Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, definitely. By the standards of my adolescence (1990s), I was widely presumed to be gay, or just odd and overly timid, in general.
As bad as that was, those traits probably saved me from the Inquisition that is taking place today. I would never have anticipated that the goal posts would have shifted so dramatically in just 20 years. It's hard to appreciate how cultural mores can subtly shift what seems like right and wrong until you have lived long enough to experience it, personally.
Really? The "Inquisition?"
Hyperbolic much? Are you actively misogynistic or are you just clumsy with vocabulary?
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why we are pretending that a huge percentage of males and females enjoy or play along with this dynamic. It's fairly common knowledge that the more aggressive you are the more girls you get if that is important to you. Even more so if you are not physically attractive. I never understood it or participated myself but then they always s called me a square.
Anonymous wrote:This has been discussed here before. I feel compassion for boys/men who feel pressured to act in inappropriate ways to avoid social consequences, and especially for those who resist that pressure and accept the consequences of it. None of this even remotely excuses boys/men mistreating girls/women just so that they're not mistreated themselves, though. You're still fully culpable for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a Twitter thread <https://twitter.com/saladinahmed/status/931206629995008002> where the original poster said "male culture tries to make boys/men feel f*cked up for NOT being harassers." I was a little surprised at the number of people, mostly women, who were unaware of this and/or couldn't think of how this tends to play out.
The example that comes to mind for me was a time in 8th or 9th grade when my friends called me a pussy for being too afraid to snap girls' bras. Besides that there was the general pervasiveness of being called a loser if you weren't getting girls' phone numbers, hooking up with them, having sex with them, etc.
Curious if other guys experienced this when they were growing up and whether women were aware that guys suffered a loss of social status if they weren't sexually aggressive toward women.
I never felt that way. I played sports and was focused on that. Didnt get laid until college a d was never called a loser. Im 32.
So 8th/9th grade would have been in roughly 1999? Hopefully that toxic masculinity faded somewhat through the 80s and 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a Twitter thread <https://twitter.com/saladinahmed/status/931206629995008002> where the original poster said "male culture tries to make boys/men feel f*cked up for NOT being harassers." I was a little surprised at the number of people, mostly women, who were unaware of this and/or couldn't think of how this tends to play out.
The example that comes to mind for me was a time in 8th or 9th grade when my friends called me a pussy for being too afraid to snap girls' bras. Besides that there was the general pervasiveness of being called a loser if you weren't getting girls' phone numbers, hooking up with them, having sex with them, etc.
Curious if other guys experienced this when they were growing up and whether women were aware that guys suffered a loss of social status if they weren't sexually aggressive toward women.
I never felt that way. I played sports and was focused on that. Didnt get laid until college a d was never called a loser. Im 32.
Anonymous wrote:There was a Twitter thread <https://twitter.com/saladinahmed/status/931206629995008002> where the original poster said "male culture tries to make boys/men feel f*cked up for NOT being harassers." I was a little surprised at the number of people, mostly women, who were unaware of this and/or couldn't think of how this tends to play out.
The example that comes to mind for me was a time in 8th or 9th grade when my friends called me a pussy for being too afraid to snap girls' bras. Besides that there was the general pervasiveness of being called a loser if you weren't getting girls' phone numbers, hooking up with them, having sex with them, etc.
Curious if other guys experienced this when they were growing up and whether women were aware that guys suffered a loss of social status if they weren't sexually aggressive toward women.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, definitely. By the standards of my adolescence (1990s), I was widely presumed to be gay, or just odd and overly timid, in general.
As bad as that was, those traits probably saved me from the Inquisition that is taking place today. I would never have anticipated that the goal posts would have shifted so dramatically in just 20 years. It's hard to appreciate how cultural mores can subtly shift what seems like right and wrong until you have lived long enough to experience it, personally.