T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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729.1 | Sez who? | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Wed Jan 22 1992 09:52 | 12 |
| Well, which is it -- men and women as groups, or men and women
individually? The former sounds like gross sexual stereotyping, the
latter may be anecdotally true, but no more so than the anecdotal evidence
for men and women who find no more cause for hostility on the grounds
of sex than they do on dozens of other grounds.
But, yes, for those who do believe in hostility between the sexes,
either individually or as groups, I'm sure there are a host of
psychological and sociological grounds for explaining such hostility.
Kit
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729.2 | THIS IS A BIASED SAMPLE! | HSOMAI::BUSTAMANTE | | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:05 | 5 |
| You also should remember that the sample you deal with here in Notes
contains a rather large proportion of disenchanted, divorced men and
women and other in-betweens who are sexually frustrated for one reason
or another. Completely absent are the young Tom Sawyers who will clown
for Beckys and adolescents who trust their hormones blindly.
|
729.3 | Love does flourish on the net ... | GORE::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:08 | 10 |
| RE: .2 Bustamante
> Completely absent are the young Tom Sawyers who will clown
> for Beckys and adolescents who trust their hormones blindly.
Considering the tremendous number of "network romances" that
abound via Notes and Email, I'd say there are still plenty
of romantic men and women on the net who are far from being
disenchanted (regardless of their political views on any
given issue.)
|
729.4 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:57 | 16 |
| See note 676?
I think the spectrum of participants in this and other notes conferences is
broader than you might assume.
Anyway, I think Kris' observations are substantiated in the "outside world".
It's a contradiction which has bothered me for a long time as well. (From
what I've read in the newspapers, Gloria Steinem's new book is a "textbook
case".)
I think that a small part of it is the power that each sex feels the other
holds over them. (I'm not sure how this applies to gays, though I don't
think that they participate in this particular dance quite to the degree that
straights do.)
Steve
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729.5 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | megamorphosis | Wed Jan 22 1992 13:50 | 44 |
|
When I exhibit hostility, often it is just suppressed anger finally
being uncorked. Sometimes I am exploring my anger or what caused it
for the first time, and if I post without a second thought I may be
blissfully unaware of the people I have singed. Until I see their
response.
I think a great deal of the M/F hostility that goes on in notes, and
sometimes the posturing we see every day in the media, is the result of
people overstating or overwhelming or biasing their communications for
an effect. To win people over to their side? To seek people of
similar mindset? perhaps. One thing is for sure - a vast majority of
the middle-road people on any subject will probably listen less to
violent outburst than to calm discussion (even if that discussion
contains passion, anger, anguish, pain, fury, whatever - and yes there
are calm ways to communicate these feelings).
I think a tremendous amount of the anger that results between one
gender and another is *misdirected* or has been *redirected*. It is a
faultfinding that stopped too soon and pointed at the first target. "my
ex screwed me over". "thus-and-such isn't fair to men". "so and so
discriminates against women". And what some people may not know is
that *we have heard it*. If we were listening, we have heard it. If
we were not listening, we may never hear it. Sometimes I don't listen
if it's something I don't want to hear.
And everyone is sometimes subject to the feeling that "my pain is
harsher than your pain". We are all naturally at the center of our own
universes. We are all highly concerned that people listen to us and
validate our pains and our needs, because that is one thing that can
help us feel secure that we are okay, and where we should be. If
people concur with us about our pain or the burdens we bear, perhaps
that reduces the pain or the weight of the burden. And if the pain or
burden feels or seems like it won't ever leave, that things will never
change, and that it is something we will absolutely never get over -
perhaps that is all we seek. Consensus that we are right in wielding
our bloody axe or carrying that torch or carving up the person who
accidentally stepped on a hot-button they perhaps should have been
aware of.
But pain is part of the human condition. Shall we nurse our wounds,
tend to one another, or decry it all and flame one another soundly?
-Jody
|
729.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 22 1992 14:48 | 5 |
| Re: .5
Yes!
Steve
|
729.8 | Make love, not hostility | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Thu Jan 23 1992 09:30 | 9 |
| I don't think the hostility is just gender based but in a
notesfile like this one it appears to be. I think that we
spend too much time knocking others down to make ourselves
look better, ego tripping I guess.
Besides, with all of the gender bashing, its the rare person
that is not still looking for Mr/Mrs right.
-Jim-
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729.9 | We need MORE personal interaction | OLDTMR::RACZKA | christopher raczka | Thu Jan 23 1992 12:29 | 26 |
|
Can anyone really believe that such impersonal means
of communication (electronic notes/mail) can actually
replace the personal face-to-face interaction ??
Electronic bbs/notes/mail is where people come for very small
periods of time to let off steam or have fun ... or various other
reasons. In these small interactions little is revealed, everyone
is just trying to make a point or "one-up" somebody to get the
last word. As Jim said in <729.8>, it is "ego tripping".
Just remember, these key strokes that I'am making to create
words and sentences IS NOT TALKING ... it is typing
You cannot distinguish my voice, or my facial expressions.
You do not even know where I'am sitting or what is going on
around me at this moment .. and the same for me
The hostility in this notesfile and others, is directly
porportional to the number of people that participate and
FORGET that their interaction is impersonal
I close my note by STRONGLY suggesting that the mennotes
conference have a Social get together REAL SOON
and I volunteer to host this event at my residence.
christopher
|
729.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Jan 23 1992 13:53 | 3 |
| Folks, we have a volunteer!
Steve
|
729.11 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | megamorphosis | Thu Jan 23 1992 14:23 | 40 |
| re; .9
> Can anyone really believe that such impersonal means
> of communication (electronic notes/mail) can actually
> replace the personal face-to-face interaction ??
I believe it cannot replace it, but it can connect me with people I
might not be able to itneract with face to face
> Electronic bbs/notes/mail is where people come for very small
> periods of time to let off steam or have fun ... or various other
> reasons. In these small interactions little is revealed, everyone
> is just trying to make a point or "one-up" somebody to get the
> last word. As Jim said in <729.8>, it is "ego tripping".
I do not come to electronic mail or notes for very small periods of
time, or to just let off steam or have fun. Fully 50% of my social
connections occur for the most part via the net (thank goodness i have
a home terminal!). I communicate, support, share, listen, and banter
via mail and notes.
> Just remember, these key strokes that I'am making to create
> words and sentences IS NOT TALKING ... it is typing
> You cannot distinguish my voice, or my facial expressions.
> You do not even know where I'am sitting or what is going on
> around me at this moment .. and the same for me
I don't think the facial expression or what's going on around you is
that important. I agree talking is more expressive, but given a grasp
of whatever language you're communicating with, and a feel for the
people who are reading what you're writing, you can generally get the
point across.
> I close my note by STRONGLY suggesting that the mennotes
> conference have a Social get together REAL SOON
> and I volunteer to host this event at my residence.
I think that would do wonders. I look forward to this....
-Jody
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729.12 | my perhaps simple view | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Jan 23 1992 14:47 | 15 |
| re .0, I think it's basically a love/hate relationship for many
heterosexuals, both men and women - the old "ya can't live with'em and
ya can't live without'em" bit.
Also, I sometimes think that part of the problem is that most men may
have different agendas than most women do. Most straight men and women
do enjoy each other's company and enjoy being in romantic
relationships, yet if most men could have the world be exactly the way
they want it, and have women act and be exactly the way they want them
to be, would that world also be an ideal world in the eyes of most
women? I think we basically like each other but we sometimes want
different things and it causes problems.
Lorna
|
729.13 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Thu Jan 23 1992 15:25 | 8 |
| Re: .12
Lorna,
See HYDRA::DAVE_BARRY 716.6 (second part) for the differences between what
men and women want.
Ben
|
729.14 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | Lock them into Open Systems! | Thu Jan 23 1992 21:55 | 11 |
| re .11
> I don't think the facial expression or what's going on around you is
> that important. I agree talking is more expressive, but given a grasp
Bzzzt! Wrong! Thank you for playing.
Go and do a body language course. In face-to-face interactions it can amount
for up to 70% of the communication, with dialogue contributing only about 30%.
PS: Good sales people know this and use it.
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729.15 | almost but not quite... | FSOA::DARCH | mucho ruido y pocas nueces | Fri Jan 24 1992 11:09 | 9 |
|
It's even worse than that, David...
Words: less than 10% of human communication (like, about 7%!)
Tone of voice: 30-something percent
Body language: Over 50%
...at least it was when I used to do training on this stuff.
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