T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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260.2 | Easily explained. | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Mon Aug 08 1988 09:50 | 2 |
| A persons considered blind by the person whos opinion they didn't
adopt.
|
260.3 | just relating an incident | TOLKIN::DINAN | | Mon Aug 08 1988 10:22 | 13 |
|
not that it matters ---
asked a friend (shall remain nameless) something along these lines
and.....
"they're all f*cked."
me - "How can you say that?"
"Geesh, just listen to then talking, or worse, talk to them
for awhile. they're f*cked."
can't say i condone this....wholeheartedly anyway :-)
just thought it was a sad kinda funny.
Bob
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260.4 | Live Up To The Title | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Aug 08 1988 10:33 | 8 |
|
"Valuing Differences". Seems the title means that there is value
in being different, which is true. Sounds as if the participants
do not value differences, but would rather have everyone reduced
to one common denominator.
Jim
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260.5 | Everybody generalizes | QUARK::LIONEL | May you live in interesting times | Mon Aug 08 1988 12:37 | 12 |
| The phrasing of the base note makes a gross generalization about
a gross generalization. My personal opinion is that neither
generalization is true (Men, as a whole, are not blind to the
issues and women, as a whole, don't accuse men (as a whole) of
being blind.
Perhaps women have a higher probability of being more sensitive
to these issues because they are more likely to have been victims
of discrimination themselves. But discussion of blanket statements
such as in .0 seem meaningless to me.
Steve
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260.6 | Well waddaya know. | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Mon Aug 08 1988 12:46 | 12 |
| It depends upon what are the circumstances which compelled a person
to make such a statement. If you found your spouse cheating on
you last night you might very easily come to that conclusion. A
month later you meet someone who you fall head over heals for, chances
are your outlook has done a 180 degree turnaround. I'd say that
a large percentage of people have been a victim of some kind of
wrongdoing in their lifetime, and I think this is the reason these
types of statements are made.
RE: An old saying about women: You can't live with them and you
can't kill them. :') (Sorry about that)
Mike
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260.7 | | TSECAD::HEALY | Perpetuating life makes no sense. | Mon Aug 08 1988 13:04 | 6 |
|
You can air your opinion, as long as its the same as ours!
|
260.8 | We are equal. | MAMIE::M_SMITH | Building a Better Yesterday! | Mon Aug 08 1988 13:40 | 5 |
| Since we are speaking in gross generalities, I would say that men
aren't any more blind to women's issues than women are towards men's
issues.
Mike
|
260.9 | specifics time | MCIS2::POLLITZ | Klimt lover at large | Mon Aug 08 1988 17:36 | 4 |
| re .8 List a few Men's issues that women are talking about.
Russ
|
260.10 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | Direction makes a difference! | Mon Aug 08 1988 18:11 | 24 |
| >re; List a few Men's issues that women are talking about.
1. jock itch
2. women taking up jobs that used to be men-only (and how, now, there
are fewer options open to men)
a. the breakdown of household chores
b. child care
c. the changing role of the male
1. macho-vs-sensitive
2. caretaker-vs-being nurtured
3. sports
4. men in love
a. is it really harder for the man to let go of the relationship?
b. do men fall faster than women?
c. is it (still) less-likely that a man will tell you the relationship
is over; will he communicate this fact non-verbally by
1. starting to see another woman in hopes you'll find out
2. being cold until you can't take it any more and break
up yourself
3. just stop calling
4. say he's busy with friends when you want to see him
5. money
6. power
7. money and power
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260.11 | let me say it again, -.9. | WILKIE::M_SMITH | Building a Better Yesterday! | Tue Aug 09 1988 18:25 | 13 |
| re: -.8
I didn't say anything about women talking about men's issues, what I
said was that in general, women are just as blind to things that
concern men as men are blind to things that concern women. What that
means is a few men understand women's issues very well, most understand
them partially (in varying degrees), and a few men don't understand
them at all. The same could be said for women and their ability to
understand issues that concern men.
For a partial list, see -.10
Mike
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260.12 | Wanted - Dead or Alive | RUTLND::KUPTON | Goin' For The Top | Fri Aug 12 1988 09:14 | 8 |
| A few years ago I worked with a guy who had to be the most narrow
minded person I ever met. His favorite saying:
"Women: If it wasn't for sex, they'd have a bounty on 'em"
He truly meant it.
Ken
|
260.14 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | still here | Fri Aug 12 1988 18:57 | 11 |
| Because of sexual excitement with some men, women will tolerate
a lot of male nonsense ... Take away the prospect of sex and
women might very well ask ...
? who needs 'em ??? and might we be happier without 'em ???
I don't really feel this way, although I know women who do. Usually is a
really good defensive wall to protect the self from further pain after
encountering a bad relationship. After a while, we get convinced that we're
better off. good excuse to maintain the same opposite-sex-as-low-life
viewpoint rather than take the work required to form a better relationship.
|
260.15 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Rastaman no pickpocket | Fri Aug 12 1988 22:58 | 16 |
| re -.1
Well said.
The attitude alluded to earlier strikes me as a cop out.
Its easier to wallow than to look at oneself
critically, work on the attitude problems, and
put the old tapes away...
Women and Men need to support one another, not
take potshots and maintain hostile attitudes in
order to get some payoff that, in the end, is
really worth nothing at all. Life is really too
short and hard enough without adding to it this
sort of garbage.
|
260.16 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Sun Aug 14 1988 19:02 | 33 |
| re: .5
"But discussion of blanket statements such as in .0 seem meaningless
to me."
Agreed, Steve, the base note was phrased as a generalization and
that discussions of same are, arguably, of dubious value. But
I'd hazard a guess that Bob's intent was not to (over) generalize
Would I be doing violence to your original thought, Bob, to say
that the intent was more on the lines of "Are some of us blind. . .?"
It strikes me that there could be some value in kicking around
what it means to be "blind" (culturally, ethically, whatever).
I s'pose one reason for my thinking this way is that for the first
half of my life, I was pretty well blind to a number of different
things/people - blind in the sense that although I knew intellectually
of their existance, I knew very little about how it felt to be black,
brown, female, handicapped, Jewish, etc, etc. and growing up in
America. Because of my blindness I carried around a lot of false
notions about other people and the way "things should be" (like,
f'rinstance, ". . .why do [they] act that way? Why don't [they]
just. . .like me?")
It took living in some places neither I nor my parents had planned
to make me aware of just how thoroughly blind I'd been. Lest anyone
think by that last phrase that I'm claiming to no longer be blind,
such is most assuredly not the case; I'm simply a bit more aware
of some of my blind spots and suspicious that there may be more
than I'm seeing today.
Steve (II, well III actually, but that sounds *so* pompous. . .)
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260.17 | | RANCHO::HOLT | An unlucky person is a dead person | Tue Aug 16 1988 02:28 | 28 |
|
re -.1
Well you certainly cannot savage me any more than Steve
did...-;
The thoughts are certainly vulnerable to criticism.. I
don't claim any special insight into the topic, since
I haven't spent a great deal of time worrying about the
issues of men's insensitivity. My impression of Steves
comments is that he took pains to place himself firmly
on what he considers the "safe" moral high ground. I
acknowlege his criticisms, but wonder why he felt obliged
to dismiss my inquiry so abruptly. Anyway, I'm not terribly
concerned if someone wants to hang a label... that is their
problem.
But, if the questions I asked are of dubious value, I think
the topic itself is a valid one for discussion. Value judgements
on my original comments are no substitute for added value in the
replies. My mind is open to whatever wisdom happens along.
Can we not get beyong the percieved "generalities" and explore the
issue we all know exists, rather than get hung up on the exact
wording?
|
260.18 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Philosopher Clown | Tue Aug 16 1988 14:40 | 25 |
| re: .17
� Can we not get beyong the percieved "generalities" and explore the
� issue we all know exists, rather than get hung up on the exact
� wording?
As my mom used to say, we *can*, however whether or not we *will*
is an entirely different question. It seems to me that part of
the problem is that, as a large group, it's likely we'll disagree
on what the (almost any) issue is (often expressed as "Well, I think
the *real* issue is. . .) and whether of not said same exists.
I think I could present some fairly compelling evidence to back
the claim that successful communication is perhaps the single most
common business (perhaps life) problem. So, good, bad, or indifferent,
I suspect that the communication breakdown you refer to, Bob, will
be around for yet a while.
Lest I become (even more) pedantic about communications, I'll stop
for now by saying that I think that folks looking for (and at)
their various blind spots ("scotomas" for you Lou Tice fans) makes
a spiffy topic.
Steve
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260.19 | | IPOVAX::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Thu Sep 08 1988 11:31 | 13 |
| RE .14 & .15
Very valid points. The only problem is that so many of
them are so wrapped up in that anger and wallowing that
they don't and won't listen to the concept of yes it was
a bad experience, but you can go on.
Getting an angry, hurt person to pay head to the words
of rational logic is an almost impossible feat. To them
the voice of reason echoes hollow words.
Bob B
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