Announcement

Collapse

Facebook Forum Migration

Our forums have migrated to Facebook. If you are already an iMSN forum member you will be grandfathered in.

To access the Call Room and Marriage Matters, head to: https://m.facebook.com/groups/400932...eferrer=search

You can find the health and fitness forums here: https://m.facebook.com/groups/133538...eferrer=search

Private parenting discussions are here: https://m.facebook.com/groups/382903...eferrer=search

We look forward to seeing you on Facebook!
See more
See less

Article: Things I wish Someone had Told Me

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Article: Things I wish Someone had Told Me

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mensen...b_4748182.html

    I thought this was beautiful:


    1. It is okay to leave anyone and anything and anyplace that makes you feel like shit.
    It's hard, but it's okay. And fuck explaining anything to anyone, unless you want to. Let them fucking wonder.

    2. Know who the fuck you are. Not just on some touchy-feely fuzzy pretty-on-the-inside tip, but knowing who you are -- racially, culturally, in relationship to your sexuality, gender and your class -- is a source of your power. You define that for you. Don't ever let anyone else tell you who you are. This may change in time, as you grow and learn more. That's okay. Manage any shame or guilt you may feel through acts of accountability.
    3. Be accountable for what you do. This means owning up to how you fuck up, just as much as it means owning and defending the contested space you fill. You will fuck up, and only you can seek atonement for this. You will need to defend yourself, and rarely will anyone do that work for you. Acknowledging both your mistakes and your rights is equally important.
    4. They will call you crazy. You are a woman. There is no way of going through the world in the moment we live in and not get called crazy by someone, often someone you wish would see you as deeply sane. You are not crazy. The world is fucking crazy. If you are affected by this imbalanced, unjust world, it only proves that you are a sentient being with some sense of empathy.
    5. Empathy is built. You need to learn to really listen. This means listening without thinking about how it relates to you, or planning the next thing you are going to say. This means seeing everyone, regardless of who they are, as a human being. You cannot really be a human being unless you regard everyone as such, even your greatest nemeses and the gravest perpetrators. All of our damage comes from somewhere. Yours and everyone else's. Learn to listen to others. Learn to listen to yourself. Empathy cannot exist without really, deeply listening first.
    6. You are going to have moments of unbearable pain. It takes time to learn how to heal yourself. And healing sometimes still leaves scars. Healing is sometimes incomplete. Think of your scars as battle wounds -- evidence of how much wiser you are now -- maps of where not to return. Cherish these scars and honor them. There will come times when they are the only reminder of where you have been, and how much you still need to grow.
    7. You are going to have moments of unbearable loneliness. You need to learn how to love being with yourself, because ultimately, no one has the potential to love you like you can. It is beautiful to love and be loved, but these are just hints as to how to regard yourself. If you regard yourself highly, and learn to turn loneliness into soothing solitude, you will be capable of giving and receiving truly transformative love.
    8. Find something that makes you feel like the world makes sense, even if you can't justify it intellectually to yourself or anyone else. Personally, if I don't rock a wall, get up, get laid, get down on a dance floor, read a good book, write a poem, listen to a mind-blowing record or have a soul-shaking, satisfying conversation at least once a week, the world doesn't make sense to me and I am unmoored. If I don't get these things for a month, I become a total, inconsolable, incomprehensible wreck. This wreck can easily snowball into all kinds of self-destruction. Find what works for you and be loyal to it as a loyalty to yourself.
    9. The world you live in is sick. This sickness creeps into all of us, and in many it manifests as an inability to love oneself, let alone others. Some of those afflicted with a parasitic strain of this illness will latch onto you as a host. You may believe it is part of your nature to nurture and support endlessly. These people will eat your love whole, and you with it, and leave you as a husk. You can grow again from your husk, but it will be hard, and it takes time and the training of betrayal and heartbreak to learn to trust yourself enough to determine who is worthy of your trust. Do not let anyone ride you. Only walk with those who will walk side by side with you, as an equal.
    10. Do not fuck with lovers that don't prioritize your pleasure. That can look like a lot of different things, and you're probably still figuring it out. Don't put up with lovers that don't give you room to explore, to express, and above all -- if a lover is only focused on using you as a vessel to reach their plateau -- be out. This doesn't mean to ignore your partner's pleasure, but rather to see yours as of equal worth.
    11. You are not responsible for the actions of those who hated themselves so much that they hurt you on purpose.
    12. Collectivism is a beautiful concept, and something worth constantly striving toward and building. Collectivism has radically changed and challenged unjust structures and institutions. But if you sacrifice your own survival for the benefit of the whole, you will find yourself wringing your hands and questioning the meaning of your life and doubting the worth of others in light of their unabashed self-interest. Find a balance.
    13. Do not carry broken people who are not in the process of rebuilding themselves.
    14. You are not your job. Your job is simply a paycheck, and you are probably not compensated what you are worth and it is not your fucking fault -- you inherited a broken economic system, and you will not be the first generation to fight for your right to live. But you need to fucking fight for your right to live, in solidarity, with those around you who are also struggling.
    15. Going to college is an accomplishment. It does not, however, make you better than anyone else. It doesn't make you essentially more intelligent. You never really make it "out" of the class you came from, and you never really make it "in" to the class you aspired to.
    16. If you cannot translate what you have learned from whatever access you've had back to wherever you came from, then you have not gained anything -- you have changed. Assimilation is a choice. Seek to be a translator. Seek to share your access to those who you may have left behind. Seek to disrupt the structures that taught those of us who gained more access that we are worth more than where we left, and less than what we found ourselves among.
    17. Never take validation too deeply to heart. This is especially true of those who came up entrenched in the age of social media. The gaze of hegemony is always on us. Find validation in the ratio between how positively you impact yourself and others versus how you fuck up and hurt others. You will hurt others. Be accountable for this, when you need to be, and always be mindful of how often that happens in relation to those you help grow. None of us can be saints, but we can be salient and sentient.
    18. Take your struggle to your community, and find community in those whose struggles intersect. It is only within one another that we will make any sense of this destroyed world and it's corrupt ideology that we've inherited. Fight. Fight. Fight.
    19. You are inherently valuable. You have worth. Ask no one for permission for this.
    Mensen is a 30-year-old Brooklyn-based muralist, public artist and community facilitator. You can reach Mensen for projects at msmensen@gmail.com, view her online portfolio at msmensen.com and blog at msmensen.tumblr.com.

  • #2
    I don't agree with ##1 and19. I am not sure I really understand what is meant by #18. I strongly agree with ##3, 17 and 19.

    And I have no idea what a 30-year-old "community facilitator" does, exactly. Must be code for "amateur philosopher"!

    Comment


    • #3
      Huh.

      #2 caught my eye, because I read this the other day:

      http://www.stonekettle.com/2014/02/r...d-blogger.html

      The similar quote is this:
      There is only one truly inalienable right, one right that can’t be taken away by gods nor governments nor men, and that is the right to define yourself.
      The author linked to it and quoted that line on twitter.

      He got a reply on twitter from a sci-fi publisher (female) who said "Didn't need the user icon to know you're white and male…"

      (he followed up with this blog post about the ensuing kerfuffle: http://www.stonekettle.com/2014/02/d...ve-wounds.html)

      Wonder how she would respond to this list, seeing as how the author of this list is not white and male.
      Sandy
      Wife of EM Attending, Web Programmer, mom to one older lady scaredy-cat and one sweet-but-dumb younger boy kitty

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by GrayMatterWife View Post
        I don't agree with ##1 and19. I am not sure I really understand what is meant by #18. I strongly agree with ##3, 17 and 19.
        I'm confused. Do you agree with #19 or not?
        Sandy
        Wife of EM Attending, Web Programmer, mom to one older lady scaredy-cat and one sweet-but-dumb younger boy kitty

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by poky View Post
          I'm confused. Do you agree with #19 or not?
          Sorry. I strongly agree with #19. I meant to type that I strongly disagree with ##1 and 12. Zero idea how I managed to mistype that…being that 2 and 9 are nowhere near each other on the keyboard!

          I also agree strongly with #2. You should know who you are. However, my gender, race, and sexual identity are not the first qualities I apply to myself. I don't find it particularly empowering to identify as female or straight or white. Maybe they are so inherent that I really don't think about them. But I just don't think, "I know who I am--I'm a white human being of Anglo-Irish descent who identifies as female and straight" and find that powerful. I think, "I know who I am--I am a creature made in the image of God who is a spouse and a parent." That I find to be powerful because it is about the very fiber and purpose of my being. I can share those qualities with anyone of any race or any gender or any sexual identity who happens to be a spouse and a parent. I see myself as having more in common in terms of identity with someone who is black, gay, and transgendered but who is married and a parent than I do with someone who is white, of Anglo-Irish descend, female, straight, and not a spouse or a parent. There is a commonality of experience for me in the spousal relationship and parenting relationship that defines me more than other traits. That's not to say that I can't identify with people who look like me or are also female or something. Obviously, I can--I'm here, where the majority of the participants are female and (I think, by the general descriptions) straight and many who don't have children.

          That is pretty anti-feminist, I know, but so be it. I find that embracing my identity as a creature made by God, and given the role of spouse and parent, to be the most empowering. Maybe it's because it is not really about me. I don't know. I'm not much of a philosopher.
          Last edited by GrayMatterWife; 02-11-2014, 10:40 AM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by GrayMatterWife View Post

            That is pretty anti-feminist, I know, but so be it. I find that embracing my identity as a creature made by God, and given the role of spouse and parent, to be the most empowering. Maybe it's because it is not really about me. I don't know. I'm not much of a philosopher.
            I was never a very academic feminist but part of my sense of self, as a feminist, is to support women in whatever life path they choose. No matter if it's homemaking, devoting your life to a profession, or a mixture of the two. So long as the woman has decided that is what's right for her, and believes she will gain fulfillment (or whatever is important to her) through it. Maybe that's not standard feminism but it's MY feminism. I also don't identify too much with being a white female married to a man. While I am, I more identify with my profession and the struggles I went through to get here.

            Poky, thanks for sharing that blog! He's an interesting writer though I have to say I didn't make it all the way through the "Defense"

            As for this list, all of our facebook newsfeeds are probably clogged with LISTS such at this. I thought it was one of the best I've seen and pretty much agreed with all of the points

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by MAPPLEBUM View Post
              I was never a very academic feminist but part of my sense of self, as a feminist, is to support women in whatever life path they choose. No matter if it's homemaking, devoting your life to a profession, or a mixture of the two. So long as the woman has decided that is what's right for her, and believes she will gain fulfillment (or whatever is important to her) through it. Maybe that's not standard feminism but it's MY feminism.
              This is how I've always seen it, too. I'm all about supporting whatever works best for you...and for supporting systems that ALLOW you a choice, rather than forcing you into one path or another, and for systems that educate you on what your choices are/can be, before it's too late.

              Originally posted by MAPPLEBUM View Post
              Poky, thanks for sharing that blog! He's an interesting writer though I have to say I didn't make it all the way through the "Defense"
              He definitely can get wordy, and sometimes a little meta, but it's usually entertaining or touching or both, and always heartfelt. The "greatest hits" page is worth a browse if you've got some time.
              Sandy
              Wife of EM Attending, Web Programmer, mom to one older lady scaredy-cat and one sweet-but-dumb younger boy kitty

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by MAPPLEBUM View Post
                I was never a very academic feminist but part of my sense of self, as a feminist, is to support women in whatever life path they choose. No matter if it's homemaking, devoting your life to a profession, or a mixture of the two. So long as the woman has decided that is what's right for her, and believes she will gain fulfillment (or whatever is important to her) through it. Maybe that's not standard feminism but it's MY feminism.
                100% agree with this.
                -L.Jane

                Wife to a wonderful General Surgeon
                Mom to a sweet but stubborn boy born April 2014
                Rock Chalk Jayhawk GO KU!!!

                Comment


                • #9
                  I, for one, thought it was a beautiful read and agree with almost all the statements. I forwarded it to my college friends and thought it was germane to those of us on the not-so-sunny side of 30.
                  In my dreams I run with the Kenyans.

                  Comment

                  Working...
                  X