Rolling Maleness and Masculinity Discussion Thread

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Like if someone is not comfortable talking to you, you are never going to really be able to safely understand their feelings. So maybe don’t have sex with a person like that.

treeship 2, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:27 (six years ago) link

whoaoaoa @ "treeship 2"

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 13 November 2017 15:28 (six years ago) link

No connection.

treeship 2, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:29 (six years ago) link

can't help but imagine Thunderbird 2 now

imago, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:29 (six years ago) link

big green skycraft

imago, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:30 (six years ago) link

modern man

imago, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:30 (six years ago) link

anyway, i strongly agree that more communication is better, being more aware is better, but i think the way to get there might include actually building real interpersonal trust. I’m not sure there is a shortcut to this via different phrasings or something, not that anyone outright said that

treeship 2, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:31 (six years ago) link

is treesh2 a parody account

mh, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:48 (six years ago) link

It’s a bot

treeship 2, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:50 (six years ago) link

but i think the way to get there might include actually building real interpersonal trust. I’m not sure there is a shortcut to this via different phrasings or something, not that anyone outright said that

Where does that leave casual sex, which is something enjoyed by many ppl of all genders?

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 13 November 2017 16:03 (six years ago) link

but the idea that you're going to determine what can help someone, rather than pushing that person speak to their own interests, is pretty much the dichotomy of social policy in a nutshell

well, yeah, there's no magic set of words that will give someone all the capacity they've been seeking to speak up for their own interests. but surely there are words that make it more and less likely? my point was narrowly about the choice of "is this okay," which is well-intention but may carry an implicit bias towards proceeding rather than stopping. it ratchets things forwards, never backwards, by (unintentionally) relying on people's tendency to acquiesce to things being "okay." i dug through a drawer and found the zine i was thinking of (which turns out is online anyway) (and which i now think maybe my friend just contributed to, or was committed to spreading the word about, but anyway) - - - and this is the particular passage that struck me back in 2010 or so:

I have never been able to figure out a way to talk comfortable about consent. I think I am pretty good about asking othe rpeople, but figuring out a way to explain wehther or not I want to be doing something is prettyimpossible. I mean, if I want to be doing something, it's usually fine, but if I don't, or especially if I'm unsure, it's impossible. If someone asks, "is this ok," i alwyas say "yes." Everything is "ok" I mean, I can survive anything, right?

the author goes on from there to complicate things even further: for them, even the "do you want me to be doing this" language is described as triggering and/or shifting them into a distanced, reflective register. but they still want to find a form of communication that works:

So, talking beforehand, and also trying to figure out ways to talk about what's happened during sex, but later. like when we are not in bed. and trying to figure out ways for them to not get freaked out if I admit to faking it or having a flashback or just not wanting to do something. it's important for me to be able to talk about it later, because I can't usually talk about it at the time, but that usually makes people feel liek shit and feel guilty and then queestion every move they make, and they feel like they can't get anything right and I have to take all the initiative and give so much reassurance, and that makes me never feel like doin' it, and that sucks too.

encouragingly, they conclude by describing a "numbers" system that they came up with in collaboration with a partner, one that worked really well for them:

He would ask me 1-6.... 1. I feel like being held. No sex. Nothing. Not even sexual energy. 2. I want kissing but nothing past that. No moving against me in a sexual way. 3. I want to kiss and might be open to other stuff too. 4. I want to do stuff, but check back in a lot as we go. 5. I want to do stuff, and don't want much checking in, just check in before doing anything with the downthere parts and check in if you feel like I might be feeling weird. 6. Let's do it!

Something about the number system took the weight off things. It made it more easy and a little bit funny. I was totally able to say 2, where as I would never say 'I want to kiss right now but nothign else.' Saying those words would make me feel totally guilty where as saying 'two' just felt like fact. It didn't always work perfectly, but it was way easier for both of us.

so life's complicated, people are complicated, it is tragically likely that your partner has been through some kind of trauma and/or a fucked-up upbringing in a fucked-up gendered rape culture. so there is no reason to assume your partner does not have experiences that have given them similar fraught relationships with these words, or other words. hence the need for again, some kind of metanegotiation when you're not already in the bedroom: how do you want to talk about these things, what kind of consent appeals to you or makes you feel empowered and in control?

maybe "treeship 2" would say this person is "not comfortable talking to you" and therefore "don't have sex with a person like that" but i find that really cold and dismissive. how do you know if the person you're having sex with is "comfortable talking to you" at this level? seems like a recipe for just assuming that those people who ARE having sex with you MUST be comfortable telling you if something is wrong.... and it's this kind of convenient assumption that undergirds everyday masculinity and lots of small moments where boundaries are crossed and consent is violated, that don't look much like harvey weinstein from a distance. but which are where IMHO i as a cis man need to do a lot of work.
meanwhile the account i'm quoting from suggests that taking communication seriously as something you could work on together (rather than an ability the person either has or doesn't) means that there are happy consensual sex lives possible even for people for whom "is this okay" doesn't work. i dunno, i guess a lot of it is easier said than practiced, but i'd rather at least be thinking about this than taking all the convenient things for granted and ignoring all the possible bad things.

Doctor Casino, Monday, 13 November 2017 16:20 (six years ago) link

and btw if it's not totally clear, i think of all these as problems i have to do serious work on, and NOT things i've solved and am here to deliver the memo to the uninitiated or w/e. i quoted so long from that zine because it's a thing that i read once seven years ago that still keeps popping into my head and troubling me, not because it's accepted wisdom that i think people are dummies for not already agreeing with.

Doctor Casino, Monday, 13 November 2017 16:22 (six years ago) link

If someone asks, "is this ok," i alwyas say "yes." Everything is "ok" I mean, I can survive anything, right?

yes
i had a belief when i was young that i should experience everything so that i could handle anything
did NOT work out so well
in fact, it was a total disaster as a personal policy!

also there needs to be some time between asking and answering for the person to actually think about their answer. think about when a teacher asks you what you think about something they just presented, a topic you are not very familiar with. you're not sure, maybe you don't understand the full situation and suddenly you are in a high-pressure situation being asked to provide an answer. it's not comfortable and doesn't lead to good answers.

patience is key in these situations and i think there should be more attention paid to giving people time to make a decision when they are presented with one. encourage thoughtful answers, not just the ones you want to hear when u wanna do it

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Monday, 13 November 2017 21:11 (six years ago) link

I had that weird outlook as well, coupled with the idea that most people had more life experience than me (which may be true when you’re really young) but that does not in any way preclude your ability to make decisions and decide what is best for you. If the answer is “I don’t know” then you need others to be aware of that, and they should adjust their behavior accordingly

mh, Monday, 13 November 2017 22:18 (six years ago) link

I haven’t followed this thread because huge swathes of it feel completely alien to me - I don’t intend at all to diminish anyone’s experiences by that, I just have felt like trying to relate would be completely pompous and absurd, so I took a break. And a lot of my shit is nobody’s business anyway etc.

But I didn’t know where else to put this so I’m putting it here.

Phil posted this tweet on the LCK thread -

Here is an example of just one of many many tweets I'm getting from men along with countless threats and attacks on me as a performer and person. This is what coming forward gets you and exactly why people are so reluctant to do so. pic.twitter.com/BYLEUQSpCi

— Rebecca Corry (@TheRebeccaCorry) November 15, 2017



And I thought, that is how other boys talked to me and my friends since we were 10? 11? That kind of overwrought demeaning invective is something I’ve been subjected to since I was in 4th or 5th grade. We all learn that from our parents and we use it on each other. I just realized there’s no way on earth I would ever give that cheap of a bully the satisfaction of screencapping his idiotic crap. That’s fucking life. Does this make me a Tory?

Or should I be giving workshops on bully-dealing-with? Because I bet I would be good at it. Just got to be careful I don’t turn everybody into an Internet Hardman, I guess.

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 00:33 (six years ago) link

well everybody's about vicariously punching nazis these days so maybe that's your usp

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 16 November 2017 01:14 (six years ago) link

I dont think it is just the invective she has an issue with, but you know that right?

Stoop Crone (Trayce), Thursday, 16 November 2017 01:57 (six years ago) link

I learned early how to tell from bullies who can easily be ignored because they’re all talk, bullies you can turn because they just want someone to talk to and can’t engage except by starting a confrontation, and bullies who are really looking for a fight. In any case, fear and humiliation is blood in the water, so you don’t ever give them the satisfaction. I was taught that, and I learned it by experience as well, sometimes from unexpected people in places I thought were safe.

But I’ve always been lucky. To get all Larrycarpet Applekaiser, you wouldn’t want to fight me unless you have the jump and 40+ pounds over. Which is just a shitty macho way of saying lucky. Sorry.

Boys are horrible to each other from the get go. It doesn’t give us the right to use that poison on anyone else. But everyone should know what it looks and sounds like, maybe that would help in coping, I think that’s where my head was trying to go.

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 04:51 (six years ago) link

if tombot's point to some extent is that this 'undoing masculinity' is something one can opt out of only through some pretty high levels of privilege i dont disagree

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Thursday, 16 November 2017 05:19 (six years ago) link

I just realized there’s no way on earth I would ever give that cheap of a bully the satisfaction of screencapping his idiotic crap.

Screencap surely not really about the bully but about showing ppl the consequences of speaking out? Like you're probably right that the bully's gleeful about the screencap and thinking "I got her!" but he doesn't really matter enough that she should have to take that into consideration imo.

And I thought, that is how other boys talked to me and my friends since we were 10? 11?

I was bullied pretty badly through most of middle and high school and I gotta say, none of my bullies ever sounded this psychotically enraged - the tone was more along the lines of chirpy, mocking sadism. A cultural thing, I suppose.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 16 November 2017 10:48 (six years ago) link

D-40 sadly otm I think

Anyway time to take a break from ilx

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 13:14 (six years ago) link

Dan RF: at least ime, the trope that all bullies are basically abused kids is real, so yeah, the occasional mocking semi-sadistic stuff could come from anywhere, but there were other kids who would be relentless and focused because they really, really needed someone else to be lower on the order than them, because they were getting relentless shit from somebody at home. I got both.

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 13:22 (six years ago) link

I don’t know if that tweet is necessarily an issue of masculinity outside of the defense of a sexual predator, because I’ve witnessed women using the same language. Seeing bullying as a male thing, especially written or verbal bullying, is kind of wrong?

mh, Thursday, 16 November 2017 13:49 (six years ago) link

I just observe girl bullies operating differently most of the time? I’m certain the motivation is identical. Anyway despite best intentions I should never engage with personal shit on the internet, it’s literally never worth it.

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:09 (six years ago) link

I definitely think there's utility in acknowledging and preparing oneself for the variety of ways in which people are cruel to one another, but I would never fault anyone for being ill-prepared when faced with a manifestation of that cruelty. I totally understand what Tombot's saying on one level, inasmuch as I had a bully for a father, which gave me a lot of time to examine that shit close up and learn how to deal with it. So I see for instance the way a pathetic manbaby like Trump throws his weight around and it seems so familiar and I'm just like, guys, he's a total pussy under all the bloviation, push back fer chrissakes. But then I have to remind myself that bullying works because not everyone has the unfortunate opportunity to get enough exposure to it that they build up an immunity to its psychological impact. And while I have a keen radar and good bit of psychic buttressing in place for a particular kind of bullying, there are all kinds of other manifestations of cruelty (physical violence, for example) which I know I'm not as prepared for and which I find traumatizing and difficult to cope with. Those sources of potential trauma are going to be different for everyone.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:21 (six years ago) link

We all learn that from our parents

WHAT NOW?? How is that remotely acceptable, as a way to speak to your children and teach them about the world? You're a dad! You would never do that!

Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:24 (six years ago) link

Once again for the record, when men use sexualized threatening/hostile language against women, it has an extra lens of inherent violence because that language is dehumanizing. And we all know what happens to people when others find them less human.

Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:28 (six years ago) link

I agree with you; I'm just not sure why it isn't also dehumanizing when men use it against other men.

the Hannah Montana of the Korean War (DJP), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:29 (six years ago) link

Of course it is.

Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:30 (six years ago) link

Yes, there's also the thing where telling people clinging to the rungs below you on the privilege ladder how they should feel about something is NAGL.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:35 (six years ago) link

While I agree with that in a general way, if you're referring to DJP and me, we each have different components to our identities that are more or less marginalized than each other in different ways so it's not really a productive comparison probably.

Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:39 (six years ago) link

No, that and my previous post generally were in reference to:

I just realized there’s no way on earth I would ever give that cheap of a bully the satisfaction of screencapping his idiotic crap. That’s fucking life.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 14:48 (six years ago) link

Is this the part where I admit my cishet white dudeness and my tax bracket

I got myopia though

Also io of course I would never demean my own child. I’ve seen what it does!

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 15:00 (six years ago) link

We all have myopia. It's hard as hell to escape the gravity of our egocentric perspective of the world, but I find it helpful to constantly remind myself that every person's 'no doy' is someone else's 'I had no idea'.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 15:17 (six years ago) link

So congrats on breaking the cycle in which this arguably abusive/violent way of interacting with people is normalized! Break all the cycles.

Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Thursday, 16 November 2017 15:21 (six years ago) link

Like I get so irritated with both of my immediate superiors at work because they tend to focus almost entirely upon what's asked of them by their superiors rather than what they people under them need, but I have to remind myself that they're both minority women (one with a disability) and that the pressures they deal with and the needs they have to respond to in particular ways are so much different than they would be if I were in either of their positions.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 15:21 (six years ago) link

I would like to keep the krebs cycle and the water cycle going btw

El Tomboto, Thursday, 16 November 2017 15:36 (six years ago) link

I’ve seen people get attacked, sometimes pretty viciously, online for not approaching these issues in the correct ways - using the “mother/sister/daughter” trope, talking about the ways in which patriarchy harms men, & so on. But given our myopias, individual and collective, aren’t these potentially useful gateways into understanding? Maybe for some guys - the chunk of men who are this side of irredeemable but who will never be woke as such - it’s as far as they will ever get, and maybe that’s ok. Progress is progress. And if they’re a little less shitty, even for essentially for selfish reasons, they’ll be less likely to pass it on to their kids and perpetuate it with their peers. Give them a “what’s in it for me”, ferfucksake, because we know that asking for pure empathy is often just too much to ask.

Anyone got any good reading material on the ways patriarchy harms men? I present very cishet because dammit that’s the easiest thing to do (and yes I recognize how privileged that makes me) but there’s all sorts of complicated gender & sexuality shit bubbling under there (I figure I’m probably about 40% female, a small percentage of which would be het female, to put it in shorthand) but I have zero interest in martyring myself to the cause by claiming trans or queer space. I work in an extremely old-school, masculinity-dominated industry where even the women tend to be pretty unprogressive when it comes to gender/race otherness & it’s tough enough being a voice for centrism & diversity as a member of the in-group.

I would love to arm myself with arguments for (at least) weakening patriarchy that focus on how it would benefit “men’s men” who have no interest in giving up their notions of masculinity - the obsession with toys, with status, with sports - I think if they could keep those things they’d be willing to budge on valuing the things that people who don’t share that sphere bring to the table.

tl;dr - Any good writing on how to convince men that it’s in their own interest to not be such dicks?

bumbling my way toward the light or wahtever (hardcore dilettante), Thursday, 16 November 2017 16:37 (six years ago) link

Give them a “what’s in it for me”, ferfucksake, because we know that asking for pure empathy is often just too much to ask.

This is sure to be a controversial perspective but it's a valid point that I've pondered quite a bit. How do we incentivize empathy (or some simulacrum thereof) among those who don't see the personal benefit in changing their attitudes (and may see far more personal benefit in remaining steadfastly-regressive)? I understand the knee-jerk reaction of saying 'fuck 'em, ignore 'em, let 'em die off, problem solved' but the fact remains that those people are still out there perpetuating those attitudes. And it's really hard to make persuasive arguments for maximizing the common good in a society that overwhelmingly incentivizes the exact opposite behavior. It may be a weak tea suggestion and it certainly isn't a pat solution, but I guess just trying to personally model the behavior you'd like to see others adopt is the best way to go about it for a start.

Home of the Ill-Considered Gravy Spigot (Old Lunch), Thursday, 16 November 2017 16:48 (six years ago) link

My lived experience of being an extremely masculine American straight white man has taught me that the primary emotion is anger. at everything. Start with the assumption that if you're dealing with such as I, that guy's deal is being angry all the fucking time, and whatever pastimes he might have, they are escape valves for colossal amounts of anger. And anything that doesn't get exhausted via another channel - sports, drugs, toys, video games, etc - radiates internally, as self-loathing, and externally on to whomever is around and seems available for abuse.

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 November 2017 05:06 (six years ago) link

Ok, and what’s behind that?

bumbling my way toward the light or wahtever (hardcore dilettante), Friday, 17 November 2017 05:22 (six years ago) link

he won't say "WOMEN" so I will

sleepingbag, Friday, 17 November 2017 05:27 (six years ago) link

re Tombot - well, it's easy to choose anger as a dude because we're not supposed to exhibit sadness overtly, especially to other men. It's a toxic mentality and turns to tears eventually anyway.

Week of Wonders (Ross), Friday, 17 November 2017 05:28 (six years ago) link

i think that's as much about being american as it is about being male

ogmor, Friday, 17 November 2017 09:35 (six years ago) link

http://d28hgpri8am2if.cloudfront.net/book_images/cvr9780743456081_9780743456081_lg.jpg

This was recommended on another thread somewhere and does a great job (at least to me) of illustrating the ways men are harmed by the patriarchy.

barbarian radge (NotEnough), Friday, 17 November 2017 11:48 (six years ago) link

ogmor at 3:35 17 Nov 17

i think that's as much about being american as it is about being male

look at Italy, look at Poland right now, it's everywhere

Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 17 November 2017 13:44 (six years ago) link

no sleepingbag not the plural

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 November 2017 14:22 (six years ago) link

sad lol @ “what’s behind that” oh really

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 November 2017 14:24 (six years ago) link

xp UMS
what's the it? I don't think they have the same type of angry, violent & indignant culture or turn other suppressed emotions into anger in the same way

to change/understand masculinity I think it's useful to think about how it's differently manifested across time and space, seeing how it is entwined with broader social/cultural factors. reductive views on social issues like masculinity strangely tend to be very US-centric, which is a real weakness (& ofc frustrating for everyone else)

ogmor, Friday, 17 November 2017 14:25 (six years ago) link


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