Archive for the ‘Droppin’ Knowledge’ Category

Sep
15
2010

The Modesty Myth

by Andrea

Sometimes when I feel like I could use a little more batshit craziness in my life, I read the letters to the editor in the Daily Universe, the newspaper at Brigham Young University, which I used to attend before I discovered the joys of coffee and HBO. If anything, the letters are usually good for a laugh. It seems that at least once a month, a letter gets published whining about what the women on campus are wearing. These letters are usually written by men, complaining about all the CLEAVAGE and KNEES and PANTY-LINES and MIDRIFFS they’ve been seeing, and how disturbed they are by all the SKIN. Somebody even wrote in once, complaining about women wearing messenger bags across their bodies. Apparently the messenger bag strap situated between the breasts was just too much for this gentleman, and he wished that they would stop drawing attention to themselves and their breasts by the way they wore their messenger bags. I wish I were making this up.

Students at the university must sign something called the Honor Code, which has a very strict set of guidelines for dress and grooming. No tank tops, no visible midriff, skirts and shorts to the knee, no tight clothing, no cleavage, etc. The letters usually invoke the Honor Code, then accuse the women who are supposedly violating the Code of being well… slutty.

While I agree that people who sign the Honor Code should dress accordingly, the vicious, sanctimonious screeds that appear in the Daily Universe are much more problematic than unsolicited cleavage, because they illustrate the problem of modesty itself. Modesty is a false concept, a social construct that is relative to culture, and a tool for controlling and manipulating women. Furthermore, the idea of an “immodest” woman shifts responsibility for men’s actions. That’s why I have a problem with letters like this, because it suggests that women are somehow responsible for the behavior of men, which is not only deplorable, but patently false. (You can read my response to the letter here.)

In Mormon culture, modesty is a huge issue. While I was growing up, I was told by my church leaders that I had a responsibility to dress “modestly” in order to help the men and boys around me keep their thoughts clean and avoid sexual sin. I’m just going to come right out and say it: men will have sexual thoughts no matter what the women around them are wearing. It has nothing to do with clothing. Take, for instance, Muslim countries, where women cover their entire bodies, save their hands and faces. Do you suppose that men in those places don’t have “dirty” thoughts? That rape and sexual harassment don’t occur? The idea that negative or unwanted sexual attention from a man is somehow deserved if you’re wearing a short skirt is sexist, offensive, and rape-enabling.

I once tutored an adult student who stared at my breasts for an hour straight every single morning. It was humiliating. I took to wearing a huge hoodie when I tutored him, hoping that by dressing in a tent, I could get him to focus on grammar instead of my chest. It didn’t work. He stared anyway, at the place under my tent-like hoodie where I’m sure he imagined my breasts were located. What I wore made absolutely no difference whatsoever.

A man should take responsibility for himself, not blame women, their bodies or their clothing for his actions. Additionally, the preoccupation of some men with what women should or should not be wearing is just creepy and weird. Quit judging my hemline and mind your own damn business.

Sep
14
2010

TMI

by Andrea

I feel like Facebook should have a filter in place that makes it impossible to post anything about cervical dilation, because I should never, ever be privy to information about my seventh grade lab partner’s baby box.

DISCLAIMER: I don’t think birth is “icky” or anything like that. I’m all about demythologizing birth and owning your birth experience and all that feminist stuff. But seriously, if it’s a body part that can’t be shown on network television, don’t discuss it on Facebook.

Sep
5
2010

How (not) to get a date

by Andrea

I got hit on the other day while I was at the grocery store. It was surprising to me because I get hit on approximately never. I think it has something to do with the fact that I look like a mean Russian lady.

It’s ok. It’s just the way my face looks, and I’ve made my peace with it. And frankly, if looking mean keeps people from bothering me, I’m fine with it.

Anyway, despite my mean mug, some poor sap decided to chat me up in the candy aisle. He sidled up to me, regarded the candy for a few moments, then said, “It’s hard to find good candy these days, huh?”

Not really. Notice the entire damn aisle in front of us, fully loaded with candy. “Yeah, I guess,” I said.

“What kind of candy do you like? Do you like peppermints?” He raised his foot and kicked a bag of peppermints. (I am not making this up.)

This couldn’t really be a sincere attempt, could it? Maybe he was some sort of hipster, trying to flirt with me ironically. I turned to get a good look at him. He was definitely not a hipster, just an earnest young man with no game.

“Um,” I said, “I like Twizzlers,” and grabbed a bag. If I were as mean as I look, I would have told him that I was buying them for my fiancé.

“Twizzlers?!” he exclaimed. “I love Twizzlers!”

“Yeah…” I said, trying to avoid eye contact.

“They match your red hair!” he called after me. (My hair is brown.)

“Thanks,” I said.

“It’s very nice!” he hollered, as I scurried away as quickly as possible.

And that, dear readers, is quite possibly the single most awkward conversation of my life.

Aug
16
2010

Free advice

by Andrea

When somebody is bragging to you about how cute or funny or smart their kid is, it’s never a good idea to say, “Oh, my cat does that too.” You’d think it would be a good way to establish some common ground, but trust me, it’s not.

Aug
7
2010

Why I’m out of shape

by Andrea

Me: It’s hard for me to respect people who go running shirtless.

Kurt: I don’t… I don’t respect people who run.

Me: Yeah, only children and thieves run.

Kurt: I guess if you were being chased by a bear it’s ok. And maybe– maybe when you’re playing with your dog.

Jul
26
2010

Life lessons with Kurt

by Andrea

“You know that saying, ‘Walk softly and carry a big stick’? I live by that. Except I don’t carry a stick.”