Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The Denial of Difference as Part of the P.C. Morality

Over a series of posts The Reasons Why the Differences between Women and Men are Being Denied I have discussed how male vanity, feminism, the men's movement, the fear of appearing naive, and many other forces are all working together towards a myth of sameness. People in all of these and other groups have reasons for pretending that women and men feel the same about sex. Even though they may be at odds otherwise, they support each other in their pretending, creating the myth.

Today I'll talk about another overriding reason for pretending that women and men feel the same when they obviously don't: the denial of difference has become part of the Politically Correct Morality.

Let me explain what I mean by "Politically Correct Morality." Lots of people complain about political correctness, but few point out what's the real problem with it. After all, many of things that are politically correct--the desire for equality, to protect the environment--are good things.

Part of the problem is obvious: if people pretend to share these beliefs for only political reasons, it leads to hypocrisy, and lots of bad things result. If a man goes around saying he believes in "gender equality" (to use the p.c. term), but in private physically abuses women, he is dangerous--more than he would have been had he felt free to go around saying, "I hate women." At least then women would know to steer clear of him.

But there's a much bigger problem with political correctness. It is becoming a new morality. As it does, the true believers become more fanatical and intolerant. The beliefs become more simplistic.

"Equality" gets mistaken for "sameness." Anyone who points out that women are different from men is suspected of not believing in equality.He may even be branded a misogynist, simply because he refuses to pretend that women and men are the same.

Naturally enough, those who believe in difference--that is, the majority--keep our mouths shut, hoping to keep out of trouble, and the myth of sameness keeps growing. 

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Where the Men's Movement is Going Wrong

The types of power that men have traditionally possessed to a greater degree than women are economic, political, physical, and, in some ways, social.

All of these types of power, except the last, are easily measurable. We can compare the amount of money women earn to what men earn for the  same work, and we get an idea of where women stand economically. We can compare the number of female senators to the number of male senators, and this gives us  some idea of political representation for women.

This ease of measurement is one of the main reasons why feminism has been so successful. The measurements produce hard numbers and it's difficult to argue with hard numbers.

Many of the powers that women possess to a greater degree than men are sexual and social. These advantages, unlike men's, are almost impossible to measure. They are a matter of feeling, not dollars or politicians. Statistics nor even science will ever reveal the truth of these feelings.  Therefore it is easy--and increasingly common--to dismiss such feelings as imaginary.

For this reason it is difficult for men to make a case that women have social powers, especially sexual powers, that we do not.

The men's movement faces a temptation to focus on a relatively small number of issues that can be effectively argued with hard numbers. These issues have already been defined by feminism. The men's movement just takes the opposite stance.

Members of the men's movement point out, for example, that women sexually abuse men just as men sexually abuse women. They cite statistics. Some even suggest that women commit these crimes at equal or greater rates than men. The crimes just go unreported because the victims are men.

In the end this approach is another way of saying women and men are the same. We are affected by the same passions. We are guilty of the same crimes, in more or less equal numbers.

This is where the men's movement has gone wrong.

The men's movement should be doing the opposite. We should be insisting that women and men are different.  Instead of seeking out as an example the female teacher who has seduced underage male students, we should be pointing out just how  rare she is. We should point out that men are ten times more likely to be guilty of this crime. We should point out that the media's obsessive focus on female teachers who seduce their male students lacks context and is misleading and should be corrected.  

We should  insist on pointing out that men are far more often guilty of such abuse. We should point out that this is the case because women have a sexual power that men do not; therefore, men face a temptation that women do not.  We must insist that this does not excuse these men in any way (on the contrary, recognizing difference makes them all the more guilty), but we must also insist that women's sexual power entails a responsibility.

If we want to point out how women abuse men, we should instead look to the emotional manipulation that often passes as "flirting." Yes, this point will be far more difficult to argue, but it is far more important because it is real and it is everywhere.

We should address the male suicide epidemic. We should start asking why so many men have to fly to Thailand for sex (and expose the so-called female sex tourists as the media-created illusion they almost always are).  We should talk about why so many men resort to pornography. With each of these issues we should emphasize that these problems result from the fact that women and men are different. We're never going to get anywhere until we start acknowledging difference.

This is the difficult approach. It will require men to do what men are forever being accused of being afraid to do: talk about our feelings. But if we do, our accusers will eventually be forced to admit that perhaps men have kept silent so long because we know how few people are prepared to accept what we really feel.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Where Feminism Has Gone Wrong

Insofar as I am any kind of -ist, I am a feminist.

I'm all for equal opportunity and equal pay for equal work. I'm all for a woman as president if she is the best candidate. I believe we need more women in professional positions of power, more women in fields that are still dominated by men.

I believe that if a woman is sexually harassed or abused, she should be able to complain without stigma and that her claim should be investigated, and the man, if guilty, should be punished. 

I believe in these and many other goals of feminism.

But there is a growing number of feminists who insist that women and men are basically the same and most differences are only "perceived" and the result of "social conditioning."  Increasingly these deniers of difference dominate popular feminism. We hear the voice of feminists who acknowledge difference only rarely, if at all.

This is where feminism has gone wrong.

Pretending that women and men feel the same about sex does not create equality. On the contrary, it promotes inequality.

By denying difference, we deny the many imbalances of power that difference creates between women and men.  We deprive ourselves of the open-mindedness necessary to assess these powers, determine what they mean, and point out when they are being abused.

In short, by denying difference, we blind ourselves to many, even most, of the real problems of inequality between women and men. 

It's not hard to see why feminism had taken this wrong turn. Denying difference is increasingly popular, and even obligatory (the subject of a future post). It is easier to go with the masses than oppose them, and feminism has taken the easy route. 

More importantly, as I discuss in my last post, accepting difference is what makes the goal of equality so difficult. If women and men were really the same, working towards equality would the straightforward matter feminism increasingly portrays it to be. The issue of sexual harassment and abuse in particular would be easier to deal with.  In the end, taking the easy way out will create far more problems than it solves, for women and men both.









  

Friday, November 11, 2011

Reasons for Denying Difference Number Eight: Mistaking the Myth of Sameness for Equality

In the last seven posts I have written about various reasons why so many people today are denying the differences between women and men. Today I will focus on the reason that has caused all the others to come together with a kind of snowball effect.

We live in a culture obsessed with an ideal of equality. This is a good thing. The goal of equality has led to fairer treatment of minorities, women, the disabled, the old, and the young.

But as the idea of equality has become increasingly accepted, it has also been simplified.  This simplification has resulted in, among other things,  a mistaken assumption that for people to be equal, they must be the same.

As so often happens when defending difference,  I must point out the obvious: sameness is not the same thing as equality.

Children are different than adults. The old really do know some things that younger generations don't. Vietnamese culture is different from Cuban culture. A Muslim sees the world in a very different light than a Buddhist. We recognize that these and many other groups are different. We want to preserve this difference while striving for equality.

Difference is what makes the goal of equality difficult. It would be easy, if we were all exactly the same.

But there is an ever growing number of people who want to take the easy way out. They insist on sameness even when difference is blatant.  This is especially true when it comes to the differences between women and men.


It's easy to see how the problem began. To achieve economic equality, it is necessary for women to receive the same pay as men for doing the same amount of work. We want roughly the same number of women as men in all the different levels of most professions. For political equality, we need roughly the same number of women as men in congress.

We achieve equality by striving for the same numbers, so it's easy to jump to the conclusion that sameness always results in equality.

When we move into the social sphere, equality becomes  more difficult. There is no equivalent here to the neat systems of measurements supplied by numbers, whether in dollar amounts or politicians.  Women's and men's roles in friendship, in family, in courtship, and in marriage are all different. Women see the world differently, and are seen differently, than men. These differences give women certain powers that men don't have, and vice versa. There are many inequalities as a result.  There are many abuses of power.

Women have a sexual power that men simply do not. A woman can use this sexual power to emotionally manipulate a man in a serious way. When one does, we have an inequality and an abuse of power.

What do we do about it?

Likewise a man may suggest he is willing to commit to a serious relationship with a woman in hopes of persuading her to have sex with him. His potential to become a steady boyfriend or husband gives him power that she doesn't have. When he uses this woman and leaves her, he abuses this power.

Once again, what do we do about it?

I will go back to such questions in future posts. For now I will say only this: the first step to addressing such inequalities is admitting that they exist. To do that, we must accept difference.

But many people do just the opposite. They try to avoid the difficulty of difference by pretending that women and men are the same. We are told that men have the same sexual power that women do when men do not. We're told that men want love and commitment in the same way women do, when men often do not. We are told  many other lies.

As long as so many go on insisting that women and men are the same, the many differences of power, along with the abuses of this power, will go unacknowledged.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Reasons for Denying Difference Number Seven: the Fear of the Unknown

The most basic reason of all for denying the differences between women and men is the fear of the unknown.

A man can never fully understand how a woman feels. Nor can a woman completely understand a man's feelings.

When a woman and a man fall in love, each is confronted with the mystery of the other.  The only realistic way to deal with this mystery is to accept it and love despite the mystery or even (if only partly) because of the mystery.

To admit that we cannot fully know a person we love requires humility. To go on loving despite uncertainty takes bravery.  The constant effort to understand, to meet halfway, can be trying.

I'm not saying that women are completely ignorant of the way men feel, or vice versa. We know enough to recognize difference. We can even see (if never determine scientifically) some of the more basic ways we are different. After all, defending this knowledge of difference is the point of this blog.

But in the end what women and men know of each other creates far more mystery than it resolves.  As when an astronomer discovers a galaxy, we get far more questions than answers. We learn mainly how little we can ever truly know.

The myth that women and men feel basically the same offers an easy way to avoid confronting this often troubling mystery, namely by helping us to pretend that the mystery does not exist, or at least by reducing it to the mystery of difference between individuals, regardless of their sex.

(This insistence that the only difference is between individuals is a common way of denying the differences between women and men. I will write about it in future posts.) 

Denying difference means denying the mystery that lies between women and men. It requires a man to pretend to know what he cannot know about a woman. It forces a woman to pretend to know what she can never know about a man. In the end it leads both to assume he or she, being basically the same,  must feel the same, when he or she is not the same, and feels quite differently.

Of course men and women have been pretending to understand each other for a long, long time. It is a natural thing to do, and the hurt and disappointments it leads to are a part of life, of growing up.

But today, as more and more people are denying the differences between women and men,  and denying too the mysteries created by these differences, this kind of pretending has become more than a common mistake. It has become standard (and increasingly obligatory) behavior. Where there were once a normal disappointments of life, there is now widespread disillusionment that makes all but the most casual relationships between women and men impossible, and eventually leads to hatred.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Reasons for Denying Difference Number Six: The You-just-need-to-get-laid Charge

Openly admit that women and men feel quite differently about sex, and sooner or later some one will say, "You just need to get laid."

The accusation (and it is an accusation, though often veiled by the lightest tones) is similar to one I discussed in my last post, The Fear of Being thought a "Prude," a "Victorian," a "Puritan," or a "Hypocrite", but with an even nastier edge, as it suggests the accused is not only in denial about sex, but has failed to obtain sex or, if he is a man, unable to obtain it. 

Telling a woman she just needs to get laid is not quite so harsh.  (The position of men and women here, as in so many situations, is different, which is one of the many reasons why I'm defending difference).  Though it is a fact often denied, along with so many other differences between women and men, a woman can get laid relatively easily. She may not be able to have sex with a movie star she likes, or even the most desirable men she knows personally, but she can usually find a partner for sex--if all she really wants is sex. She can even charge for the sex--if all she wants is sex (but that's the subject of another post).  Of course finding a sex partner willl be easier for a young woman or a good looking woman or a charming woman, but the fact is even an ugly, old woman with no charm whatsoever can have sex with men whenever she likes--if all she really wants is sex.

The catch, of course, is that a woman wants something more than just sex. 

And so when a woman is told "you just need to get laid," there is something humorous and even gentle about it. The implication is that she just hasn't gotten around to doing what she needs to do, but she can whenever she chooses, and this, at least, is true: she can. She just doesn't want to without the prospect of love and commitment. Still, being reminded of her sexual power, even though she chooses not to take advantage of that power, is not unpleasant.

Telling a man he just needs to get laid is quite different. The implication that a man can get laid whenever he chooses often simply is not true. For men who are not in a sexual relationship, getting laid usually takes time, money, status or power (see my post on women's attraction to power and prestige). Some scheming is often necessary too.  For a man, getting laid requires, above all, a belief on the woman's part that there is at least the possibility of finding  love and commitment with him.

This is why men pay good money for prostitutes (and, increasingly, risk exposure and humiliation when they are caught doing so). This is why men fly to Thailand. This is why, far more commonly, men go through the ritual of dating when they have no interest in a serious relationship: it's a lot of trouble and money, and, worse, it's dishonest, but it's a way of getting sex. 

All of this to say, for many men, getting laid isn't so easy, but when we tell a man (usually in a false casual tone), "You just need to get laid," the implication is that yes, it is.

It's a lie, and like so many of reasons the differences between women and men are being denied, it adds to the widening chasm between what we claim to be our sexual reality and what it actually is. It creates deception, with women and men both.

The lie suggests to women that men have it easier than they do, leaving them unprepared for encounters with what can be an urgent, even violent, need in men.

The lie suggests to men that they are failures when they are merely ordinary, and because this supposed failure is sexual, the suggestion can be devastating, especially for the young. 

The brutal old practice of taking a young man to a whorehouse would be more honest, and even more effective, by comparison.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Reason for Denying Difference Number Five: the Fear of Being Thought "Victorian," a "Puritan," a "Prude," or a "Hypocrite."

The words "Victorian," "Puritan," "hypocrite," and "prude" are thrown around pretty carelessly these days.

I won't try to explain how the Victorians were far more sexually sophisticated than they are generally given credit for.

Nor will I go into how in a culture that denies its own sense of sexual propriety, as ours does, the so-called "prudes" may be the ones facing our sexual reality.

There would be no point in going into all of that, because the standard definitions of each of these words are being set aside. They are used instead as blunt accusations, much like "Fascist" is used by left-wing people or "Commie" used to be used by the right. Little if any regard is being given to the actual meanings of these words. 

"Victorian," "Puritan," "hypocrite," and "prude," are just ugly names to call  non-believers. 

Though each word still often carries a vague connotation, they are used synonymously. Roughly, they are taken to mean: you know that women and men feel the same about sex but won't admit it because you're too weak or squeamish or ridiculous. You are in denial, et cetera. 

Like all name-calling, the use of these words reveals more about the accuser than the accused.
 
The accusers want to believe in the illusion of sameness even if (especially if) their day-to-day lives prove that it is false. They know how fragile their illusion is. They know that with even casual examination, the illusion may fall apart. 

If they dismiss doubters by calling them "Victorian," "Puritan," "hypocrite," or "prude," they protect their faith.

Those who acknowledge that women and men are different generally have the sense to be wary of   fanaticism. They know better than to attempt to argue with people who are determined to believe.  And so they keep their mouths shut. The myth of sameness goes on unquestioned and growing in popularity.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Reason for Denying Difference Number Four: Male Vanity

Male vanity is one of most obvious reasons why some people, usually men, deny that women and men feel differently about sex

To put  it simply, it is flattering for a man to imagine that women lust after him just as he lusts after women.

Or, to put it another way, it is humbling for a man to admit that what women feel for him is quite different from what he feels for them.

Male vanity, like The Entertainer's Temptation, is one of the oldest reasons in the book for denying the differences between women's and men's feelings about sex.  Also like The Entertainer's Temptation, it was once relatively harmless tendency, often humorous, forming the basis for many dirty jokes. But today, when combined with so many other reasons for denying difference, it does cause harm. See my post Why Acknowledging Difference Matters for further  explanation.   

This form of denial is particularly harmful when young men (and often not-so-young men) brag to each other about their supposed success with women--usually in the guise of the most casual conversation, of course.  Again, this kind of thing is as old as the hills, but back when the differences between women's and men's feelings about sex were more widely accepted, it was far easier to recognize boasting as boasting.

Today, with so many people denying difference for so many different reasons, silly Don Juan stories can seem very real, even when they are exaggerated or altogether false.  The rejections, snubs, disapproval, and downright indifference that men must face when searching for a mate is hard enough already.  We make it that much harder by giving credence to stories that were once rightly confined to boys' night out.     

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Reason for Denying Difference Number Three: The Virtuous Ones

Devoutly religious people, as well as other morally upstanding folk, are often among those who insist most adamantly that women's feelings and attitudes about sex are much the same as men's. The reason is simply that the myth of sameness makes it easy to appear, and even feel, virtuous.

The man who believes that the world is full of women who want to have no-strings-attached sex with him can appear virtuous for resisting this temptation. It's easy since this temptation never actually exists.

This "virtuous" man's wife can pretend that her husband's resistance to sexual temptation reveals the strength of his love and devotion to her, when neither has actually been tested.
 
The woman who manages to convince herself that her sexual desires are much like a man's can congratulate herself for the moral willpower required to suppress these urges, when in fact she has never experienced anything remotely like male lust.

The wife who cheats on her husband can make the wrong appear less serious if she tells herself that it was only lust. The truth is she has acted as she has for different and far more important reasons. 

These and similar delusions depend on the myth that women's and men's feelings about sex are the same. The moment we admit that women's and men's desires are quite different, this illusion of sexual virtue falls apart, and being good suddenly become much, much more difficult.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Reasons for Denying Difference Number Two: The Fear of Appearing Naive

In yesterday's post, "The Entertainer's Temptation," I wrote about how artists, especially storytellers, often portray women who behave like men because such depictions have an inherent entertainment value: they provide an escape from everyday life where women behave quite differently.

Today I will focus on another reason for denying difference, the fear of appearing naive.

To put it simply, anyone who dares to admit that women feel and think differently about sex than men do puts himself in danger of being accused of naivete.

In our television shows, our films, and our novels, anyone who believes that women tend to want love and commitment with their sex--that is, anyone who admits the truth of sexual difference--is portrayed as an innocent, or a fool.

The reality of our daily lives is different. Most of us know there is a very big difference between the way women and men feel when it comes to sex, and our actions are determined by this knowledge.

Women are on their guard against men who are after "one thing."  And though many men would be happy (not to mentioned flattered) to encounter a woman who wants no-strings-attached sex, these men keep generally keep this fantasy a secret, or admit it only in a joking way, to avoid giving offense, and especially to avoid being thought of as pigs.

In the same way men are on their guard against women who want commitment.

This is the sexual reality we in.

Today's  popular fantasy of sexual sophistication requires everyone to deny this reality and pretend that women and men feel the same. Anyone who admits the truth of difference threatens to undermine the fantasy. The most effective way to eliminate this threat is to accuse him or her of being a fool or, more generously, too innocent to know the ways of the world.

 We live in a culture that rewards naivete as sophistication and denounces knowledge as innocence. Anyone with sense enough to recognize the sham is compelled to keep his or her mouth shut.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Reason for Denying Difference Number One: The Entertainer's Temptation

This is  the beginning of a series of posts on the reasons why so many people today are denying the differences between women and men.

I'll start with what I call "The Entertainer's Temptation."
 
An artist, whether a film maker or a novelist or just an ordinary person telling a story, must express a truth, but he must also entertain or else no one will pay any attention to that truth.

Ideally, truth and entertainment are one and the same, but usually this is not the case.  A film or novel that truly depicts how ordinary women and men behave can be very dull. And so the artist creates extraordinary men and women for his characters.

Ideally, these exceptional people will illuminate some truth about our ordinary selves, but often we learn nothing from them. Often the artist resorts to the extraordinary not to shed light, but simply because the extraordinary can be entertaining.  If nothing else, it provides relief to a humdrum reality.

This is especially true when it comes to the sexual desires and behavior of women.  Show the audience a woman who approaches men she hardly knows, who initiates sex with them, who is wild in bed, and who expects no commitment or anything else in return--in short, show a woman who seems to feel the way most men do about sex--and she is instantly, highly extraordinary. 

Such depictions of women have entertained audiences for centuries.  They have long since become dull cliches. Today these depictions continue (and multiply) for very different reasons (the subject of future posts) but originally these depictions provided a simple escape from a reality of difference that could be (and still often is) oppressive.
   

  Out of all of the reasons for denying the differences between women and men, this desire to entertain people weary of that difference is one I sympathize with most. That said, I suspect such entertainments, though harmless enough in themselves, provided the center of the giant snowball of denial that we have to today. 

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

More on Women's Attraction to Male Power and Prestige

In my last post I pointed out an important difference between men and women: while men have a tendency to be attracted to a woman for her looks, women are more often attracted to men for their power, status, or prestige.

The statement about men needs no explanation. There are of course many exceptions. Some of them I would like to talk about. They will be subjects for future posts.

Today I will focus on the women's attraction to male power. I want to make this point clear. By "power" or "status" I do not mean just economic, political, or physical power--though those obvious kinds of power can help a man to succeed in finding sexual partners.  There are many, many sorts of male power that attract women.

In certain situations, a drug dealer has power. In others, a guy in a successful rock band gets the attention. There are men who achieve a kind of status through being a clown or "cool." Even being a certain type loner or underdog can suggest power.

There are women who will brag about how they are attracted to "nerds," usually meaning "computer geeks."   It's not surprising. Computers play an important part in all of our lives, and those "geeks" make a lot of money.  Nerds have power too, and power attracts women.   
 
When I was first starting out as a writer I had to take low-paying, part-time jobs to make ends meet. I was a file clerk. I was an office boy. I was a lone male receptionist surrounded by female receptionists--all of whom despised me because I was only a receptionist.   I even delivered pizza at one point.  When I was working such jobs, I was beneath women's notice.

If I took a teaching job, suddenly I became visible.  If I went to a writer's conference, especially if it was somewhat exclusive, women even found me desirable.  But as soon as I returned to another temp office job I became the invisible man again.

In this way I came to understand that my desirability as a man was directly related to my position in a given sphere. I came to see that unless I had a certain status, I was nothing as far women were concerned.

Men who have never been through that--men who find a place for themselves and keep it--have a hard time understanding just how important their position is. Most women refuse to believe this fact of male existence at all.

Women have a hard time imagining this because their own sexual worth (as well as other sorts of worth) is more constant. Whether a woman works as a business executive or a maid in a hotel, men will find her attractive, if she is attractive in any way at all. 

 One of the biggest differences between women and men is that women have a sexual power that men simply do not.  This sexual power is extremely important, but it is being denied. 

  Why? This will be the subject of future posts.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

How Denying Difference Leads to Misguided Ideals of What Women & Men Should Be

Reading over my last post I found a doozy of a line:

"I see people holding the opposite sex to impossible standards. The idea of what a woman should be or a man should be becomes increasingly narrow. It is as though the fixation on the false idea of sameness has resulted in mass blindness, preventing people from recognizing the beauty in real women and men."


 What do I mean?


If we acknowledge that women and men feel differently, we can evaluate those differences. We can see that men really do have a tendency, say,  to judge women too much by their appearances alone. We can see that women really do tend, say,  to judge men by their status or power.


Once we recognize such a tendency, we can be on our guard against it.

In some ways I am lucky to be a man in culture so willing to criticize men. I am rarely allowed to forget the male tendency to fall for a younger woman, a woman with a good body, or just a pretty face. Whenever I feel attracted to a woman with any of these qualities I stop and ask myself, "Am I being 'typically male'?" Usually the answer is "yes." I'm on my guard. I think a little before acting and I'm better off for it.


Women in this regard aren't so lucky.  Because we live a culture where anyone who criticizes women is immediately labeled a "misogynist," most people wisely keep their mouths shut, even when criticism is due.   If more people just came out and said it, "Yes, a lot of women do have a tendency to go for men with power or status," maybe more women would stop and ask themselves, "Do I really like this guy? Or am I just drawn to him he's lead singer in the band?"
 
But fewer and fewer people are willing to admit that a lot of women have this problem. Instead, they retreat to the myth of sameness. They insist that women are attracted to a handsome face just as much as men are attracted to pretty one, that women are attracted to a sexy body just as much as men are, and even that men are attracted to status or power or success in a woman the same way women are attracted to such qualities in  men.

Pretend long enough that a problem doesn't exist, and a lot of people will believe it doesn't.

We end up with what we have today: many women who will not consider a man unless he has certain social or economic standing, a certain kind of power or status. When they cannot find a man with these qualities, they say, "All the good ones are married or gay," or they chalk it up to bad luck. It never occurs to them that they should reexamine their own standards and tastes because no one dares to question those standards and tastes anymore.


I'm not saying that men don't have their problems too. There are still plenty of guys out there who really want (or think they want) any woman with big breasts (real or not) and blonde hair (real or not). But we at least force such men to realize that they are being shallow and that they deserve the sort of women they wind up with.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Why Acknowledging Difference Matters

In my first post I said that the current, widespread denial of difference was making a lot of people miserable.

Strong words.  Does it really matter so much that so many people are pretending that women and men feel, think, and see the world alike?

In a word, Yes.

For one thing, the myth of sameness leaves young women unprepared for the reality of men. If a teenage girl starts dating actually believing that the boys she's going out with feel the same way she does about sex, she's going to be in for a rude awakening. Possibly she could be headed for real trouble.

And it's not fair to young men either. Imagine a teenage boy who's been brought up to actually believe that  woman will often make the first move, initiate sex, and expect no real commitment from him. That's going to be one disappointed boy. He's going think something must be the matter with him.

"But why aren't women coming up to me and leading me by the hand into their bedrooms the way they do on TV?" he'll ask himself. "Am I hideous? Does my breath stink? Am I saying something wrong?"

It's easy to laugh. But such disappointment can cause real pain to young men, especially when everyone around them keeps insisting that women feel basically the same as they do.

And young people aren't the only ones hurt by a lie.  I meet many adults who believe or claim to believe in the myth of sameness. 

I see women who hate men because they refuse to believe that men feel differently than they do about sex. 

I run into men who are full of hatred towards women because they refuse to accept that women want love and commitment.. As men, they can't get away with complaining the way women can, but inside they're seething.

Even more often I see people holding the opposite sex to impossible standards. The idea of what a woman should be or a man should be becomes increasingly narrow. It is as though the fixation on the false idea of sameness has resulted in mass blindness, preventing people from recognizing the beauty in real women and men. 

So yes, acknowledging difference between the feelings of women and men does matter. The lie of sameness is causing a great deal of pain.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Stating the Obvious: Men Want Sex, Women Want Love

Women and men are different--different in their desires, their needs, their way of seeing, their expectations of others and themselves.  I'm stating the obvious, but we're living in a culture that denies difference and embraces a myth of sameness, and so stating the obvious, unfortunately,  has become necessary.

One of the most important of these differences is that men want sex, women want love.

I am not saying that men never want love. (Of course we want love.) Nor am I saying the women do not want sex. (They do want sex, thank God.)

What I AM saying is that most men want sex in a way that women have a hard time imagining. We want more of it, with as many different partners as possible, in as many different ways as possible. 

Women, on the other hand, want love that (usually) includes a certain amount of sex.

Already I can hear the protests:

"But that's stereotypical thinking."

"What a cliche!"

"You are so naive."

"Obviously you need to get laid."

And so on.

Yet most men know what I have just said is true. They may not admit it's true, to avoid the accusations I have just listed, along with many others, but they know.

Most women refuse to admit this difference even to themselves. Oh, they know deep down that  the difference is real. They must deal with that difference if they live with men at all. (Though many women, confronted with this difference, choose not to live with men at all).   On some level, women know. They just don't want to hear it.

And under ordinary circumstances I would not ask women to hear it.  To point out this sort of difference is, after all, rude.

But we are not living under ordinary circumstances.  We are are living in an age of denial.

Why do so many deny this difference exists? Why do they insist on a make-believe sameness?

There are many reasons. I will talk about them in future posts.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Why I shouldn't be writing this blog, and why I am anyway


In general I am a non-political person, even apolitical. I cannot stand most political debates. Writing about politics tends to be even worse.  This is true not only of government politics, whether democrat or republican, but the politics of environment, race, class, religion, and sex, or what is nowadays called by the grammatical term, "gender."

If anything, "gender politics" is the worst of the bunch--absolutely unbearable. Whenever a feminist starts up about how we have been "socially conditioned" to believe this or that about women, or when member of the men's movement (if there can be said to be a "men's movement") says that men are "wired" to do this or that, usually in defense of despicable behavior, I stop listening. It's the same old argument.  It never leads anywhere. It's a big waste of time.

And yet I am starting a blog in defense of difference, the differences between women and men--differences  of desire, of thinking, of expectation, of ways of seeing.  I am entering the debate I loath. 

Why? Because we in the U.S. and Europe and increasingly other areas of the world are living in a culture that denies difference.  More and more, our writers, filmmakers, television and radio personalities, and just regular people are pretending that women and men feel the same about sex when we obviously don't.

That's another problem with this blog: I will often be pointing out the obvious, things that most people already know, if rarely admit.  I am afraid that the obvious will become very dull, very quickly. 

Still, I'm going to do it. I'm going to point out the many ways that women and men feel differently, post after post.  I'm going to point out again and again that the idea that we are the same is a lie. I am going to protest the lie of sameness because it is making so many people, women and men both, miserable.

I feel that I have to say these things because I hear almost no one saying them. I wish that someone else would. I'm a busy person. I have other things to be doing. I spend way too much time writing already. There is no way I will find the time or energy to say all that I have to say as clearly as it needs to be said.

If any of you out there know of anyone who is defending difference please, point him or her out to me.  I will stop posting immediately. I will become a devoted follower. I will be immensely relieved.

Until then, I'm writing in defense of difference.