Hey. I'm Laura. I'm 15 years old. I play the flute, am in marching band,roller derby, enjoy video games, write somewhat terrible things, swim, have a cat named Chloe, and love to read. I like Homestuck, Doctor Who, Sherlock, Supernatural, Harry Potter, John Green, American Horror Story, Orange is the New Black, Desperate Housewives, Welcome to Nightvale, and Scott Pilgrim. I like the color blue.
~Searching for a percussionist to cuddle~
I think it’s safe to say we all know what sexism is, right? When a woman doesn’t get hired because of her gender, or when a mechanic charges a woman more for his services because she “doesn’t know anything.” Unfortunately, there are more insidious types of sexism, and
when they are spouted by women they become what’s called internalized
misogyny. Need some examples? Do you have a female friend that thinks
she’s cooler/better/smarter/etc. than other women because she doesn’t do
“girly” things? Or a female friend that says she’d rather hang out with
guys because they’re “less drama”? (Read a history book, bro) What
about the woman who scolds other women who are emotional, like it’s a
flaw?
Tina Fey had a poignant moment in Mean Girls where she discussed girl-on-girl hate.
These are examples of internalized misogyny. It’s the sexism we hear
every day and we start incorporating into our own lives. The idea is to
reject the feminine as “bad” and “weak” in an attempt to be the opposite
-strong. Like a man.
I know what you’re thinking. “That’s fine and dandy, Courtney, but what does this have to do with fitness?”
Everything.
I’m going to take a huge, huge problem in this post an examine it
through a smaller lens: memes. We can all agree that we’ve seen a meme
or two in our life, probably posted one, probably laughed about it.
Memes are a cultural phenomenon that speak volumes to the way we think
about certain classes in society.
Now, let me take you down the “Wall of Shame” for just a second.
Ah,
yes, a very typical meme. You’ve probably heard this before from a
friend on Facebook or at the gym. “Who does she think she is – wearing
MAKEUP to the gym?! Doing her hair?! Doesn’t she know she’s here to WORK
OUT? LIKE ME? I WORK SO HARD.” This is an underlying theme in a lot of
these memes – girl on girl crime/hate. The recurrent theme is
Girls as competition – if another girl is doing better/more thanyou/looking better than you/etc. she is competition in a bad way. Sheshould be torn down at all costs. She lifts more than you? Yeah, wellshe’s ugly. She runs faster than you? Well, good, she has no life, sheneeds something in her life.
These “better than x” posts are also very common too. The recent
popularity of Crossfit has brought a ton of women into the lifting
community – which is great! For far too long many of us have been the
only girl at a powerlifting meet, or maybe were met with strange looks
when we explain that we put hundreds of pounds on our back and squat it.
With this came the barrage of “better than x” ideas. Suddenly doing
something “masculine” like lifting heavy weights makes them better than
you. Again – girl on girl hate. “Haha you dance for an hour? WELL I LIFT
WEIGHTS FOR AN HOUR SO I’M BETTER!” This is the equivalent of the girl
who says “The Bachelor? Gag. I’d rather watch Sports Center!” There’s
nothing wrong with enjoying something “out of the norm” but the minute
you put down another woman for her preferences (which are “typical
female” preferences) you’re furthering this girl on girl hate.
And men, you’re just as guilty of this! Here are some memes that I’ve seen posted by men AND women alike.
Yes,
please never grow up to be a multi-million dollar pop star that enjoys
things. Cultural appropriation aside, that’s an entirely different
discussion.
Large
boobs are not optional. Also insert endless “MY FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE BAR
HAHA” and “GOING DOWN LIKE A SQUAT NOT LIKE A SLUT” memes
Do you see a theme here? Most of these are trying to empower a
certain type of woman by tearing down another – and usually solely based
on looks. Don’t believe me?
You can run a marathon? Who cares you don’t have 10% body fat haha!
I know science is hard, but genetics…I mean really. And photoshop. OH GOD PHOTOSHOP.
Every time you say something about “that girl” who works out and drinks.
Every time you tear down a woman for wearing makeup or doing her hair before the gym.
Every time you put one type of “non-traditional” exercise over another.
YOU are contributing to a world of GIRL ON GIRL hate.
These memes often have a deeper, darker motive as well. Sure, on the
surface they may seem motivational, but they actually reinforce a gender
norm a lot of these women try to steer clear of. Notice how all of
these women are skinny, white and conventionally attractive? These women
all embody what is conventionally attractive to the modern man (and
please, let’s keep the #notallmen to a minimum). A big, firm butt, low
body fat, white, etc. These memes reinforce the current beauty standard
under the disguise of a new, “healthy” one. Don’t believe me?
Lift hard and heavy! …but only to an extent, that’s gross, right?
Re-affirming conventional beauty standards. If these memes were
REALLY about “internal strength” or “Bettering yourself” they’d focus a
range of body types and skin colors. They would show the top woman and
say, “Suns out guns out!” or “Work hard, play hard!” or whatever other
catchy saying currently spewed by fitness people. Instead they work to
tear down women who stray from the idea of what’s “accepted.” And don’t
be too shocked by the comments on these pictures – women and men alike
will tear down the top image. Post a picture of Dana Linn Bailey on
Facebook and wait and count how many people (women included) tell you
“not to get that big” or read her countless “Ew you’re a man!” comments.
So, basically, when you post these memes you’re 1) reinforcing the
beauty norm, 2) tearing down other women (you don’t think that top girl
has seen this image before? How do you think she feels?), 3) negating
the hard work of the individual…just to name a few.
A lot of girl on girl hate, right?
(And, on a tangent, how many of these memes are thinly veiled
thinspo? How many of these reinforce guilt about food and eating
disorder ideas – which is a predominantly woman’s issue? Yeah.)
So – what can you do?
Build other women up – don’t tear them down. Find your competition and praise her for her strengths. Find a sisterhood in your shared struggle.
Call out other women for their internalized misogyny. “I don’t understand why the hair style of the girl on the treadmill has anything to do with your workout?” or “Maybe she likes pink nail polish, why do you care?”
Accept that not everyone wants to do Crossfit or lift weights and some women just like to dance with their friends, or cycle, or run. And remember it has NOTHING to do with you.
Praise other women. Lift them up. Empower each other in EVERY facet of your life. Other women are NOT your competition and if they’re doing“better” than you it’s not a personal affront to you.
How awesome does this sound though. You get infinite money and once a week you get to take a child to a candy store or toys or us or somewhere they love and buy them as much they want this would be fun given the kid wasn’t a brat.
There is no downside to this at all
This is the best, because it says A CHILD, not your child, so I could pick one of the really poor kids on the streets and go “Your life is going to change right now”, and I could buy everything their family might need, along with a house, a food supply, toys, clothes, and everything they never had the chance to have before. And the best thing is that I could do this with lots of children, and not just one. I could give a lot of children in need a full week of Christmas basically and maybe give them a chance to have a different life. That would be great.