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Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 08:19 pm
This should be a ranty post, really, but I'm too tired to even rant. Give me a few days and I'll be back to my normal ranty self, but right now, I'm so fed up with this, I haven't the energy.

The thing is, in the last couple of weeks, I've

- been wolf-whistled in the street
- been told that this is really a compliment and I should be flattered
- been told that if I wear a slightly low-cut top, I have to expect that men will not only look at the tiny bit of my cleavage they can see, but also not be able to take their eyes off it
- had a twenty minute conversation with a guy I work with, all of which was conducted to my breasts
- had a guy I've never spoken to in my life come and put his hand against mine, then move after me to do it again when I moved away
- found out that I'm about to be working with someone who thinks 'is your wife hot?' is an okay question to ask his brand new supervisor, and also feels that it's okay to announce, in front of said supervisor after he's explained that actually his wife is not his wife but his husband, that 'I don't like gay people, I don't like what they get up to and I think it's wrong, but it's fine unless they try to come on to me'.

And the thing is, none of this is even really new. Most of it happens every year. It's just - is it so hard to understand that I dress in these clothes, in the same way I dress in everything I wear, because I like how I look, not because I want people to ogle me? Do men really have so little self-control that they become utterly transfixed by the slightest hint of cleavage, and are incapable of looking at my face while I talk to them?

My friend said, about the new guy at work, that at least I can educate him, and my first thought was, yeah, but I don't want to have to. He's 32, he should know better by now, and I'm not a walking education in how to treat women and gay people, or what's appropriate to say in the work place. If I wanted to do that, I'd get a job as a diversity and equality trainer. I just want to be able to go about my day and not have to put up with all this, and right now I think, it must be so nice to be a man, because whatever else you have to put up with, you don't have to put up with this.

Also, if one more man listens to me explain my thesis into perceptions of female date rape victims and tells me that this is a problem for male victims as well, or that not all men who are accused are guilty (which, btw, has absolutely nothing to do with my research), I swear I'm not going to be responsible for what I do or say. I don't need this pointing out to me - I'm not living in a bubble, I get it. Men get raped as well. But that's not what I'm researching, and the way they come out with that right after makes me think they just don't get where I'm coming from at all, and that they can't think about anything except in terms of how it affects them as men.
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Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 10:50 pm (UTC)
“At least you can educate someone” is a bullshit line meant to make you feel bad that you didn't turn getting harassed or hearing some soet of prejudiced comment into a constructive learning experience for the person who's being prejudiced or harassing. Which, by the way, is bullshit, because you're under no obligation to expand anyone's life or learning experiences, because you have a right to be pissed.

Why do men always want to point out their half of the species can be raped too? Is it to make it all about them, or are they just, I don't know, trying to steal some of what makes being a woman more unique without giving up any of their privilege? Or… Oh, God, why am I bothering to try to analyze this?
Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 11:37 pm (UTC)
“At least you can educate someone” is a bullshit line

Yeah. I mean, she's right in a sense, in that I do take a lot of opportunities to explain to people why they're being idiots, but it's not exactly a consolation to know I'm probably going to have to. And I sort of feel like - what right does he have to benefit from getting it explained to him nicely why what he's saying could be seen as offensive, when he probably doesn't even care what I have to say anyway? I'm not a teacher, it's not my job to educate everyone and...I dunno, some days I just want people to not be idiots so I don't have to.

Why do men always want to point out their half of the species can be raped too?

God, I wish I knew. It's like they just can't fathom there being an issue that isn't all about them. Or maybe it's a way of avoiding the implication that they personally could be accused/guilty of rape, even though that's not what I'm implying. Like a way of getting around the idea that by being male they fall into this category of people who commit rape... I don't know, I don't think I'm explaining that well. I just end up giving up on the conversation, because I have to keep saying, yes, but that's not what my research is on, that's not what I'm concerned about in this, or getting into a discussion of male rape, which, if we're trying to avoid the idea of men as rapists, is pointless, because most male rape victims are also raped by men.

Ugh, some days, I just want to lock myself in the house and not deal with any real people at all.