid) required!!!

Ohhh working so many "buttons & switches' everyday is GREAT!!

Work hinted at SELLING IT & I threatened QUIT!! Everybody else has 'automatics' and just met our new HR dept today - a lady named 'Ann' that reminds me of my mom (also named 'Ann')

Told 'the guys' in the office "I could probably tell her anything" to which they replied "Get Out" !!??

Is that so???? (makes one go "hummm")
"But it's no use now," thought poor Alice, "to pretend be two people!
"Why, there's hardly enough of me left to make one respectable person!"
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Gertrude

Quote from: Kiera on September 21, 2017, 05:55:55 PM
Julia! Where do u come up with this stuff????

I positively ADORE, LOVE my '06 379  Peterbilt with it's 9speed (+deep reduction and tandem interlock) twin-turbo C13 CAT (engine that is, a classic, that one cannot get anymore!) 7 MPG & no DEF (diesel exhaust fluid) required!!!

Ohhh working so many "buttons & switches' everyday is GREAT!!

Work hinted at SELLING IT & I threatened QUIT!! Everybody else has 'automatics' and just met our new HR dept today - a lady named 'Ann' that reminds me of my mom (also named 'Ann')

Told 'the guys' in the office "I could probably tell her anything" to which they replied "Get Out" !!??

Is that so???? (makes one go "hummm")
What? No 8V92?


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