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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

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I'm starting to hate men

580 replies

Mamaka · 14/07/2016 22:43

I posted this on relationships but didn't get any response:

I've noticed recently that I've become more and more anti men - I think since having my first child. So many factors that I could mention and probably many deep rooted issues contributing to this but the long and short of it is why do women have to suffer and sacrifice at every turn?!

I don't really want to feel like this. I have a son who I want to bring up/am bringing up to be a feminist but I'm worried about how my hateful feelings towards men are going to rub off on my dc.

I suppose I am asking if there is a way I can combat these feelings and start to feel more positively towards them.

OP posts:
Mamaka · 20/07/2016 19:27

Strawberry and trying - maybe soon we can have our very own man free thread about our new feminism findings! Happy reading!

OP posts:
Xenophile · 21/07/2016 08:59

I look forward to that thread Mamaka, Strawberry and trying. But don't feel you need to know it all to be able to post here, we're generally a friendly lot (permatrolls notwithstanding) and contrary to popular belief, we've never actually eaten anyone.

amarmai · 21/07/2016 12:39

Just read the other thread op posted . This one got off easy with just one protagonist !

NotQuiteSoOnEdge · 21/07/2016 14:24

I'd come and find you on that thread, Mamaka, if you set it going. I'd like a safe place to start articulating some of the angry murk inside me.

Mamaka · 21/07/2016 15:41

Safe place in place! Come on over!

OP posts:
AskBasil · 26/07/2016 07:07

I posted this on the other man hating thread and someone said I should have posted it here. So here it is:

What do men do when they hate women? They cat call us, they threaten us, they inflict violence on us, they rape us, they murder us. What do women who hate men do? They ignore them. So fucking fuckity what? Go away and solve men's hatred of women and then I'll have another think about feminists who hate men.

ChocChocPorridge · 26/07/2016 07:59

hear hear Basil. So what if we do, as long as all we do about it is go off away from you, it's just a rational response to the treatment so many of us have received at the hands of men.

JacquettaWoodville · 26/07/2016 08:30

Which is why I'm baffled by MGTOW's motives. You want to go your own way, not have relationships with women? That's fine, no probs.

You want women to beg you to reconsider, which seems sometimes to be the motivation ? Nope.

Miffer · 26/07/2016 08:40

Talking about hating men.

Recently I decided to pop along to some more mainstream political meetings. At the first one I would say women were 1 in 4 of the 50ish people present. When the floor was opened only one woman spoke (out of about 20 people). I didn't speak because I had nothing to say that was relevant to the topic. I noticed the that most of the men didn't either. They repeated, they banged their own personal drum or they made comments that were so obvious they were entirely pointless ("Hey everyone I think the Pope is Catholic!"- In a room full of church going Catholics). I saw this pattern repeated at at all other meetings I attended.

The conclusion I came to was thus - Men don't seem to give a fuck if what they are saying is meaningless and irrelevant they think everybody should listen to them. Women will only speak if they have something relevant to say. I am very politically savvy, I speak in front of hostile groups of people at work regularly. I wasn't stopped from speaking by the men in a "can't get a word in edgeways" way. They didn't railroad me. I just had nothing to add at the start and by the end they had managed to drag the subject into such inane self evident rambling I certainly had nothing more to add.

Mamaka · 26/07/2016 15:48

Thanks for that Basil! Will be using your words in future.

Miffer - I have noticed that too. It's a bit like that statistic that says something like, men feel that they can apply for a job if they have 40% of the necessary skills and qualifications while women apply if they have 90%. I probably have the figures wrong there but the entitlement shines through clearly!

OP posts:
JacquettaWoodville · 27/07/2016 18:00

Mamaka

This thread goes to show that even if you hadn't used the word "hate", some people might've assumed it anyway!
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/_chat/2694930-How-to-raise-boys-when-you-have-a-negative-opinion-of-men?watched=1&msgid=62576670#62576670

Mamaka · 28/07/2016 15:57

Thanks jacquetta I've just posted on that thread, funny how defensive people get. While it is of course right that we should defend groups of people, I somehow just can't imagine men jumping in to defend women on a primarily male site.

OP posts:
ReaWithson · 28/07/2016 21:35

It's funny Miffer - don't know if this has been posted before but I've definitely been working on editing out the amount of 'feminine padding' I put around things when I actually do have something relevant to say:

thecooperreview.com/non-threatening-leadership-strategies-for-women/

Guess what? It really doesn't go down as well when I directly offer opinions/make requests as it does when the male partners do (even if I don't quite shed ALL of the sanitary protection I usually offer with my 'bloody difficult' opinions) Hmm

Miffer · 29/07/2016 07:58

Haha thanks Rea I especially like the last one.

The experience I had was different from that though. For instance, the woman who spoke wasn't met with hostility. In fact that was one of the parts of the meeting were we got some proper debate and answers (full disclosure it was my friend).

Mamaka I think your right. It was the same thing. It wasn't the lack of confidence of the women, or it certainly wasn't on my part. It was more the over confidence of the men. They were so sure their point was worth listening to even though they were basically repeating each other or being told by the chair that there point was irrelevant to the topic at hand.

ArchibaldsDaddy · 29/07/2016 08:10

Try looking for a decent man who isn't a replacement for your father.

My wife's father was a bit of a nightmare in all sorts of ways (but great with me because, as a military officer, I was all his hopes and dreams come true) and it has taken a few years of supportive marriage to break her out of her cycle and make her realise that many (at least some) men are actually quite decent.

The problem is that we tend not to be the loudest, most showy, most preening, less likely to be attractive in a 'bad boy' way, and are less likely to chase you!

And, in stead of bringing your son up to be a feminist' as you put it, why not bring him up to be an 'equalatist'?

JacquettaWoodville · 29/07/2016 08:20

What's your issue with feminism. AD?

And regarding your bad boy schtick - I think I just threw up in my mouth.

ReaWithson · 29/07/2016 09:32

Miffer - yes, sorry, I got what you were saying and it made me think of how things have been for me at work since I tried to stop padding out what I was saying so much and getting directly to the point because, as you say, there's overconfidence from some male partners who are just saying stuff that's blindingly obvious and not achieving anything (in my head I'm doing the 'c'mon wind it along' motion with my finger) but I find I have to nod along and listen to it without interjection and then reply with 'that's very interesting', 'good points', 'blah, blah, blah' then 'I wonder if perhaps we should be possibly looking at' etc. before getting my (more pertinent) point across i.e. - "ok, sure, but the real issue is clearly..."

I'm trying to change that a bit but it doesn't go down so well when I do, even though it's clearly moved the meeting on more quickly and gets to the heart of the issue. There are two other men in the group who 'cut to the chase' and it never seems to cause the same flicker of tension in the room when they do. Maybe the difference is that I am both the only female and the youngest person.

Grimarse · 29/07/2016 09:43

How can the OP bring her son up to be a feminist? Men can't be feminists, can they?

ReaWithson · 29/07/2016 09:58

I believe some may say adult men can become "feminist allies" and others feel that adult men can legitimately call themselves feminists; either way I personally think a son can be raised to be a feminist.

BuffytheReasonableFeminist · 29/07/2016 10:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Grimarse · 29/07/2016 10:50

Buffy's points are exactly what I have seen before, and why I think that men cannot, or rather should not call themselves feminists.

newshoes68 · 29/07/2016 10:58

Like you I have a son, I raise him to be a positive decent person to show respect for the world, humanity and society and life.
I hate his father... Another story, but I keep positive about everything as I don't want to extinguish the joy in my child .
Keep everything positive - we are raising our sons to be husbands and fathers .
Nxt yr my son leaves sch for the big world I hope I have done a good job. X

ReaWithson · 29/07/2016 10:58

Yes, I agree with that - I think it might be different raising a male child as a feminist though...?

ReaWithson · 29/07/2016 11:23

Sorry - there was a post in between - my post about raising a son as a feminist was saying I agree with the idea it is difficult for adult men to be feminists but perhaps it is different raising a son as a feminist from a young age.

JacquettaWoodville · 29/07/2016 11:28

I use feminist ally for preference but don't have a particular issue either way. The "this is what a feminist looks like" t shirts worn by men and women were good.

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