T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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751.2 | let's keep female female and male male | YOSMTE::MIDDLETON_DA | | Mon Apr 01 1991 19:59 | 23 |
| I can't say that women are dipicted as the only sex grieving or that
that's a representation of our society, i.e. men are strong, women
emotional.
There have been photos in the newspaper, during Gulf War, where soldier
cried and grieved over dead comrad. Interviews of men's emotional
reactions to questions.
I think the deal with the grieving women photos is not that the media
is trying to portray women as the emotional or weaker sex but rather to
show the feeling of the effect of the crisis that's in involved in
whatever the situation is. A crying woman, older woman especially,
enforces motherly love. Just what the photo represents. Motherly
love, nurturing, over loss or death or destruction.
And personally, T.V. is entertainment, unpaid T.V. anyway. The ads
have to catch our attention. I like well built men. If a product was
endorsed by a "soft, emotional man", I don't think I'd be persuaded to
buy it for my guy. It's kinda psycological. I want to keep the men
in my life very strong. So, let's not knock those "look what a day
makes" commercials.
cin
|
751.3 | | CFSCTC::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Mon Apr 01 1991 20:33 | 25 |
| >Has anyone been keeping track of how often the Boston Globe runs its stock
>photo of Grieving Women?
Dorian,
Haven't counted the photos but I just recently noticed that, in
general, the women on television seem to emote much more often than
the men. ... hmmm ... poorly said, ... lemme try again: Most of the
women on television, in news stories, ads, sit coms, dramas, et
cetera, seem to always be emoting: sad, happy, stressed, angry,
forceful.... It's rare to see a woman simply delivering a calm
declarative sentence. I dunno if the calm declaratives end up in the
news editor's clip bucket, or it it's the configuration of our world
that only shows women when a certain temperature is hit ... but
it is annoying.
I'll keep my ear tuned. I'll also turn my eye to the window of grief
and see who is there.
P.S ... I noticed a real dearth of faces like mine (female) while
watching tv several months ago, so I started counting the consecutive
sex appearances. The highest male-to-male-to-male I found was about
28 ... can't remember the female-to-female-to-female. On last week's
network news, a saw a black_female-to-black_female-to_white_female. It
was the first time I had noticed this.
|
751.4 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Apr 02 1991 09:30 | 11 |
| - .1
Thanks - it seems to me that women are portrayed as if they "emote much
more often than men" - I guess this is just the familiar stereotype of
women being more emotional, men more rational. Lately I've been
wondering where this comes from? Why should men want to project
emotionality (is that a word?) onto women? As in, "real men don't cry"?
Is it because men feel less than women do? Or is it because men are afraid
of feeling and are thus led to deny it? If so, why?
D.
|
751.5 | A Tangent... | NAC::BENCE | It was the best of times... | Tue Apr 02 1991 11:20 | 18 |
|
Re .-1
On a tangent to "real men don't cry". The flip side of this is that
women are sometimes faulted for not emoting enough.
I heard a interview with a juror in the Pamela Smart case who said that
one thing that swayed the jury against her was her lack of visible emotion
in the courtroom. (Wasn't there a similar circumstance in the case
of the Australian woman who was tried for the death of her child a
few years back. She didn't grieve enough to suit the public.)
This is not a commentary on Pamela Smart's guilt or innocence, but on
the perception that her lack of visible grief was a "wrongness".
clb
|
751.6 | Men cry too, just be alert | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Thu Apr 11 1991 16:01 | 10 |
| what about the boy in the same (Pamela Smart) trial? Did you not see
his tears? Everybody did... HE showed emotions while SHE did not.
There are many cases... no, women are not the only ones who cry, any
human being, let it be man, woman, child, girl or boy does, in one way
or another, whenever there is enough reason for it.
Ana
|
751.7 | Too close for comfort... | BUBBLY::LEIGH | Bear with me. | Sat Apr 20 1991 00:03 | 31 |
| re .0:
>Are women the only ones who grieve? Do men ever grieve? If not, is it
>because the media keep telling us that only women do?
I believe that women are not the only ones who grieve. I believe that
men do grieve, but in ways that don't make interesting photographs. Men
in our society may not even learn *how* to grieve. So when they have
to, it's slow and difficult. Or they may suppress the need to mourn.
In fact, I'm a case of that.
My father died last June. My mother has needed a lot of practical help
from me since then: settling the estate, paying taxes, dealing with
the mess of medical bills, and figuring out how to deal with the things
(finances, home maintenance) that he always took care of.
My wife felt close to my father (although he didn't necessarily
reciprocate) so she was very upset when he died. So I've been the
shoulder to cry on, the hug-provider.
I've learned that when she's upset, my reaction is to push my own grief
out of the way, as if it could be taken care of later. Her grief is
immediate, and I need to deal with that. So she grieves openly, while
I generally hide it, and write about it, and get help from one special
friend. I've learned that I can't keep pushing it away.
I don't know if it's peculiar to me or to my family, or if it's
generally true in our society, that women grieve openly and men hide
it or deal with it privately.
Bob
|
751.8 | | BROKE::RUSTIE::NALE | Expert Only: I'll do it anyway | Mon Apr 22 1991 12:49 | 24 |
|
Bob,
Thanks for your reply and openness. My dad died last July. My
grief *still* comes to the surface, sometimes very unexpectedly.
Immediately after his death, when we were all home making the
arrangements, I'd often "lose it". My sister was a mess. My
mother weepy and indecisive. My brother, the youngest, (only
20), and my dad's only biological child, was a rock. He provided
hugs to those that needed them. He made decisions when the rest
of us stood around dazed. He made jokes when we thought we were
going to explode.
I wondered, "Is he grieving? Has it hit him yet? What will
happen when it does? Will he let it?" I still haven't figured
these out. I guess I thought that since he wasn't grieving
openly like myself and the other women in the family, he must not
be feeling anything. Apparently this isn't necessarily true.
You're lucky that you have a special friend that you can share
your feelings with. I hope my brother does. I'm not sure that I
can be that person for him.
Sue
|
751.9 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | Gazpacho...my drug of choice | Mon Apr 22 1991 13:25 | 26 |
| Based upon my public behaviour, I have been called calm and controlled
in situations where an expression of grief would be deemed
'appropriate behaviour.' Publically I allow myself anger, humour,
competence, ... I do grieve.
When my dearest friend Vicki died on her daughter's 3rd birthday I went
forward with the birthday party, cleaned up afterward, and went home to
take a shower. Afterward, I sat wrapped in a towel in the master bath
and howled and keened and sobbed myself to sleep [Rick tells me it
lasted about three hours ... it felt like forever to me].
On April 12th, when the husband of a dear friend died [see hug note and
many thanks to those who responded] I was very sad. I most likely
appeared a little preoccupied. But I got through a dinner for 12 [left
the dishes in the sink this time] and afterward sat on the floor and
sobbed into my arms on my coffee table for the better part of an hour.
This is a typical response for me. I also do my grieving in 'safe'
situations, like tear-jerking movies.
I 'hide' my grief from a sense of self-preservation. To show grief was
to show weakness, places that could be hurt, when I was small ... and I
just formed the habit.
Annie
|
751.10 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | so wired I could broadcast... | Mon Apr 22 1991 14:37 | 14 |
| I cry quietly. Most often when I'm alone. Most often in the car.
It sometimes hits suddenly, and then leaves as suddenly. There are 2
or 3 people I feel comfortable crying around. It's a very intimate
thing to share with someone. If I just can't hold it in I try to keep
a lid on it until I'm alone, or at least away from people, because once
they start "there there"ing me I just cry harder, and I don't like to
cry in public if I can help it. It still feels to me like a sign of
weakness, like I obviously don't have my s#it together, and like I'm a
fragile, frail, lady-type person (no offense meant but that's not how I
like to see myself).
-Jody
|
751.11 | sometimes women are rocks and men grieve | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Mon Apr 22 1991 15:02 | 14 |
| I don't think it is always the man who is the "rock" supporting the grieving
women around him.
When I was in college, my boyfriend and I heard that his best friend, Rob,
had been killed a few weeks earlier. Rob was also a good friend of mine,
although we weren't as close as he and Andy were. I felt like screaming and
crying and withdrawing from the world, but instead I stayed strong and
supported Andy, who did enough crying for the two of us. Through-out the
whole ordeal (by default, being the first and only one to know, we had to
be the ones to let all of our other friends know) I hugged him and held
him and talked to the other people in our group (by phone). I didn't cry
until it was all over and I was alone.
D!
|
751.12 | Some random thoughts | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Be bold and fear not | Tue Apr 23 1991 05:58 | 44 |
|
I've held men-friends while they cried.
I felt very trusted and touched that they were comfortable enough
with me for this....sometimes, when they stopped, they talked about
how difficult it had been for them to cry, and their fears at
others seeing them weep. I respect them all the more for showing
their feelings. I've had menfriends camp out in my house and
work through grief - one guy stayed for about three weeks after
his girlfriend died, mostly sitting in corners and listening to
"their" songs.
So, men do grieve.
I suspect that the media don't usually focus on it because of our
cultural discomfort with men crying and showing feelings. Thus,
when a picture is shown, it has special impact and is used to
highlight an event that the media want to show as particuarly
powerful or important.
I keep thinking about the Greek tragedies, and their Chorus of
weeping women. Grief has to be worked through, but life has to
go on, and it seems to me that society has split these two
functions on gender lines - men have taken responsibility for
"keeping things going" and the women disrupt their usually
routines to pubically express the grief of the community. It
seems like a ritual - one that's cathartic, but also one that
prevents the men of the community from touching these painful
feelings. Sort of isolation from feelings by mutual consent....
I cry easily myself, especially when I'm in a situation that feels
free (often when I'm travelling, or abroad - somehow being in
another place frees me up). I can't control it, and I'm learning
how not to feel awkward and embarassed about it - I do tend to
wander off on my own rather than stay with people, but I no longer
feel crippled with embarassment if I start when I'm with others.
I am especially likely to get triggered off by music. Most
of my friends now know this and tease me gently about it - I
do feel uncomfortable when people around me are obviously
distressed by my "distress" and start fussing or trying to stop
me crying (assuming that crying is emotionally painful for me,
which it usually isn't, and assuming that feeling pain is a
bad or sad thing, which is isn't necessarily).
'gail
|
751.13 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Apr 23 1991 09:28 | 13 |
|
I'm sure men do grieve. What bothers me is that there seem to be so few
'validating images' in our culture, showing men grieving - so that the
message is, they don't, or shouldn't, or it's not 'manly' to do so. But
the Grieving Woman was there in the Globe again, on page 1, this past
Sunday (in living color) and again on page 1 the following day.
I suppose it's just part of a broader tendency in our culture to project
all emotion onto women (so much so that it becomes a 'bad word': how
many times are women accused of being 'too emotional'?). Such splits
along gender lines can't be good for women *or* men...
D.
|
751.14 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:27 | 7 |
| Men more often grieve in private, but certainly not always. A friend
of mine lost it on the airplane coming home from his grandfather's
funeral. I lost it outside the animal hospital where our cat was
put to sleep. A friend lost it at a bridge party just last friday when
we were talking about the Vietnam memorial in D.C. (he lost many men
under his command in the war).
- Vick
|
751.15 | Revealing semantics? | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Be bold and fear not | Tue Apr 23 1991 10:41 | 5 |
|
Curious.....why do we use this phrase "lost it"?
Lost what?
Control? Our masks? Our public persona?
|
751.16 | | BROKE::RUSTIE::NALE | Expert Only: I'll do it anyway | Tue Apr 23 1991 11:59 | 7 |
|
When I use the phrase "lost it", I mean lost control. There are
times when I'm just weepy or depressed, but basically I'm in
control of myself. When I've lost it, forget it, I can't talk,
drive, or do anything. One of the times I lost it was when I had
to call a bakery to bring food over after the funeral. That was
too much.
|
751.17 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Tue Apr 23 1991 12:56 | 4 |
| I just meant "lost it" in terms of not being able to keep oneself from
crying. My friend on the airplane apparently "lost it" in the manner
described in -.1.
- Vick
|
751.18 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Wed Apr 24 1991 01:06 | 4 |
| I think it was Henry Thoreau who said: "Most men live in quiet
desperation".
Eugene
|
751.19 | ??? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Apr 24 1991 09:49 | 11 |
| - .1
I wonder whether, by "men", HDT meant human being, or adult human male?
(Isn't it odd that the English language has no word that means,
unambiguously, adult human male?)
Although I suppose if he did mean adult human male, he could have said,
most *guys* live lives of quiet desperation...anyway, it all makes for
much confusion, imho.
D.
|
751.20 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Wed Apr 24 1991 10:09 | 8 |
| re. .19
That's funny. I have always used "guys" as an genderless appelation.
I yell at my daughters, "Would you guys knock it off!" or say,
"hi, guys" when approaching a mixed group of friends. Is this
non-PC?
- Vick
|
751.21 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Wed Apr 24 1991 10:12 | 16 |
| re .18, .19
I asked about that line in VISA::JoyOfLex; among the
replies were ...
Dan
>> 700.3
>> The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.
>>
>> -- Henry David Thoreau (1817-62), _Walden_ (1854) _Economy_
>> 700.7
>> Did you know that while he was living at Walden Pond, Henry David
>> regularly took his laundry home to his mother to be washed? (I
>> always knew all those lit classes would come in handy someday!)
|
751.22 | | COBWEB::swalker | Gravity: it's the law | Wed Apr 24 1991 11:17 | 18 |
| re .20 (guys as a genderless expression)
I think it's okay if you're *addressing* your daughters, and it's clear who
you're talking to. However, I've been known to find the word 'guys' as a
form of address irksome on occasion when I'm being addressed by someone I
don't know, particularly in work situations ("Thanks, guys, for the bugfix",
for example.)
I think guys gets considerably less PC when addressing women in non-traditional
roles; whereas I might think nothing of addressing a group of aunts and
uncles as "guys", I probably wouldn't do it to a group of mechanics. I also
think it's more acceptable as a genderless form of *address* than as a
genderless form of *reference* (which I don't think it is; who does the phrase
"the guys down at the bank" conjure up to you? If one of your daughters called
you up at 11 PM and asked to spend the night at a friends house with "the guys",
would you assume those other people were female or male?)
Sharon
|
751.23 | | BUBBLY::LEIGH | and slept like a NEFFAlump | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:46 | 2 |
| I usually use "folks"for a genderless group, and "guys" (rarely) for an
all-male group. But I agree that "guys" really is ambiguous.
|
751.24 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | so wired I could broadcast... | Wed Apr 24 1991 15:05 | 8 |
| I use "folks" for both genders, "guys" for men, and "gyns" for women,
for the most part.
Could we take this to the language topic and leave this topic for the
subject of grieving?
-Jody
|