CupCate

Why I AM what a Feminist looks like!

Comments

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This is the very reason why I tend to get itchy with any classification of any sort, anytime. The minute you title yourself anything, people want to whip out the chalk and draw you a nice tidy little box to sit in.

Fuck a box. Of any kind.
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What she said! :)

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This is why "feminism" has become a dirty word. They are preaching to the choir and in myopinion, expecting too much from women and driving them away from "the cause". It's counter productive in a lot of ways. To me what is important about feminism is self respect. Teaching your children--including the boys, respect for themselves as humans and as little girls or little boys. There is nothing wrong with a woman who wants nothing more than to get married and have children and do that for the rest of her life. As long as she respects herself and gets the same from her family, and brings up her children to believe that they can be whatever they want to be when they grow up, etc. I mean, it's basic stuff. Don't do something because you think it will make someone like you better. whether it's getting a boob job, putting out on the first date, or going to med school to become a brain surgeon. To me, it's all about self-respect. That's empowering.
Oh and welcome back Cate!!!! xoxox smooches!
I always love reading your posts! Wouldn't it be great if everyone could be proud to say "I'm a feminist!" (Or, "I'm an environmentalist" for that matter, but that's another topic)? I mean, feminism is basically a humanist movement - an uprising against oppression. I assume most people are against oppression, right? But we get into trouble when we start trying to collectively define oppression. Is showing cleavage or wearing heels buying into an institution of oppression (ie, objectification/ de-humanization)? I can't say that it is, but I'm also not entirely sure that it isn't. I wear heels and lipstick and show cleavage... and I am a feminist, but - like driving a car and being an environmentalist - I realize there is a hint of hypocrisy in doing so. No, I don't women should try to look masculine in order to find some sort of superficial feminist status. Feminism is not about lipstick or lack thereof - it is about social, political, and economic status. The problem is that there is still discrimination against femininity in some arenas (if not blatantly against women). Women are stereotyped, and the more we look like those stereotypes the more difficult it is to overcome them. I'm all for taking back sexy. It should be empowering to wear makeup, etc., and not "objectifying." I also think it is important to be aware of the many faces of sexism (internal and external) and to try not to feed them.
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I was born in 1964 and as a child I watched the older women around me struggle for things you rightly identified as being important (jobs, abortion rights, equal pay). One of my biggest concerns as I got older came from watching younger women distance themselves from the term "feminist." They were doing it mostly because they didn't want to be defined as militant, man-hating lesbians.

Why did they have to distance themselves from that? Because the term feminist was redefined by people who hated the movement. To make things worse, groups like the one you describe above reveled in the negativity and used it as an excuse to separate themselves from the majority of women, saying ridiculous things like "People hate us because we refuse to give in to the despicable stereotypes of women. You women who do give in, by wearing girly clothes and make-up are weak. We are superior."

These rightous women can take this tact this because they are spoiled brats who have the luxury of education and privilege. If they had to work in a restaurant, a meat processing plant, a market, or god forbid, in waste management etc., they might spend more time worrying about the things that really matter. Women's rights (around the world). Equal pay. Access to education. Child care. Women's health. The list is long.

That said, changing definitions is a very effective and increasingly popular way to control groups. Characterize environmentalists as crazy, hemp-wearing tree-huggers and wham, over time it becomes unfashionable to take care of the earth (happily this is starting to change again). Characterize liberals as pot-smoking proponents of gay marriage and like rats off a ship, people redefine themselves to get away from that.

I am raising my girls to be feminists. At nine and four years old they wear glittery lip gloss, lust after high heels and own several furry tiaras. And they are learning that they have a responsibility to educate themselves, get jobs doing whatever makes them happy and not to let boys (or anyone, really) tell them what they can and can't do with their lives.

As they get older they'll learn that there are things worth fighting for and rights we have to be vigilant about protecting. That there are millions of people in the world who think female circumcision is good thing. That women should not be educated, allowed access to birth control, own property or even allowed to show their faces in public.

Now please excuse me while I go relax with a copy of US magazine, I need to escape the real world for a minute and see if the stick figure formerly known as Nicole Ritchie really is pregnant.

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Karen. I am now officially in love with you.

These rightous women can take this tact this because they are spoiled brats who have the luxury of education and privilege. If they had to work in a restaurant, a meat processing plant, a market, or god forbid, in waste management etc., they might spend more time worrying about the things that really matter.

Holy god, YES. YES. YES. Exactly. Thank you so much for this! :)
I ADORE YOU. Honestly! I am a stay at home mom because my husband and I are poor and our kids are young and I wouldn't be able to make enough money to pay for day care and thus justify getting a job. I like to wear skirts and lipstick and guess what? I'M A FEMINIST. I use my voice and my vote to advance women's rights, and the idea that I should use my body and my home and my work to also do so seems to me a little contradictory- after all, this is my life and my rights, and I should have the right to not work the same kind of job as my husband and not sacrifice my time with my kids if I don't want to. Yes for equal rights and equal pay and less objectification and less abuse and autonomy and all of those really marvelous wonderful things that women sacrificed so much to give us. But the thought that somehow by choosing to stay home and raise my kids I've somehow pushed the movement backwards really offends me. If my autonomy meant I HAD to behave as they desire, it would be meaningless, wouldn't it?

And I love you back.

Keep writing smart stuff like this.

It's wonderful.

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Ah, one of Sheila Kelley's fav topics. She prefers to refer to herself - and the S Factor women - as "neo feminists"... the generation of women choosing to have OPTIONS and DIVERSITY instead of the old-skool, nazi-feminists who want us all to reach some form of "equality" by looking and behaving like men.

Sorry the conference was so negative. At least it was an education - perhaps a bit like time traveling to the 60s.

Whoa-whoa-whoa. I'M in love with Karen. Back your make-up-wearing self the hell off.

And your post exhausted me. I'm going to take a nap now.
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People are people. People in "power" look down on others and think that they are beneath them. Its not a male / female thing, its a human thing. I have seen the "old-girls" network operate, and its not pretty.

I was born in 1965 and a lot of the women I came into contact with put me off women completely as humans. Of course I need them, but most of my bosses have been women so on a personal level I don't know what the hell people are talking about when they say women are still not equal. So many laws are stacked in favour of women esp custody of kids, rape etc. What happened? We went from Emily Pankhurst to domineering women with a grudge against men getting into power and wrecking destruction with long term effects.

To be honest the only chauvinistic behaviour Iv seen has been from ppl from other cultures where women are still treated as sub human. Im sure your pseudo feminists didnt mention the veil furore, or arranged marriages.

As for British women needing liberation, these people at the FWSA have some kind of a mental illness. I too was lured into the far left where I existed for a period of 10 years until I escaped. They develop in some kind of a void/vacum, faraway from reality. They debate issues that cannot be verified. I found myself standing up for a woman at work who was being chauvinistically dismissed for the wrong reason(she wasnt pretty enough) and I did it automatically, not because fo these screwball theories but because it was the right thing to do. I know it happens everywhere in all walks of life.

It is not just in relation to womens rights, these academically inclined people with some kind of a pioneering 'light in the head' mentality have infiltrated the whole of society and can currently be observed righteously preaching to the masses on such matters as religion, race, politics, ecology, waste disposal, smoking, eating chololate, downloading things you're not supposed to download and recently buying the correct type of lightbulb.

I concur, FUCK them.

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Sorry, but that picture looks more like a constipated person than a feminist. Maybe a constipated feminist? I dunno. LOL

I agree with a lot of what the feminist movement is for, better working conditions, same pay for same work, do not legislate my vagina and other equally important items, but as with any group of people, I cannot see stacking things in favor for them by developing things like hiring quotas, discrimination of others to favor their group and all things generally that throw the balance beam off balance. Remove the hinderances yes, but do not create new ones. Let's just all be equal, shall we?

In a true and just society these things would be a non-issue. Unfortunately we do not live in one of those yet, so I am glad that where there is a cause such as this, there are people such as yourself not afraid to step up, be heard and stand fast for their convictions. You go Cate! We'll be here to read about it in detail and throw our $0.02 in there with you! Execllent post.

I had to think about this one for a while before commenting.

It seems to me that feminism - "a doctrine that advocates equal rights for women" - means just that, equal rights, including the right to be dumb. Hell, us men have been and continue to take advantage of the right to be dumb every day.

I can understand the frustration of older feminists when they say, "Is this what we created Take Back the Night For?", while pointing at some dumb tart passed out in the gutter. I'd probably be pissed off too, if I were them. Unfortunately, that's what they were fighting for - the right for women everywhere to be just as dumb as men.

The fact is, stupidity knows no gender. Women now have more opportunities than they did in the fifties and sixties, and more are coming, because of freedoms brought to them by the trailblazers of feminism, but with those opportunities for greatness also come opportunities to demonstrate the innate stupidity of all human beings. This is a good thing, inasmuch as freedom is inherently a good thing.

As for whether a woman can wear make-up and shave her legs and still be a feminist... a feminist is anyone who supports equal rights for women. Anyone who tries to define it otherwise needs to get out their damn dictionary.

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I agree about hiring quotas, and its sad that they are already in place in a lot of large organisations and government departments. While it has good intentions, it often has the opposite affect, the very people they are trying to protect are not getting equal rights because they are being hired (or not hired), not because they're good at their job, or are the "right person for the job". They get the job because they are the right race, or right gender, or have a disability. "Let's just be equal" would be a fantastic way of life, yet that would require the entire world to have a brain.

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Interesting post and comments. I don't have anything to add right now, but I'm happy to see this being discussed. It's always a thought-provoking topic.
Brilliant response Karen...and explains very poignantly why I tend to reject any label. Because I can't expect or rely on people to have an educated understanding of what I'm really about. LOL. That and perhaps I am wildly defensive about assumptions.

Awesome.
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CupCate, I confess I didn't read this whole post yet but I wanted to recommend
Nora Ephron's Crazy Salad from 1976(unlike some papers you may have seen,
it's an easy read, but also an objective critique of the feminist movement at that time(plus it's funny as hell, which is the main appeal for me).

I just bought but haven't read Full Frontal Feminism, by a younger,
possibly third wave feminist, on why feminism is important to younger
women.
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Up until now, I hadn't given feminism much thought. Not for any particular reason apart from the fact that I really don't care all that much. I do believe women should be treated equally and that they shouldn't be objectified. I think it's important for women for women to put on makeup, do their hair, shave their legs, buy fashion magazines, show off their tits, and anything else that they feel they want to do - not for men, for themselves. I spend countless hours "putting on my face" in the morning, not so my boyfriend will think I am more attractive, but because I WANT TO. Am I wrong in thinking that feminism is about a woman's right to do what SHE wants for HER, and not to be treated un-equally because of it? I work in an environment dominated by men. Am I objectified because I have big tits and a "pretty" face? Hell yes I am! Do I care? Fuck no!! I flaunt the assets my mother gave me (not in a slutty kind of way) because I can. Because I like the way my tits look in the shirts I wear. Thing is, I don't live my life to meet someone elses standards, I live it for me. So does it make me a bad person because I shave, wear makeup, etc? I don't think so. I think that as long as your living life to your own standards, not putting up with the bullshit expectations pressed on you by society as a whole. To me, THAT is feminism. Sorry, went a little crazy with the comment!! :)
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*I* am what a feminist looks like.
I agree with RPM that this is a fabulous response - and an amazing post.

I once applied to work at a feminist bookstore and when asked whether I considered myself a feminist or not, I had to pause and seriously consider the question. Opponents will always try to redefine what a cause stands for, as that is one of the most successful ways to sabotage progress. However, my understanding of feminism is that it initially did not include women of color or women who chose to live a more traditional lifestyle (i.e., stay-at-home moms). I have profound issues aligning with a cause that purports to represent all of one class of people and then compartmentalizes, dismisses, and judges sects within that class.

Ultimately I answered that I was a womynist (for lack of a better term) for the reasons I described above and ultimately I did not get the job. I wasn't sure if it was because of the answer I gave, because I continued to shave and wore make-up, or because I married a man (that was a double strike - I conformed to traditional convention by marrying and taking my husband's last name and I was with a man). Being a Leo, I never assumed it was because I wasn't qualified ;). Regardless of the reason, it left even more of a bitter taste in my mouth than before about feminism.

I am a passionate and strong advocate for equality generally. As a rape survivor and a woman, I am even more passionate about women being safe and being treated equally. What saddens me most, though, is that we are harshest on each other. Women are judged by one group of women for wearing make-up and by another for not. Same thing with high heels and skirts, not to mention brands and cuts worn. Someone mentioned that she wears make-up for herself. not her husband. I wear it to, but I am conscious of the fact that since I was five - or possibly younger - I thought wearing make-up and high heels is what it meant to be a woman and to be desirable. That is a product of our culture, which does exploit and objectify women. I suppose it just matters to what degree you buy into it and to what degree you want to take a part of it for yourself.

Bravo, Karen, for being a responsible mother and teaching your daughters about feminism and all that it means and entails early.

A parting point I would like to make is that some of those traditional women's magazines (like Marie Claire and Harper's Bazaar) have great news articles.
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This is the first time I have read one of your posts and I love it! Gotta read the rest. I am a feminist. I do what I want to do with my life and I think that sniping at other women makes the feminist movement weaker, not stronger. I think you have as much if not more to add to the movement (to the more "educated" sniffy snobs dismay) It should be about freedom to be who you are and to do what you want with what you have.

As to what women look like- ohmigod, aren't we over this yet? I love fashion mags & stuff. I love my husband and my kids. When I stayed at home it was my choice!!! If we keep judging and stabbing women in the back how can progress be made? Its all wide open & whoever wants to narrow what we can do - to me, is not a feminist.

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This post got me thinking. I consider myself a feminist, but I've always had a nagging feeling that I didn't know enough about the movement or even what was "expected" of me. I guess it's time for me to delve a little deeper. Some of the books you list look fascinating, so I think I might start there.
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Thanks for the good read :)
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Amen, sista! I could relate to encountering the old guard/elitist-type feminists (having taken a women's studies course in college) and am proud to know (and be) one of the modern day feminists who wear make-up, read mainstream magazines, and yes, advocate for women's equality. Thanks for writing an amazing post.

What saddens me most, though, is that we are harshest on each other.

This makes me sad too and I'm glad you brought it up. There is so much power in standing together and helping each other, just look at men's success from forming professional networks - the old boys club we all love to hate. It's an easy enough model to steal and yet we still don't do that nearly as well as they do. Why is that? Why instead do so many of us insist on modeling the worst stereotypes by sniping at each other and hold each other back? Perhaps we feel that as long as none of us gets ahead the rest of us won't feel so bad about where we are in life.

Such crap.

Such a freaking waste of energy.

I have no problem with people having different definitions of feminism, or environmentalism, or christianity or (insert your controversial topic here). In fact I'm all for it. Disagreement should lead to dialogue and I'm a huge believer in dialogue - even (gasp) a good healthy argument. 'Cause see, we don't have to agree in order to get along. But we do have to respect each other despite (perhaps even because of) our differences and not use them as an excuse to put each other down.

Imagine what we could do if we used our powers for good.

(setting fire to the soapbox now)

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i'm a 34 year old house wife with no kids and i believe that i am a feminist. i'm sure by nearly all feminist standards the minute you say house wife that instantly makes you NOT a feminist. it's sad to see so many who have similar ideals build fences around one another to keep themselves separate....'here's the corral for the manly women, over here the "lip stick" lesbians and here we have the suit wearing, phd holding over bearing meanies"....it's not just something found in the feminist community it's every where. but back to the point, don't we all want equal pay for equal work, we want to be able to be in control of our own bodies and what we do to and with them, we don't want to be second class citizens...we need to stand together so we can reach our common goals.
i don't know if that was really what you were trying to say, but that's how your post made me feel. i'm also not sure how much sense this comment is making. i only have a G.E.D. i am however going back to school this fall.
anyhoo...
i'm glad you made this post, thank you
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Six's Wife:

Sister, I've only got my high school diploma and a few college courses under my belt. Your comment made sense!!!

What's funny, is that there are so many parts about me that aren't exactly typical "feminist" traits. It sort of feels if your married, or have children that you're automatically in the minority...

Thank you for your comment!!!






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On another untouched topic (it seems) - I love feminists who are so concerned with work equality that they have other people raise their children. I would consider myself a feminist (born post '70) but if I had kids I would also want to be a stay at home mother, does that make me less of a feminist?
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That ladys breasts need liberating.

Confused, perhaps the crucifix round her neck is a clue? The bemused blonde behind looks like she's coming back down from an acid trip, and the Quaker hatted dude behind obviously has something stuck up her arse.

THIS IS WHAT A fe MINI st LOOKS LIKE

Total contribution to world body of knowledge= zero.

In the age of cyber terrorizm, what is there left to liberate? I think these people are living in a fantasy, and two centuries behind time. In a place like the UK, who can say society puts constraints on your behaviour or lessens your life-chances? The internet and Wikis have succeeded in democratizing information and have added a new dimention to the idea of complaining and self-indungence. Most women(and men) are too busy these days earning huge amounts of money, getting fat, spending money and getting involved in self obsession to worry about womens liberation. Can you really be serious? Just look around at the women in the media. The Victoria Beckhams, Kate Mosses and Shilpa Shettys...do they need liberating? How many women are like them? How many women in relationships are in control of that relationship?

In the western world, women are not in chains. It is a myth. Women are very much in control.

Like Marxism before, "Feminism" should now be more concerned with wine tasting and offering tips on buying the latest fashion accessories from Gucci et al.

I would start by suggesting the lady at the top of the page loses the T shirt and considers a humour implant and if she is looking for a man, a facelift.

In the western world, women are not in chains. It is a myth. Women are very much in control.

Errrr...Maybe you'd like to read THIS POST here. But I doubt it would help you pull your head out of your ass any time soon.

You said: "If she is looking for a man" that the women in the photo should get "a facelift."

That is just a teeny tiny little example of why we still do need feminism. I'm wondering what sort of fantasy world you live where you think KATE MOSS and VICTORIA BECKHAM are "proof" that society doesn't put "constraints on your behaviour or lessens your life-chances". They are two famous, white, privileged, starved, surgically enhanced, RICH women who actually are two prime examples that our society is FUCKED.

How many women are like them? VERY FUCKING FEW.

I enjoy how you suggested that feminism, and discussing feminism on the internet, was basically about "complaining" and filled with "self-indulgence" -and yet then you said that maybe "'Feminism' should now be more concerned with wine tasting and offering tips on buying the latest fashion accessories from Gucci et al"...Yes, because that's NOT self indulgent at all.

I think that you're the one living "two centuries behind time".

The link I was referring to was this:

http://cupcate.vox.com/library/post/we-havent-come-a-long-way-baby.html

Like I said, I doubt you'll read it or actually understand it. But whatever. You don't really need to.

Lady, reading your other posts about how you hate the UK, you still think you speak for women in this fair land? Really? Why not ask Brit women if you speak for them? If you hate 80 year old British men so much you can always go back to your own country, it will be no loss for us.

Close off the conversation in a patronising fashion, surround yourself with like minded people, go for it.

I didn't say all women were like Kate Moss or Victoria Beckham, but they are role models of get up and go people that millions of girls admire and emulate. Women with balls. Contrary to your small world view, there are a lot of women like that, they don't need your brand of feminism steeped in victimhood.

You post on a public forum presumably so that other people will read what you've written and pass commentary. Did I do something wrong? Did I commit a mortal sin by god forbid disgreeing with you?

Kate Moss and Victoria Beckham do what they do not with a gun at their heads, they DO IT OF THEIR OWN FREE WILL. Vile sociological arguments that they somehow have no right to take their clothes off because it offends the whole of womankind have been shown to be ridiculous throwbacks to the mistakes of the 1960's. Would you also say the terrorists that blew up the buses and trains on 7/7 were also victims?

I notice you never actually engage with people that disagree with you, is that because you already know what they are all going to say and have pre-empted them in your mind?

More fun than a tart, but less fun than vodka? Hmmm

Are you one of these here Yankie dolls that wants to be British? God, not another one. The country is full up with people like you now, can't you go somewhere else? If you are genuinely concerned with liberating women, and it's not just a load of old vodka and tart fumes, please go to Afghanistan and get stuck in.

Together we can change the whole world. You have the power to help her do it.

Thanks for going back and reading my other posts. I love how much time you're spending on this. You even spent the time to create a new profile JUST to comment THREE more times to insult me!

Lady, reading your other posts about how you hate the UK, you still think you speak for women in this fair land? Really? Why not ask Brit women if you speak for them? If you hate 80 year old British men so much you can always go back to your own country, it will be no loss for us.
Sexist and racist! Charming!

Seriously dude, please stop commenting on here. You clearly don't have anything rational to say, and you're not exactly striking up a discussion. It's fine that you disagree with me, and if you weren't so fucking insulting and rude I might want to discuss this with you. But I don't, and I don't have to.

And PLEASE do not fucking tell me to go back to my "own country" or tell me that I'm trying to speak for all British women or call me a "Yankee doll" that's trying to be British.

You really don't like women speaking their mind, do you?




Please dont ever speak on behalf of british men again, you're embarrasing us.

just thought I'd share a private message I got this morning from ptrek...

Your girlfriend thinks that blogging in an insulting way about 86 year old British male post office workers and workers that can't speak very good English doesn't come across as arrogant, racist and sexist. Is it any wonder Americans have a bad name? I have no beef with Americans, I admire them. But not when they do this.

I don't speak for Brits? Maybe not, but I am one. I was disagreeing with a ‘feminist’ viewpoint when Kate blocked my disagreement in such a childish way. But it doesn’t matter, she can go on deluding herself she is making sense for all time.

PS- Actually mister hero to the rescue, it’s none of your F-ing business what I write. For someone that claims to be an IT worker, your spelling is embarrassing, please don’t spell on behalf of Brits.

Please don't feed the trolls.
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I'm whoa late in finding this post, but I love it. I think I pretty much agreed with everything you said. I'm sick of the attitude that feminist = masculinized woman who hates all men, isn't allowed to wear make-up or dress "like a girl," and can't express any kind of sexuality. Being empowered means having the power to make one's own decisions, and if I want to wear high heels and a mini-skirt, fuck anyone who says it's degrading.

Anyway, I could rant on, but I won't. Fabulous post, I favorited it.
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Kate, I agree with Karen, Paxton, and love Leenda's term, "neo-feminists"!
Kudos on the original commentary opening these quesitons. I also recommend Christine Northrup and Caroline Myss as more upbeat versions of feminism,
not that I agree with every single thing they say(or know if I do or not)....
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Oh, I'm glad to see the trolling didn't continue on this one.

For me, feminism is about opening potential up for women to have more control over their choices in life. That includes academics who want to keep it more theoretical and show off their credentials. And women who want to throw their Guiness up in gutters. Women who want to wear makeup and those who don't. I don't wear makeup, but I don't do it because I am trying to make a point. I don't wear it because it just doesn't feel like the person I am. It's about letting women go to the gym (or not) for whatever reason they choose. It's about women being able to choose things that I might deem unhealthy for myself, while giving them the right to choose it for themselves for as long as they want to.

I started to read this post because I did minor in GWS (gender and women's studies) and intend to continue with that course of study to get a PhD at some point in the not-too-distant future.... And then I stopped because I wasn't reading hard enough. But I will come back! And I will likely leverage some critiques about your critiques about second wave feminism and the academy and other things because even though I am a scant 23 years of age, I consider myself more of the second wave than of the third, and though I am woefully behind on my third wave reading (no, I haven't read Manifesta yet), I don't really care for what I have seen. But this post deserves a close and careful reading, and not knee-jerk reactions! I will return!
even though I am a scant 23 years of age

I turn 23 in June, lol. To be honest, I don't even know where I stand with feminism anymore. I'm a feminist, obviously. But I've been shunned by most of the 3rd-wavers I know. They don't do it outright, it's just more passive aggressive and like, "You're against porn, right?" and when I respond, "Well, no." I get the look.

I need to write another post on my feelings about all this, as a lot has changed in the months since I wrote this. But anyhoo. Thanks for reading! Can't wait to read what you think! (Be gentle, lol) :)
Hi thanks your blogs are always greats There is nothing wrong with a woman who wants nothing more than to get married and have children and do that for the rest of her life. As long as she respects herself and gets the same from her family, and brings up her children to believe that they can be whatever they want to be when they grow up, etc. I mean, it's basic stuff. Don't do something because you think it will make someone like you better. whether it's getting a boob job, putting out on the first date, or going to med school to become a brain surgeon. To me, it's all about self-respect. That's empowering. Keno Game

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