Wednesday, 25 May 2016
i've been listening to hope sandoval and the warm intentions and it's been raining softly outside my window all morning. you know that half light where the sun is hidden so it's a kind of milky glow radiating from the window but not reaching the walls?
i've been thinking about the ignorance of our society and how i'm very much apart of that. how we work to afford a house that we can't even live in because we're always at work. how we work to eat food so we have energy to go to work. how we work to afford a car so that we can get to and from work. and we post all of this online, so we can feel close to something, to other people's dreams, to validate our meaningless existence, to feel close to the lives we wish we had. looking at 'dream lives' on instagram you really feel like it's attainable, oh look, it's right there. maybe i can do it one day.
but it's all a big lie, in my opinion. you have to work so hard and you hardly get anywhere. can you really make anything in the world happen? can all of your dreams come true? can you truly start over or will we just go back to where we came from?
I feel like our lives and our personalities and our priorities and our morals and values are too deeply ingrained in us by the time we reach adulthood and are fully able to reconsider and evaluate what we want out of life. by the time we reach maturity we've already developed our habits and the kind of person we shall be.
i know i'm taking a negative outlook on all of this, i'm aware. but i think it's important to analyse and reflect on why we do things and why our society thinks things are normal as a whole, actions and ways of being. a lot of people just carry on, because 'that's life' and it's 'what we do'. but what if you don't want to do those things? what if there's more to your existence than just following everyone else? does everyone have to live the same life? make a family, go to uni, go to work, get a car, get a house, start a diet, quit a diet, watch sport on weekends, do some gardening, work all year to save for a one week holiday...
it's all ridiculous and i'm a spoilt privileged brat to write about how it's unacceptable here, because we do have no choice, money rules everything i guess. i could move to an island and become a castaway but really. it's unrealistic.
i need to think about what i truly love doing, what i like doing, what i want to do. because if i'm making money doing something i love, then it won't feel like work, it will be a life with purpose. and that's what i want.
i've been thinking about the ignorance of our society and how i'm very much apart of that. how we work to afford a house that we can't even live in because we're always at work. how we work to eat food so we have energy to go to work. how we work to afford a car so that we can get to and from work. and we post all of this online, so we can feel close to something, to other people's dreams, to validate our meaningless existence, to feel close to the lives we wish we had. looking at 'dream lives' on instagram you really feel like it's attainable, oh look, it's right there. maybe i can do it one day.
but it's all a big lie, in my opinion. you have to work so hard and you hardly get anywhere. can you really make anything in the world happen? can all of your dreams come true? can you truly start over or will we just go back to where we came from?
I feel like our lives and our personalities and our priorities and our morals and values are too deeply ingrained in us by the time we reach adulthood and are fully able to reconsider and evaluate what we want out of life. by the time we reach maturity we've already developed our habits and the kind of person we shall be.
i know i'm taking a negative outlook on all of this, i'm aware. but i think it's important to analyse and reflect on why we do things and why our society thinks things are normal as a whole, actions and ways of being. a lot of people just carry on, because 'that's life' and it's 'what we do'. but what if you don't want to do those things? what if there's more to your existence than just following everyone else? does everyone have to live the same life? make a family, go to uni, go to work, get a car, get a house, start a diet, quit a diet, watch sport on weekends, do some gardening, work all year to save for a one week holiday...
it's all ridiculous and i'm a spoilt privileged brat to write about how it's unacceptable here, because we do have no choice, money rules everything i guess. i could move to an island and become a castaway but really. it's unrealistic.
i need to think about what i truly love doing, what i like doing, what i want to do. because if i'm making money doing something i love, then it won't feel like work, it will be a life with purpose. and that's what i want.
Monday, 23 May 2016
( ( (hurt me) ) )
‘All they want is my body.’ How many times have you
heard this statement, from young people, and more importantly, especially from
girls? The concept of men only wanting women for their body is an old one, a
deeply ingrained idea in our society. Many young women and girls only just reaching
puberty will most likely relate. In my opinion this is not only a problem of
men’s opinion of women, and how they’re raised, but that of another prominent
issue, violence against women.
Ahh, queue eye roll from my readers. ‘Violence against
women’ is such a frequently repeated statement that it seems to have lost most
of his impact. It no longer follows with discussion of how often it may occur,
or ways to tackle it, but now by a sigh and that’s it. It’s as if when
something gains momentum and publicity, it becomes less talked about,
ironically. When was the last time we truly thought about it, this violence. I
don’t mean in those brief news articles or television ads about domestic
violence, I mean a proper investigation into the background of it, why it
occurs, and why it’s still so common.
This violence that I talk about is probably not the
‘violence’ that you’re now picturing in your head. Maybe you’re thinking about
a woman hiding bruises from her ‘loving husband’ when she picks up the kids from
school, or maybe it’s the image of a young woman at a bar getting grabbed by a
stranger without being able to defend herself. Yes, this exists, this is
common, but I think it’s important to go deeper than that. Where do these
actions come from? Why is it so entwined within a woman’s life that she may not
even recognise this violence when it’s happening?
‘Life changing pussy’ is an idea that is thrown around
casually amongst friends, young people, groups of boys, memes, and found all
throughout current social media. All you have to do is scroll a tumblr feed for
5 minutes and you’ll encounter several posts about how one woman’s ‘sex game’
has changed a man’s life, and even more currently now, he’s decided to turn his
life around because of it. What does this mean? Do we not realise as a
collective of young people that this is still minimising a woman’s worth to
good she is at sex? How good she is to her boy in bed?
It bother’s me, as a girl who hated herself for a long
time, being reduced to my body and its physical worth really messed me up. I
connected my worth to what boys thought of me in bed. I was only ‘the best
fuck’ and ‘her pussy is bomb’ rather than, ‘she is kind’ or ‘she is articulate
and intelligent.’ I’ve never had a boy actually like me. I know that I’ll get
arguments, but let’s be real. No boy has told me they love me, or even, that
they have feelings for me. But I couldn’t count the amount of times boys have
told me I’m the best they’ve ever had, and that they could fuck me for days.
When a boy tells me he can’t live without me, it’s
because the absence of me equals the absence of my pussy, and my ability to
please him. When a boy tells me he missed me, it really means he misses fucking
me, and can’t imagine me doing the same with someone else. I’ve had
‘relationships’ with boys, never officially, where they’ve acted more
possessively and more manipulatively than what I would call an abusive
relationship.
Halfway through last year I was ignored for two weeks,
and yelled at, because I’d accidentally matched with a friend of the boy I was
seeing. Mind you, I didn’t know they were friends, and I hadn’t even replied to
any of the messages I’d received from the friend. Yet, I was in trouble. How
dare I talk to his friend? How dare I betray him like that?
That was the problem all along apparently, that I
couldn’t be trusted. 4 months later in the relationship that wasn’t really a
relationship, just sex, the guy I was seeing informed me he’d been talking to 4
girls the whole time, and he had started seeing one of them. That was it, I was
heartbroken, but what could I say? It was different, and it didn’t matter, what
was he doing wrong? ‘It’s not like we are dating.’
But if you flipped the roles, I’m sure it would be a
very different story.
My sense of self turned into what men thought of me.
If I wasn’t validated in some way by them, my existence didn’t matter. If a guy
didn’t want me anymore, that was it. I’d begin to become extremely depressed,
just because I felt like without their approval or want of me, I didn’t matter.
I don’t think it’s right to excuse them either. They purposely go into things
with the intent of hurting us. I’m not a special snowflake for thinking this,
and I’m sure I’m right. They never have any want to continue the relationship,
or invest in the relationship. They just want to be pleased, they want us to
always be there at their beckoning call, to please them and make them feel
good, but god forbid we ask for the same in return.
Isn’t the deliberate destruction of one’s sense of
self a type of violence? That’s what they were doing, and are doing. They took
away my ability to feel good about myself, unless I was a ‘good fuck’ or had a
‘good pussy’ that they wanted. Because only then would they text me regularly,
ask me how I am, ‘miss me’ and want to see me. It made me feel wanted, like I
had a purpose, like I was good for something. Even though that something was
just sex.
This has caused me to be in many abusive and
dysfunctional relationships, and like I said, never officially. But when they
ended, I felt like my world was falling apart. Why? These boys never showed me
love, they never showed me happiness, never treated me well. But the choices I
made were to please them, everything to try and make them want me.
There’s this lyric in an A$AP Rocky song that goes:
"Head so good, make a nigga feel good,
"Head so good, make a nigga feel good,
‘Till the point I wanna marry her"
This
contains such common and yet scary connotations, he only wants to marry her
because she’s good at making him feel good, only wants to make her his so she’s
not sucking any other boy’s dicks? Are women only ‘life changing’ for the way
they are in bed, if they are loyal to him with their bodies, and they way they
use their mouths?
This physicality shouldn’t exist. The message is that
men don’t want us, and that we’re no good if we’re not a good fuck. The only
time they want to make us theirs, is if they don’t want us to use our bodies
for someone else. It’s not a matter of love, it’s a matter of the ownership of
our bodies. They better make us ‘theirs’ before we go use our talent elsewhere.
What kind of message is this portraying to us? To our wellbeing?
That we’re worth nothing unless we’re giving a man
what he wants. This can go as far back as the argument of virginity. The other
side is that in our society, there’s this ridiculous thought process that a
man’s dick can be so life changing, that we lose something. The science behind
actually losing something is empty. What on earth are they taking from us when
we decide to have sex? In my experience, if you haven’t ~lost your virginity~
by the time you’re 18, there’s something wrong with you. If you haven’t had a
dick inside of you by the time you finish school, you’re weird and
unattractive. It sounds bloody stupid when you put it like that doesn’t it?
But in discussions of feminism, sex and equality, I
don’t like to play the victim. Talking about my personal experiences is fine,
but it doesn’t cover the half of it. I’m well aware that my thought processes
should change, that I shouldn’t put my worth into a boy’s opinion of me, but
that’s besides the point. We should be looking at why this type of relationship
exists, why boys treat girls this way, and why it’s so common and yet rarely
talked about
Going back to talking about my own personal
experiences, there are a few reasons behind why I think I put up with it. One
is that my own self worth is so damaged that I believe I deserve this type of
treatment. I also blame that on some of my relationships with boys, it’s all
I’ve known, so it’s all I think I deserve. It’s also a way of self harm for me.
I know these boys are going to hurt me in the long run, I know they’ll leave
from the get go, and yet I pursue it with everything. I know it’s going to
break me, and yet I go for it. Maybe because I know it will reassure my theory
of this, that I’m only wanted by boys if I’m using my body. I was reading through a DBT course book
recently and there was a paragraph that really resonated with what I’m trying
to say: “The suffering of the woman who submits to dull, loveless sex without
saying a word is different only in degree from that of the woman who stays in a
relationship in which she was violently raped by her partner. Many women live
in such a perpetual nightmare of pain and discomfort that they don’t recognise
pain and suffering…This in itself is a painful discovery, for a woman must
suddenly confront the fact that she was taught by a culture to accept suffering
and pain as natural for her.”
From the water.
She came out of the sea like a mermaid washing up to
shore, unknown, unprecedented, unexpected. Like a thing no one wanted to touch
but everyone wanted to look at, with greedy eyes and sharp prodding sticks. Her
limp bones hung translucent against the dark sand, a crowd had gathered, like
her birth was a spectacle for the masses. Soon, when the murmuring people
realised she had not opened her eyes since the fourth degree, and it was now
time for food, they wandered off, leaving only one villager standing.
The
old lady had such withered skin that the salts in the blusters that came from
the water settled in her cracks and creases like a mask. The blood orange sun
had disappeared now, so only a ring of clouds lined the horizon, welcoming the
new moon. The old lady got down on her hands and knees and pushed the sand out
of the girl’s eyelashes. In one moment, the past and the present merged into
one, and the winds paused their breath, holding it to allow room for the
girl’s.
And
she was born. And with her came the history of so many things, it would be such
a waste to spoil it all here.
Saturday, 21 May 2016
cinder and smoke
oh to live a simple life. one without the distractions of technology and the media and our want for a stranger's validation. does it not happen if you don't upload it to social media? i've wanted to cut myself off for a while, hence my trips to the farm. there i don't get reception, i can't get worried about teeny things that shouldn't matter. i find myself getting bored easily, what do i do whilst i smoke if i can't scroll through my insta feed?
cutting myself off hasn't worked out that well, as i'm addicted to it just like the majority of us. but i think it's a nice idea to try every now and then, go an hour without your phone, and so forth.
why are we so reliant on knowing everything everything everything at all times?
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