very good article here (it's long though)
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/12/the-weaponization-of-awkwardness/548291/
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/12/the-weaponization-of-awkwardness/548291/
I hadn't heard or read anything about the "Cat Person" essay this article references, but the gist of what follows is so very true. We've heard (or used) the cliché "Just like a woman, always changing her mind" so many times - and it's generally used in a disparaging way.
So by acquiescing (definition: to accept something reluctantly but without protest) to the man's advances, the woman "saves face" at the time of the event because in the moment, that is what seems the most important.
I think ALL women have been through this - perhaps not with actual sexual activity but even just with "making-out" - when you're with someone you feel rather ambivalent about, and it's just easier to go along with things than "make a scene" at the time.
Back in my younger days when I was dating, I had plenty of those AWKWARD moments where I finally told the guy that "No, in spite of those couple of times we were making out and you thought I was enjoying it, I really DON'T like you "that way" and I don't want to have "that kind" of relationship with you"
Guys, I'm sure most of you have been on the receiving end of that sort of awkward moment yourself.
It is so important to teach girls and young women that it is NOT their job to try to please other people, particularly not those with whom you're involved in casual relationships.
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/12/the-weaponization-of-awkwardness/548291/
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/12/the-weaponization-of-awkwardness/548291/
I hadn't heard or read anything about the "Cat Person" essay this article references, but the gist of what follows is so very true. We've heard (or used) the cliché "Just like a woman, always changing her mind" so many times - and it's generally used in a disparaging way.
So by acquiescing (definition: to accept something reluctantly but without protest) to the man's advances, the woman "saves face" at the time of the event because in the moment, that is what seems the most important.
“Young women say yes to sex they don’t actually want to have all of the time. Why? Because we condition young women to feel guilty if they change their mind.”
That was the writer Ella Dawson, in her essay reacting to “Cat Person,” the New Yorker short story that went viral, and indeed that is still going viral, this week. Kristen Roupenian’s work of fiction resonated among denizens of the nonfictional world in part because of its sex scene: one that explores, in rich and wincing detail, the complications of consent. Margot, a 20-year-old college student, goes on a date with Robert, a man several years her senior; alternately enchanted by him and repulsed by him, hopeful about him and disappointed, she ultimately sleeps with him. Not because she fully wants to, in the end, but because, in the dull heat of the moment, acquiescing is easier—less dramatic, less disruptive, less awkward—than saying no....
Consent, concession, the blurred lines between the two: The work of fiction, and the analysis of it, are each in their own ways deeply true. And they struck a cultural nerve this week—Dawson’s essay, titled “Bad Sex, or the Sex We Don’t Want but Have Anyway,” went viral along with Roupenian’s story—because they highlight, together, something that is widely recognized but rarely talked about: the version of sex that is bad not in a criminal sense, but in an emotional one. The kind that can happen, as Dawson suggested, partly as a result of cultural forces that exert themselves on women in particular: the demand that they be accommodating. That they be pleasing. That they capitulate to the feelings of others, and maintain a kind of sunny status quo—both in the immediate moment of a given social situation, and more broadly: Wait for the raise to be offered. Put in that extra minute of effort with the eye makeup. Nod. Smile. Once you’ve consented, don’t make things weird by saying, out loud, that you’ve changed your mind. “Cat Person,” on top of everything else, is an exploration of awkwardness as a form of social coercion; the conversation it sparked, accordingly, in “Bad Sex” and Facebook posts and essays and tweet threads, has been a consideration of that kind of awkwardness as a condition—and a chronic one.
That these conversations would be occasioned by a work of fiction is both ironic and revealing: The world itself, the one that is all too real, has long provided its own stories of perilous awkwardness. As revelations of sexual harassment and assault have come to light in recent months, awkwardness and discomfort and embarrassment and, in general, Americans’ deeply ingrained impulse to avoid involvement in an “awkward moment when” have also shown their darker sides. Harvey Weinstein, on the tape recorded by the model Ambra Battilana Gutierrez as part of a New York Police Department sting operation, told her, “Don’t embarrass me in the hotel.” And: “Honey, don’t have a fight with me in the hallway.” And: “Please, you’re making a big scene here. Please.” So many of the other men accused of predation, it has now become painfully clear, have in their own ways used those soft but crushing social pressures as weapons, both in moments of abuse and beyond: Don’t be dramatic. Don’t make a scene. Please.
I think ALL women have been through this - perhaps not with actual sexual activity but even just with "making-out" - when you're with someone you feel rather ambivalent about, and it's just easier to go along with things than "make a scene" at the time.
Back in my younger days when I was dating, I had plenty of those AWKWARD moments where I finally told the guy that "No, in spite of those couple of times we were making out and you thought I was enjoying it, I really DON'T like you "that way" and I don't want to have "that kind" of relationship with you"
Guys, I'm sure most of you have been on the receiving end of that sort of awkward moment yourself.
It is so important to teach girls and young women that it is NOT their job to try to please other people, particularly not those with whom you're involved in casual relationships.