Dyslexicea
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2012
- Posts
- 924
I do think after reading your post Netzach, my bias was showing.
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Short answer; Masculinisation might be humiliating to some women, but not many. It's not generally considered shameful to be a man.
Feminisation is humiliating to most men, although not to all. It is, in many ways, considered shameful to be a woman.
Also, this; how-i-discovered-gender-discrimination
An old friend of mine just did, in fact. Just an example of the kind of token noise made in 'favor' of letting men into roles they were traditionally excluded from.As far as men being nurses, you seem to be behind the times, men are entering the nursing profession in far greater numbers every year.
That's news to me (good news, mind you).As for men being primary care givers. The number of men staying home taking care of children and household is also increasing every year.
That's fucking /awesome/! Where did you find that statistic?Divorce where both couples in a hetero marriage work is higher if the wife makes more than her husband but where the husband stays home the divorce rate is lower than households where the wife stays home.
When i hear 'post-feminist' i think 'feminism has been around a long time' not 'it's dead.' Feminism has already changed society. There's society as it was before feminism, and society as it is today, after decades of feminism.feminism is not dead and we do not live in the post feminist era as some seem to think. Feminism has changed but it is a long way from dead.
I find it very easy to think of women as being superior, of course.Over all I really do think of men, as a whole, as inferior, superior only in privilege, so dressing as a man any time should be humiliating.
Considered by society at large? i mean, shame is a form of societal policing. Shame exists to push us towards "acceptable" behavior. It's contextual. It is not shameful to be a man or a woman. It is shameful to be male, and violate the expectations society has of man. It is shameful to be female, and violate the expectations that society has of a woman.Stella_Omega said:It's not generally considered shameful to be a man. ... It is, in many ways, considered shameful to be a woman.
Is it not also humiliating for a man who isn't trans to want to be a woman? I know men who'd like to experience sex as a woman because they see our sexual abilities as far superior to their own. Along with feeling we control who, when, where and how. In my mind it has to be humiliating knowing they'll never experience sex as we do.
True, forcing someone to butch up isn't necessarily the same as forcing someone to pretend being a man. I can't really attest to the effectiveness of either, since a) I am not a lesbian, b) my butchness crosses over into genderqueer (some people call me 'he').
Is it not also humiliating for a man who isn't trans to want to be a woman? I know men who'd like to experience sex as a woman because they see our sexual abilities as far superior to their own. Along with feeling we control who, when, where and how. In my mind it has to be humiliating knowing they'll never experience sex as we do.
It was the scene I cared about, not the characters so much. I guess I could say that sometimes it got frustrating and embarrassing for me to have to dictate all my own scenarios because nobody else would get the hint or had the kink bug as bad as me. I know that taking control of situations IRL because of someone else's incompetency pisses me off. The s in me can't even be indifferent to it; I just get mad lol.i want to express affirmation of and empathy with this statement ... i'm just not sure howI guess I could say that sometimes it got frustrating and embarrassing for me to have to dictate all my own scenarios because nobody else would get the hint or had the kink bug as bad as me.
i don't know about 'eunuch blobs' (fat guys are maybe seen that way outside of the 'bear' fetish), but women's bodies being sexualized is pervasive in western culture. Art, advertising, entertainment - the personification of sexuality is female (and idealized). 'Sexy clothing' for a woman is something that shows off her body, enhances it, or hides a little of it in a suggestive way. If there is 'sexy clothing' for men in the mainstream/hetero-normative/traditional sides of western culture, it's a suit or tux - which suggest the ideal masculine form (the 'V' body type), but hides the body of the wearer.Like seriously though, I want to know where this meme of "women are sexy and sexual and men are eunuch blobs" came from, because I did not get the memo.
Those are certainly stereotypical masculine activities.Then again, I've always equated punching things and blowing shit up to sexyfuntiems
Some people appreciate pantheons with very flawed asshole Gods in them. I think that the idea that the person you serve MUST be better than you is tied up in ego. Sometimes submission has nothing to do with that other person and it's more the agreement that you've made with yourself.
Some people call you 'he'. What is your pronoun?
Most of the time my pronoun is 'she', I'm comfortable being XX but at times I think I more relate to the genderless 'it'.
For a long time it made me seriously consider if I didn't want a male body myself, and be a sadistic motherfucker. I guess I came to the conclusion that I didn't actually want to have sex as a man but rather that I couldn't trust anybody else to roleplay their male characters as mean and nasty as I liked.It was the scene I cared about, not the characters so much. I guess I could say that sometimes it got frustrating and embarrassing for me to have to dictate all my own scenarios because nobody else would get the hint or had the kink bug as bad as me. I know that taking control of situations IRL because of someone else's incompetency pisses me off. The s in me can't even be indifferent to it; I just get mad lol.
This isn't true for every PYL, but it's certainly true for me.The premise was that in every PYL there's a pyl who's frustrated as fuck that nobody can top them the way they want to, and in the end they turned themselves into the top they would've wanted to meet, but could never find.
This isn't true for every PYL, but it's certainly true for me.
Alternatively of course, a frustrated pyl could learn to communicate. That's made a difference!![]()
This isn't true for every PYL, but it's certainly true for me.
Alternatively of course, a frustrated pyl could learn to communicate. That's made a difference!![]()
i don't know about 'eunuch blobs' (fat guys are maybe seen that way outside of the 'bear' fetish), but women's bodies being sexualized is pervasive in western culture. Art, advertising, entertainment - the personification of sexuality is female (and idealized). 'Sexy clothing' for a woman is something that shows off her body, enhances it, or hides a little of it in a suggestive way. If there is 'sexy clothing' for men in the mainstream/hetero-normative/traditional sides of western culture, it's a suit or tux - which suggest the ideal masculine form (the 'V' body type), but hides the body of the wearer.
Oh, that reminds me, there is something associated with masculinity that suggests sexuality: phallic imagery. But it's generally only symbolic. You want to suggest sex, you put something long and hard out there. Maypoles, guns, rockets, swords, etc... there are even tons of everyday items that are vaguely phallic if you go looking for it. Buy, y'know, whip out the real thing and get arrested.
A fascinating question. i'm sure it was meant as a rhetorical question, too, but i'm just compulsive about looking for answers, sometimes, ;( so i hope i don't offend or annoy in taking a guess...I guess my question was more along the lines of "how come I didn't internalize it".
A fascinating question. i'm sure it was meant as a rhetorical question, too, but i'm just compulsive about looking for answers, sometimes, ;( so i hope i don't offend or annoy in taking a guess...
Maybe this is too obvious, but: could it be because the imagery of sexuality we're bombarded with all our lives is by & for the allosexual? It just wasn't aimed at you, so it missed? Part of the reasons, perhaps?
A lot of this conversation makes me head swirl, but it is all interesting stuff.
Going right back to the original thing (you guys are on track, but further ahead in your thoughts than me) that maybe being made masculine would humiliate a sub who is used to being His favourite girl, all cute and feminine and sexy and little outfits and is ok to be emotional to him (I'm not describing this very well but I hope you understand the sort of role I mean) and as punishment is made into a kind of boy servant. No more revealing outfits, a simple men's uniform. No playing, no squealing, no cuddles or small rewards for being his best girl. No physical affirmation of the power of her body, even if he owns it.
Kind of like when a boy is forced into manhood. A very rough sort of man up. No special treatment, no displays of weakness or much emotionality.
Does this make sense, in a way?
it does, in a kind of horrifying way... To someone who kind of was never much good at squealing, and has had to be educated about the cuddles. I will endure them if my girl needs them. The idea of withholding kindness for a little princess type is unconscionable!A lot of this conversation makes me head swirl, but it is all interesting stuff.
Going right back to the original thing (you guys are on track, but further ahead in your thoughts than me) that maybe being made masculine would humiliate a sub who is used to being His favourite girl, all cute and feminine and sexy and little outfits and is ok to be emotional to him (I'm not describing this very well but I hope you understand the sort of role I mean) and as punishment is made into a kind of boy servant. No more revealing outfits, a simple men's uniform. No playing, no squealing, no cuddles or small rewards for being his best girl. No physical affirmation of the power of her body, even if he owns it.
Kind of like when a boy is forced into manhood. A very rough sort of man up. No special treatment, no displays of weakness or much emotionality.
Does this make sense, in a way?