T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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418.1 | ? The opposite of Misogynist ? | PARITY::SMITH | Penny Smith, TWO/B5, 247-2203 | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:52 | 5 |
| What is the term for the opposite, when the subject deals with
the "hate or distrust of MEN"? I'd be interested in reading
material along this vein if anyone knows of any resources.
Penny
|
418.2 | the strengths/divisions of hate | EUREKA::DENISE | everything in moderation... | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:10 | 9 |
| all i could find was misanthrope....which is the hatred of
*mankind*, which seems too broad for *man* in particular.
re. .0, is it being implied that domination is contingent
to misogyny? or vice versa?
i would also like to know more about this.
d
|
418.3 | misandry? | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:52 | 0 |
418.4 | Does this help? | AKOV76::SHAW | | Wed Oct 14 1987 16:50 | 25 |
| The "control" is the learned behavior. This behavior SOMETIMES results
in the "hate of women". After reading this book I certainly do not
believe that this is a one way street. I know of relationships where
the woman must be the dominating force. I highly recommend reading
this book. It is written by Susan Forward. Although I don't agree
with some of the content I can certainly relate to a lot of it.
I believe that it is this type of behavior that leads to many divorces.
Many people are very much unaware of why they behave in such a manner.
Examples:
Belittling the spouse either in private or in public, usually both.
Flying off the handle for the most insignicant reasons, not letting
up.
Pushing for sex, being rejected, further degrading the spouse, this
of course forces the spouse to withdraw.
General belief that the spouse cannot do anything right.
Severe jealousy and mental cruelty.
Accusations that the spouse does not truly love you.
Accusations that the spouse is self centered.
True Misogynists will not accept that they are responsible for this
behavior. In these cases either the relationship remains miserable or
divorce occurs.
Many people exhibit this behavior, the good of it is that what is
learned can become unlearned. I believe that it can be done with
true desire to change and be happy about yourself and competent therapy.
|
418.5 | Linguistic digression | SUPER::KENAH | Giselle gives me the Wilis... | Wed Oct 14 1987 17:17 | 11 |
| Apparently there is no common word in the English language that
means "hater of men." I researched this question a year or two
ago, and like the earlier response, the closest I got was "mis-
anthrope."
One of the roots of "misanthrope" is the Greek word anthros,
meaning "man;" consequently, one definition of "misanthrope" *might*
be "hater of men." Most often, however, it is interpreted as "hater
of mankind," the connotation being both men and women.
andrew
|
418.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed Oct 14 1987 17:50 | 5 |
| RE: .6
That would be "someone who fears men", not the same thing.
Steve
|
418.8 | | EUCLID::FRASER | Crocodile sandwich & make it snappy! | Wed Oct 14 1987 21:07 | 6 |
| RE .4
With reference to my previous marriage, the items quoted are
frighteningly accurate!!
|
418.10 | | PBA::GIRARD | | Thu Oct 15 1987 09:54 | 3 |
| re. 0
Not yet, but getting there!
|
418.11 | it helped to make me MORE! intrigued.... | EUREKA::DENISE | everything in moderation... | Thu Oct 15 1987 10:50 | 8 |
| .re .4
in the book does it say or *assume* that it is directed toward
a *certain/particular* personality/character type?
in other words can it be a particular trait within someone
that brings out subliminal misogyny?
d
|
418.12 | Am I gaining? | AKOV76::SHAW | | Thu Oct 15 1987 13:47 | 14 |
| Re: .11
No it is not directed toward a particular character or personality
type. However a woman or man who have been exposed to relationships
where this type of abuse is present are usually quite a bit more
tolerant of it. In other words if your parents had this type of
relationship you would be more tolerant of this type of behavior.
It is the person who is dishing out the "abuse" who is responsible
NOT the person accepting it. The receiver's only fault in this is
to tolerate this behavior. It further promotes it.
When I say this type of behavior is learned I mean that it is usually
learned from a young age. If Daddy treated Mommy like sh** then
then Tommy may treat Susie that way. If Mommy treated Daddy like
sh**, then Tommy may say no woman will EVER treat me that way.
|
418.13 | New Hite report? | SQM::AITEL | NO ZUKES!!!! | Thu Oct 15 1987 15:02 | 5 |
| Anyone seen the new Hite report? From what I've heard, there's
some unsettling data on how women view their treatment by men
in the new report, but I have not yet seen it.
--Louise
|
418.14 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | You might think I'm crazy | Thu Oct 15 1987 17:31 | 9 |
| Re .4, .8, sounds a lot like a description of my former marriage,
too. :-( That's how he acted about 75% of the time, the rest
of the time he acted like the nicest man you'd ever want to meet
in your life, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Of course, it started out
he acted that way 25% of the time and nice 75% of the time. Gradually
it got worse and eventually I gave up on him.
Lorna
|
418.15 | | EUCLID::FRASER | Crocodile sandwich & make it snappy! | Thu Oct 15 1987 21:08 | 7 |
| Re. 14
Yeah - that's not any kind of fun - it took about 5 years to
get to the give-up point and the latter two years was about 90%
and 10% - but the relief to be free of it!!
Andy.
|
418.16 | Hmmm must be one here in de BOOK ! | BETA::EARLY | Bob_the_Hiker | Fri Oct 16 1987 09:27 | 16 |
| re: .0
Myhandy dandy dictionary (DEC issue) says the definition is correct,
but it doesn't specify gender. It says "the hatred of women", but
not by whom.
re: .1,.2
If MISogynist is the hatred of women, then MRogynist must be the
hatred of men, eh ? ;^)
Humour aside, MISO comes from the greek misein and misso. The same
book describes "gyn" as being gynecology, which is the study of
women, so perhaps the hatred of men would be "misotestical" (??).
Bob et trois (+3)
|
418.17 | Me, too! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:00 | 10 |
| re .4,.8,.14,.15:
Me, too! Do we all have the same ex-spouse, or is this more common
than I thought??
I don't hate men because of him, however! Of course, my current
spouse is a very sweet-tempered person. I think the rotten temper
was the hardest thing of my former relationship for me to deal with
- never knowing when he was going to get furiously angry over some
random thing.
|
418.18 | | EUCLID::FRASER | Crocodile sandwich & make it snappy! | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:11 | 13 |
| RE < Note 418.17 by CADSYS::RICHARDSON >
-< Me, too! >-
> Me, too! Do we all have the same ex-spouse, or is this more common
> than I thought??
Being as how I'm male (last I checked anyway) and you and Lorna
aren't - I *hope* not!!
Andy (note the deep voice)! ;*)
|
418.19 | It hits home for alot of us | AKOV75::SHAW | | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:13 | 8 |
| It is EXTREMELY common. I want to clarify that although .0 mentioned
hate of women, what I actually mean is that the treatment is such
that you would think it is hate. It is control. When these types
of relationships end, it is very painful because the person actually
loved his spouse, not hated her. I keep hearing my ex-spouse, previous
marriage, etc. Did any of you really try to work it out? Did your
husband/wife try to change, through counselling or other means?
|
418.20 | It takes two to work things out | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Oct 16 1987 14:25 | 5 |
| I would have gladly gone to counseling (though I am FAR better
off now!! Good riddance to him!), but I didn't have the chance
- he moved out and moved in with a girlfriend one weekend while
I was attending a girlfriend's wedding. He married her the day
after our divorce was final, and she divorced him three months later.
|
418.21 | You're right about that! | AKOV75::SHAW | | Fri Oct 16 1987 15:08 | 3 |
| That's also common. If he did it once, he'll do it again. You're
right it definitely takes two to work it out. I guess I'm the lucky
one.
|
418.22 | It DOES Take Two | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | You might think I'm crazy | Tue Oct 20 1987 12:28 | 12 |
| Re .19, there was a long period of time when I was willing to try
to work it out with my ex-husband. He used to say things like,
"If you want to go to a counselor, go. I'm not crazy. I don't
need one. But, maybe you do." He also used to say, "The reason
I treat you so bad sometimes is because you deserve it. It's the
only way I can get you to act right." Huh! I'd rather be alone
than stay with somebody who actually thinks I DESERVE to be
mistreated!!!! Yeah, I worked at it for a long time and then I
got the hell out.
Lorna
|
418.23 | Just ONE, but it has to be the RIGHT one!!!! | CAM1::PAPISON | You see what I'm saying..... | Fri Oct 23 1987 17:09 | 21 |
|
re:-1 Me thinks not, it only takes one, but it had better be the
guilty one. If a man does not realize the behavior is inappropriate
then nothing will change, one partner or both involved.
re: all I would venture to say that part of the problem with misogny
is that men, in general, are not aware of the deep rooted causes
of such behavior. Men will see " macho " behavior as being one
of the boys, a movie character, some misguided sense of "manliness"
seems to exist. My question is....What is the root of the malady??
How many men have taken the time/energy to become aware of thier
past and its effects on thier future?? I'm sure not all men have
an abusive attitude, but I would venture to say that those who do
have never taken the time to investigate themselves? My guess is
that awarness is the cure... what is the cause??
the_wiz
|
418.24 | | QUARK::HR_MODERATOR | | Wed Nov 18 1987 10:08 | 69 |
| The following reply is from a member of our community who wishes to
remain anonymous.
I'd like to take a few minutes to shed some light on the issue of misogyny
for you. As the author of .4 points out his belief that this is not a one
way street, let me confirm that it is not.
What I am about to share with you is how I came to practice this "learned
behavior" on my husband. I hope you will bear with me and realize that I
am not a bad person, but a person fighting for her survival.
Seven years ago, I met a sailor whom I fell very much in love with and we
became engaged. After his discharge from the Navy in April '82, I helped
him with all his expenses as he was unemployed and his family didn't care.
Within a month, he'd gotten drunk and cheated on me. Said he didn't know
if he still loved me. Why? Because I wouldn't give him money when he wanted
it. Thus, a broken engagement.
He continued to chase me for two years after that. Every time he arrived at
my apartment he was drunk and/or high on heroin. Kept telling me he loved
me, but continued to tell me about the girl he'd slept with the night before.
Phone calls continued coming in at 2:30 a.m. (collect) and I continued to
deny them. Then he lied his way through and threatened suicide. When I
refused to fall for his ploy again, he really did try it. Finally, he ran
away to the carnival, but I knew he'd be back. And he was - in a month.
Still I told myself he was bad for me, but I really did loved him, too.
He moved to Florida to join his parents.
Two years ago, he arrived on my doorstep for what was suppose to be a
vacation. He had no clothes, no place to live, etc. I offered him room &
board for a month, and bought him a new wardrobe. Soon, the party started
again. The drinking, the friends, everything! By the next month I'd found
him an apartment (Nov. 1985). By February, '86, he was moving back in with
me. I paid his back rent, bought him another new wardrobe, a car, you-name-
it, AND agreed to marry him AGAIN! Within two months he dumped my car in a
brook ($3K damage), wiped me out of $3K CASH, and the fun begins.
I find out I'm pregnant; my husband never makes it home from pay day to the
following Monday (when he did make it home, there was $4 out of a $345 check)
because he's out partying. It's AFTER the wedding, I find out I married a
cocaine addict, heroin addict, and an alcoholic!
The last 1 1/2 yrs of marriage feel like 10! When my son was 6 wks old he
had no food because daddy was putting it up his nose & hypodermic needle.
Daddy doesn't hold a job well - In 1986 I filed 9 W2 forms and that didn't
include the under-the-table jobs. Mommy supports a family of 3 on $18K/yr
(thank GOD for DEC!) and just bought another car to get him around in.
He's better now than he was (6 mos. sober), but still knows how to push
those "hot" buttons. I still don't know if the marriage will survive, but..
a) would you feel truly loved if this were your story, or could you make
the accusation your spouse doesn't truly love you?
b) would you think them generous when you have given all I have given?
c) would you want to make love to a person who put you through this hell?
d) does it sound to you like my spouse "can do anything right" other than
torment me?
e) wouldn't your nerves be so tightly strung that you could be capable of
flying off the handle?
f) would you feel like much like boasting about such a spouse or more like
belittling him/her for all you've been through?
I hope I have shown you how someone who normally not capable of the examples
listed in .4 can become that way. I don't excuse myself because it is wrong
and I am working with a therapist and my husband to conquer these feelings.
I just wanted you all to understand the "other side" of the coin.
|
418.25 | Addictive behaviour | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | There are no misteakes | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:13 | 19 |
| Re .-1:
I think you are doing the right thing in working with a therapist. I
also believe you could get some help from ALANON, the group that works
with spouses and families of alcoholics who are "addicted" to the
alcoholic spouse that uses and abuses them. From the sound of things,
there was quite awhile that you knew what was going on, yet continued
to take him back, and buy into his threats of suicide. This is an
addictive behavior too. I believe there is a similar group that
works with families of narcotics addicts. I don't know what they
are called, but the ALANON people should be able to point you there.
I don't mean for this to sound negative. I am just suggesting a
source for help.
BTW, you might want to read the suggestions in the note "Women who
love too much". I'd also suggest the book by the same title.
Elizabeth
|
418.26 | Get help - for yourself | HARDY::KENAH | ROCK-> You are here <-HARD_PLACE | Thu Nov 19 1987 17:08 | 5 |
| re -.2:
Go to EAP. Then go to Al Anon. For yourself.
andrew
|
418.27 | Misandry is man-hating | XCELR8::POLLITZ | | Mon Feb 22 1988 00:26 | 25 |
| re .3 re .1 Misandry: Hatred of men, from Greek *misein* "to hate"
+ *aner/andros* "a man." "Note that the word *anthropos*,
from which misanthropy derives, means mankind in general;
*aner* means a specific man." "As of today, there is
a word to express man-hating: misandrism; and if you
are a man-hater, nameless one, you are now a misandrist.
If there is any truth to the theory that the assignation
of a nameto an idea gives the idea validity, then mis-
andrists now have a place in this .. world and a name
under which they can unite to dispel the male indoctrinated
theory of perverted female behavior. -- Marilyn Goldberg,
from 'On Misandrism'
Means "(1) a refusal to suppress the evidence of one's
experience with men; (2) a woman's defense against fear
and pain; (3) an affirmation of the cathartic effects
of justifiable anger." -- Ingrid Benis, 'A Woman's New
World Dictionary'
Should not be confused with *misanthropy*, a hatred
of men and women, or *misogyny*, woman-hating.
Russ
|