Saturday, 23 November 2013

"NO"

Let's imagine someone who you don't really like that much asks you to join them for coffee.

Hi, would you like to go for coffee with me?”

Now you want to say no, but what you actually might say is something closer to...

Oh... Um.. Well, that's very kind of you but I can't today. I have a lot of work to do for next week.”

Using conversation analysis, this can be broken down as follows;

Delay                       “Oh... Um...
Preface rejection         Well,
Appreciation               that's very kind of you
Modulated Rejection    but I can't today
Account                      I have a lot of work to do for next week.”

It would be quite odd in fact if we just said “No.” and that be the end of it. We might pull a face and say “mmmm No, sorry I can't.” And then give an account of why not, but No is rarely used in rejection on its own.

You might think this is a polite and English way of refusing an invitation, but in fact conversation analysis around the world shows us this is not Englishness, it is in fact socially constructed everywhere. We don't ever want to appear rude, nor do we wish to hurt anyone's feelings. We are not used to saying no so when does no get used in rejection?

This is a very important realisation in reference to when we need to use the word no. Apparently our social and cultural behaviour means we are wholly unprepared for the specific time when “No” is the only word that might save us. I am referring to cases of sexual harassment and rape. 'No means No' is a commonly used phrase referring to rape and sexual harassment. The reality of a very clear and timely “no” being uttered is not as simple or as obvious as it may appear. Also, by a certain point “No” is possibly not going to help anyone. Yet it is used in court as defence for the rapist. If a victim of sexual harassment has not clearly said “No” then the crime can be turned into a simple misunderstanding.




If “No” is all that a victim needed to say to stop the incident from occurring then why on earth did they not say it? Seems so simple now, so clear. Just say “NO”.

Erm... No. I am saying no to this suggestion. It's not that simple, or clear, or easy to say. Try saying “No” next time someone asks you something and the answer is no. Just say “no” to that person asking you for coffee, don't give an excuse or delay. Just say no, see how it feels. Then try and imagine that situation being completely different, someone isn't even asking you if you want to have sex, they just assume you do or don't care if you do. When should you say no then?

If No is the only way a victim can avoid being raped or harassed, at least lets offer “No” training to all people.

No” training schools for children who have never heard of sexual harassment or rape, for teenagers who are already surrounded by a whole world of what is appropriate behaviour, for adults who may never have used no to reject someone but suddenly might find a use for it.


I do have a better idea though, lets have training for everyone on how not to be a rapist! Great idea! 


Picture sourced from http://www.jamesaltucher.com/2013/09/how-the-power-of-no-saved-my-life/

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Being a good Ally

When a someone is being belittled, ridiculed and verbally harassed you have a choice. Either block it out and ignore it or say something. If you don't know that someone, they are a stranger, as is the harasser, you can walk away or you can step up. There is a very faint boundary between saying something off your own accord and saying something on behalf of someone else. You need to be careful not to say anything that could make the situation worse but you know from your personal moral code that what is happening is wrong and you need to do something.

A few weeks ago I was in a pub with some friends. Over my shoulder I could hear the voice of a man, frustrated and bitter, telling the woman he was with she was worthless. I did not know either of them. In fact this was the only thing that prevented me jumping out of my seat and screaming at him. He was talking to her loud enough for me to hear but not shouting. The woman he was talking to did not say a word. He repeatedly told her what he thought of her, over and over like a mantra, and she didn't say anything.

I don't know if what I did next was beneficial or not but I felt it could only change the mantra, which at this point I was sick of hearing. I walked over to their table, crouched down to eye level with him, (he was holding an electric cigarette like a knife in his grip so I took it off him and laid it gently on the table so he couldn't stab my eye out with it) and began stating in a hushed voice that the topic of his conversation was offending me. I didn't try to suggest that what he was saying was wrong, nor did I assume I knew anything of how the woman he was with felt.

How could I possibly know?

All I did know was that those words are used as weapons to keep people down, and in my mind I may have thought he was being abusive to her, what I said was merely personal.

“People in this room can hear your conversation, what you are saying is offending me and others.”

Stunned and confused, he just waited for me to finish. It felt like I was speaking to him for ages but in actual fact I think it was only a moment. I became the one chanting a mantra.

“What you are saying is offending people in this room, I can't speak on your behalf (I said to the woman) so I won't, but I can speak on behalf of myself and I am offended. Please change the topic of your conversation.”

He finally gathered together some words, “YOU KNOW NOTHING ABOUT ME! YOU DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT ME!”.

I repeated myself, asking him to just not talk so offensively in public because people can hear him. I stood up, over him, and asked again clearly. I smiled at them both and said thank you, and walked back to my table.

A moment later he started shouting “My life is none of your business.”

“You're right, but I cant close my ears to you when you are speaking offensively and loud” was my retort.

“What do you want? What do you want me to talk about?! YOU DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT ME!” he said.

“You're right, I'm sorry. Please, continue you're conversation. I'm so sorry, please carry on.” but by this point others in the room had started joining in and agreeing with me so what I said mattered very little.

“You and your little stooges, thinking you're so big with them behind you.”

I can't remember exactly what else was said, some expletives and angry shouts. He got up, as did the woman he was with (who now was smiling at me) and put on their coats to leave. As he left, one of the stooges shouted Fuck off, people clapped and that was that.

I was a tad intoxicated. I almost straight away worried I had said something wrong and how he was right, it isn't my business. Luckily though, the people I sat with that evening were in unison agreement that someone needed to say something. I tried to not undermine the woman in that situation, the voiceless woman (who said three words in the course of the event) who was being told what the man thought of her. The words he used were the words you hear being used in abusive and controlling relationship stories and I was hearing them being used with my own ears.


If I could remember the actual conversation I would better know what exactly the outcome was but I am sure that if nothing had been said I would have regretted it forever.  





Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Every Day Scepticism

Warning-this could be described as a rant. I am not apologising but giving you a head start. If you're not up for it right now I suggest you come back to it when you have a brew in hand and are sitting down. I do get quite annoyed by this stuff (as I have every right to)

Even if you avoid buying newspapers and magazines, don't watch TV and even manage to never know what this years blockbuster titles are, you can't avoid sexism. You might block it out and close your eyes and ears, or you are so numb to it you don't notice it anymore. Either way, it is everywhere. If you don't believe me, here are a few examples I came across just this morning: (I haven't left the house).

TV Adverts
Options belgian indulgence.
GUILT FREE CHOCOLATE! The women in this advert are attacking cake, boxes of chocolates, chocolate bunnies etc to demonstrate how they are so empowered! They are so strong they can say goodbye to that entire cake and now have a GUILT FREE hot chocolate. Guilt would of course be caused by the fact that chocolate has calories, calories are a form of energy that if we don't use through physical activity turn to fat and WOMEN ARE NOT ALLOWED TO BE FAT! So indulge now, you no longer have to feel SHAME for eating or drinking something you WANT! Oh and not to mention, men do not like chocolate. That would be far too feminine!


Samsung Eco Bubble,
Mum is always right:
In the world of samsung washing machines, child rearing, domestic chores and instilling moral codes into young adults, men/dads do not exist. The little girl is trying to steal a doll from a friend at a tea party (because ALL little girls love dolls and tea parties), the young teenage girl is leaning in for her first possible kiss (because all girls have first kisses with boys their age at their homes in the dark in their school uniforms), the hopefully eighteen year old coming half way down the stairs (the angle lets you see most of her crotch) and is sent back up stairs to put more clothes on (because her mum doesn't want her to get raped or sexually harassed while she is out, because in that dress it would most definitely be HER fault, not the fault of the harasser/rapist) and finally the grown adult woman who knows how to successfully use a washing machine (because that is of course her duty) and she can even use it on an eco setting because although she is a mere housewife she is also intelligent and aware of the world around her and her own energy bill. This is clear by the fact the eco setting is REALLY OBVIOUS!

Facebook advertising:
I am female, therefore my tailored adverts at the side of my Facebook wall are for high heeled booties, make-up, articles from women's magazines on how to get men and other completely not my taste types of things. I need heels to stop me running fast enough, make me tall so I can feel a misunderstood version of 'empowered' and I need make up because my face is clearly hideous in it's natural state!!!!! Ewwwwww. I won't even go into why getting a man is not in my to-do list.

When I go to the corner shop, all magazines, for men and women, are completely ridiculous. I don't understand how the companies stay afloat, people aren't that stupid but someone is buying into this rubbish. 

Sex tips from a celeb and his dad (because only men know what sex should be like)

Tips on how to enjoy getting dressed (because as women we are supposed to not like our bodies and if we do then there must be something wrong with us)

Famous musician is asked about her career and men (because to all women-kind, men and careers are on equal par of importance and this needs to be reminded to us, just asking about her career would be neglecting her entire life in relevance to men)


Best sex positions for girls (not women) -a magazine is the only way we learn how to have and enjoy sex, so please tell us, make sure it is not through the male perspective (which im sure it won't be, it's a women's magazine) (note sarcasm)

The new feminism!!! -The word empowerment has been hijacked- Would you go topless to get a raise? No! Why? Should I? If feminism says it ok then it must be suitable for women to do this, maybe I will! Thank you, reliable source of feminist discourse, Cosmo! 

How to get a body like J-Lo in four easy steps (because knowing the reality is too hard and would ruin the nonchalant ideal that she and all famous women are effortlessly and naturally like that)

How to: stop a cheater. I have a clue on this one... DONT BE WITH ONE but I think Cosmo has a different idea on the subject. Being strong and independent according to cosmo means caring about your looks above your health, your man above your career and his happiness above yours. Oh yes and sex is important but it needs to look just like it does in the videos you may find on adult websites because those yelping groaning porn stars are always without doubt having REAL orgasms!

What I am trying to say is that we need to always be sceptical of everything ever! Not in a tiresome way, but take every piece of commercial media with a huge bucket of salt because more often than not it is aimed at a stereotype rather than a person and therefore it is instilling negative thoughts of 'other' people. We are all human and we all like/dislike stuff, it shouldn't have anything to do with your class, race, creed, gender, age, size or any other socially constructed limitation.