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Come & share your mansplaining stories here!

272 replies

TheStroppyFeminist · 25/09/2024 12:43

Yesterday a male colleague told me that adding an extra column to my document would make it better.

a) It didn't and b) I've been hiring people since way before he was born so he can FTFO

What have you had mansplained to you recently?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
7
LikeWeUsedToBe · 25/09/2024 23:01

My ex liked to explain child development to me because his children were older than mine so he obviously knew best. Despite me being degree level qualified in it and having 20 years experience working with children. And while his children are lovely and it could be argued there is just a difference in parenting styles there are some issues that are certainly down to poor parenting and lack of understanding of their development.

Another time the male head of school. It was an academy he wasn't even a qualified teacher. Mansplained to me how my parenting was causing my autistic child's difficulties and suggested a parenting course. Again the fact I know child development was irrelevant to him and the multiple additional courses I had done in autism to support children I work with and to understand my own child (and myself) couldn't mean I knew more than him because he ran a mainstream school.

When I was much younger I got a flat tyre and a helpful man stopped to help me change it to the spare. I said I was fine and knew what I was doing and he insisted he could do it much faster and better that I a young lass could do. I didn't have the confidence I have now so just let him do it. He moved the Jack from where I'd placed it and bent the underneath of my car!

Alalalalalongalalalalalonglonglilong · 26/09/2024 00:13

Not exactly mansplaining but just as bad... my Dh and sister have the same job, it's the kind of job that most people are familiar with. Same qualifications and experience but specialised in different areas. My Dad constantly asks DH his opinion on things relating to his profession but never my sister. He has even done it in front of her and DH has said 'you need to ask your daughter that, its more her field' but he will just ask again. My sister has even butted in a few times to say she knows about this etc but my Dad just blanks her and turns back to DH.

MysteriousInspector · 26/09/2024 01:15

Re @IbizaToTheNorfolkBroads's wave story

Is it mansplaining if they don't know you are an expert in the field before imparting an interesting piece of information which is correct?

PuppiesLove · 26/09/2024 02:12

I won't state the scenario but it was quite funny when my son called out from the other room, "Dad, stop mansplaining to Mum!" Good on you son.

BiscottiToffee · 26/09/2024 03:04

Fancypopop · 25/09/2024 19:38

One of my male friends helpfully mansplained to me that cars require a yearly MOT. I had no idea! Because I’m female I obviously have no clue about car ownership.

He quickly STFU when I helpfully reminded him that I had passed my test on the first go whilst he took 3 attempts. 🤣

🤣

This reminds me of the female formula 1 McLaren mechanic who takes a male friend when getting her car MOT.

Mechanic talks only to guy. She waits until the most awkward moment and then points out what she does for a living.

Downunderduchess · 26/09/2024 04:24

I posted a video of a magpie in my backyard that visited on the weekend, my bio says Sydney Australia.

A man responded

Come & share your mansplaining stories here!
CottonCandyLand · 26/09/2024 05:03

Taking part in a works go-karting event a colleague explained how I should have my helmet visor positioned. I’d spent years competing in a Motorsport requiring me to wear a crash helmet.

GertieN · 26/09/2024 05:11

A few months after we got our first house together, dh (who had been working long hours so hadn’t been around to do his share of housework) stepped in to oversee me unloading the dishwasher properly one weekend.

He proceeded to turn all the spoons the same way round in our kitchen drawer and mansplained that now the spoons snugly nested together, the drawer was no longer in a mess.

Of course, when he attempted to shut the drawer, it bounced open again due to the protruding spoons. I watched silently while he turned half the spoons around again so the drawer would close.

——-

I remember one summer dh and I decided to buy a kit for a multi-tier wooden raised bed for the garden. I love building and gardening as I used to do help my parents out in their huge garden but dh insisted he would build the kit alone, as it was a one-person job (it wasn’t). He started by attempting to level the ground, but it was very compacted and hard work and he quickly announced he was going to give up because “the weight of the wood will push the ground level as I build it.” It clearly wouldn’t and I mildly suggested why that that might not actually happen and the risk that would make the joins harder to connect together.

Three hours and a lot of swearing and sweating later, dh finished. I said encouragingly, “well it turned out ok” to which dh replied without blinking, “it’s wonky, if you look closely. The problem is some of the joins aren’t perfectly square with each other and I had to bend some of the internal screws to make it connect. It was bloody hard to do. I think it may be because the ground was uneven to start with and the wood wasn’t heavy enough to push the ground flat.” Riiiiiiight.

——
Last year, while I was doing the weekly shop, dh took it upon himself to “finish off” tidying up our front garden which I had been working on for a few weeks. After 20 years of marriage it is an accepted that I do the plants and he does the grass, because in the past some lovely plants have died under my dh’s not-so-tender care.

When I got home from the shop, I burst into tears the moment I saw what he had “achieved”. Dh confidently told me he had removed the dead stuff I hadn’t gotten round to, including tugging out that dead twiggy plant next to the fence which was “rooted quite deep actually.”

Once I stifled the sobs, I was able to confirm that he had also chopped up all the “dead” plants so they’d fit in the garden waste bin.

I am afraid, MNetters, I did yell at him.

“Those plants were not dead, they were hibernating, it is still f*ing MARCH. And that dead twiggy thing was the last cutting of my mum’s heritage shrub and it took us four years to get a cutting to take in my garden and we succeeded just before she died. Which, if you ever listened to a word I say, you would already know. And before you suggest we can go and buy another one, no - I already know we cannot because it originated in my great-grandfather’s garden and has probably been growing there for several centuries and definitely does not exist in any garden centre any more.”

And finally - after years of mansplaining so much of our domestic life - dh apologised.

NeverAloneNeverAgain · 26/09/2024 05:46

When we were looking at getting a new kitchen the rep explained bi folding doors to me as being 'like pleats on a skirt'

DoIWantTo · 26/09/2024 05:55

My then 4 year old son - “being a mum means you have to take care of me.” Well yes, I know that already, but chocolate ice cream at bedtime isn’t taking care of you 😂

Bgfe · 26/09/2024 06:08

I once said that I was happy now being single after divorce and must have triggered this bloke because he explained to me that I wasn’t actually happy and had been hoodwinked by the feminists into believing I was. My single state was unnatural and I was deluded to think I was happy. 😆
Mansplaining my actual mind to me.

bebopalula111 · 26/09/2024 06:51

We enjoy watching the SAS programmes.
My OH was in the armed forces many years ago so takes it upon himself to mansplain every task and challenge every series 🙈

The tv guys explain it well, yet we need to pause it to mansplain and help me understand better.

MushMonster · 26/09/2024 06:52

Boidont · 25/09/2024 12:44

‘The cup of tea is cooler because I put milk in it. So it’s cooled it down - because there’s now milk in it.’

Aw, well done to the 3 year old that said that!
(Jaw dropping moment LOL)

RhaenysRocks · 26/09/2024 07:00

IbizaToTheNorfolkBroads · 25/09/2024 21:12

I'd gone away with a group of friends to the Northumberland coast to celebrate a 50th birthday. Lovely weather, lots of sea swimming. A little party of blokes who I didn't know (the birthday girl did) joined us on the second day. We were all in the seas one day, and this chap says to me "if you look at the waves carefully, you can see how every third one breaks before it get the the shore". My reply "It's called depth limited wave morphology, I wrote a paper for JONSWAP about it", "JONSWAP?" he said. "Joint North Sea Wave Analysis Project. I spoke at one of their conferences when I was doing my PhD.".

To be fair, if he didn't know you, that's not mansplaining. I don't know that about waves and would probably be quite interested. Mansplaining absolutely is a thing and ought to be challenged but if we call every single instance of a man offering up an opinion or knowledge mansplaining then it will become a meaningless "moan" according to
the Andrew Tates of this world.

BlackOrangeFrog · 26/09/2024 07:10

I used to be in it support, and would have to do things like fill the copiers with paper every Friday. Id been doing this every Friday (and more) for about a year for 30 copiers, 3-4 teams each time. So easily opens and put a ream of paper to fill a paper tray 6000 times LOL. One particular Friday, I was just about to load some paper when a man came up to me and said "give that to me love, you have to do it a particular way, you don't want to just shove it in, you need to do it like this".

I very happily said "thanks, there's the other 50 reams just in the supply cupboard, floors 1-8 need doing as well, thanks for doing this for me, saves me loads of time" and walked away hehehheh

3LemonsAndLime · 26/09/2024 08:34

GertieN · 26/09/2024 05:11

A few months after we got our first house together, dh (who had been working long hours so hadn’t been around to do his share of housework) stepped in to oversee me unloading the dishwasher properly one weekend.

He proceeded to turn all the spoons the same way round in our kitchen drawer and mansplained that now the spoons snugly nested together, the drawer was no longer in a mess.

Of course, when he attempted to shut the drawer, it bounced open again due to the protruding spoons. I watched silently while he turned half the spoons around again so the drawer would close.

——-

I remember one summer dh and I decided to buy a kit for a multi-tier wooden raised bed for the garden. I love building and gardening as I used to do help my parents out in their huge garden but dh insisted he would build the kit alone, as it was a one-person job (it wasn’t). He started by attempting to level the ground, but it was very compacted and hard work and he quickly announced he was going to give up because “the weight of the wood will push the ground level as I build it.” It clearly wouldn’t and I mildly suggested why that that might not actually happen and the risk that would make the joins harder to connect together.

Three hours and a lot of swearing and sweating later, dh finished. I said encouragingly, “well it turned out ok” to which dh replied without blinking, “it’s wonky, if you look closely. The problem is some of the joins aren’t perfectly square with each other and I had to bend some of the internal screws to make it connect. It was bloody hard to do. I think it may be because the ground was uneven to start with and the wood wasn’t heavy enough to push the ground flat.” Riiiiiiight.

——
Last year, while I was doing the weekly shop, dh took it upon himself to “finish off” tidying up our front garden which I had been working on for a few weeks. After 20 years of marriage it is an accepted that I do the plants and he does the grass, because in the past some lovely plants have died under my dh’s not-so-tender care.

When I got home from the shop, I burst into tears the moment I saw what he had “achieved”. Dh confidently told me he had removed the dead stuff I hadn’t gotten round to, including tugging out that dead twiggy plant next to the fence which was “rooted quite deep actually.”

Once I stifled the sobs, I was able to confirm that he had also chopped up all the “dead” plants so they’d fit in the garden waste bin.

I am afraid, MNetters, I did yell at him.

“Those plants were not dead, they were hibernating, it is still f*ing MARCH. And that dead twiggy thing was the last cutting of my mum’s heritage shrub and it took us four years to get a cutting to take in my garden and we succeeded just before she died. Which, if you ever listened to a word I say, you would already know. And before you suggest we can go and buy another one, no - I already know we cannot because it originated in my great-grandfather’s garden and has probably been growing there for several centuries and definitely does not exist in any garden centre any more.”

And finally - after years of mansplaining so much of our domestic life - dh apologised.

This is quite sad. @GertieN were you able to rescue anything from the bin and enable something to grow again?

RabbitsRock · 26/09/2024 08:43

DH will do it sometimes but calls it “ trying to help” & then he gets huffy when I say I’m perfectly ok thanks! It’s infuriating when he says more or less exactly what I’ve just said as if I haven’t said it! Grrr!

JudgieJudie · 26/09/2024 09:00

I work with a fair amount of men. One mansplained how a mammogram works and what a mammogram feels like. 😂🙄

RabbitsRock · 26/09/2024 09:08

Not mansplaining but another example of a man only talking to the man in a couple - DH & I were in a restaurant & the waiter completely ignored me whilst asking DH what wine we wanted. DH didn’t drink & I knew more about wines than he did. In fact, I don’t think the waiter spoke to me at all!

MrNarwhal · 26/09/2024 09:15

Got another one. I was being examined in hospital whilst miscarrying (again, I've had many). Male Dr tells me that I should feel comfort that at least I can get pregnant and that I have my ds already. A man actually telling me how I should be feeling whilst miscarrying.

I replied asking him if he had any children and he said yes, two. I said imagine one of them dies and someone says at least you have the other one. He had the decency to apologise.

MrNarwhal · 26/09/2024 09:18

And another. I work high level in a niche industry. I'm a specialist in what I do. I was visiting a site with one of the team I manage who was carrying out an inspection. She told him he'd need to change the doors on one part of the building to comply with licensing. He disagreed. She asked me to step in and I explained why the licensing stipulated this.

He said I think you'll find that the licensing doesn't say that, I know because I'm on a group of business owners who feed back to the government.

I wrote the licensing.

Oobalooba · 26/09/2024 09:26

This example perfectly demonstrates mansplaining... watch the video!

www.theguardian.com/society/2024/feb/23/you-shouldnt-be-doing-that-female-pro-golfer-films-mansplainer-at-driving-range

ErrolTheDragon · 26/09/2024 09:34

Some of it (like GertieN's garden tragedy) isn't so much 'mansplaining' as 'men who bizarrely can't hear women'. The golf one is both!

RabbitsRock · 26/09/2024 09:35

SmudgeButt sorry if this is “ womansplaining” but it’s “ rankles”