Archive for the 'Human Oddities' Category

Catfight!

NS June 4th, 2009

Hey, look everybody, Catfight!

Okay, so there’s not an actual fight going on in this photograph, featured in the New York Post, but the message is that these two ladies (Megan Fox and Angelina Jolie) are engaged in a war, alright — a war of how smokin’ HOT they are, or are perceived to be; of how old or young they are; and, of course, how much of a “bad girl” each is. Below the picture of them squaring off in this Battle of the Babes, we are treated to bullet-pointed analysis of their tattoos, significant others, age, best quotes, ancestry and professional accolades, searching for ways in which the two are different from and alike one another, and using those differences or sameness to create an illusion of friction, competition, judgment and controversy.

I mean, isn’t that the trash media’s job summed up, right there? The Post epitomizes it, obviously, as does the Daily Mail here in the UK. I wouldn’t line my cat’s litter tray with either, personally, not least because I once read that misogyny can be contracted through direct physical contact with it, especially when soaked in urine.

The Boston Herald, not wanting to be left out of the Catfight! stakes decided it would be fun to pit the “Octomom” (Nadya Suleman) against Kate Gosseling of “Jon and Kate Plus Eight” fame (a popular US tv show about a couple with 8 kids, for those who haen’t a clue who I’m talking about) and stir up some trouble between the two.

And so and on and so on, ad nauseum. Examples of woman versus woman Catfights! can be found every day, in multiple media outlets (not just the tabloids) across the world. I’ve asked myself why this is and while many people’s first instinct is to say (or at least think) that women are just petty and bitchy like that, I know better. I know that Catfights! are our culture’s way of keeping women otherwise occupied while the men behind the curtain pull all the strings and make all the laws that will keep us at each other’s throats for another century.

I’ve often heard a sentiment expressed that women are each other’s worst enemies, not men. When we fuss and stress out about how we look before going out on the town, our fellas roll their eyes and say we’re being silly, that no one will care what we wear or how we look. They love us for who we are, as individuals. We are told that the only reason we care is that other women care — that they will be judging our clothes, our hair and makeup, our topics of conversation, the way we laugh, what we order from the bar. In a way, they’re right. We do try to please other women and care what they think, as much as we might not like to admit it. But competition and shallow judgment among us is not some biological norm, it’s not the way we were “wired.”

The only reason we care so much what other females think is because we know that they will have read the same magazines full of ads for diet pills and stories on the latest fashions, heard the same sexist jokes, seen the same beer commercials, worked with the same chauvinists and interalized all of the ways, both large and small, that our society marginalizes, belittles and objectifies women. And we know that if we’ve been suckered into worrying about how we look and how we behave every time we leave the house, other women will have too.

Because we’ve been conditioned to base our sense of identity on our public image, what other choice do we have? It’s a rare, extremely self-assured woman who doesn’t mold herself into what others think she should be and instead into what she was destined to become. Take, for example, the “Mommy Wars.” It is a myth that they were created by, run for the benefit of or perpetuated by mothers who revel in judging other women for their differing choices, to make themselves feel better about theirs. Make no mistake — we did not create this war, oh no. Why would we strike the match that burns us? There is nothing for us to gain by wasting time and energy on tearing each other down. We’re all busy enough as it is, right? So if I don’t have a vested interest in making you feel bad about yourself and you don’t have a vested interest in making me feel bad about myself, what the hell are we doing on this faux battleground? It’s like invading a country and then finding it had no weapons of mass destruction after all.

But as we know, even when weapons are not found, one or both sides will feel they’ve come too far to quit outright. And so we press on, heaping more misguided bullshit on top of the pile threatening to break us. We can’t see the forest for the trees now and it’s easier to blame something else instead: each other, politics, religion, idealism, feminism…

We avoid talking about the ways in which our choices have empowered us as mothers or what has worked for our families fear of being accused of harboring a superiority complex or inflicting guilt upon those who made different choices or had different circumstances. We draw lines in the sand between those of us who have had children and those of us who haven’t. Even amongst feminists, we have been put into neat little boxes (or, more accurately, waves) to keep us separate, divided and anything but united. Because the powers that be know that if we were to ever break out of our boxes, tear down the walls dividing us, burn the straw man fallacies and advance as one unwavering, unmoldable mass, it would be like King Kong crashing through New York. Thousands would flee their homes, running in fear from the hairy-legged fembots seeking to destroy mankind by putting a W-O in front of it. Or, at least that’s what some people and organizations would like everyone to think.

When the claws have been retracted and the fur has stopped flying, I think we’ll all see exactly who or what was behind the Catfight! concept…and it won’t be wearing a skirt.

Depravity with dolls

NS May 23rd, 2009

If you thought we’d made some progress on normalizing breastfeeding and that, really, us lactivists get our knickers in a twist over nothing, then what does one say to this?

I am at a loss for words, frankly, so I’ll have to let others do the explaining.

Needless to say, my daughter has exhibited the exact same “disgusting” and “depraved” behaviour with her dolls and will, according to some people, surely end up mentally scarred and socially outcast as a result of being witness to the filth of seeing me nurse her brother. Insert heavy sigh and massive eye roll here.

Nothing makes me laugh more than people shielding children’s eyes from breastfeeding, saying that they shouldn’t see ‘that’. Kids are the only ones who aren’t bothered by it and understand that it’s totally normal, it seems! Talk about needless sexualization…pushing your boobie hangups onto impressionable young children who hadn’t even thought of breasts as sexual until a hand was clapped over their eyes amid shouts of “zOmg!!1!! The children might see babies being fed with men’s and ad agencies’ playthings! Quick, throw a blanket over that woman and her dirty jezebel udders!”

Seriously folks, your ignorance is astoundingly embarrassing. Give it a rest already, or else I might have to squirt milk in your eye. And we all know that if breastmilk touches human retinas it renders you completely and permanently blind within seconds, such is the power of its destructiveness. Mmwaahahahahaha!

Long live depravity.

Mrs. Robot-o

NS April 23rd, 2009

I have discovered that if I talk like a robot, The Noble Child will do whatever I ask.

Yes, seriously.

This came about in another of our epic battles to get her dressed and her hair combed, wherein, in desperation, I summoned up my best authoritative and monotonous voice and said “Sit. Still. Please. Robot said so.” Automatically, TNC stopped wriggling and crying and allowed me to part her hair and put them in “hairtails” (pigtails/bunches to you and me). She grinned every time this new voice asked her to do something (put on socks, do a wee, etc..) and said with great enthusiasm, “Okay, Robot!”

The rest of the day was spent issuing orders in a mechanic overtone.

“Pick. Up. Your. Toys.”

“No. More. Milk. Today.”

“Time. For. Bed. Now.”

I patted myself on the back. How genius was this robot act?!

Turns out, not that genius.

In a shop yesterday, TNC wouldn’t stop running away and touching things on the shelves and I was in a rush to get back home in time for our online food delivery time slot. As I perused the aisle for an appropriate birthday card and jiggled a whiny TNB on my hip, I caught sight of TNC about to pick up a very delicate and breakable item.

Now, every parent knows that cat-like reflexes enable us to spring into action the moment a child puts their grubby little paw on something breakable (and expensive, no doubt) in a shop, but in 0.2 seconds I furiously calculated the time-distance equation and came to the conclusion that the only way to reach her in time would involve dropping TNB on his head and performing a running round-off back handspring reminiscent of a 14-year-old Romanian Olympic gymnast with glitter in her hair and thigh muscles that could strangle a grizzly bear. Unfortunately (or fortunately?), I possess neither.

I knew the only thing that would make my daughter stop dead in her tracks was Robot. She’d never listen to Mummy but Robot…well, she’d only been around for a couple days and hadn’t had sufficient time to be deemed a nag or a killjoy and subsequently ignored every time she opens her mouth.

And so it was that I had to say, quite loudly, “Put. That. Down. NOW. For. The. Love. Of. God,” complete with jerky arm movements. The shopkeeper looked at me in complete befuddlement and a nearby customer (a teenage boy, no less) sniggered. I stared straight ahead as I walked stiff-jointedly towards TNC, figuring that I might as well play the role completely and convincingly if I was going to do it at all. There would be no half-assed robot acts here!

I looked down at TNC, who had calmly placed the item back on the shelf, and said in my monotone: “Let’s. Go.” She grinned beatifically, took my hand and said “Okay. Mummy Robot” in a very impressive robot imitation for a three year-old. We shuffled out of the shop, hand in hand, pushing Baby Robot in his RoboPram.

I’d have loved to be at that shopkeeper’s dinner table that night.

Spinster’s Got Talent

NS April 11th, 2009

This is shocking, apparently: An unmarried woman in her 40s who fits the stereotype in every way (frumpy, shapeless clothes; wild hair; no makeup; eccentric and assertive behaviour; lives alone; has cats) can….wait for it….HAVE TALENT!

When an unassuming lady named Susan Boyle walked onto the stage at auditions for tv show Britain’s Got Talent, the judges and audience rolled their eyes and grimaced. This woman couldn’t possibly possess skill at anything other than cat care or lesbianism, surely! They looked at one another knowingly when she reported that she had never married and was 47. When Simon Cowell asked her who she aspired to sing like and she answered “Elaine Page,” everyone sniggered. All three judges were looking around in boredom and bemusement when she began singing “I Dreamed a Dream” from Les Miserables. Within seconds, their faces changed to ones of awe and piety. As Boyles’s voice soared and tears formed in audience members’ eyes, Ant and Dec, the presenters backstage, said “You didn’t expect that, did you?” in absolute shock.

She was phenomenal, no question. The arrogance of those who judged her made Susan’s success all the sweeter. But why did they judge her talent based on how she looked and her marital status? Are we so shallow as a society that those two things are primary criteria for ascertaining whether or not someone will have talent or the ability to be successful? Ridiculous.

Overheard in the high street

NS March 1st, 2009

    In a charity shop

Woman with inordinately large hoop earrings and an unusually orange tan to her 10-year-old child: “If you touch that again I swear to God I will smack you so hard you see stars, march you home and put you to bed at six.”

Child: “Go on, then.”

(She didn’t)

    In the coffee shop

Woman of about 60 reading an article from the newspaper out loud to her husband who is reading another section: “And it says here….blah blah blah blah blah blah blah….blah blah blah blah blah….Are you listening to this, dear?”

Husband, without missing a beat or lifting his eyes from his own paper: “Not at all, darling.”

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