teachercd
Active member
I like to think 7 pages it the magic number...isn't 5 pages of nothing about nothing generally what message boards are for? :dunno
5 seems, lite. Ha
I like to think 7 pages it the magic number...isn't 5 pages of nothing about nothing generally what message boards are for? :dunno
You seriously have never heard a woman (wife, boyfriend..etc.) describe a man (husband, boyfriend...etc.) like that?Here's a possible reason why woman-splaining could technically be a thing, but isn't invoked:
Someone being weak, helpless and dumb and needing correction isn't a male stereotype, its a female stereotype.
I think it's more that all women have had legitimate negative experiences with your gender than it is that all members of your gender perpetuate those things.
At the same time, it's become overused and diluted, like most cultural vernacular does.
The vast majority of my professional life has been spent working with >75% women. In my current employment, until recently I was the only male in my office, and it had been that way for years. Now it's about 60/40 women-to-men.
Further, just about everything I know about football I learned from my mom. Same with cooking - mom & grandma. My dad is a good cook but didn't teach me, and he didn't really like football much until he moved to Nebraska & mom educated him.
So to me the concept of patronizing a woman because she's a woman, as in, presuming superiority over her because of her gender & mine, is pretty farfetched. I am aware of the plight of women in the world and how *some* men behave toward them because I am a normal human & I have the same general knowledge everyone has, but to tell me that my gender is guilty of this is simply wrong. SOME of my gender is, but it's not common enough to dedicate a 5+ page thread about haggling over the definition, that much I can tell you.
Next meeting found out that the girls would be deciding what we would wear during the competition and the boys would be designing and building the cars.
This is just one experience I've had.
Did it change you forever?
Have I made a claim in this topic that any single one of these things has a huge effect on women? Or me?
Have I claimed that having someone "mansplain" something to me has changed me?
Please stop being ridiculous and downplaying out of hand things other people have experienced.
Have I made a claim in this topic that any single one of these things has a huge effect on women? Or me?
Have I claimed that having someone "mansplain" something to me has changed me?
Please stop being ridiculous and downplaying out of hand things other people have experienced. Maybe re-read some of the posts I've made where I never said I cut myself due to any of these things.
Have you been hermetically sealed in a mayonnaise jar on Funk and Wagnall's porch your entire life?
No one accused you of mansplaining. The word refers to a specific man doing a specific thing at a specific point of time.
As for your "from whose point of view?" comment, I really don't know what planet someone has to have been living on to think women assume men are stupid/ignorant in the same frequency as the reverse.
I was in Odyssey of the Mind in 6th grade. I think the way my school picked teams was based on us being good at math and science. I dont remember for sure.
Anyway, on my team there were half girls and half boys. The dad of one of the boys was in charge. I was excited because our project was to design cars and have them do specific things on a track. I even drew up a diagram for an idea I had.
Next meeting found out that the girls would be deciding what we would wear during the competition and the boys would be designing and building the cars.
This is just one experience I've had.
So someone thinking that men don't even talk to women like they're stupid/ignorant at a higher rate than the reverse is a bit shocking to me. What I think is fairly common for women seems pretty rare for men. 2 brothers isn't a big enough sample size but nothing like that ever happened to them.
I thought this was an intuitively obvious truth in society.
You're acting like I did by making that post.