So I’m a feminist – and a misogynist?

2009 January 28
by Sabrina Morgan

(For my 3rd blogaversary I’m publishing select previously private blog entries. Originally drafted in January 2008 after hearing one too many women say “I’m not like most girls” with obvious contempt…)

I’m starting to think that we self-identified “vixens” are terribly misogynistic.

We start out feeling different from the other gals. Maybe we have a hard time relating to them. Most of our friends are guys, often from an early age.

We tend to be very independent (some might say selfish). We don’t want to live our lives by anyone else’s rulebook, least of all the gender-pink lace trimmed one people have tried to hand us. We decide this at an early age. Simultaneously we find the power that comes from flirtation and are intoxicated with it.

We don’t want white dresses or babies or hearts and flowers. We don’t want anything that will weigh us down and try to come first.

We don’t need love. We’re not weak, emotional women.

We’re not afraid to get our hands dirty. To get dirty. We’re accepted into societies of men, but in our own place, as they are very aware of what we are. And we use this.

When we’re around other women, it’s not the same. The dynamic is not the same. We forget how to relate, or we never learn.

They don’t trust us because to us flirting is friendship.

Our boyfriends will have a hard time understanding. They’ll want more than we can give. They’ll want a heart.

We’ll have a hard time opening up, or be too open, or both.

We define ourselves as not being like the other girls – perhaps defensively – and because of this we mirror the gender stereotypes we were taught, hard.

Lately for every gal I hear or read who says she doesn’t enjoy the company of other women because they’re always so much cattier than men, I hear contempt for their gender and its perceived weakness. (And a woman who hasn’t been around her male friends when they gossip and fight. Of course, since they’re men, they would use the word argue – which is an angry word but a word of strength. It’s not often used strictly to demean. Gossip is a powerless word for ineffectual people and we only apply it to women. We castrate our own gender.)

It’s one thing to rebel against being spoonfed a stereotype as an ideal. It’s another thing to have obvious disgust for your gender (and most of these offending women are primarily gendered female, even if they do sometimes feel male inside; or at least, they express their gender as female).

I caught myself at it when I realized I was emotionally neutered. I fixed that. Mostly.

But even then, I thought the problem was a fear of vulnerability, not a fear of all the mockable quirks we define as female.

I’m not saying this was any less my actual personality. I was on this path because my own inclinations led me there; it wasn’t simple rebellion. But humans need both traditionally masculine and traditionally feminine qualities within themselves to be whole people. I thought wearing lace and high heels and being into emotional honesty was expressing my feminine side.

There’s more to being a woman than dressing the part (although that’s a reward I savor).

A fear of committment commitment – I can’t even spell the word – is unanticipated when a woman wears it but that doesn’t make it any less a weakness of character than it is in a man.

Not all traditionally masculine qualities are positive. We weave them into ourselves because they represent power and we love power any way we can get it. Taken from us (ooh!), wielded by us (mmm…), exchanged and rearranged in the kinkiest permutations… We use our bodies, our voices, our feminine wiles, just as we use our masculine traits. To disarm men and confuse them when they trail after us like lost puppies.

It’s one thing to be independent, and favor few attachments, and not be very interested in relationships but that is sometimes a stage, not a permanent trait, and even when it is a permanent trait, it’s neither a positive nor a negative. It’s just a way of being.

We don’t need to throw poison darts at women who didn’t spit on their gender-pink, lace trimmed role book.

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6 Comments leave one →
2009 January 29

No, my dear, *you* win the internet. All of it.

2009 January 30

There are a lot of great insights here, and it sadly reminded me of the disdain I had for the women that lived next door to me in college simply because they were obsessed with wedding shows. It’s tempting to define yourself against others (even though we have more in common than not), and it’s sometimes confusing when you want to fight against a stereotype that you’re not actually fighting the people that you perceive to fulfill it. We could all be kinder to each other, but certainly women to other women.

2009 January 31

[...] Privilege- A fable with a lesson at the end,” written exactly one year to the day after my last post was drafted: Even in the way I was attracted to people- I still idolized masculinity- the whole [...]

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2009 February 3
Sabrina Morgan permalink

[...]it’s sometimes confusing when you want to fight against a stereotype that you’re not actually fighting the people that you perceive to fulfill it.

You make a tricky distinction and an important one. In our efforts to break the hold of old patterns we often either reject them completely – as well as those who exhibit them – or we backlash so hard we end up reducing anyone who reeks of the stereotype in question to nothing more than that.

We’ve all got good intentions, treating others as individuals and not allowing society to press us into a template. It’s damn hard not to fall into the trap of resenting/reducing those who fulfill it but then we become the ‘enemy…’

2009 March 13

Ah, its taken me over 25 years to figure out what it is about my “vixen” that makes her avoid deep relationships with other women. I think one clue you offer here is that flirtatous nature mixed with a rejection of the what you called the frilly pink-laced aspect of femininity. But she did want the babies, she did want love, but then again she’ll change a car tire in the rain if need be. She likes getting dirty. Lately she has found another woman to play with but its sort of a sexual contest, and she still makes herself through me. Her mom was hard on her and that has a lot to do with all this. And ironically enough she get’s mis-read by women as the conformist when she has always done things here way. She doesn’t spit at anyone, which is probably her salvation. At least that is the way I used to see her. She spits a little at me, and wants me to punish her for it. Suffice is to say that’s something I wasn’t always willing to do, but now its the spice of moment. That, and facing the “other” woman, naked.

2009 May 8

[...] So I’m a feminist – and a misogynist? | Sabrina in Stockings "Lately for every gal I hear or read who says she doesn’t enjoy the company of other women because they’re always so much cattier than men, I hear contempt for their gender and its perceived weakness. (And a woman who hasn’t been around her male friends when they gossip and fight. Of course, since they’re men, they would use the word argue – which is an angry word but a word of strength. It’s not often used strictly to demean. Gossip is a powerless word for ineffectual people and we only apply it to women. We castrate our own gender.)" (tags: gender feminism) [...]

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