These are the sorts of distinctions that aren't being made by the #MeToo wave. — Bitter Crank
You don't mouth "help me" you say loudly enough for everybody to hear: "I'm done hugging, now let me go." If he continues, you knee him in the groin in self-defence. Fuck grace. If he's not being a gentleman, you can stop being a graceful lady. — Benkei
It can be, if you presume that the person in question has sufficient reason in them to realise they are wrong. Ignoring someone that way can perform the function of getting them to re-assess their emotions before having a discussion. When we're in the throes of emotion, we're not necessarily the most rational.Ignoring someones distress is neither emotinally supportive or cognitively helpful. — praxis
Krishnamurti went on to give countless talks at which he frequently implied that his audience shouldn't be wasting their time listening to spiritual talks. But perhaps the most striking was a 1977 lecture in California. "Part-way through this particular talk," writes Jim Dreaver, who was present, "Krishnamurti suddenly paused, leaned forward and said, almost conspiratorially, 'Do you want to know what my secret is?' " (There are several accounts of this event; details vary.) Krishnamurti rarely spoke in such personal terms, and the audience was electrified, Dreaver recalls. "Almost as though we were one body we sat up… I could see people all around me lean forward, their ears straining and their mouths slowly opening in hushed anticipation." Then Krishnamurti, "in a soft, almost shy voice", said: "You see, I don't mind what happens."
Hmmm I think you are thinking about something... very evil >:)The top head represents reason, if I'm not mistaken, therefore perhaps the conversation was impaired by... something more base. Clearly the brother's friend was a creeper, so why didn't hubby support? — praxis
Question: How should I have responded to the following scenario that just happened to me. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Really? BC, you have known me for over a decade and do you honestly think that I cannot tell the difference between a pat on the ass and rape?
Such an insult to the #MeToo movement. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So until you solve the underlying moral issues, and adopt a culture which doesn't put sex so much on the pedestal, this issue won't be addressed adequately. — Agustino
Yeah, but it's precisely because you don't see the larger moral context of the problem that the issue will not be helped much by the #MeToo movement. The issues are more complicated than this. You're not addressing why men are harassing women in the first place. You just want to bully them not to, through social means. So until you solve the underlying moral issues, and adopt a culture which doesn't put sex so much on the pedestal, this issue won't be addressed adequately.For this specific goal there's in my view no need to address the legal niceties of rape, sexual harassment and unwanted sexual advances. It's not about punishment, it's about creating awareness, staking out social territory by women for women to get this addressed and hopefully getting men to stop with rape, sexual harassment and unwanted sexual advances. — Benkei
Question: How should I have responded to the following scenario that just happened to me.
NicK and I were leaving out best guy friends house at the end of a party and as we were saying goodbye and hugging as we do, our friends' brother opened his arms offering a hug to me (first time I had ever met him) and I stepped into the hug with my arms around his chest and then went to release and as I did he said to me "Oh push your body hard against mine" in a moaning drunk way and I pushed away but he wouldn't let me go. Keep in mind NicK is saying goodbye to others and not watching what is going down but my friends' sister in law saw what was happening and I mouthed to her, help me with BIG eyes and she stepped right in and broke his hug on me and took it onto herself. Why did she do this? Not because she wanted that kind of attention but she felt the need to help me and I am forever grateful. She intervened because she understood how uncomfortable I was and likely because it was her home that we were in but either way that time it ended gracefully.
So when NicK and I got in the car I explained to him what had happened and he dismissed it as the guy just being a "huggy" kind of person. I called bullshit on NicK because I am a "huggy" person and I have never uttered such words to a man while embracing and NicK still, today, believes that I am over-reacting. Am I? I don't even want to be around him because knowing NicK doesn't have my back on this makes me nervous. Not because I don't know how to put an end to it but because of the ripples within our friendships it would cause if he were to do it again and still not hear me and make me call him out on it. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So why should I be surprised that sexual relations are some of the most abusive relations there are? It is entirely to be expected in this cultural environment. If you went on to speak with some of those men who grab women, etc. - which is a large majority of them - they would laugh at you. They would say, "you go do that, we will keep doing what we've been doing". They will say "you have a micropenis, so you want to stop people like us, with bigger tools, because you cannot compete with us". That is how they will approach this subject. They will say that you are a woman's slave, etc. So that's how the rhetoric will go. It will be impossible to change their minds. Even if you make a law against it, and enforce it, all that you will do is make them afraid, but inside, they will be the same, completely unchanged. So how will you ever get to such people? — Agustino
Yah a similar thing happened to my mother once with someone from our family, except worse, since that person kissed her on the lips that time (while he was meant to kiss on the cheek, as it is traditional). When my father heard, he dismissed it too. That kind of stuff is sexism that has been internalised by the culture as acceptable in my opinion. So it's very difficult to convince people who think in this manner that they are wrong.Question: How should I have responded to the following scenario that just happened to me.
NicK and I were leaving out best guy friends house at the end of a party and as we were saying goodbye and hugging as we do, our friends' brother opened his arms offering a hug to me (first time I had ever met him) and I stepped into the hug with my arms around his chest and then went to release and as I did he said to me "Oh push your body hard against mine" in a moaning drunk way and I pushed away but he wouldn't let me go. Keep in mind NicK is saying goodbye to others and not watching what is going down but my friends' sister in law saw what was happening and I mouthed to her, help me with BIG eyes and she stepped right in and broke his hug on me and took it onto herself. Why did she do this? Not because she wanted that kind of attention but she felt the need to help me and I am forever grateful. She intervened because she understood how uncomfortable I was and likely because it was her home that we were in but either way that time it ended gracefully.
So when NicK and I got in the car I explained to him what had happened and he dismissed it as the guy just being a "huggy" kind of person. I called bullshit on NicK because I am a "huggy" person and I have never uttered such words to a man while embracing and NicK still, today, believes that I am over-reacting. Am I? I don't even want to be around him because knowing NicK doesn't have my back on this makes me nervous, not because I don't know how to put an end to it but because of the ripples within our friendships it would cause if he were to do it again and still not hear me and make me call him out on it. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I did not go with him to the club, he was there, and he knew me, so he came to me to do what every man wants to do - impress the other with his skills. And I did not return to the club that often, but he did.Agustino I can understand your not getting into the middle of customs in another country on the first night but why would YOU condone that behavior by returning to the club with him day after day? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Yeah, he often got kicked out of the club, but that's not much of a problem for someone like him, since they can always go to another club. And the bouncers at the club aren't always the same, hard to keep track of who enters and who leaves. And there are girls who are receptive to such behaviour, he was actually very successful with women by the standards of Western society.The second thought is that if "your colleague" had behaved that way in the states on the first night he might not have been tossed out by the establishments' management but by the second night and women were NOT receptive to his behavior, he would be escorted out. Any establishment worth their salt are not going to facilitate this unwanted behavior for fear that at some point they might be held legally accountable. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
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