** Her Bad Mother, Mom-101, and a few other women blog stars have apparently been chatting up noneother than Ms. Gloria Steinem. And this got me thinking. I have always considered myself to be a strong, confident, capable female, but a feminist? Well, not in the storm the streets/fight for your rights sense of the word. The following post details my thoughts about feminism, based solely upon my own unique experiences. It’s the first time I’ve ever spoken these words out loud.
Back in the summer of 1984, when I was a plebe at the United States Military Academy at West Point, a member of, if memory serves, the fifth class of women ever at the academy, I thought a lot about feminism. Equal rights. What it meant to be a woman in a man’s world. I had never really given the topic much thought.
I didn’t have to.
Feminism was my mother’s movement - the wind beneath her apron of sails that propelled her out of the kitchen and into the aerobics class, during the dinner hour (!), after teaching all day and coaching until dusk. While she butted heads with my father about her rights and responsibilities as wife, mother, and equal human person, I never had to fight. I always felt equal - that is, until I went to West Point and learned that I was not.
During my first and only year at West Point, all of us plebes, or first year cadets, endured the same ritual humiliations and physical challenges. We marched side by side for miles wearing the same boots and bearing the same heavily weighted packs on our backs. We ran in formation at the same pace up and down the same mountainous hills. We walked the same walk, a walk known as “pinging” in which we moved as fast as possible in the position of attention, with elbows locked and eyes and heads facing squarely to the front.
We even talked the same talk: Yes, Sir. No, Sir. Yes, Ma’am. No, Ma’am. No excuse, Sir. No excuse, Ma’am. During bayonet training, while we practiced how to smash and slash our invisible enemies with bayonets attached to the ends of our M-16 rifles, we would utter the same chants, at the prompts of hardened, enlisted army combat veterans: Kill a commie for your mommy. Blood makes the grass grow.
Despite our seemingly equal treatment at every turn - in the classroom, on the parade grounds, inside the barracks - there was nothing equal about being a female cadet at West Point, especially in 1984.
Consider, if you will, the prospect of a girl being invited to participate on a boys’ football team. She can wear the uniform, learn the plays, and practice the tackles, but come game day, when it counts, chances are she will be warming the bench. This is football, after all! And she’s, well, a girl! Does anyone really believe she or any other female (rare exceptions notwithstanding) can compete as an equal on the football field? To do so, she not only has to be as good as her male counterparts, she has to be better. But even then, who wants to see a girl get tackled on the football field? And what girl in her right mind would want to be there?
At West Point, I realized early on that if I was to survive, let alone excel as one of the handful of female cadets dotting the ranks, then I had to be better. Smarter. Tougher. And I really had to want it.
Still, I would never be truly equal.
Behind the camouflage I wore - the crisp, tailored uniforms, the game face, the warrior cries I grunted with ferocious intensity (Hoo yah!) - I was still…a girl.
I was someone’s daughter, sister, and niece. Someday, perhaps, I’d be a wife and mother.
And like it or not, I was a sex object. A woman. A member of the weaker sex - from a strictly physiological standpoint.
I was a woman surrounded by men on a male playing field. A woman who would be relegated to the sidelines - not the front lines - when it really counted. (Did I have to be protected, like all the other women and children armies have protected for centuries? Wait, but wasn’t I being groomed to be the protector? Wasn’t I equal?)
No. I could not be equal. My body made me different. Better, in fact, in a lot of ways. Not less than or inferior. Just different.
But definitely not equal.
I left West Point honorably, and without regret, about one year from the day I entered its ranks about twenty years ago. And though my uniforms have changed through the years - nowadays it’s mostly what I term “slob chic” - the playing field onto which I stepped is still, in too many ways, predominantly male. It’s also old - with old rules, age-old stereotypes, and good old boys.
Can women compete on this global field, side by side and on equal terms with men?
Yes and no.
In my view, women are not equal to men and never will be, in the same way an apple will never be an orange, though both are fruits, delicious and nutritious in their own ways.
But we can compete, and indeed we do compete - on our own terms.
And that’s what feminism means to me.
Feminism is not about women trying to be more like men, trying to be “equal” to men in an unnatural, desperate sort of way. Feminism is not about criticizing men or blaming them for unequal treatment.
To me, feminism is about celebrating the very essence of our womanhood, embracing the qualities that make us unique, and asserting our right to be whatever it is we want to be.
We should not be relegated to the sidelines; we simply need to re-define the game.
But to do so, oftentimes, we need to be better. Smarter. Tougher.
And we really have to want it.
**********
I am raising a daughter now, a strong-willed, bright and beautiful girl with the world at the tips of her painted toenails.
I tell her she can do and be anything she wants to be, just as my mother told me.
But unlike my mother, I find myself telling my daughter that she has to choose.
“Choose one or two things, and do them well” I say, my words falling on the deaf ears of my daughter, who at seven years-old has no idea what I’m talking about.
“Hey Mom, do we have any popcorn?”
“Because you can’t do everything. You’ll be a jack of all trades, master of none. Like me.”
“Where’s my American Girl doll?”
“Life is about choices, and for every choice we make, there is a sacrifice.”
Silence. Blank stare.
“You can be anything you want to be.” Pause. Scratch. Shrug. ”Do you want butter on the popcorn?”
Sunday, September 10, 2006
Feminism - The Dynamite Perspective
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17 comments:
Feminism is a word I try to avoid about 99.999999% of the time. Because I don't understand it. I feel that the current definition has become so warped, due to all the twisting by various media and, naturally, further morphed by the super-varied societal response to that twisting by the media, and in the end... ? I just don't know where we are with the whole thing. I know that I am a woman, and that I want to live as fully and as truly as I can, whatever that means, but I don't really know whether that meets the requirement of feminism. Is there even a requirement? I don't know. I want to be a good person. And a good woman, I suppose, but more just a good person.
I should probably have posted this at my own place, b/c now I'm cluttering up what you said, which was brilliant, as usual, but you've inspired me, and now I'm going to remove my fingers from the keys and let you have your comments section back.
Debbie, I think being a good woman and living a good life are exactly what feminists have been fighting for all along. I'm not so sure what feminism means nowadays to most people, but to me, it means that women need to define "good woman" and "good life" for themselves - and not be afraid to claim their goodness, their excellence.
Inequities still exist - prejudice, stereotypes, sexism, etc. - and thus, a movement. Feminism. A collective voice.
At least, that's how I see it.
This was really thought-provoking. And fabulous, as usual!
Thanks for writing it!
What a great post - and really interesting perspective, with your background! I can only assure you that while the military is probably an extreme example of the differences you feel, I can't think of one corporate job I've had, even in high positions, where I wasn't reminded of being a woman. Let's just say that when I really wanted to write ads for Hasbro's "Monster Face," it was deemed more appropriate that I write for Cabbage Patch Kids.
In the end, they looked at my scripts and said I was...a little too dark for Cabbage Patch. So there is justice in the world.
Mom-101: I found the similarities between the military and corporate America strikingly similar. For me, it was deja vu.
so, Ruth, by your standard, we're doing our bit. maybe not always adequately, but then maybe sometimes more than, so there's probably a decent balance.
that's pretty damn reassuring. and, of course, one of the multifaceted aspects of my adoration of your writing. and you.
When I decided to be a stay at home mom, my own mom was disappointed and said I was not living up to her feministic (word or no?) values. I explained to her that to me, feminism means I get to choose. Without all the work women did in past generations, I would be EXPECTED to stay home, but now it is a choice. I'm not sure that made her feel better, but I am doing what makes me happy and I think that is all it should be about anyway. Great post!
I really appreciate your take on this and found your perspective on feminism really interesting.
I work for a feminist organization (it actually says on all of our documents "we work from an anti-racist, anti-oppression, feminist framework". And despite that I still struggle with what the definition of feminism is for me.
Radioactive Girl - I totally agree and I applaud your choice since it makes you happy.
Sunshine Scribe - Thanks for your comment. It's a fascinating, evolving topic.
Great post! You reminded me of a time when I ran for Class President in high school against one of our school jocks. He said to me, "Why don't you run for something girls are supposed to do, like secretary." Which pissed me off, but I realized then that I'd be (and all women would be, really) dealing with those kinds of attitudes the rest of my life.
PS: I won the election three years in a row. ;)
My exposure to feminism, via my mother, in the 1970's was such a bastardization of what it should mean. In her view, it meant working and supporting yourself, without a man, ever. I think she'd be more aptly described as an anti-manist.
I loved your perspective as a West Point cadet. I believe feminism is about choice - that we no longer have to fall into gender roles prescribed by history. Equality is a whole 'nother ball of wax.
Beautifully written. Made me really think.
My six-year-old is waiting anxiously for Sunday, when "Barbie and the Twelve Dancing Princesses" will premier on Nick.
And I'm all like "You can get a master's in statistics like your mom, you know. You can do anything."
Maybe when they're older.....?
I think you have managed to sum up what I have been feeling for a very long time.
I never understood why women, in their quest for equality, tried to be more manly with powersuits and going to the titty bar with all they guys and being really tough executives. I mean I know WHY they did/do it but I don't understand why they accepted that that was a good approach.
I'm not a man. I never will be. I can't see that denying who and what i am would ever get me where i want to be. But that's just me. I don't feel unequal to men. I feel superior to them in uniquely feminine ways.
I'd never be able to compete on the gridiron but they can't grow a life inside them or even fricken multitask. I can do 10 things at once and do them well. I've yet to see a man that could do the same.
We are different. We should play to our strengths and create a new playing field. And I think women are doing that. Some insanely high percentage of new businesses are started by women each year. Women. Not men.
And I think that is a perfect example.
Anyway, I've rambled on and on and I'm sorry. You rock. Great post!
I can still remember how painful it was when I began to realize that all those years I was told "You can do anything!" no one ever explained that I couldn't do everything.
You are doing your daughter an important service. Even if it goes in one ear and out the other, you're still shaping her expectations into a realistic framework.
(My mom did do her best, though - she refused to buy a VCR because she believed it would teach us that we could have it all, instead of having to make choices (i.e. taping one show and watching another). I just don't think I ever applied that lesson to the "If you can dream it you can do it" career rhetoric I was being fed elsewhere.)
Truly wonderful post. Feminism has always been to me about having choices, whether you opt-in or not. I don't think that what we seek is so much equality in the sense of "I can do whatever a man can do" but equality of respect for our gifts and talents as women.
Your daughter will get the message...You are a wonderful example for her to follow.
Arrrrghhhhh! I'm so late to this, and I'm sorry about that.
First, I'm blown away that you were a plebe at West Point. Not an easy place to be - man or woman. But yes, I'll agree that it's harder on the women.
Better. Smarter. Tougher. Show people what we're made of. We ARE different, in more ways than just anatomy. But men and women are not different in a black and white, zeroes and ones sense. It's really a continuum.
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