March 27, 2012

The other faces of feminism (or femininity, when you prefer)


Great afternoon

I realize I'm the last 1 on the bandwagon with this by far, but last night I watched the documentary The Small business of Being Born dresses to wear to a wedding (90 minutes, streams on Netflix), and it was really amazing. For those of you who know me, you know that I'm not in touch *at all* with that maternal factor that females my age normally get started acquiring. I feel the sound of my biological clock is?drowned out?by the sounds of girls screaming inside the delivery space, which I've heard in too many films and horror stories. Oh and ps- and from the baby I saw delivered when I was only five years old. Thanks to my grandmother for that traumatizing knowledge! Hurl.

Anyway, I met a woman last year who swears by residence birth, and I was turned off towards the thought in numerous approaches. I did notice, though, that she under no circumstances ever ever ever mentioned being in pain, regardless of giving birth with out discomfort medication. Her stories had been captivating sufficient that the people I listened with forgot to ask about it, too. I kept hearing about this documentary, and last night I turned it on when digging by means of the last of?the unopened boxes from my move. It captured my attention. I watched at the least 5 babies becoming born (and let me tell you, I've a weak stomach) at household, and also a couple of in the hospital, including C-sections. The residence births had been...; stunning? Can I say that? Seriously, it was really moving to determine it (and you realize I'm not a crying type of girl when I can aid it), and not gross at all- no gore involved, and no stitches anyplace. In truth, the way the females walked aboutvintage cocktail dresses and swayed in the course of their contractions reminded me of a quiet yoga class plus a dance. I believed it was awesome how their partners got to lay in bed next to them while they rested, rub their shoulders, and just frequently participate sans surgical mask. It gave me a various perspective on the experience (as a lot perspective as a person who has not carried out it could have, needless to say) that wasn't?dominated by?fear and discomfort plus a scary hospital. Just last week,?a buddy of mine had just learned about episiotomies, and I relived with her?my own horror in hearing about it for the initial time. Which is generally how my pregnancy discussions go.

Like any documentary, I take the information using a grain of salt. I appreciated seeing a side of pregnancy that I by no means have before, exactly where the woman is truly empowered. I can't think a body can do that. I do not know if I want youngsters, or if I'd go this route, but I highly recommend checking this documentary out. Like it or not,?delivery is one component from the human female encounter, and I say there is certainly absolutely nothing incorrect with exploring it.

Which reminds me: Lately I've been thinking about the word "feminist." I know there are all sorts of academic explanations (and not-so-academic ones) for the word, and truthfully, I don't know where I stand. What I've?figured out?lately, although, kate middleton wedding dressis the fact that whatever the word may well encompass, my private use of it?has been?limited to girls obtaining ahead in male-dominated professions. That doesn't actually do it justice, and the truth is, occasionally it makes me completely tired. Reading Click, and seeing this documentary, has opened me up to all sorts of feminine (female?) experiences which can be equally portion of it. This is every thing from ladies who've suffered sexual violence, to single-motherhood, lesbianism, as well as women acquiring ahead in female-dominated professions. Undoubtedly I knew about all of these issues, but I never identified and associated?with them as part of my mission to engage with empowered females (and to empower other people). I really feel negative about that.

To me, in my extremely undeveloped philosphy on the F word, the only thing I'm positive about is the fact that ultimately, supporting women's rights is just one portion of supporting human rights generally, and so my use from the word desires to expand to cover that. So hello for the rest of the female knowledge, from me, the one who only thinks about function.

Has any individual else observed this documentary?

Posted by: appliel at 07:54 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
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