T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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836.1 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | up on the watershed... | Wed Oct 28 1992 09:03 | 68 |
|
Please, no blasting. I'm doing the best I can with a clumsy keyboard
and screen.
> o Where are Men coming from?
I think they're coming from a space where there was a "standard" role -
a role that helped them feel empowered, powerful, and valued in the
culture. Now? Now the landscape seems to have suddenly changed. And
at the same time they are encouraged to come to terms with who they
FULLY are - the positive (getting-things-done, risk-taking,
going-against-the-flow, overwhelming, trailblazing) and the negative
(greed, violence, anger, frustration) sides BOTH (note not all men have
all characteristics I just described), the universe tells them they are
wrong for being the same people their fathers and grandfathers were.
And tells them to reveal vulnerable facets of themselves they may have
learned all their lives to hide. Men are coming from a place of
long-buried need, in a world where it seems only others' needs matter
(or are valid). It must be frustrating, infuriating, and heartbreaking
to seek validation where it was before and find none, and know
validation exists beyond if you can only overcome ingrained protective
patterns.
> o Where are Women coming from?
Women are coming out from pain/containment. Anger is often the one way
to break out of this space, and many women who are outspoken and may
seem seditious are fortunate to be able to express what other women may
still bury. Historically, women were not valued for who they were, but
for what they did. As women seek validation and fair achievement/value
for WHO they are, this seems to detract from the value this society
once placed on men. Some women have powers and skills that were often
labeled "weakness" (the skill/need for connection, for
intuition/sensitivity, need to caretake, etc....), and many women are
striving to have these skills branded in a more positive light.
> o How are Men and Women complementary to one another?
I feel that men and women combine from at *least* minorly polarized
spaces. Men and women can often create a place of comfort and
sustenance for one another (love), and seem to complement one another
in the weakest spaces. Ideally, they encourage one another to try
spaces in which they may not be comfortable - As men can grow more
comfortable with emotions, so may women come to be more comfortable
with power and anger. (and, of course, men and men, and women and
women, can also come to love one another and create these spaces....)
> o Must/Should Men and Women (or other distinct classes of people) be
> segregated in order to come to terms with diversity?
In some cases, I've found women-only space to be very supportive and
sustaining (in spoken and unspoken ways). I find there's more room to
be completely myself (flaws and all) in a room that is solely populated
by women. I've found men-mostly space to be to some degree
frightening, and to some degree empowering. I find that I guard myself
more closely, have a heightened sensitivity to insult/offense, and yet
find that those facets of myself that women find discomforting have
more free rein in this space.
I suspect that there is room for personal growth and insight in
women-only, men-only and mixed spaces. All of the courses/seminars
I've taken have been mixed space - and the ability for BOTH men and
women to doff their protective armor and be *human*, sharing the
exploration of what it truly MEANS to be human, is humbling and
connecting for both genders.
-Jody
|
836.2 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Thu Oct 29 1992 07:13 | 6 |
| RE .1
The 1st part men was good.
Steve
|
836.3 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Chew your notes before swallowing. | Thu Oct 29 1992 08:43 | 6 |
| >I think they're coming from a space where...
Jody, when I first read that, I thought you going to tell us that men
came from Outer Space. :-)
-- Mike
|
836.4 | Emotions | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Oct 29 1992 12:10 | 8 |
| Men seem (in general) to be VERY unwilling to share vulnerabilities
with other men. To reveal any type of weakness is 'unmanly', at least
that is what I see in the men I attempt to relate to. Also, to reveal
emotions other than anger to other men seems to be considered
'unmanly'. As a result of my perception (outlined above) I find it
difficult to develop 'meaningful' relationships with other men.
Jeff
|
836.5 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Only to believe in you | Thu Oct 29 1992 15:55 | 4 |
| I applaud Jody for making the effort to turn this into a worthwhile discussion.
Nice job!
I'll try to contribute when I can find a few minutes...
|
836.6 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Thu Oct 29 1992 17:39 | 45 |
| I look forward to reading other responses to these questions... I find
these questions extremely challenging! As usual, Jody has "paved the
way". Many thanks to her and anyone else who chooses to get involved.
I can't really say that I am satisfied with my answers but here's my
first pass...
o Must/Should Men and Women (or other distinct classes of people) be
segregated in order to come to terms with diversity?
I was hoping that people would answer this with a resounding NO! I don't
want to believe that segregation is necessary "for BOTH men and women to
doff their protective armor and be *human*", however, Jody and Laura say
they have both gained benefit from that particular environment due to
(my interpretation) the allayment of Fear... Also, I suspect the men who
attended the Sterling Men's Workshop as well had to displace a certain Fear
in order to accomplish the "journey". All military basic training is
geared to dealing with Fear. I think that how we deal with Fear determines
whether or not we become/stay a "victim". On the whole, I don't think Men
and Women share the same Fears but we all must become cognizant of each
others Fear. For true insight to occur, mixed company is required (in my
book).
o How are Men and Women complementary to one another?
The ultimate complementary fact is that it takes a male and a female to
create life... I wonder what the Grand Order Designer had in mind when
setting up this scheme? And what place do non-heterosexuals hold?
Men are solitary trying to get "connected". Women are "connected" but
try to become solitary.
o Where are Men coming from?
I Fear that someone will ask me "what are _my_ Fears"...
I have to disagree with Jody about Men being "risk-taking" because Men
tend to rationalize away their Fears (at least I think I do) so that the
so-called "risk" goes away. Women are the "risk-takers" because their
role in the process of producing a new life may require that they give up
their own.
o Where are Women coming from?
From listening to Women it seems their Fear of being brutalized by Men
is paramount.
|
836.7 | | TENAYA::RAH | | Thu Oct 29 1992 22:45 | 6 |
|
segregating ones self to "come to terms with diversity" sounds like
a clumsy oxymoron to me.
if one "wants to come to terms" with something, one simply confronts
it.
|
836.8 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | $SH QUO: You have -2 miracles left! | Fri Oct 30 1992 07:51 | 10 |
| The notion that segregation is either unnecessary or harmful requires
that men and women (or, if you prefer, masculinity and feminity) be
essentially the same. Since the body of evidence, already huge and
growing, is that this is not so it follows that segregated workshops
whereby people become, presumeable, more comfortable and confident in
who *they* are, makes a great deal of sense. Since who you are
includes (may be, even revolves around) your gender identity it is
logical that you come to terms with that first, which then enables you
to approach your 'humanity'. To do it the other way around is putting
the cart before the horse.
|
836.9 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Only to believe in you | Fri Oct 30 1992 08:19 | 19 |
| > if one "wants to come to terms" with something, one simply confronts
> it.
It's tempting to agree with you, Bob, but I think that confronting problems
only works for people who have a strong sense of self and of their ability to
effect change. For people who are extremely meek and who lack confidence the
idea of confronting anything may paralyze them with fear. I think that perhaps
segregation can reinforce a sense of self and self-worth and power, and then
confronting the issue of diversity can be more effective.
From listening to women, it's obvious that there is a completely different
mindset at work. First of all, many of them seem to feel powerless- as if they
are slaves to their environment. And many men seem to feel they have at least
some limited power. So it sounds to me like you are attempting to work the
solution within the male paradigm (apologies for the overused phraseology, but
it fits.) I think we have to be more general than this, and allow people
alternative paths to find their solution. We're not all square pegs. Maybe
part of acknowledging diversity is recognizing that no one solution will work for
all...
|
836.10 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Mon Nov 02 1992 08:36 | 25 |
| The following is from Saturday's ABOUT PEOPLE (The Associated Press) column
in the local newspaper. It caught my eye as it is so germane to this
discussion...
DIGNITY: It was a simple question from a teacher of mostly poor, black
children, the last question to actor SIDNEY POITIER during his tribute
at the Virginia Festival of American Film in Charlottesville.
The answer brought Poitier back to his boyhood, and the audience to
its feet when he finished answering Thursday night.
"Where does that dignity come from?" asked the teacher who did not
identify herself.
Poitier, 65, said it didn't come from this country.
"I grew up in the Caribbean and had a chance to develop a sense of
self before the onslaught," Poitier said, referring to the racial
prejudice he encountered when coming to America in 1944 as a
16-year-old.
His parents were farmers in a place where blacks were in the majority.
"I had the circumstance to develop a feeling of self without having to
deal with racism that early," he said. "I felt good about myself, so
I was able to survive without too much damage."
If he had been raised in this country, where people of his age and
race were constantly told by society that they were inferior, "I don't
know if I would have had the strength to succeed."
The work necessary to "undo" the wounds of racism is enormous, Poitier
said.
|
836.11 | my thoughts on the subject | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Mon Nov 02 1992 12:34 | 74 |
|
I would tend to agree on needing the safe places of only one sex
present to gain a sense of ones self. Once that sense of self
is attained and truly believed in, integration will only serve
to enhance that sense of self. However, if one does not have
a sense of self and is thrown into an integrated environment, it
only serves to increase the amount of things to deal with which
could cause more negative feelings to surface.
On the subject of where are men coming from. From my experiences
with men, they seem to be quite confused about life in general.
More so on just what role they are now expected to play in
society but specifically with respect to families. Where once
they were expected to be the sole support and not have to take
an active part in the emotional/physical work of raising kids,
they are now faced with a choice which is more often than not
a necessity for them to be both a financial supporter and
an emotional and physical supporter.
Men are having to live/work with women who are bringing home
nearly equal amounts and sometimes more money than they. This
I believe is a major issue as men tend to identify themselves
first with what they do for a living.
Social roles are changing and at such a rapid pace. It's
scarey to see the rules change. Even more so when you have
no idea of just what the rules are at any given moment in time.
As for where women are coming from, I think it is out of the
old and into the new. However, with this change, there is
a growing number of women who resent the fact that now not
only do they still have to do the majority of the domestic
work, but they are asked (or in some cases economically
required) to work a full 8 hour day outside of the house.
It is also true that there is an increasing reason to
be scared for ones life in ordinary situations where men
simply do not have to face that fear. That fear also
trickles down to the children. Afterall, if a women is
afraid to walk by herself at night, then she will most
likely convey those fears to her children.
What I see that really bothers me is that a large
minority of men feel threatened by women where that
threat was until recently non-existant. In feeling
that threat, they need to find nonviolent positive
ways to work through the fear. From my experience,
alot of guys I've met are very intimidated by my
professional choice and the amount of money I make.
To me it is a part of who I am, but not the major
thing involved so I just don't understand how they
could be intimidated by it. I don't look at men
and see them for what they do for a living and
how much they take home. I see them for the person
they are and what's in their hearts. At the moment
I'm looking for someone who wants to share my life
and challenge me to grow with him. I know he's out
there, but just hasn't shown himself to me yet.
This is a major change that men are having to
deal with. With the majority of women working
able to support themselves, the need to get married
and have the man support them has all but disappeared.
Now the needs to merge are more on personal growth
together as an equal partnership vs a lopsided
support system. One more thing for men to have
to change along with.
What I really would like to see change is this laying
blame on each sex. If we continue to do this, we are
never going to be in harmony with each other.
Michele
|
836.12 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Nov 04 1992 19:38 | 8 |
| re:.8
That evidence is really just fictitious work of male chauvinists.
The heterosexual white male patriarchy has you brainwashed!
Praise the goddess!
|
836.13 | been converted? | MSBCS::KATZ | LAH-di-frippin'-dah! | Thu Nov 05 1992 08:13 | 1 |
|
|
836.14 | so what really happens at 40 ? | STAR::ABBASI | what happened to family values ? | Sat Nov 07 1992 04:19 | 13 |
|
I've read that if a man gets to age 40 without getting married, it
is a very good chance he'll never get married.
why is that?
is it because they are so wise by that age, or it it because they
lost the desire to do it, or is it because they dont know how to play
the dating game as well as the younger men, or is it because if you
have not got married 40, then you dont want to anyway?
/Nasser
|
836.15 | | BEING::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Sat Nov 07 1992 17:47 | 12 |
| > why is that?
Good luck?? :-)
> lost the desire to do it, or is it because they dont know how to play
> the dating game as well as the younger men, or is it because if you
Or the number of people available has decreased quite a bit...
Of that number, the number you actually encounter is small...
Of THAT number, the number who would say 'yes' can be miniscule :-) :-)
-Joe
|
836.16 | | RANGER::RTRME::Lichtenberg | Mitch Lichtenberg (RANGER::) | Sun Nov 08 1992 07:48 | 22 |
| >
> I've read that if a man gets to age 40 without getting married, it
> is a very good chance he'll never get married.
>
> why is that?
From my observations, I would guess that this is because by the
time you reach that age, you'll be too set in your ways to make the
necessary changes in your life to accomdate someone (this works
from both sides). To make a long-term commitment work requires
changes and sacrifices on both sides. It's not that there are
no compatible people out there, it's just that each person
will have some specific idea of who they're looking for...
too specific. I don't think all people are like that, but
many are... you're as young as you feel!
Just a hunch... I'm only 28 though... and definitely not an expert
at this! (but who is really?)
/Mitch.
|
836.17 | peck peck peck peck peck | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Nov 08 1992 13:28 | 3 |
| .13> -< been converted? >-
Does being nagged into submission count?
|
836.18 | only if you *really* mean it.... | MSBCS::KATZ | LAH-di-frippin'-dah! | Sun Nov 08 1992 16:01 | 1 |
|
|
836.19 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | now watch Sarah gloat | Sun Nov 08 1992 22:56 | 3 |
| re.14 Somebody (W C Fields?) once said that single men knew more
about women than married men - if they didn't, they'd be married
too! ;-)
|
836.20 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | make it real one more time | Mon Nov 09 1992 09:57 | 11 |
| re .19, it's only the single men who have been womanizers who know more
about women than married men. :-) (or maybe I should just say the
experienced ones...) :-)
re .16, yes, I think that's it. The older single people get the more
used they become to not having to compromise about things. People in
their early 20's are more willing to make changes to accommodate others
since they're not really sure how they want to live anyway.
Lorna
|
836.21 | Life Style | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Nov 11 1992 11:38 | 9 |
| I think its because if you havn't found and married someone by 40 or so
its because your life style is not conducive to attracting and keeping
a partner. By 40 you have lived long enough for the odds to have
worked toward marriage IF your living in a way which encourages
marriage. There are exceptions of course. Also, you tend to be set
in your ways which maintains that life style.
Jeff
|
836.22 | shoud'not the style be more coductive than not? | STAR::ABBASI | Nobel price winner, expected 2034 | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:12 | 22 |
| .21
> I think its because if you havn't found and married someone by 40 or so
>its because your life style is not conducive to attracting and
>keeping a partner.
iam not sure i agree, it should be the other way round, for example
when you are a single dude, you go to the frozen section of the
supermarket, right?, and all the people who hang around the frozen
sections are most likely single people too, so you get to meet them
that way. this is a good example to show that a life style of the
single people is not the reason for it, it must be something else
more deep than that?
for instance, the other day I almost met a realy nice woman over the
frozen vegg'y section, only to find she was not really interested in
veggy's at all, she was just passing by from the meat dept. to the eggs
section ;-(
so, woot do you think ?
/nasser
|
836.23 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | make it real one more time | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:07 | 5 |
| re .22, I think your lifestyle is not conducive to attracting a
partner. :-)
Lorna
|
836.24 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:11 | 8 |
| Single dudes, Nasser, do not always go to the frozen-food section. :-)
Best friend I ever had was single all his life, and I can't recall ever
having visited the frozen-food aisle when we went shopping. He was
also the best cook I ever knew, and I'm eternally grateful to him for
teaching me that real food tastes better than that frozen stuff. :-)
-dick
|
836.25 | | STAR::ABBASI | Nobel price winner, expected 2034 | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:26 | 18 |
|
this is really a dilemma, i mean a single dude cant cook by definition
(unless you consider boiling eggs cooking), so he must go to the frozen
section, and it seems you guys think the frozen section is not the best
place to meet that special single women, right? then what does the guy
suppose to do? STARVE HIMSELF TO DEATH !!!
this is getting more complicated that i thought ...
however not all is lost, going to the laundry machine facilities is
always another option, but the problem there is that one can at most do
his laundry only once a week, but one needs to eat every day, so that is
why i think the frozen section has better chances for eminent success.
/nasser
|
836.26 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:45 | 5 |
| But what kind of woman do you expect to find in the frozen food
section? You kind of have to assume she can't cook either...
You missed an opportunity with that other woman: probably should have
invited her home for breakfast - HAM & EGGS...
|
836.27 | | STAR::ABBASI | Nobel price winner, expected 2034 | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:52 | 6 |
| .26
the problem is that i dont eat meat and ham, at least not red meat, iam
sort of a veggy my self too.
|
836.28 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Wed Nov 11 1992 16:42 | 1 |
| I'm not gonna touch that one...
|
836.29 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Nov 13 1992 06:54 | 6 |
| .22: Perhaps people who spend so much time in the frozen food section
have trouble warming up to a relationship?
:-)
ed
|
836.30 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Aphasiatic fever | Fri Nov 13 1992 07:30 | 1 |
| <groan>
|
836.31 | Is that a Frederick's of Hollywood? | SALEM::KUPTON | Ren & Stempy/Clinton & Gore | Mon Nov 16 1992 11:17 | 16 |
| A friend of mine owns a couple of automats (coin operated laundromats
with misc other machines) in Maine. He needed ways to generate more
business so he started making Wednesday nights "Singles Night" at his
places. He met his SO at one, using the line that she had awesome
undies.....anyway, the laundromats rock on Wednesdays and people bring
beer and munchies and picnic baskets and their laundry. I guess they
have a great time and meet a lot of new people. It's become so populsr
that he's had to hire bouncers to keep kids out and to move people
along once their laundry is done. Alot of people separate whites, PP,
darks, delicates etc, and delay starts so they can dry a load while a
load finishes in the washer...takes about 3 hours but it's hysterical
to listen to how BVDs and Fruit of the Looms are now 'name brands' and
Lady Grace and Victoria's Secret are like commonplace at the
"undiewash".......needless to say...he's making a bundle.
Ken
|
836.33 | i like that one, we need more such laundiries | STAR::ABBASI | Nobel price winner, expected 2035 | Mon Nov 16 1992 11:54 | 13 |
| ref .31
that sounds like a fun laundry room.
the laundry room facilitates i frequent is really a very boring one,
it is not like in the movies at all, iam really thinking of changing it
and to go the one across the street instead, but this one have bigger
and better machines, this is the issues iam having to decide on.
/nasser
|
836.34 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Mon Nov 23 1992 10:59 | 17 |
| So Steve, with regard to your 840.160 reply of
"As host-moderator of this conference, I will state once again that it is my
belief that restricting participation in a conference or topic to any select
set of individuals is a violation of corporate policy and will not permit
such in any conferences I moderate. I also believe that it is a self-defeating
notion which serves only to increase the isolation and separatism which is
tearing our society apart."
it would seem that your response to the question:
o Must/Should Men and Women (or other distinct classes of people) be
segregated in order to come to terms with diversity?
must be a resounding NO as well!
Your comments would be appreciated...
|
836.35 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Nov 23 1992 12:24 | 19 |
| Re: .34
I don't know about "resounding", but I do believe that, overall, segregation
as a tool is bad. I'm aware that "safe spaces" make it easier for some to
speak their mind, but what that does is make it only possible for them to
do so in such safe spaces. The real world is not safe.
My ideal situation would be to have a "mixed" audience where politeness
and respect is encouraged/enforced and where each group is allowed to hear
the views and opinions of the other. You may not like what you hear, you
may not be open to the ideas and opinions different from your own, but at least
you're aware of what is being said, rather than being able to pretend that
these other opinions don't exist since they are not expressed where you can
hear them.
My personal view is that those who shout the loudest in favor of shutting
out "evil influences" are those whose minds are the most closed already.
Steve
|
836.36 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Enough! | Mon Nov 23 1992 14:37 | 7 |
| re .35
>as a tool is bad. I'm aware that "safe spaces" make it easier for some to
>speak their mind, but what that does is make it only possible for them to
When you teach a child to swim do you throw them alone into the ocean
or help them first in the shallow end of the pool?
|
836.37 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Nov 23 1992 16:17 | 7 |
| Re: .36
You're implying that the "safety" of safe spaces is gradually lifted, as
a child is encouraged to swim in deeper waters. How does that happen in
a separatist society?
Steve
|
836.38 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Enough! | Tue Nov 24 1992 07:08 | 10 |
| re .37
An occasional safe space does not a separatist society make.
If you want men to try and articulate what is very, very hard to
understand then you have to give them some latitude while they work
their way around it, gradually knocking off the rough edges in the
process. Allowing ill-informed, damaging and generally unwelcome
interference from those with an irrelevant axe to grind is guaranteed
to stop this process before it ever has a chance to really get going.
|
836.39 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 24 1992 09:30 | 9 |
| Re: .38
Well, that's the great thing about NOTES, isn't it? You can type anything
you want, and nobody stops you from typing, nobody even sees what you're
writing until you push the key to actually enter the note. Sounds safe to
me, and that seems to be responsible for a lot of people saying things here
they'd never say face-to-face to another person.
Steve
|
836.40 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 09:39 | 9 |
| When the things some men are trying so hard to articulate turn out to
be the same old workplace biases (about the worth of non-white-male
individuals in the work force,) someone else is likely to articulate
an objection. It's a touchy subject.
It's rather naive, in my opinion, for anyone to expect that such a
discussion is a 'sensitivity' issue for some men (to be able to voice
biases against others in the workplace in a notesfile that takes place
where these individual men and those being discussed are employed.)
|
836.41 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Enough! | Tue Nov 24 1992 09:46 | 10 |
| As usual, you've missed the point. The topic was never about being
able to voice biases. It was about feelings and they are, for a great
many men, very difficult to articulate. So, a reasonable person (that
excludes you, obviously) will understand that the first few times
around they won't necessarily come out right. They will need to be
practisd and polished. Not exploded.
Oh, and Steve, your contention that people are protected by the feeble
anonymity of the screen is nonsense and you know it. By participating
in notes you actually expose yourself to the whole corporation.
|
836.42 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Nov 24 1992 09:59 | 22 |
| RE: .41 David
> As usual, you've missed the point. The topic was never about being
> able to voice biases.
The basenote is missing (and has been since the topic first started,)
as mentioned before. The guidelines for discussion are, thus, missing.
> It was about feelings and they are, for a great
> many men, very difficult to articulate. So, a reasonable person (that
> excludes you, obviously) will understand that the first few times
> around they won't necessarily come out right.
You certainly have no trouble expressing your boundless hostility,
of course, so I suppose you think these other men need your help
and protection. I disagree. I think they know how to conduct
conversations for themselves (even if someone objects to something
they've written.)
Someone did object to something written. It wasn't a big deal.
(Objections happen in notes all the time - it's the nature of
the medium.) Evidently, you'll never recover from it, though.
|
836.43 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Nov 27 1992 23:35 | 4 |
| re:.35
We disagree on some issues, Steve, but I really admire the way you
think and reason regarding this male/female segregation issue.
|
836.44 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sun Nov 29 1992 03:16 | 10 |
| re: .36
> When you teach a child to swim do you throw them alone into the ocean
> or help them first in the shallow end of the pool?
An interesting analogy. A cousin of mine started teaching her
2-month old daughter to swim. At that age there isn't a shallow end.
The child was swimming before she was walking.
Maybe if you avoid a shallow end (segregation, safe spaces) from an
early enough age you will never need them?
|
836.45 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Brrrm, brrrrrrm, brrrrrrm, brrrrrrm, purrrrrr! | Mon Nov 30 1992 07:25 | 4 |
| re .44
I assume that the todler in question wasn't simply thrown into the
water and left to cope? In which case my analogy stands.
|
836.46 | comments on the base note and recent replies | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:34 | 64 |
| > o Where are Men coming from?
I can't speak for all men, but I am coming from a place where I have been
attacked for having feelings, showing feelings and talking in anything but
straightforward, rational "manly" patterns.
> o Where are Women coming from?
I have no idea.
> o How are Men and Women complementary to one another?
See previous answer.
> o Must/Should Men and Women (or other distinct classes of people) be
> segregated in order to come to terms with diversity?
I think short retreats into segregated space are valuable, although it has
little to do with diversity. In general, most cultures support various kinds
of retreat (prayer, isolation, fasting, silence, wilderness) as a way of
gaining insights we can't reach in our everyday society. In particular, many
men these days seem to find it easier to get in touch with their feelings
and their deeper nature in small groups of supportive men.
I have not spent much time in men-only groups, but it is enough to feel an
entirely different atmosphere. This atmosphere changes when there is a
non-supportive man around. It also changes when there is a woman
present, regardless of how supportive she may be.
I was also once in a serious group consisting of myself and several women. The
atmosphere really changed when another man joined us. The two of us and the
women produced a competitive energy that would not have been there if there
was only one man in the group.
I find these effects strange (and even a little distressing) but I have felt
them and heard and read similar reports from others. These effects tell me
something about myself. I would not have this awareness if I spent all my time
in correctly mixed gender groups.
.44> Maybe if you avoid a shallow end (segregation, safe spaces) from an
> early enough age you will never need them?
Interesting hypothesis, but I know I am already past that hypothetical age.
.42> Someone did object to something written. It wasn't a big deal.
> (Objections happen in notes all the time - it's the nature of
> the medium.)
True, which is why notes would need an additional level of respect and
tolerance before it could be the kind of safe space I and others have talked
about. I think those of us looking for safe space must look elsewhere.
.39> Sounds safe to me
This is not the kind of safety I am talking about. Notes are safe in that
nobody can immediately punch me out, but I have not been threatened in a
social conversation these thirty years. So in that very limited sense, all
my conversations are safe.
The kind of safety and support I am talking about is more subtle. It would
mean that I could produce some confused, messy, half-formed feelings and my
listeners would help me to get a handle on them. In return I would do the
same for them. My experience is that the conversation changes when this
level of support is present.
|
836.47 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:23 | 14 |
| re: .45
Well, actually, the mother was a biology lecturer at an Australian
university, and was prepared to test the theory that babies could swim
from birth. I doubt she would have left the baby to drown, but she was
interested to see how little assistance would be needed. The answer is
"remarkably little".
Incidentally, the "baby" is now a 30 year old teacher at a school
in New Zealand.
The analogy is still valid, though. If you start early enough then
things that adults regard as difficult (like swimming) may be easier
than things that adults regard as easy (like walking). I am much too
old to learn anything.
|
836.48 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ultimus Mohicanorum | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:36 | 5 |
| RE .46
Well put, Wally. Thank you.
-dick
|
836.49 | that's the question | DELNI::STHILAIRE | we need new dreams tonite | Thu Dec 03 1992 15:20 | 4 |
| re .47, yes, but does she still like to swim?
Lorna
|
836.50 | A New Zealander that doesn't like swimming??? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Dec 04 1992 03:00 | 5 |
| She teaches swimming (amongst other things). It sort of runs in the
family. Her mother represented her country at swimming, and her
great-uncle on her father's side could still swim lengths of an Olympic
size pool at the age of 92. Not that this has anything to do with the
topic, but since you asked...
|