T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
504.1 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Oct 06 1987 19:11 | 13 |
| On the money, Peggy.
I find the heat is a lot more productive when we are _personal_,
when we talk about what we _feel_, what has _happened_, what is
happening to us and our sisters. Notes of this sort are substantial,
hard to write, but so full of _meaning_.
Advice feels trite, semantics loses all interest VERY quickly (this
is what for we have Da Box), but saying, "this happened. I felt
this. It was awful/great." Geeze, that works so much better than
dissecting a note line by line.
Lee
|
504.2 | Validating feelings | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Oct 06 1987 21:59 | 13 |
| Thankyou Peggy, I felt very much the same way that you did.
One of the things that I liked most about Womannotes when I
first joined was that it reminded me of two times in my
life when I had a strong woman's support group....once
in college and once again with a group of friends when I
was around 30.
and the most special and precious thing about those two
situations was the ability to share view points and feelings
and to learn from each other and to value and love each other.
Bonnie
|
504.3 | Keep working | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Wed Oct 07 1987 04:07 | 8 |
| Reply to the last few,
There is a definite need for separation on a temporary basis. I have
seen the fruits of separate mens and womens groups. It is positive.
Keep working toward that goal, it will reward you.
Blessed Be
|
504.4 | (-: :-) | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Oct 07 1987 12:16 | 41 |
| Re: <-- all of the above
Yes! "Not valid for me" is precisely what I meant, which in no
way _invalidates_ Lee's feelings or experiences. One of the arguments
that gets my dander up the most (either on my own behalf, or someone
else's) runs along the lines of "since it didn't happen to me, it
can't have happened to you." We often hear this type of argument
couched in pseudo-logical terms ("What you are saying is "logically
impossible", therefore your experiences and feelings are false.")
What the person is often saying, really, is "it never happened to
me."
So I think it's a terrific idea to get more personal, more
experiential. If we debate the existence of sexism in the workplace,
for instance, merely quoting studies _and accepting it when studies
are quoted "at" us_ does us not much good in dealing with the nitty
gritty of our lives. What I love to examine instead is "Well, here's
what Statistican X and Publication Y are saying, but what's actually
_happening_ to me and my friends?" If women feel they are being
discriminated against at DEC what I really want to know is what
actual form that has taken for each person who feels it is so.
If we debate some of the issues of "training in sexism", I want
to know what happened to each person, what they now perceive as
messages they got, what effects they had, how they might be struggling
with them now.
BTW, I have begun, in the last few years, to use the "get personal"
approach with my husband. He is something of a master debater and
I have a hard time keeping up with him in a strict logical sense.
But when something he asserts "couldn't happen" _has_ happened to
me, I now tell him so. "I don't care if it's not reasonable,"
I say. "It happened to me! It may be ludicrous, but it's true!"
And I've found that, rather than provoking increased argument, the
simple assertion "it happened" does more to open his eyes to another
way of seeing reality than all the half-baked, unsound arguments
I can muster at a moment's notice (which is not many; I'd be a
terrible trial lawyer).
Many thanks,
Marcia
|
504.5 | People Hearing Without Listening | FDCV03::ROSS | | Thu Oct 08 1987 13:38 | 21 |
| RE: priors
What's been said about invalidating people's feelings is right
on the money.
As my shrink is constantly saying to me: "Alan, you're entitled
to your feelings. You own them. They're yours." (Of course, there
IS a problem if I have "feelings" that little green people are
out to get me.)
I think a lot of the heat generated in Note 479 was a result of
this invalidating of people's feelings. Some women were saying
that they knew what they felt, that they were not anti-men.
Some men were saying they knew what they felt, that they felt
that some women were anti-men.
Sadly, neither group was listening to the *feelings* of the other.
Hearing (reading), perhaps. Listening, no.
Alan
|
504.6 | Me, too | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Mon Oct 12 1987 00:00 | 20 |
| I, too, support this idea. Many, if not most of my notes here
are based upon my own experiences and trying to express them in
a way to share them and contrast them with those of others here.
This kind of sharing of very different perspectives is one of
the real strengths of this file.
It is very hard to grasp that other intelligent, well-informed,
people of good will can view the same data as you and come up
with completely opposite conclussions. It is very easy to try to
deny the validity of the differing position, to blame the
difference in viewpoints on malice or other ulterior motives.
Men often have a hard time believeing women's stories of sexism
because they are way well outside of their own personal
experience. Similarly, women will often hear men say things and
assume that the only reason that they could say or believe such
things is because they are sexist. In point of fact, in many
cases it is just a completely different perspective.
JimB.
|
504.7 | a personal statement | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Oct 13 1987 14:39 | 18 |
| The following reply is from a contributor who wishes to remain
annonymous.
Bonnie J
moderator
< Well, personally....>
One reason a particular note may have been written in a dispassionate
or lecturing tone is that the author may prefer NOT to make it personal!
Reasons for this may vary; some may simply preferring not airing their
problems in "public". Others may not want to implicate or hurt other
people (ex's, coworkers, relatives, friends) who read or who might be
told of notes here. And some may have found that the only way they
can (currently?) cope with the topic is to treat it as objectively as
possible.... If they felt that they needed to speak to the topic,
this may have been the only comfortable way they could do it!
|
504.8 | Ids this equality? | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Fri Oct 16 1987 09:44 | 19 |
| RE: .0
"I believe that WOMANNOTES can be a place where women's opinions are taken as
valid without having to fight for each word we say."
Why should not men's opinions be treated the same way? Men's opinions are
*not* treated this way in this file.
'women should have their own space'
Hmmm... perhaps, but then I think that you need two WOMANNOTES conferences,
one public, and one private, because a public WOMANNOTES is definitely needed...
RE: .5
I don't really think that either sex is anti<opposite sex>. But it does
appear that way sometimes. *That* is the problem.
Jim.
|