ouirdeaux
Caring, Understanding, Non-judgemental Type
Is this really trending now? I can't say I keep up with the latest fashions in anything.With porn the current feedback loop is all the pseudo-incest shit.
Is this really trending now? I can't say I keep up with the latest fashions in anything.With porn the current feedback loop is all the pseudo-incest shit.
Is this really trending now? I can't say I keep up with the latest fashions in anything.
It might be easier to bring pressure to bear on the hardcore stuff if there's a kinder alternative. If it were possible to put some pressure/incentive onto the primary sources to be more...discriminating in what they publish, for example. I realise that this is all hopelessly idealistic nonsense, but...I think a decent amount of amateur porn pretty much fits that description existentialist
But realistically it’s never going to replace the hard-core stuff.
It's happening to me right fucking now but, because it's sanctioned by the state it's not classed as DV and no fucker really cares. My abusers aren't just male, they're female too. I have been in TWO violent relationships, now I can't escape. There's ZERO regard for me as a person, ZERO regard for my human rights. I've been where I am now since 28/11/2023. I'm regularly physically assaulted. I'm denied proper nutrition. I'm not allowed anyone to come to the flat. Everything I do is monitored (I've enabled a VPN so that's one less thing they can control),I know it happens, but I struggle to get my head around it, and just don't get how anyone can treat someone else like that, it makes my blood boil.
And if we're talking violence, we need to recognise that emotional violence is a pernicious and ongoing part of the problem. I know you know this.Don’t get me wrong, there is an important conversation to be had about porn. But prioritising it during a discussion about violence against women is itself an example of the fetishisation of the woman-commodity and how that fetishisation gets normalised in common-sense discourse. It makes the violence into something that otherwise “well-adjusted” men fall into because their valuation of the woman-commodity has become corrupted. Far better to go back to what SpookyFrank was saying about how it is violence that subjectifies violence. Violence is inherent to the social, communal and family systems people are living in, not a downstream effect of third-party activity.
What I refer to when I am addressing students as the "You'll be sorry when I'm gone" suicidal motivation. Although I think, like most other motivations to suicide, it's not usually cognitively thought through, more of an urge.Back to suicide as an act of ( emotional )Violence - my friend, who is in hiding with her 2 young children, just got a knock on the door from the police. Her violent ex found dead this morning - at "their special place"
Don’t get me wrong, there is an important conversation to be had about porn. But prioritising it during a discussion about violence against women is itself an example of the fetishisation of the woman-commodity and how that fetishisation gets normalised in common-sense discourse. It makes the violence into something that otherwise “well-adjusted” men fall into because their valuation of the woman-commodity has become corrupted. Far better to go back to what SpookyFrank was saying about how it is violence that subjectifies violence. Violence is inherent to the social, communal and family systems people are living in, not a downstream effect of third-party activity.
Let's just say...it's possible. But it needs a willingness to change, and that is going to be the bigger challenge - getting men to more from a simplistic outlook that generally works to their advantage, to a more nuanced one that requires discarding of all kinds of assumptions, and much more difficult choices from day to day, isn't going to be something everyone will do willingly.I suppose this kind of threat points to the paucity of emotional literacy some men have: they're feeling desperate but don't know how to own it, process it, handle it.
So they turn it into a weapon of attack.
And then it (theoretically) becomes the woman's responsibility.
Again.
All of it: his feelings, her part in the dynamic, his burden, the threatened outcome.
When/how do men do the work of rebuilding autonomy and power in their emotional lives?
I think one of the many problems arises from the fact that agency arises from first owning your own part in the bad things that have happened in your life. Not as a blame thing, not as an individualistic thing, not to deny the systemic ways that circumstances arose, but only because not recognising your own role in the emergence of the context that hurts you means that you are nothing but a passive victim of circumstances. So you only get agency by accepting that you did things wrong. And that’s exactly what men get socialised to avoid doing all their lives. It’s a real bugger, that..When/how do men do the work of rebuilding autonomy and power in their emotional lives?
I honestly think a lot of men don't even realise it until you point it out to them.
And say, “But I know women who also agree with me that women like this behaviour/langage/role”, like it’s just a big old game with two sides.I think that’s true.
And if it is pointed out to the them very often their first reflex is to deny, defend.
And if pointed out to them those men almost certainly won't get that why when they do this they're so often met with pleasantries -"But she smiled back!" - and that it's not necessarily because women generally enjoy having their space invaded yet again by strangers demanding their emotional labour, and that the cost of not smiling back or whatever is the risk of verbal abuse or worse.I was talking with a woman friend about all this last week. She told me that she’s noticing stuff that previously would have gone unnoticed.
For example, she was with a woman friend sat on a park bench having a conversation. They were repeatedly interrupted by men who stopped to chat with them. All polite and cheerful, nothing overtly predatory, except that she was aware in a new way that this was men inserting themselves, intruding, on their private conversation. No woman stopped to say “isn’t it lovely here, you’ve picked a nice spot, are you enjoying the weather…?”
Men seemed compelled to demonstrate their assumed right to own their space. Presumably, if challenged, not one of those men would agree that they were being patriarchal.