Rotten Little Girls

Tag: sexuality

Why I Became a Feminist, Pt. 5

by Guest Blogger

Why am I a feminist? It’s a question I’m asked constantly. I’m white, middle class, college educated and from one of the most liberal cities in the world. I was born late in the twentieth century, after the first wavers got the vote and the second wavers passed Roe and broke barriers in a plethora of fields. I am beginning my career in the twenty-first century. I am privileged enough to be able-bodied, fair skinned and American. So what could possibly bother me enough to join a radical movement of such pissed off women? What could I possibly be so upset about? What could I have experienced in my mere twenty-four years on this planet that can lead to such indignation?

The answer to this question is as complex as the reasons for joining the feminist movement are diverse. There is no denying that my place and time on this planet have afforded me more opportunity that the vast majority of people who ever walked the earth could imagine. And I am aware that there are millions of people out there who have so much more to be upset about than I do. But I do not see my feminism in comparison to them or in spite of them. My feminism is one part a spectrum that includes the experiences of women all over, no matter how different we may appear to be at first.

My grandmother was a housewife most of her life, but unlike the sanguine image neoconservatives like to paint, she lived in a constant state of heightened anxiety because her husband was a womanizing alcoholic with a bad temper. After years of physically abusing the entire family, he left, never to be seen again. My grandmother was left with the repercussions of multiple treatments of electric shock therapy that she underwent to handle the nervous breakdowns that were a result of the abuse. Social services took her youngest son away because they declared her unfit to raise a child given her psychiatric history and lack of a paying job (my aunt wound up adopting him back).

My mother came out of this situation deeply scarred but still strong and independent. She moved out to work full time, live on her own and attend college at night to pursue the accounting degree her father refused to pay for because she was female. She was harassed as one of the only women in her accounting classes by students and professors alike. But she went on. After marrying and having children, she was always the steady rock of the family. She was a strong role model for me because she was a reliable source of strength and love for the family.

But on the inside, she was often in turmoil. As a result of her childhood, she saw any admittance of vulnerability or hurt as a sign of weakness that could be exploited. She was so afraid of ending up helpless like her mother. Even though electric shock treatments have since gone out of vogue, she still has an understandable fear and resentment towards the psychiatric and psychological fields. To even admit needing help would be bad enough but it would be unfathomable to ever place herself in the dependent position that a patient is in with a doctor because she has witnessed closely how that can be abused. So, instead she suffers within.

At times, she self-medicates with alcohol and in her inebriated moments, she identifies with her abusive father because identifying with her mother would be too painful. But what is most remarkable about her situation is that it is not unique. Her fear of displaying fragility is in many ways emblematic of the inner struggle many second-wavers faced. So frightened to turn into their mothers, they often run to the next extreme and hurt themselves and loved ones in the process by identifying with the overly aggressive men our patriarchal society has created.

Beyond my family, my feminism has been strongly shaped by my tumultuous adolescence. I, like many of my generation, grew up walking the unsteady tightrope of cultural contradictions. The “be sexy but not sexual” mantra leaves little room for girls to develop healthy sexual identities and the best of us often become either Ophelia‘s, withdrawn from life and shadows of our younger, more dynamic selves, or starving perfect daughters, trying to do it all but never feeling truly successful.

I tried to safely discover my innocent budding sexuality in a culture that has so perverted sex that the only options are still defined by the same virgin/whore dichotomy of yore. I watched all my male friends make a weekly group sport of finding girls, getting them as intoxicated as possible and ‘running trains’ on them (taking turns having sex with them), while their “good” girlfriends waited at home for them to come back. I watched them congratulate each other on their sexual conquests and degrade any girl who had the misfortune of thinking one of them was kind of cute.

The girls were ostracized while the boys had their egos inflated. I saw the way it heightened their sense of “manhood”. And I noticed the homoeroticness that was always on display as they shared their sexuality primarily with each other, through females –while homophobia pervaded their words and actions. In the meantime, if I so much as made out with two different guys during the same week, I was scorned and scolded by all of them (“you used to be such a nice girl but you’re going down the toilet”) because apparently all my male friends had a right to tell me what to do and at times, even threatened (“I’ll break your arm if you ever date a black guy”) and nothing is worse than a young woman exploring her body because that’s what boys do, not good girls.

It was all normal and I did not have a feminist awareness of what was going on but I always felt that something was off. For a while, I always wondered why I spent so much time around my guy friends when it was apparent how toxic they were for me. But I realize now that it was largely because all my girl friends became all about their boyfriends (the ones they had or the ones they wanted). Many lost all of their own friends (and lives generally) because they became the shadow of the guys they dated. And when they weren’t with them, they just wanted to talk about them.

Others viewed getting married and having children before graduating high school great because that was they could feel good about themselves. I witnessed many enter severely abusive relationships and was in a couple of mildly abusive ones myself. But no one cared because the boys encouraged each other to keep the girls in place. I was told I should spend my time doing my hair and cleaning up after the guys when I preferred reading and–shocker–NOT being their personal maid.

Fortunately, I moved on to college and made more enlightened friends to spend time with. I also had my consciousness raised in various ways. And the more I learned about the world, the more I realized how poorly it has treated women. Fortunately, I also met a plethora of feminists who gave me hope that we can make real change if we work together at dismantling the patriarchy. There’s a lot to be pissed off about, but there’s a lot to hope for also.

And that is why I became a feminist.

-Francesca of Dancing Backwards

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The “Why I Became a Feminist” series is open to anyone who identifies as feminist and wants to share their story. Please email me at rottenlittlegirls @ gmail.com and I will consider publishing your piece in this series. I’d love to have a broad range of voices and experiences.

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4 of the series.

Do As You’re Told — Or Not

by Guest Blogger

I read many blogs, some of which are written by mothers who talk about their parenting methods. So naturally I reflect on how my parents raised me, and how I feel about the role of a parent when I read such entries. In retrospect, I’m more or less satisfied with how my parents did because I think I came out “all right” despite some shortcomings on their part. That doesn’t mean I can’t be critical because there are glaring mistakes and/or omissions in what they taught me, consciously and subconsciously.

motherstalkes_228x259In fact, they seemingly “forgot” to inform me about sexuality or sex in general. Ahem. My friends, this is big. Sexuality is an essential part of us, and it’s so important that we know about it, lest we become perverted pedophilic demons (Extreme? Maybe). But really, as an adult now, I’m looking at the way my parents treated the topic with increasing suspicions. I’m pointing to specific instances with dismay, “Dad, now…now it probably wasn’t the best way to approach the topic of sex when you randomly blurted out ‘No pre-marital sex!’ at the dinner table.” You know?

It’s when I look back at those AOL instant message conversations that started out innocently enough that went awry when nasty men asked me, age 11 at the time, if I “spit or swallowed,” darling. Now you might say that I should have known better than to join chat rooms at such a young age, better yet, that I should have known better than to keep going to those chat rooms. But what’s a curious kid to do in that situation? I personally didn’t have any clue what I was getting myself into, especially since my parents weren’t at all aware of how those perverts could possibly communicate with their innocent little daughter. Nor could they even say the word ‘sex’ without blushing. Seriously, we lived like the Victorians. Hello sexual suppression?!

Of course parents are, whether we like it or not, humans who make many mistakes—our own always seem to have made the most. But can that be an excuse? Should we just shrug our shoulders at the countless kids who are being jaded by the minute, or are completely shell-shocked when they get to college and say, ‘Sorry kid, deal’? Pretty depressing wouldn’t you say? But what do we do? Have family sex-ed classes? I’d feel kind of, no, really fucking uncomfortable in that situation. But I’ve had friends who talk with their parents about their sex lives—no problem.

mother-daughter-1For instance, the girl I went on a date with last night told me how her hippie dad gave her a “sex positions encyclopedia for lesbians” last Christmas and said “Have fun!” Now that’s awesome. So that got me thinking about how I’m going to deal with this whole sex thing when I have my own kids. I mean kids are sexual beings and I know I don’t want to suppress any natural actions they take, but almost everyone in the world has a different standard for what’s healthy sexual behavior, mental or physical. While my mom probably views sex as ‘pleasurable with your fiancé until you have sex to have a baby, at which point you stop having sex, period’ and my dad, ‘No pre-marital sex!’, according to friends, many parents engage in fetish-inspired sexual acts. So then how can a parent help their child find their own sexuality by guiding them through the hoops of fire so that the child will come out of adolescence thinking, “Hey, I came out all right”?

Well, clearly I’m no expert in this and you probably sensed that a long time ago. So I’ll turn the tables on you—what do you think your parents did right in terms of sex-ed? What did they do wrong? And while you’re pondering, read this funny (and frustrating) story about my mom.

I was 17 at the time and had been dating a boy I lusted for about a couple of weeks or so. Due to said lust, we were at third base by then (eating each other out, blah blah blah) and so my mom’s question “So, have you two kissed yet?” was both cute and embarrassing. Thinking naively that she wanted our relationship to evolve into the hip and progressive, “mother and daughter—best friends for life, we share everything we each other,” I said, “Yes!” with a few giggles. Boy was I surprised when her eyes slanted upward, and she spit out fire as she admonished me that “Hina, you’re still too young!”

She tricked me! She SO tricked me! Well, I simply cannot believe her recent complaints, “Hina, you haven’t told me about your love life in a while,” after such a trick. Imagine how she would react if I told her that I’m seeing a girl right now? Oh baby. That’s a fun one to think about.

So tell me about your parents. Are they flawless? Did they scold you in front of you and your naked partner? Do they have raunchy sex that you can hear through the walls? If you were to have kids/if you have kids/when you have kids, how would you deal with sex-ed?

- Hina

Why I Became a Feminist, Pt. 4

by Guest Blogger

In class last week, my professor asked us to break into small groups and come up with a definition of feminism. My group and I decided that feminism is a movement to end sexism and all other forms of oppression, discrimination, and violence (such as those based on race, gender identity, sexuality, class, faith, age, ability, etc). More positively, we might have said feminism is a movement for the acknowledgment of all people as free and equal. Judith Butler would add that in this definition, ‘free’ and ‘equal’ are contested zones, each with a constantly shifting meaning that enables feminism to remain alive and relevant. Because of the massive scope of the movement, its perpetually changing goals, and the diversity of its constituents, I believe individually tailoring your own feminism is the best way to get involved in today’s feminist movement. While bell hooks feared this would lead to compromises on important issues and argued against “lifestyle feminism,” wherein everybody is able to decide for themselves what feminism means, I believe this type of understanding is necessary in order to ensure feminism’s inclusiveness of all oppressed peoples (in our world, everyone). In my opinion, anyone who is willing to self-identify as a feminist and believe in at least one feminist cause should be encouraged. Only a welcoming and mutually respectful feminist community will be able to build the bridges necessary to unite people of varying degrees and forms of feminism in the effort to improve our world.

So, that said, why and how am I a feminist? What is the connection between feminism and my lifestyle?

The light-hearted answer that I give is that it’s impossible to like sex as much as I do, be a girl, and not be a feminist. As a female who likes to have lots of fun, frequently, with a variety of partners (safely!), I need to be outspoken and confident about the fact that I am doing exactly what I want. If I do not make it overwhelmingly clear that I am happy with my choices, the assumption is that I should be ashamed of them. I am a feminist because the world expects me to be a virgin, or at least monogamous, and I cannot tolerate either of those options.

I think one of the main reasons people are so dismayed by my sex life is that Americans seldom engage with female sexual pleasure. In high school sex ed we learn all about scary sex. We’re told abstinence is safe, sex can lead to STDs, condoms are not always safe, sex can lead to pregnancy, and birth control is not always safe. We learn about not having heteronormative sex because male orgasms make kids. Since female orgasms are not necessary for procreation, and sex ed is about preventative rather than pleasurable sexuality, female sexuality is erased. I believe the acknowledgment of male pleasure is closely tied to the fact that all of my male friends have had orgasms, and the erasure of female pleasure contributes to many of my female friends’ complete lack of awareness of their sexuality. I will continue to be a feminist at least until all my friends start climaxing.

Another major obstruction to healthy sexuality is associating someone’s self-worth with the number of sexual partners they have had. For men, worth is generally viewed as increasing with every additional partner, and for females the opposite is true. This is especially clear in our societies treatment of virginity, something for which men are ridiculed and females are rewarded (up to $3.8 million apparently). I remember that right after I started having sex, I told my mom that I was thinking about having sex in order to gauge what her reaction would be. She urged me to wait longer, saying “if you start having sex now, you’ll probably sleep with other people before you get married, and when you finally do find the right person you’ll feel bad about that and wish you hadn’t done it.” This year I emailed my mom and suggested a “performative model” for understanding sex. In this model, I explained, virgins would be analogous to amateur musicians with lofty dreams but little skill, practice would make perfect, and new partners would be seen as an exciting avenue for growth. I am a feminist because I have claimed my number, rather than let it own me.

These are some of the things I mention when I talk to people about feminism. Lots of people, male and female, have never questioned their understanding of gender and sexuality before and they find it really interesting. Many will even add additional reasons to the why I’m a feminist list, whether or not they have had experience with feminism before our conversation. bell hooks was very right when she suggested that most people do not identify as feminists simply because they are unaware of what it means.

Despite these positive responses, I only rarely tell people the serious reason I’m a feminist. For a long time I never talked about being date raped because, like many girls, I didn’t realize what happened to me was rape. There were no strangers, no weapons, and no date rape drugs. There was only a very long argument, which began when I said that I wasn’t in the mood for sex. My boyfriend yelled at me until I started to wonder if I was being as mean as he said I was for refusing to do “just one little thing for him”. I wasn’t sure what I had done wrong, but I knew it had to be really bad since he was so angry. Eventually I stopped saying no because that seemed to be what he wanted. Over a year later I read an article about acquaintance rape and finally realized I had been justified after all in not wanting to have sex. Today, I am a feminist because I think that if I had been then I might have been more aware of my rights and because I think if he had been then he might have respected my choice more.

Feminism remains essential in today’s world, because women and others continue to be oppressed by the structure and assumptions of our society. It is my hope that by encouraging everyone to work towards a feminist cause that they feel passionate about we will be able to create a movement strong enough to make a dramatic positive impact. If everyone were to become a little bit of a feminist, I think it would start to dismantle the constructions of aggressive males and acquiescing females, making our world a safer and more egalitarian place.

I personally want to help enable women to say both yes and no to sex, because I think consent is an essential component of achieving control over our bodies, which in turn is necessary to becoming both free and equal. My style of feminism has only barely started to engage with issues of race and class, because as a privileged white middle class woman I only recently became aware these issues really existed. Similarly, my knowledge about and contributions to the feminist movement have been very blog-centric, because this is an easy avenue to me. My efforts to expand beyond the internet have led to discussions with my friends, family, and coworkers but still not very far into other communities. That’s why I need you to become and remain a feminist. Please, address my flaws. Talk about the things I don’t realize matter and talk to the people I haven’t met.

Tell them why and how you are a feminist.

- Jessica Annabelle

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The “Why I Became a Feminist” series is open to anyone who identifies as feminist and wants to share their story. Please email me at rottenlittlegirls @ gmail.com and I will consider publishing your piece in this series. I’d love to have a broad range of voices and experiences.

Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 of the series.

8 Reasons Sex and the City is not a Good Role Model

by Kelly

sexandthecityentertainment2I love the show Sex and the City & I’m aware it is good, fun entertainment. While many women look to Carrie Bradshaw and her friends as fashion icons, the show itself isn’t a beacon of progressive values & feminist ideals. Sure, the women are independent and open about their sexuality, but upon closer inspection these women are not examples of strong female characters.

For example,

1) Not all men are crazy! The main cast members of Sex and the City (SATC) are constantly dating the most dysfunctional and insane men. Remember shoe fetish guy? The guy who took a shower after sex because of Catholic guilt? The list of crazies that the women run into is pretty extensive and the depiction of men is not very realistic.

2) Why do these women choose $400 shoes over paying the rent? Viewers are constantly hit over the head with blatant consumerism. Demand for Manolo Blahniks increased after the show was released merely because they were Carrie’s shoe of choice. You know, because accumulating more crap is good for the economy and all.

3) Maybe I’m the only one who finds this odd, but how do these women have NO friends or lovers of color? I know it’s the Upper East Side, but come on! Okay, so there are a couple of episodes where one of the women dates a black man but these relationships are weighed down by Hollywood’s favorite interracial couple stereotypes (for example: the white woman might be with the black man because he has a big penis; the black man’s sister is upset that he’s dating a white woman so she gets between their relationship).

4) Every SATC episode sends conflicting messages to women: “Be strong! Be independent! You are incomplete without men!” The message of women’s sexual liberation & independence is pretty heavy-handed throughout the entire show. Yet, the show is focused on the women’s relationships with men. Pick a side, HBO, and stick to it.

5) Considering the show is often centered around women eating together in a café, you’d think there’d be a broader range of body shapes instead of skinny, skinnier, and then Miranda…the “fat” one. Right. I know it’s Hollywood, but stop shoving this tripe down our throats!

6) Where are the lesbian woman? Gay men are a regular “accessory” on the show; the women bring them to parties or clubs when they don’t have a “normal” date. However, there are only a few episodes that feature gay women. During these episodes (surprise, surprise), these lesbian women are depicted as either incapable of being friends with straight women or they’re throwing plates in fits of jealous rage.

7) The women talk about men all day long. What about politics or some other interesting topic? I would find that to be compelling, but apparently it’s not marketable. Miranda’s character does complain about all the conversations centering around men but she’s basically as guilty of it as the rest of the women. The show never really deviates from their time-tested formula: four women discuss men and how stupid/amazing/good in bed they are.

8) The whole premise is just so darn unrealistic. Sex columnist in B-rate daily newspaper spends all her money on expensive shoes, restaurants, and Hamptons timeshares while being friends with other skinny, surprisingly wealthy white women – all the while encountering no people of color, no lesbian women or transgendered people. Yet these women manage to sleep with every mentally deranged man in New York City & the surrounding areas.

So, what are your thoughts? Do you have anything to add to this list? Are there any shows out there with more realistic depictions of people or would that be expecting the impossible from Hollywood?

Happy New Year,
Dollface

Photo Credits

Thoughts on the Splintered Feminist Movement

by Kelly

I’m pretty new to the feminist movement. While my political leanings have always been liberal and I most certainly have always agreed with the feminism, I wasn’t really very aware of the actual movement until recently. I discussed this in my post, “Why I Became a Feminist,” and to be sure I still have a lot to learn about feminism and what issues are most important to me.

That being said, it’s hard for me to understand the feminist movement because it’s so confusing. When I was in high school I thought it was simply: “Women are equal and shouldn’t be violated or injured by men.” While I still believe this to be a basic tenet of feminist thought, I have since taken several Women’s Studies courses, started a feminist blog that has forced me to actively think about women’s issues, and started to experience life as an independent young adult. All of these experiences have increased my awareness of the diversity of human life – and, inevitably, the diverse nature of feminists.

I understand the differences now between liberal feminists and radical feminists, postmodern and global. When I say I’m a radical feminist, it’s because I have always felt strongly about how women’s sexuality is constructed in society and in the course of my studies have realized that radical feminists and I seem to have a lot in common. However, I’m still a little hesitant to use a specific label. I’m not afraid of calling myself a feminist, but in the few months that I’ve been following feminist blogs, I’ve noticed a lot of infighting amongst “different” brands of feminism.

There are arguments between Marxist feminists and feminists who think MacKinnon is a snotty brat (I read her for a class and felt like she was putting my thoughts to paper, so I’m not sure how to feel when I hear this). There are arguments between white feminists and feminists of color (as far as I can tell, these are often cases of people needing to STFU & L & be respectful but failing to do so). I could go on, but what’s the point? If you read an extensive array of feminist blogs, you probably have a sense of what I’m talking about.

This makes me weary, and I’ve only been on the feminist blogger “scene” a couple of months. I’m wary of starting a flame war by posting my thoughts on sex work or some other hot topic. Apparently, the people I should be worried about getting upset are fellow feminists, not the general public, or men, or misogynists. It’s difficult for me to stomach feminists having huge public fights over which cause is more important or who is dead-wrong about their particular opinions. We’re all in the same movement, right?

I don’t have too many conclusions to draw yet because, as I said, I’m still learning. I hope with time the feminist movement becomes more coherent & cohesive. It seems to me, the more open-minded, respectful, and thoughtful we are with each other, the more we can begin to bridge the gaps between different feminist theories. If we are asking men and women living under patriarchy to question their privilege and their stereotypes, it is fair to ask that of ourselves. I think you’ll find that even though the feminist movement is splintered, we still have a common goal: helping women and dismantling their oppression. It’s something to keep in mind.

- Dollface

lorde
Photo Credits

All I Want For Christmas is a Salad, Hold the Dressing

by Kelly

Food and I have a love/hate relationship. It’s the standard story: Girl has chocolate addiction, eats tons of (insert sugar-laden food item here). Afterwards, she feels guilty/bloated/ (choose another adjective, as many as you’d like). You’d think this relationship with food would inspire me to a) stop eating chocolate b) exercise to “cancel out” the “negative effects” or c) just get over it. Alas, I do none of the above and the cycle continues.

gingerbread

Some say that appetite is linked to passion and sexuality. A strong hunger can indicate a voracious sex life or maybe even sexual frustration. There are foods linked to love and food designed to comfort. It’s undeniable, not only do humans eat to live, but they can live to eat. So when did an appetizing meal become a girl’s worst enemy?

Gluttony is one of the seven deadly sins…and to be sure, our fatphobic society is a testament to this. Many women (and some men) look towards stick-thin models who don’t touch sugar unless it’s in their exfoliation cream as their beauty ideal. Yet, interestingly enough, American meal portions are notoriously on the excessive side. Once you stop and think about it, even on a societal level we have food issues.

Our advertisements tell us to eat all we can, to go to unhealthy fast food restaurants (“It’s quicker, it’s cheaper!” they say) yet all of the actors and actresses in these commercials are what the infamous BMI would deem as “underweight”. Mixed messages, anyone?

This isn’t a new topic to any of you, you’ve probably heard about Courtney E. Martin’s Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters, you might read Shapely Prose and may even have a complicated relationship with food yourself. Harlequin has written about her former eating disorder and Dolly has written about fat acceptance blogging.

xmascookiesSo as we approach this festive holiday season, full of family reunions, gift giving, and a large helping of candy canes and holiday-themed sugar cookies, I’d like to share these wise words by several famous authors, comedians, and thinkers. But most of all, I’d like to quote my mother: “You only live once. Why deny yourself the small pleasures in life?”

“Nothing would be more tiresome than eating and drinking if God had not made them a pleasure as well as a necessity.” – Voltaire

“We think fast food is equivalent to pornography, nutritionally speaking.” – Steve Elbert

”No man in the world has more courage than the man who can stop after eating one peanut.” – Channing Pollock

”A bagel is a doughnut with the sin removed.” – George Rosenbaum

“Part of the secret of success in life is to eat what you like and let the food fight it out inside.” – Mark Twain

“There are people who strictly deprive themselves of each and every eatable, drinkable, and smokable which has in any way acquired a shady reputation. They pay this price for health. And health is all they get for it. How strange it is. It is like paying out your whole fortune for a cow that has gone dry.” – Mark Twain

What is your relationship to food? Share your stories, thoughts, or other awesome quotes about food! Happy holidays, everyone!

Cheers, Dollface

Photo Credits

Selling Motherhood

by Harlequin

I just had to comment on the latest Angelina Jolie news.  You know, the one where she is breastfeeding on the cover of W magazine.  I will not deny it – for the most part, I think the concept is great.  As a woman, she looks real, beautiful, but most of all she looks happy.

Still, I am ridiculously sick of hearing about Brad and Angelina.  While I give her props for the breastfeeding photo shoot (which was actually done by hubby Brad), I feel as if she is constantly trying to do things for shock value.  Making out with her brother, wearing a blood-filled vial around her neck…she has created an un-shockable persona.  This reminds me of Demi Moore’s nude pregnancy shot for Vanity Fair.  Sure, I like the idea of having a positive attitude towards pregnant and breastfeeding women (I find it strangely attractive), but does the process of sexualization ever end?  It’s not as if we even see anything; in fact there is a little hand right over her nipple.  But we all know men and women alike love Angelina for her sex appeal, otherwise I doubt we would be obsessing about her newest kid or a picture of her breast that might as well have been her in a low cut evening gown.  I would find it a bit more heartwarming if I didn’t feel as if it was another ploy for Hollywood hype.  Something about it just seems so ingenuine – even if it is a “family” affair.

Not only that, but apparently Angelina is raking in the cash based on her status as one of the “most bankable” faces in the world.  Especially during this economic crisis, when our exorbitant consumer culture is threatened with a recession, magazines are clamoring for stars like Ms. Jolie who will sell covers.  And whipping out her breast will surely sell magazines.  It is a telling sign, though, that this same idea was conceptualized on the cover of Babytalk magazine two years ago – except it definitely did not receive positive feedback.  People thought it was disgusting and inappropriate, while Angelina Jolie is being praised by La Leche League International, an organization for breastfeeding.  Perhaps Ms. Jolie’s photo is a bit more tasteful for those who might be offended by a baby sucking on a full breast, but I feel as if we welcome the cover of W magazine because it is someone beautiful and famous.  In the end, it’s all about sex appeal, and celebrities can carry it off.  Women discussing the cover of Babytalk worry about their husbands or sons looking at it, not the actual breast itself.  And maybe that is what bothers me.

So I am not sure how I feel about this photo.  Part of me thinks it is a positive step for women’s bodies, but the other part of me strongly feels that this is just another example of advertising that objectifies women.  Except that now, we are objectifying hot women who have babies.  It’s great that we are finding pregnant women and new mothers to be sexually appealing (God knows my future husband damn well better) instead of calling them fat cows, a nickname O.J. Simpson used to refer to his pregnant wife Nicole.  But something still doesn’t seem right about it to me.  What does everyone else think?

Photo Credits Here

I’m Not a Slut – I’m Emotionally Easy.

by Harlequin

Sometimes I feel like a big slut. And in a manner of speaking, some people would say I am pretty easy. I have not had sex with that many people, but my number is a bit higher than I care to admit. I have lied in shame about my number (not to anyone I have anything longstanding or serious with, I swear). But honestly, I am torn. Part of me wants to fuck every attractive human (penis desired but certainly not required) that I see, but the other part of me wants that monogamous relationship. I spend a good deal of time wondering how many more men I will have to sleep with before I find the one I want to be with indefinitely…err, I mean forever.

But quantifying my sexual escapades isn’t the real reason I feel like a slut. It’s more about the degree to which my emotions for a person sway me to give it up, and give it up fast (well sometimes I take it slow….) All jokes aside though, I try to stand my ground and demand respect, but at the end of the day my feelings take all. The last guy I fell for (note: by “fell for,” I mean got infatuated with, not fell in love with; there is a big difference) certainly wasn’t the monogamy material he tried to present himself as. He spouted about wanting a relationship every time he came back into my life, and I believed him because I wanted to. The last time I saw him he refused to come inside my house to meet my friends; he instead convinced me to have sex with him in the back of his car in the parking lot outside my house – after I cried with my back against his driver’s side door for an hour. The thing is, I don’t think this is a bad thing. I loved having sex with him, I wanted to do it. But I just feel so easy! I don’t find people that I can fall for often, but once I do, I fall for them so easily and lose all my dignity for them. If that makes sense. I have only ever been in unhealthy relationships, and this latest “relationship” has been going on for over six months. I should be woman enough to say that he can’t give me what I need and move on, but I just know that when he stops ignoring me this time his dick will be inside me faster than I can say “fuck me please.” I relish having him inside me, breathing on my neck, wrapping my arms around him and laying on his shoulder after we’re done. But sometimes I wonder just how fast he wants to get out of there.

What am I trying to say? I don’t know. Maybe that I’m not really a slut, I just want a person unconditionally. After  bruises on my heart and ego heal, after my anger subsides, I realize I do care about people with more than my hormones. And if sex is supposed to be between people who care about each other, then I illogically conclude that caring for him overrides any lack of feelings on his part.

So is it okay for us to be sluts? Baby, I’ll be a slut for someone I care about any day. And maybe someone will come along to be a slut for me the same way.

Photo Credits

The Fishbowl Effect of Sexual Objectification

by Kelly

“All women live in sexual objectification the way fish live in water” writes Catherine A. MacKinnon in her book, “Toward a Feminist Theory of the State.” Now, this book was published in 1989, but does that make her statement any less true?

It’s not the first fish analogy I’ve heard. “There are so many fish in the sea,” a mother might tell her unlucky-in-love teenager. “I feel like I’m in a fish bowl” an employee might complain when being overly scrutinized by his superiors.

The fish & water analogy is significant here because of the implications: the transparency of water, the natural habitat water provides fish. What would a fish be without water? In that same vein, what would women be without men (or vice-versa)? Where would women be without sexual objectification?

If MacKinnon is right, women cannot walk down the street without being seen, viewed, or objectified by others. As I write this, a billboard-truck hybrid drives past, advertising (in BIG! RED! CAPITAL! LETTERS!) a “Gentleman’s Club”. In broad daylight, mind you, on the main street of a picturesque town in the Northeast. The irony is palpable. Apparently I can’t even sit on a street bench and write about sexual objectification without being reminded of strip clubs (which, let’s be honest, are one of the more brutally honest forms of sexual objectification out there).

It’s not enough that women are objectified. We (and our male counterparts) are constantly & visually assaulted by sexualized imagery. There are vodka advertisements with scantily-clad women, fashion editorials with lip-sticked models, and an exponential amount of music videos highlighting female dancers grinding on male singers. You can’t even flip TV channels without seeing these images.

There are plenty of women and men who have already written extensively on this subject. I’m not here to paraphrase them, or to add much insight to their findings. I only want to ask one thing of you. Become more aware. These images are not going anywhere. However, you do not have to let them be the definition of your beauty standards. If you are female, these images do not have to control your own self-worth. If you are male, these images do not have to be a standard that your girlfriend/sister/mother/daughter must live up to. We have the power to reject what the media tells us is valuable.

Sometimes, it may seem hard to ignore. Even as I write this, thoughts of my own self-doubts (about my body, sexuality, and value to others) come to mind. Yet I take comfort in the fact that if I personally work to reject society’s standards of beauty, and surround myself with others who do the same, there is hope that I can feel less like a fish, and more like a woman.

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