I am a risk-taker in relationships. In addition to being a risk-taker, I’m doggedly committed and don’t give up on a teetering romance until I’m well and truly and certainly done with it. As a result, my friends, family – and, I’m sure, more than one potential suitor – sigh and shudder and worry and are not-so-secretly convinced that I put myself on the line because I’m lonely, fat, a single mom and therefore should be lacking in self-esteem due to my apparent unfuckability (oh, if only y’all knew) and desperation for the security of a relationship.
They would be wrong. I’ve always been a risk taker: fat, skinny, younger, older, before and after kids, always. I take risks because I know I can handle it. I’m resilient. I have faith in myself. Even if I get my heart broken, even if I’m stung by love’s yellow jackets and swell up and take to bed for three days to nurse my hives, cracked heart, fractured ego and assorted existential wounds, I’ll come out of it okay. I usually learn something, too. I stretch. I grow. I expand my emotional range. I go wide and deep. I love.
This, I submit, is the opposite of low self-esteem and desperation.
But, I admit, I’m breaking the rules. It is not always comfortable. It is not always easy. And so far, I don’t have the happy ending to point at, chant “see, nya, nya, I told you so”, and then legitimately launch polemics against tepid dating and soulless relationships and the patriarchy.
So I break the rules. I own myself and my feelings and act on them. I try to connect and I call when I feel the need to do that, which can be a lot. I think that is as it should be. When you like someone, you want to talk to him. I don’t wait around or corral myself into a good girl box of chocolates hoping a man will choose me. When I like a man, he knows it. When I love him, he’s lucky. That sounds like empowerment, and it is, and sometimes I say things that feel honest and powerful to me but which are interpreted vastly differently by the people who live outside my head. Things like this: I need a man. I am lonely. Arguably, being honest about those things does not makes me pathetic or weak. In fact, I think the opposite narrative, the one that says “I don’t need a man, I want one” is ridiculously boring and weak. I get it, but it is not compelling. It goes like this: you can pay your bills. You’re doing fine. You have hobbies and friends and a cat and if you died tomorrow, you’d be satisfied that you lived a good life.
Those things are sort of true for me, too, except that I don’t have a cat. I like my upholstered goods on the unshredded side. And even with the ability to take care of myself quite competently for the rest of my life without male assistance, I still need a man, and the fact that I am marginally solvent and reasonably capable in most adult matters means that I can be shameless about expressing my needs. Admitting to needs – requiring companionship and savouring love and partnership – does not diminish me. So there, nya nya, I told you so (again. Am I undermining my credibility as an adult?).
I need a romantic, significant, long-lasting relationship. I think most people do. Relationships – friendly, romantic, platonic, passionate, familial – are the juice and the juju that a growing life demands. Being one half of a passionate partnership presents challenges and struggles and magic and love and I need that. I need to give that and exchange that and grow in that. And I’ll risk the lectures about how I should be an independent woman (I am! and it is not all self-sufficient sunshine and egalitarian roses!) to say so. Because the risk is worth the reward.
So fuck risk-managing potential relationships. I’m frustrated with that and this is the core of my exasperation with dating and the our boring cultural discourses about dating: one of the axis that it turns on is a glib, therapized, risk-managing approach to relationships. And yes, my darling reader, you ARE so prescient. I do have thoughts on the matter and I would love to share them:
- I highly doubt that everyone out there who is dating has gone to therapy and explored the issues and done the work. Actually, I don’t DOUBT it, I know it. Most of us speak therapy but we haven’t really been therapized.
All the risk management and red-flagging paradoxically creates risk. Every step is a mine-field of meaning. Codes are being signalled and transgressed. Everything becomes a Big Freaking Deal. Relationships halt based on a poorly timed phone call. As proof, I offer you my recent, deep, and time-consuming research on the after-sex call. This is what I did: I googled ‘after sex call‘ and the results cracked my lid and my brain made a brief, panicked, screaming run around the living room. There are more than 80 million pages advising you when to call, when not to call, what it means when he calls on Sunday (you’re girlfriend material), Monday (he’d like to sleep with you again but you’re not relationship material), or Friday (you’re a booty call). Let me repeat it: EIGHTY MILLION pages of results on this issue.
- The patriarchy. Oh, the patriarchy. The sexism. The double-standards. The give-a-cookie, get-a-ring theory of dating.
- The dating rules. OMG, The Rules.
- #3 and #4 are in fact the same thing and my brain is now making crop-circles in the dining room. Which is tough to do because despite what you’ve heard about Vancouverites, BC and our main agricultural export, not all of us grow grass in the dining room.
Let’s talk about The Rules, which is not just a way of talking about the stupid rules of dating but an actual book that articulates them in 35 (!!!) easy-to-remember points (!!!!) by Ellen Fein and Sherrie Schneider.Or let’s not. I’m sure you know them and all their evil, anti-feminist clones like He’s Just Not That Into You, Steve Harvey’s Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man (which uses cookies as a metaphor for sex and advises women to dole them out sparingly, and not at all in the first three months) and, most recently, Be a Hepburn in a Hilton World by Jordan Christy. All of them essentially advise the same thing: don’t put out, don’t call, don’t require much, and maybe, if you’re lucky and you wait around quietly looking pretty, he’ll marry you. In short, don’t be you.
So that is what is supposed to guarantee me the Happy Ending. The Wedding (which incidentally, I don’t even want. Marriage: yes. Wedding: no). The Husband.
But what kind of husband would I land with those rules? What kind of relationship and marriage would that be?
The answer to this not-so-rhetorical question is this: not the kind I want.
In Canada, you can marry anyone you want, as long as you’re only marrying one adult person at a time. This, in the world according to Kelly, is as it should be. So I have no issues with marriage. If gay and lesbian and straight people and everyone who identifies themselves in between or outside of those categories can marry, then I too can marry in good conscience because I’m not accessing a privilege allowed only to those who accidentally, luckily, have sexualities deemed socially acceptable. So, yay, Canada. Yay, marriage.
If I am to marry – and I hope that I do – I would want to marry a man who thinks like that, too. And I highly motherfucking doubt that a man who thinks like that would
- be ‘caught’ by The Rules;
- require a woman to play by The Rules;
- get off on the chase;
- like it when a woman doles out sex like the forbidden cookie, to be earned with virtuous, chivalrous behaviour and a mainly no-sex diet;
- think I’m an unmarriageable slut for expressing my sexuality and acting on my desires;
- interpret my ability to be real and raw and vulnerable as desperate and unappealing;
- be reeled in through a prescribed course of intense manipulation;
- need to be manipulated to feel valued; and
- insist that I contain my needs for connection and companionship with him.
Because that would mean that he’s wired like a wannabe patriarch. And this is would be a problem for me because how I feel about fucking the patriarchy (pro) is wildly different than my feelings about fucking the patriarch (con).
So, sadly, dating is still a gender-trap. And, paradoxically, even as dating is a dangerous trap, it is so gd safe. We talk about dysfunction and reflexively screen out anyone lacking a career or a physique that will pass muster with friends and family and who doesn’t call by Wednesday. We’re risk-managing ourselves out of hypothetical heartbreak but into one-bedroom apartments and solo-Christmases.
Recently, someone said to me “…but I never enjoyed dating the way you do.” And I was stunned. I embrace the risks that relationships entail but I hate dating. I like people, I adore men, I like meeting people and connecting and getting excited about seeing the world (and even myself) through their eyes, but dating and me – well we are not in love and never will be. It is too coded. Too mined with gendered expectations and signals and social assumptions. Too uncertain. So, yes, with one side of my mouth I bemoan the rules of engagement while with the other I freely kiss and confess that I adore being wooed. It is a very, very good thing when someone showers me with attention and affection and never makes me wonder: Do I call? Do I not call? Is he just not that into me if he doesn’t call? What does it mean if I call? To me? To him?
And that’s it. That’s the dichotomous, insane space we live in. As women, we’re supposed to be empowered and beyond The Rules. As naked, vulnerable, brave and needy people, we need to connect and be adored (or at least I do). And the dating manuals that make me crazy live in precisely that crazy-making space: they directly address the need to be feel adored by prescribing formulas for discerning adoration while in the same breath and with lipstick-slicked, barbed kisses they re-inscribe a pointed, confining, prescriptive cultural narrative about gender roles and heterosexual relationships.
About women, that narrative says this: Women should wait. Women should let men take the lead. Women should not be demanding or difficult or insist on getting their needs met by their male partners. Women should contain their sexuality. Women should be tricksters. Women should not expect anything other than the social outlines of a contractual relationship. Women who do all of these things will be rewarded with a ring. Being single is a prison you can earn your way out of with good behaviour and yes, your man is your Warden.
About men, that narrative says this: Men are hunters. Men do not have emotional needs or require friendship from their partners and if they do, they should never admit it and definitely not call before three days have elapsed because that is just unattractive. Showing you like a woman will scare her off. Don’t care for her, conquer her, because, after all, men have an inherent need to conquer women and the world. Men don’t like themselves so they cannot like women who show them that they like them. A man should marry the woman who likes him the least. A man values a woman who restrains her desires with him, because that means she’ll restrain her desires with other men, too. Men don’t know themselves so have to be tricked into getting what is good for them. Men can be tricked. Men should be tricked. Men are dumb.
How is that for seductive? After you get past the pre-marital, tedious process of risk-management and encoding gendered, patriarchal assumptions, the two of you will ideally end up in a soulless, mostly sexless marriage of convenience where the man takes out the garbage and mows the lawn and the woman flutters around doing sexy domestic things like cleaning the toilet and keeps her mouth shut except when she’s yelling at the kids. Excellent. Fantastic. I’m in.
Confession: Until this year, year thirty-sex, I never really dated. Every significant relationship I have ever had evolved out of ‘hanging out’: out of spending time together, having wide-ranging, unconstrained, passionate hours-long conversations in which we solved the political and social dilemmas of the day, doing things together, with other people, and together, until we were just, organically, a couple or some sort of watershed sexual/romantic/conversational moment occurred that articulated our ecstatic commitment to couple-y-ness.
I suspect that this dynamic is a function of youth and university. I suspect that this is even what universities are for: campuses are covert, middle-class marriage markets. Mostly middle-class families offload their kids there and after four or five years and those kids emerge as qualified adults ready to earn, baby, earn and are likely, hopefully involved with now-degreed, pedigreed, marriageable partners who also have reasonable career prospects and are probably from other middle-class families. Who needs a matchmaker or an arranged marriage if you can send your kids to college?
During the university years, young adults are installed in crappy, overpopulated apartments on a campus with several thousand mostly-single people in the same age bracket, and all of them have lots of free time and (temporarily) very little money. It is a recipe for social interaction that is based on conversation and connection and ideas, and if you’re lucky enough to be surrounded by uberliberal, progressive, smart, thinking people, then the very structures of relationships get talked about, questioned and negotiated. Then, if you’re really lucky, you end up in a Relationship with a man who thinks about these things too, and is willing to go there with you and wonder about The Rules, and fuck the Rules, and just be, and figure out how to be, together. Yessssssssss.
I spent most of my twenties in University. Naturally, I ended up in a Relationship – bizarrely, with a very socially conventional (and very good) man – and spent most of my thirties having babies. Then we split. Now I have a job, kids, a rigid and unbending schedule that requires me to see the inside of 5am every weekday, a cosmic void where babysitters should be, and no classmates or (adult) house-mates with single friends with whom to hang out and eventually fall in love. So now I have to date, marshal time to date, organize an infrastructure that allows for dating, search out appropriate people to date, all of which I do, sometimes ecstatically, sometimes begrudgingly. To me, the logistics and the safe, gendered discourses of dating are the antithesis of sexy. I miss my flophouse university days. I miss organic relationships.
Relationships are conversations. Relationships are messages sent and received and returned. Relationships are primal, biological, electric, evolutionary, revolutionary. Relationships are generative. Relationships are transcendent and divine. Relationships are magic. Relationships are worth the risk.
Too bad that as a grown-ass adult you have to date to find one.
___________
note: I originally posted this piece in September 2009 but I was missing it, lots, so I called it back. It loves me, too.
Sometimes you open the closet and find something you love but forgot you had and realize it totally deserves another fabulous night out…this essay is that. I first published this essay last May, when I had four readers (my mom, my two sisters and Heather ). It is still one of my favourites. I hope you like it too.
A friend of mine, who is a very evolved guy with a lot of strong women friends, recently asked me “What happened to feminism?”
Let’s discuss.
Disclaimer:
- Just because I have (spectacular) breasts does not mean that I have the answer to this question.
- Just because I have (spectacular) breasts does not mean that I am responsible for the answer to this question.
- If, however, the answer to this question is written on the side of a Little Mermaid DVD and/or tampon box, well then yes, I may have the answer to this question. Let me go check.
- Nope, sorry. I don’t have the answer to this question.
This bugged me. Not the question – it is a really good question – but that I do not have the answer. I used to BE the answer.
When my first niece was born, I wrote her a letter about the importance of challenging authority. [Note to my sister: I'm sorry.] I could discuss, at great length and volume, the etymology of ‘the rule of thumb‘. I used to get involved in heated discussions with dinosaur profs (shout out to Poli Sci UBC) and then go cry in my sparkling wine coolers because They. Just. Don’t. Get. It.
I had Ideals. I was not going to dress my girls in pink and there would be no barbies. (Having a boy was never an option and never you mind that I myself collected barbies. As an adult. Don’t tell anyone.) I would work and nurture. I would support my girlfriends and all of us would abstain from cosmetic surgeries. I would turn up my nose at the casual use of the word ‘bitch’ between friends. I would have an evolved, equal partner fully engaged in child-rearing and household and BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH.
Then I had a child. And another. And stopped working (for pay) and fully, completely, unquestioningly embraced The Cult of Imperial Motherhood.
The four commandments of Imperial Motherhood are these:
- I am The Mother. I know it all.
- I am The Mother. I will do it all.
- Fathers are hapless and semi-helpless, and left to their own devices, will dress the children unfashionably, feed them fast food two meals a day (oh, they need three meals?), and possibly lose them in the mall.
- I am The Mother. I know it all, I do it all, and I complain about it all.
Allow me to paint the picture of my fall from feminist grace into the fires of Imperial Motherhood. A year after we bought a new washer and dryer, my then-partner called me at work to ask me how to use them.
One year.
Yes, we can cast aspersions on his work ethic and contribution to the home and relationship. But while we’re at it, let’s vilify me, too. When we were together, I did not require him to do anyfuckingthing. I did not allow him the opportunity to be hands-on. If I wanted his opinion about what colour to paint the baby’s room or where and how she would be schooled, I would simply think up the correct opinion and then let him in on the secret. I was the Imperial Mother.
Let’s be honest. Few – if any – of the activities on this list are intrinsically rewarding or empowering:
- cleaning toilets
- laundry
- breast feeding in public
- breast feeding in general
- caesarean sections
- stretch marks
- post-pregnancy bellies
- Heidi Klum
- vacuuming
- playdates
- birthday parties every single gd Saturday
- eating dinner in the car on the way to baseball/soccer/dance practice
- meetings with caregivers and teachers to discuss your child’s spitting on people and/or spitting on large screen TVs
- 1am, 3am and 5am feedings
- judgment from other Imperial Mothers
- judging other Imperial and commoner mothers
- changing diapers
- sucking mucus out of clogged baby noses
- grocery shopping
- colic
- colic
- colic
You get my point. I concede that there is likely some value in some of these things. (Actually, I’m just saying this so that the League La Leche doesn’t flame me.) That is of course why we do them. But it is not guaranteed to make you happy, if only because just when you finish some or all of these things, you have to do them all over again. And again. This is tiring and monotonous and tired, monotonous people are not happy, satisfied, inspired people.
In fact, there is actual research that concludes that contrary to popular belief, having children does not make you happy. Or happier.
Remember my pithy little post on the Economy of Happiness? Well, Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilberts wrote a book called Stumbling on Happiness, in which he writes that before we have children, prospective parents acknowledge and anticipate that raising children is hard freaking work, (okay, ‘freaking’ is my word) but that we are stupid, stupid, stupid (again, my words) and still think that having kids will make us happy. In fact, evidence from several studies demonstrates that having children makes us less happy – even unhappy! – and that this dismal state of affairs doesn’t improve until our kids leave home. Fantastic.
So…I think Imperial Mamas are buying a cartload of expired groceries. We think that this job will make us happy; we wish that it will; we work like crazy trying to make it so; and we abuse ourselves and everyone around us when it, in fact, makes us miserable. Or maybe that is just me.
Now that we’ve fully covered the downside of mothering/parenting, let’s return our attention back to the rewards. Oh, we haven’t even started? Funny that.
In amongst the drudgery and mayhem of daily life with little people, there are moments of unsurpassed brilliance and beauty.
- When my daughter, Sophie, was born, I looked at her and recognized her. I literally breathed out and said, “Oh, I know you.”
- Sophie sees the world through eyes sprinkled with fairy dust. One day she came to me, held out her hand, and said “Mama, my tooth grew feet and jumped right out of my mouth!”
- My youngest daughter, Lola, has the soul of a linebacker and the independence of an exiled wolf…until bedtime, when she needs to stroke my hair until she falls asleep. I find it strangely touching that her favourite place to sleep is directly on my head.
- Every morning, before the crazy-crazy begins, the girls get in bed together, cuddle up to each other, entwine their fingers in each other’s curls, and say “Good morning sister, I love you. It’s a good day”.
- Each and every day that I spend with my children, I am kissed, cuddled, hugged, stroked, and told “I love you” and “I love you so much” more times than I can count.
Imperial Mothers hog these moments all to themselves. No wonder fathers are not engaged. And pity the fools, because they are really and truly missing out.
Oh god, am I bashing women and blaming for them for male privilege? I’m trying so hard to be feminist. I really love women. My best friend is a woman.
I am a mama. I fully and completely identify with and embrace being a mother. Having children is truly, madly, deeply the most significant thing I have done in my life. Still, I have sincere worries about how women allow motherhood to define us, as people, as our whole life and being and worth (why else all the judging?), instead of simply as something we do partway through our lives. The Cult of Imperial Motherhood is not good for women. It is not good for men. And it is not good for our children. (I knew I’d get you with that last one.)
In fact, I would argue that Imperial Motherhood far more substantially and materially constructs social attitudes towards women than does Playboy (no one reads it anymore, anyway), strippers, Britney Spears, and all of them, combined. I submit to you that your child spends more time with you and watching you than she does pole dancers. She is learning from her mother that women take care of the house, that men are absent twits, that when she has children it will be all on her, and not to drink out of mommy’s water bottle because it is not water.
So…what happened to feminism? Where have all the feminists gone? I can draw you a map. We’re at the playground, judging mismatched socks, pre-packaged snacks and the tummy-tucks (actual, desired, or sorely needed) of other Imperial Mothers. We got tired, we stayed home, and we accidentally forgot to save the world.
With this in mind, here is my do-as-I-say-not-as-I-do advice to all of my imperial sisters: Take off the crown. Share the responsibilities and the joys. Allow men to be fully developed people and partners and parents. Be one yourself.
The revolution will be mothered. And fathered.
Notes
This essay was, shall we say, ‘inspired’ by the works of others, most notably Madonna Kolbenschlag and Rebecca Traister.
I borrowed the term Imperial Motherhood from Madonna Kolbenschlag’s Kiss Sleeping Beauty Goodbye, in which she writes a letter from the perspective of a newly feminist wife to her husband:
If I give up my princess ways, will you give up your princedom?
I know I will have to steel myself to accept the consequences. If you begin to take on more responsibility for home and children, I will have to sacrifice some of my matriarchal prerogatives there. If you begin to shed the “team” mystique at work, take a stand on sensitive issues, work fewer hours, I will have to bear with the consequences in loss of promotions, lower pay, job changes, whatever may come. I’ll have to bear with insecurity and loss of status without putting guilt on you. You’ll have to stop putting guilt on me for abandoning the “imperial motherhood” role in the home and the Girl Friday role in the office…”
This theme is echoed in Rebecca Traister’s “The Worst Parents inThe World“, in which she reviews Ayelet Waldman’s Bad Mother: A Chronicle of Maternal Crimes, Minor Calamities,and Occasional Moments of Grace, and Michael Lewis’ Home Game: An Accidental Guide to Fatherhood.
Traister compares the two tales of stay-at-home parents, one male and one female. The common ground between both experiences leads her to hope that one day
“we will truly attend to the task of un-sexing parenting, of readjusting the definitions of our daily lives, so that baby care is no longer purely feminine, and moneymaking is no longer purely masculine, and those who cross over — whether they’re apologetic and guilty for both wanting just motherhood, and wanting more than just motherhood, like Waldman, or whether they’re vaguely embarrassed by the lengths to which they’ve traveled to be full partners in the raising of their kids — can stop kvetching about it and just go on doing it.”
Amen.
Recently I ‘fessed up that criticizing Tyler Perry gave me many a sleepless night.
So, after my confession, can I rest easy?
No. Now, in the 4am of my soul, I’m anxious about Penelope Trunk.
Penelope Trunk is educational. Entertaining. Fearless. She drove a casual, politically charged tweet like a bulldozer through the abortion debate. I cannot possibly love her enough for that.
Back in the day, feminists – including some big deal, famous women - signed a petition that said “I had an abortion” and braved the consequences for believing that these life-and-death decisions underline and are the basics of women’s freedom.
They did this because the consequences for being ’out’ about abortion can be dire. Still. Ask Dr. George Tiller.
And Penelope Trunk blogged about it. Personally. Politically.
And that’s not all. In addition to being brave, Penelope Trunk is substantial. Sometimes it feels like there aren’t a lot of substantial bloggers out there. The medium lends itself to lazy, off-the cuff opinions and reactivity (pot, this is kettle, you’re black).
Penelope researches her stuff and research takes time. I know. When I decided to write a not-lazy, not-off-the-cuff-opinion piece, it took me six weeks to complete six interviews and write the resulting piece for Write to Done (forthcoming. Really. I promise. I turned it in, and everything.)
Research makes your work better, like a good bagel: dense and chewy.
I think people miss the depth of her analysis because they’re distracted by the oh yeah I had a one night stand with a salesguy, blogs without a focus are a waste of time (Dear Penelope: I focused. Please love/read me now), leverage sexual harassment and her general prickly contrariness.
I love those things. I love that she refuses to shear off her woman-y-ness and button-down her sexuality to be perceived as professional. I also love her unwavering conviction that assholes who call a woman a bad mom
- a) for working; b) enjoying work; c) complaining that taking care of your kids, whom you absolutely love and need like air, is hard or sometimes tedious work (it IS) -
are, absolutely, undeniably, sexist hypocrites. That is just the rule.
And I learn things on her blog.
That again: I learn things on her blog.
Penelope Trunk quotes Daniel Gilbert a lot. He’s a “happiness researcher”. I took that to Google, as I am wont to do.
My happiness research google-tilt-a-whirl led to Gretchen Rubin’s Happiness Project – another substantial blogger, who toggles between epiphanies on the cross-town bus and Victor Frankl – and just a general, serious love-on for thinking and writing about what it means to be happy and sometimes counterintuitive, simple ways to do and be that.
Later, when I asked around for published authors to interview and Danielle LaPorte suggested Gretchen Rubin, I (a) knew who she was and (b) was ultra-excited about interviewing her. And she agreed.
(To be interviewed. Not to be my Jiminy Cricket. There was no explicit permission around that.)
This meant that when I made my pitch to Write to Done, I was able to say “I will be interviewing Gretchen Rubin (and Leo Babauta, Danielle LaPorte, Erin Doland, Chris Guillebeau, and Josh Hanagarne)” which pretty much guaranteed the pitch would be accepted and lo! the pitch was accepted.
So, indirectly, Penelope Trunk introduced me to Gretchen Rubin who participated in my forthcoming How To Get a Book Deal guest post that will hopefully increase my blog traffic. This, in the blog-o-sphere, is like handing me wads of hundred dollar bills or giving me a sensual massage. Deeply appreciated.
Reading Penelope Trunk helps my writing career.
Oh. One more thing.
Before I started blogging, I read Penelope Trunk’s provocative, quality, quirky, truth-telling blog and thought,
I want to do that.
guest post by Ronna Detrick
There is a space in which I live, think, wonder, rage, and hope. It’s an in-between place. Sometimes a threatening chasm, other times a sheltering cleft, it’s unnerving and welcoming, frightening and beautiful all at once. It is home.
Faith and Feminism.
Neither word is benign; both conjure up images, thoughts, and emotions nearly immediately. And for me, each is laden with story.
Story #1: Faith.
Images of myself as a girl – in Sunday School, memorizing verses, singing hymns, playing the piano, going to summer camps complete with fireside chats. Later, attending a Christian college; later still, moving overseas to work for a missionary organization. Not soon after, becoming a pastor’s wife. (I know…it’s just too much. Clearly my story agreed because…) 15 years later I ended my marriage. I left his church. I abandoned my tradition.
Faith, understood as a non-negotiable of my spiritual worth, had been my heritage and the formative lens of my development, my ethics, my relational codes as a woman.
A possible sub-text to this story: Faith cannot abide strong, outspoken women. We are counterintuitive to its patriarchy and sometimes even unwelcome in the context of a church or religious structure that still holds to (and text-proofs) our silence and subservience. There’s no room for feminism.
Story #2: Feminism.
I was already in my 40s by the time I experienced my first real brush with feminism – aware for the first time in palpable, acutely felt ways the objectification of my gender, its harm, and the preponderance of misogyny. Re-reading age-old texts with a new lens, I couldn’t not see thousands of years of interpretation that had slighted, if not blatantly ignored the perspective, voice, and experience of my sex.
Feminism now became my religion; a new formative lens for my ongoing development, my ethics, my relational codes as a woman.
A possible sub-text to this story: Feminism necessitates a profound pragmatism, a critical eye watching acutely for insipid, unenlightened perspectives or unjust, ignorant words/behaviors. It is action-oriented, justice-focused, advocacy based. There’s little room for faith.
These two stories create a seeming binary; one that for myself and many women results in significant tension, angst, and forced choice. Can they coexist? At first blush (and in light of repetitively validated experiences with one subtext or the other) the answer feels like a definitive “no.” But I wonder.
Here’s what I have faith in: No story (or dogma, philosophy, theology, even Text) stands as sacred, holy writ; definitive and concrete, unmovable or un-editable. It is influenced by others’. It is constantly being written and re-written. There’s dialogue and banter that shifts and shapes the ever-forming narrative. Sometimes it’s full of compliment and other times just contradiction. Usually both.
Faith and feminism are having that dialogue – and sometimes that argument – in my head and heart. I can’t get them to shut up. They are perfectly content to keep talking and, in the process, convincing me that there might just be more story yet to tell; one that allows these seemingly odd bedfellows to be wed (with all the relational complexity therein…though not as complex or odd as me married to the pastor. Another story for another time).
This is a new story. Not yet completely formed within the texts of my own life, but definitely being crafted – themes developing, plot thickening, dialogue chattering away. No hard lines. Lots of blurred categories. Significant intrigue. It is a story that needs to be told and allowed to reside in an in-between space. Hmmm. Maybe it’s a story of cleavage.
Cleavage in which a feminist’s experiences of harm by structures and/or individuals of institutionalized faith could be healed.
Cleavage in which a woman’s faith could actually be strengthened and enhanced through the tenets of feminism.
Cleavage in which women (and men) could rest, reason, and wonder about the mutuality, compliment, and sustenance found in these seemingly polarizing perspectives.
Story #3: Faith and Feminism combined.
This is the story I’m currently telling, writing, living. Big time cleavage. Bold. Low-cut. Sassy. Generous. Potent. Powerful. Passionate. Life-giving to those who have lived exclusively with only one text or the other. Telling the truth, all the time, no matter what. Definitely not the faith of my mother’s (or father’s…to make a bad allusion to an old hymn). A hybrid feminism that invites much.
It’s also dangerous and provocative – this talking back to years of history and interpretation, talking back to my own heritage, my own upbringing, my own story. But I’m good with that.
This new story has a voice of its own. It calls to me – enticing, seducing, inviting. And as such, it requires increasingly more faith: a belief in something I can’t yet see, a trust in something not yet known. Full circle.
Faith informed and shaped by feminism. Feminism informed and shaped by faith. The space in which I live, think, wonder, rage, and hope. The space in which story, yes, even sacred text, continues to be written and told. A story, yes, a cleavage that’s seductive enough to be pursued and ample enough to be shared. I’m totally there. (Maybe I could find someone to design and sell the T-shirt.)
We women can move culture forward and create a future beyond patriarchy…This would be a new expression of the feminine, and given how essential it is for transforming our world, such an endeavor is nothing less than sacred. (Elizabeth Debold, The Divine Feminine Unveiled)
________________________
Ronna Detrick is a writer, feminist, scholar, mama, friend, renegade, and conversation-sparker (and sustainer). She wrestles faith and feminism. She leaps tall buildings in a single bound. She does it with grace. You can find her at Renegade Conversations.
This is a list of people I don’t mean to criticize but might, accidentally, because
- they are the establishment, or
- I think they are wonderful on both cellular and cosmic levels but even wonderful people make mistakes and I’m so anguished about it that I HAVE to say something, or
- I really, really like them but sometimes they piss me off but even when they piss me off, I like it (and them), or
- they criticize the establishment or conventional, repressive ideas but not always to my satisfaction, or
- they are the establishment and as such are often conflated with or espouse certain unquestioned conventions and really the idea is my target, or
- they are the establishment, or
- in fact I will never, ever criticise them because I love them unreservedly, or,
- if I criticize them, please know that I love them, violently, unconditionally, right through the criticism. (For example: my kids. Oprah. Jay-z. You get the picture.)
*note: some people on this list fall into more than one of these categories. The people who do ARE SO AWESOME.
- My mother (also, please note that if I criticize my mother, I criticize myself and all women. Mother-bashing is misogyny in action. Even/except if she really deserves it.)
- Malcolm Gladwell (this will NEVER happen)
- Tyler Perry (this already happened and it caused me many nights of lost sleep. I am also bemoaning our engagement party which will now never happen. Malcolm, it is all on you, now.)
- Penelope Trunk
- Barack Obama (blasphemy!)
- Michelle Obama (heresy!)
- Oprah (if I EVER criticize Oprah, please know that I am on some kind of hallucinogen and/or my blog has been hacked by terrorists. Or she consulted Suzanne Somers on medication.)
(WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH ME? DID I JUST CRITICIZE OPRAH?????)
(OMG I THINK MY BLOG JUST GOT HACKED BY TERRORISTS WHO DON’T FERVENTLY LOVE OPRAH. THEY’RE EXTRA SCARY. I’M FIGHTING THEM OFF, RIGHT NOW, VIGOROUSLY, WITH A THIGH MASTER.)
We now return to our regularly scheduled “Accidental and Passionately Loved Targets of Hedged Criticism” list.
- Jesus* (while I’m heresying…)
- Mohammed* (more blaspheming…)
- The numbered list function in Wordpress. WTF, WordPress? I love you so much, and you casually, remorselessly, viciously betray me.
- Christopher Hitchens. He’s possibly a jerk, but wow, can he write. He made an observation that is so lemon-suckingly fantastic that even though he thinks women are evolutionarily incapable of humour, I bend my knee and give him props. (I am a bad humourless but forgiving feminist.) Here it is: “The four most overrated things in life are champagne, lobster, anal sex and picnics.”
- John Cusack
- Kate Harding
- Beyonce
- Jay-Z
- Any future Beyonce/Jay-Z offspring. Can you imagine????
- Child #1
- Child #2
- Imaginary child #3
*I don’t have any problems with prophets. I think we need more prophets, but maybe less sheep.
tyler perry.
love his backstory: broke, homeless, an escapee from horrific childhood abuse, he chose to write. He wrote. He wrote eleven plays and toured them around the country. He found an audience, and a passionate audience, and he leveraged the loyalty of that audience to get a movie deal. His first movie, Diary of a Mad Black Woman, cost $5.5 million dollars to make and grossed $50.6 million in box office receipts. Since that movie, Tyler Perry made eight more (Madea’s Family Reunion, Daddy’s Little Girls, Why Did I Get Married?, Meet the Browns, The Family that Preys, Madea Goes to Jail, and I Can Do Bad All By Myself) and grossed nearly $400 million dollars.
LOVE that.
love that he started in the the-ah-tah darling. How arty. You know I love The Artists.
love that he built an audience and leveraged their passion for his work into movie-making for the masses. I see analogies there. Ahem. Writing. Social media. Platforms. Influence. Audience. Passion. That’s all I’m a-saying.
love his fucking fearlessness. Tyler Perry recently wrote a wrenching email to his fans:
I’m tired of holding this in. I don’t know what to do with it anymore, so, I’ve decided to give some of it away…
Memories at 40: Not long ago, I was asked to speak at an engagement. I walked in and I was told that they had assigned a person to take care of me while I was there. She walked up to me, all of 5’2″ of her, and asked if I needed anything. I looked at her and started to sweat. It took me back thirty-something years to her apartment. I couldn’t have been more than 10 years old when I went over to play with her son and Matchbox cars.
She opened the door in skimpy lingerie. There was a man sitting on the couch, smoking. She told me that her son was in the bedroom. I was there playing with him about 20 minutes when I heard the man arguing with her. He said he was leaving and slammed the door. She came into the bedroom and told me that I had to go home. She told her son to take a bath and she locked him in the bathroom. I was at the front door trying to get out, when she came in and laid on the sofa and asked me if I wanted the key. I told her I had to go home as it was getting dark. She put the key inside of herself and told me to come get it, pulling me on top of her.
Memories at 40: “What the f*#K are you reading books for?! That’s bull*#*T!”
“You F*#*ing jackass! You got book sense but you ain’t got no mothaf*#*en common sense! You ain’t sh*t and ain’t never gonna be sh*t!” I heard this every day of my childhood. As my father would beat and belittle me, he played all kinds of mind games with me. He knew I loved cookies as a kid, most kids do. So he would buy them and put them on top of the fridge and when I would eat them he would beat me mercilessly.
My mother was out one night, as she loved to play bingo, and my father came home…mad at the world. He was drunk, as he was most of the time. He got the vacuum cleaner extension cord and trapped me in a room and beat me until the skin was coming off my back. To this day, I don’t know what would make a person do something like that to a child. But thank God that in my mind, I left. I didn’t feel it anymore, just like in PRECIOUS. How this girl would leave in her mind. I learned to use my gift, as it was my imagination that let me escape. After he was done with his rant he passed out. Since my aunt lived two doors down, I ran to her. She saw me and was horrified. She loaded her 357 and went to kill him. Holding a gun to his head, her husband came and stopped her.
Memories at 40: I got a call not long ago from a friend. He told me that a man that I knew from church when I was a kid had died and he didn’t have any insurance. His family was trying to reach out to me to see if I would pay for his funeral. I quickly said no, but I wish I would have said yes.
There is something so powerful to me in burying the man that molested me.
I wish I would have dug the grave myself.
Memories at 40: I was about 8 or 9 years old. I had a crush on a little girl across the street. She would come over to my house and we’d play. She was about 12 or 13. One day she stopped coming and when I asked her why, she told me that my father was touching her. I didn’t believe her, so I talked her into staying one night. We were both asleep — she was in one bed and I was in another. I opened my eyes to see my father trying to touch her and her pushing him away. I moved in my bed trying to make him think I was waking up. He looked over at me and left out of the room. Not long after that, he beat me mercilessly for something again. Another mind game set up, so I told my mother what he had done. The blood drained from her face. We left that day. We were at my Aunt’s house and he came there about 1am. Not long after that we were back at home. Nothing would compare to the random, drunken, violent beatings I would receive from then until I was 19.
Memories at 40: We would spend the summers in the country, with my father’s adoptive mother. As a kid I was always sick. I had asthma and he hated it. He hated that I wasn’t strong and viral like him. He hated that I couldn’t be in the sawdust, pollen and the raw lumber like him. He hated that I liked to read and write and draw. He hated that me and my middle sister were darker-skinned than him. He didn’t think he could make a dark baby. He just hated everything about me I guess. Anyway, I had to go to the doctor every Tuesday to get shots to control my allergies. When his mother found out she said, “Ain’t nothing wrong with that damn boy…he just got germs on him. Stop wasting all that money.” When my mother left to visit some friends I heard what sounded like water running in a tub but it was sporadic. She came and got me out of the living room leaving my Matchbox cars on the floor. She said she was going to kill these germs on me once and for all. She gave me a bath in ammonia.
Grateful at 40: I was asked recently how I made it through all of this, (half has not even been told) and my answer to that is…I know for a fact that there is a GOD. When my father would say or do those things to me, I would hear this voice inside of me say, “That’s not true” or, “Don’t believe that” or, “You’re going to make it through this”. I didn’t know at the time what “it” was, but today I surely have no doubt that “it” was GOD. That voice always gave me comfort. It allowed me to hold on. It kept me from being strung out on drugs, from dying when I wanted to commit suicide. It kept me from being a gang banger or drug dealer. Worse than all of those things put together, it kept me from being him. It brought angels to comfort me after every foul, harsh word or every welt on my legs or back. GOD, only GOD.
so. Tyler Perry. He’s brave. He’s real. He tells it. He wrote his way out of poverty and pain. What’s not to love?
errr…the movies? I’ve only seen two. I laughed awkwardly and I wished that I didn’t and wished for more of a, well, craft and so no, I don’t love them. They kinda make me wonder when Martin Lawrence is gonna show up.
they make me itchy. they make me wonder why big ostensibly ‘black’ films often feature black men in dresses. Dave Chapelle – and by no means am I suggesting that he’s a thought leader – wonders about this too. He thinks it is a conspiracy by the white Hollywood establishment to publicly disempower and humiliate successful black actors. Or at least I think that’s what he thinks. He was a bit incoherent and twitchy when I saw this on Oprah so I may be filling in the blanks.
I don’t have a problem with incoherent and twitchy. I actually appreciate it. It leaves lots of space for interpretation.
I don’t have a problem with drag, either. But it does make me wonder why we apparently need to see rich, powerful black men in dresses.
this in turn makes me pause to note that if putting a man in a dress is a way to humiliate him, then my god it must be humiliating to be an actual woman. [Note: I am a woman.]
so then I worry that – despite the fact that Tyler Perry identifies with strong black women – maybe his films mock women. Then I wonder what are his movies really saying about women. or gender. or sexual orientation. or or or.
and I wonder ’bout all the bitch-slapping of Tyler Perry. I worry about my casual use of the term bitch-slapping because it is painfully accurate here which makes it all the more violent and disconcerting. I mean, think about what ‘bitch-slapping’ means and the context from whence it springs. Pimps controlling ‘their’ bitches. The ubiquitious naming – by everyone, it seems – of black women as bitches. Again, the allusion to feminization and feminized abuse makes it all the more humiliating to inflict on a man. I just did it now.
I worry when people start tearing down a rich, famous powerful black man. I wonder what that’s all about. (Actually, I don’t wonder what that’s all about.) I’m not even cool with dissing Kanye for being a jackass unless you’re Obama because otherwise it degenerates into the N word PDQ. I even worry about Michael Vick. Lots of times people are just waiting for a reason to bitch out a successful black man. And there’s the word bitch again.
I worry that to diminish a black man we put him in a dress.
I worry that to be made or compared to a woman is to be diminished.
I worry that this kind of man/woman discussion reinforces notions of gender and sexuality that are problematic and constraining and oppressive and the mofo problem in the first place.
I worry that I’m only worrying about gender ‘cuz I’m a white woman and that’s my thing. We’re hundreds of words into this essay and I haven’t even mentioned the fact that Spike Lee draws a direct line from minstrel shows to Tyler Perry’s movies that engage in and perpetuate stereotypes of “coonery and buffoonery“.
then I worry that I’m not dealing with the black thing because the only form of oppression I understand is gender and then I wonder, how the fuck am I going to champion my black, biracial babies if I don’t make sense of black means and what black is constructed to mean and the histories of the images I consume?
so a twitter debate that morphed into a most excellent rant by Damian J. Denson (@HypnotiqOne) rocked my world. It is not the only answer, but it is good.
Gotta luv|Hate w Perry but this T[hanks]giving his work will undoubtedly B screened by my fam. They will laugh & cry. I cant complain.
In defense of Tyler Perry (Yes, in defense): When I go home for T-giving, I will undoubtedly be a part of screenings of your recent work. In spite of the Black elite proposing I practically pause each and every DVD and proselytize about abhorrent imagery and coonery, I won’t.
Critiques of Perry & his work happen abt twice a month these days n my feed. These new Blacks have really “gotten over.” And they bother me. Perry & I have a certain Love|Hate, but I’ve never seen my mother, grandmother, & aunts laugh so hard by a bootleg recording of a stageplay. Tears. Choking. Laughing. Screaming. Giggles. Tears. Smiles. All from what “they” now say we should be ashamed by. I’m not. I won’t be.
Madea could have been based on many an Aunt (or Uncle for that matter). And I won’t disown the family that I see reflected in Perry’s work.
Should more multifaceted stories be told? For sure (Perry even agrees, ie. Precious). So to that I say, make them.
But I find it very offensive (and elitist) to tell other Black people where to find humor or good storytelling of THEIR liking. So keep making your movies, Mr. Perry.
hmmm mmm. Assent. Ascent. Yes. Thank goodness.
and thank goodness for everyone stepping up to start and have this conversation. Thanks to Tyler Perry. To his audience. To Spike Lee, the intellectuals and elitists and their critics, too. To Damian J. Denson. Well said.
and Precious. Can’t wait to see it. So glad Tyler Perry is famous and makes wacks of cash and can throw it behind a movie like this.
love that he did.
______________________________________________________________
you can find Damian J. Denson on twitter as @HypnotiqOne. I wish I wrote his bio:
Damian J. Denson. Professional Proselytizer. Freelance Writer. Cultural Critic. Doctoral Candidate. Mama’s Boy. Scene Stealer. Your Lucky Charm.
To celebrate Barack Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize, announced this morning, I’m reposting one of my earliest blog pieces, originally written to mark 100 days in office. It is a call to arms, Mr. Obama.
When I look at Barack Obama, I see my children.
Like him, they’re biracial and have a black, African father and a white, North American mother. But more than that, in Barack Obama, I see excellence, achievement, perseverance and a world of possibilities for my girls. I see a “My child goes to Harvard” bumper sticker on the shopping cart that will be both my vehicle and home once I start paying for Harvard.
I also read too many self-help books and articles. It is a problem for which I blame my imaginary BFF, Oprah. So far, despite my best efforts, I have not been able to locate a twelve-step program for people who relentlessly research the ‘best practices’ for every mundane fact of life. There is no Researchers Anonymous. Trust me. I’ve researched it.
A child-rearing best practice (or so I’ve read – as evidenced by my ill-behaved children, I can claim no practical experience or expertise in this area) is to find learning moments in everyday life. When your child displays interest in something, jump on that interest, wrestle it to the ground and strangle it into a life lesson.
One day not too long ago, I was having a moment with my new BFF, Barack Obama (Oprah endorsed the relationship and is completely okay with sharing my affections. We’re all cool like that). I was watching the musical paean to him by Will.I.Am and a host of other trendy folk and getting all pumped up on “Yes We Can!”.
Attracted by the music, rather than the message (oh, Will.I.Am, you are crafty!) Miss Sophie came and sat in my lap and we you-tubed democratic p(r)opaganda together. In this moment, I heard the best practices, want-to-be-a-good-mommy voice in my head say “Yes You Can seize this learning moment! Yes You Can impart wisdom! Yes You Can inspire this child to aspire to Harvard!”
So I did. The life lesson was this: Sophie, you are just like Barack Obama. Like Barack Obama, no one can hold you back and you can be anyone or anything you want. You can be a mommy, a teacher, a doctor, a juggler, a firefighter…you just need to work hard and stay focused on your dreams. And go to Harvard.
Naturally, I couldn’t just leave it at that. I needed a little satisfaction, too, a pay-off for my good-mama efforts. I asked her: “Sophie, what do you think you might like to be when you grow up?” while visions of a masked, gowned surgical Sophie danced in my head.
My darling girl completely grasped the lesson: there are no limits to imagination. She replied, with great passion and enthusiasm:
“I want to be a mermaid with red hair and a green tail!”
My not-so-best practices, but silent, reaction was as follows:
- Yeah, should be a lot of openings in that.
- Effing Disney. Those simpering princesses are patriarchal wet dreams. Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Cinderella and Snow White are all motherless and/or mothered by an evil witch (as are my children). They flutter. They sing. They give up their voices to get their man (literally – that’s the plot of The Little Mermaid!). Little critters do their bidding, but not one of them aspire to do anything of substance beyond rodent-charming. Yet these befrocked and befluttered future fiancées capture the four year old imagination and trump visions of human excellence every time. President Obama, would you consider wearing a ruffled pink dress and sparkles in your hair? Pretty please?
- Sophie, darling, you can be any damn thing you’d like after you finish medical school.
But I have not given up. Thanks to the historic choice of millions of Americans one hundred days ago, my beloved Barack will be around to inspire life lessons and learning moments for at least another four years.
Let’s hope that during that time, President Barack Obama gives Princess Ariel a run for her money – or, even better, makes a movie with her. Now that he’s taken on the presidency, maybe he can take on Disney. Now THAT would change the world.
Update 1: now, when she grows up, the child wants to be Barack Obama’s wife. She and I are going to have a briefing on the tenets of feminism very soon.
Update 2: Disney has a new princess, Princess Tiana. She’s black and she has a mother! And that mother is Oprah Winfrey! I normally frown on the overuse of exclamation points but this occasion calls for it! Hallelujah.
If you’re looking for me today – and I hope you are, because you’re here, and yay! for that – I’m over at Raising My Boychick, writing about:
- wishing my kids were turtles;
- hair (AGAIN, because dammit, it is IMPORTANT and POLITICAL);
- implicitly, white privilege;
- and the healing, war-ing power of words. Yeah, baby.
So please go there now, and read it. Please. I’ll be your best friend forever.
And while you’re there, take a look at Arwyn’s razor-sharp, bleedingly joyous blog about her feminist thoughts on parenting a presumably straight white male. She’s smart and acutely insightful and so is her work. I have to google words when I read it and I’m not the only one. She very helpfully provides a glossary. Arwyn’s the bomb.
When I was twenty-one years old, I declined a monumental apology.
If everyday apologies – oops sorry, I bumped you with the cart, oops sorry I cut you off at the intersection, oops sorry I accidentally had sex with your room-mate – are pleasure crafts, this apology was a freighter. A tanker. A leaking oil tanker about to slick up some helpless sea-life and require flotillas of volunteers, enormous donations and teams of public relations professionals to clean up.
Not only did I refuse the apology, I declined to offer an audience to even hear the apology.
Yet in that decision there was no malice. There was no vengeance. There was nothing. I had been wronged as a child – sadly, habitually, sexually wronged – and now an apology was being offered to my adult self. And I didn’t need it. It was over. As a six year old, as an eight year old, as a ten year old, the only thing I needed from anyone was for someone to make it stop. But as an adult, I had made amends for myself, to myself, and I was fine. I was neutral. I needed nothing from my abuser: no apologies, no explanations, no reparations, no reconciliation. Nothing.
I didn’t need the apology, I didn’t need vengeance, or justice, and I didn’t need to offer forgiveness. Not even for myself.
Forgiveness is a slippery fish. There exists the idea that forgiveness can be offered, like a plate of cookies, or maybe a shot of penicillin, or a priestly palm to the forehead, to cure what ails you. There exists the idea that granting someone forgiveness can help you to release your pain and cure yourself: that forgiveness is, possibly, a selfish act of self-care.
I’ve wondered about that, this week. I thought about apologies that I’ve received and grudgingly accepted, which is not acceptance at all, and apologies I’ve greeted with a tongue-lashing. I wondered about the right way to apologize, to hear an apology, to receive an apology, to accept an apology. I wanted a formula for achieving authentic graciousness, accountability and magnanimity.
I have been struggling to remember a formula I forgot that I knew by heart when I was twenty-one.
Maybe there is grace in refusing to engage in an awkward social show that, deep-down, you don’t require. Maybe it is generous to return the gift to the giver and say:
here.
here is the harm you granted me.
it is for you to intimate and decipher.
the only relationship to be decoded and repaired is yours with your actions.
the pain has passed.
it is nothing to me.
Maybe forgiveness is not mine to give. Maybe asking it of me, at all, is asking me to right your wrongs. Maybe forgiveness is a journey you take, yourself, with yourself. Maybe that is the only path that leads to peace. Maybe what I offer – the nothingness, the absence of any need to inquire, to understand, or to accept – is the meaning of magnanimous, itself.
______________
one of apologies I was waiting for should have been from the Very Bad Lying Man, but this essay is part of The Sorry Series – How To Apologize, How NOT to Apologize, and the Power of Forgiveness:
On Harm, Healing, Ceilings and How Absent Apologies are the Pits – The Sorry Series, #1
A Child’s How-To Guide for Heart-felt Apologies and Chris Brown’s Example of How-Not-To-Apologize. OOPS. – The Sorry Series, #2
Guest Post by Josh Hanagarne: Three Lame Types Of Apologies – The Sorry Series, #3
How To Receive an Apology. How To Accept an Apology. How To Forgive. Or Maybe Not. – The Sorry Series, #4
The Forgiven, The Sorry Series #5
It is okay NOT to teach people how to treat you. Unless they were raised by wolves. Then Cold Play or a quick exit is in order. Your call. *
*not really part of the series but I do make a wildly necessary apology in it