faewitch: (Default)
2014-07-18 07:02 pm

Compliments, harassment, and self confidence

This post has been a long time coming, it has percolated in my brain on more than one occasion and has finally been sparked by a post by Girlwithholesin.

She comments that one of the reasons she doesn't talk about some her experience is the fear of being judged by other feminists. I know that feeling all too well.
During my early teens, I was actually pretty happy with my body. I had issues with it of course, but on the whole I liked the way I looked. Certainly I liked it enough to wear clothing that clung to the nascent curves. On the other hand, I had days where I felt off, we all do. Those days when the mirror just doesn't seem quite as friendly as it should for whatever reason. On those days, I had a way of cheering myself up. I put on 'nice' clothes, a summer dress, a strappy top and long skirt or jeans (I don't remember doing this in bad weather), and I headed outside. Whether it was walking into town, going to see a friend, or going to the park, I would walk SOMEWHERE and make sure that people got to see me. On those days I counted the number of times a car horn beeped at me or someone whistled or I heard cat-calls, and I smiled a little wider at each one. I was attractive, I was becoming a woman and clearly these people saw it and appreciated it.

I can't say exactly when I grew out of it, at some point when I realised the difference between complimentary and objectifying I think. Although that's not entirely fair, there are still days where it makes me feel better about the way I look even while I am mentally fuming at the society that creates such a situation. A situation where it is acceptable for strange men to pass public comment on a woman's appearance and expect her to appreciate it, and a situation where I am so damn insecure about my appearance that this anonymous objectifying crap CAN make me feel better. These are the experiences I don't talk about, because they make me feel like a bad feminist. Hell, they make me feel like a bad person because, by accepting this treatment I am tacitly condoning it and encouraging a society in which it happens to others.

Most of the insults I have received, I have simply laughed off, they have been related to my mode of dress rather than my actual appearance. Or they have been aimed at the company I am in. Likewise, I have been lucky to avoid aggression (from strangers anyway) when I have ignored advances or offered suggestions on what they can do with their 'compliments'. On one occasion I with a girlfriend, some young (probably teenage) males yelled something at us from an upstairs window as we walked past. When we ignored them we were accused (?) of being lesbians...at which point we stopped and kissed. Was it a bad response? Possibly, I'm not sure whether it would encourage them to repeat the behaviour or not but it certainly shut them up at the time. The point was that they had offered a label which they considered to be insulting, we showed just how little we were insulted by it. However, there is a problem there as well, the culture of entitlement which says that men who offer uninvited comment on women's appearance/existence are entitled to a polite response. While the most reasonable of them simply expect to be thanked, for their passing objectification, the responses range from the sublime to the Isla Vista shootings.

To take the subject of harassment in the form of compliments to a smaller scale, let's look at LRP events. Ten years ago, I thought nothing of getting falling down drunk, I don't remember half of what I did in the evenings when the bottles were going around and we were mostly out of character. What I do remember is seeing people looking at me differently, expecting to be allowed more liberties in terms of hugs, kisses and even grabbing at my backside. I consider myself partially to blame in this case, whether you agree or not, however, that is no excuse for people to assume that things I had ignored or not noticed while I was heavily inebriated were just fine the next morning. In some cases, it has not even been a case of things I don't remember while drunk, I have also had experiences where a brief flash of bra while I have been getting changed (I'm not hugely modest when it comes to that kind of thing, I think being a drama student knocks it out of you), gives them permission to comment on my breasts and more.

Although the hobby as a whole is improving, it still has a reputation for being rife with sexism. We are slowly managing to convince the single male contingent that female roleplayers are not in the field looking for sex, nor are they 'easy lays'. Unfortunately, it does not change the fact that I got to a point where I could not take any compliment I received on the field at face value. Someone commented on my makeup and I checked to see whether they were looking down my top. Someone said something nice about my costume and I took a step away, out of arm's reach. It spread over into the real world as well, I've never been good at accepting compliments, I tend to blush and mumble because saying thank you always seems arrogant, but for a while, they actively scared me. I thought that there must be an ulterior motive. Even women didn't escape the paranoia, either they were just being polite or they thought I was a /bitch/impostor and were taking sly digs at me. There are a very few people who I met in those years who I am still friends with, those are the ones who asked how I was feeling the next morning, helped me fend off people who I didn't want to talk to, and were more interested in making sure I was properly hydrated than commenting on the way I looked.

A lot changed between early teens and twenty something, even more has changed since then. I may no longer be happy with my body but I have learned that the only person I need to dress for is myself, that I am happiest just ignoring the cat callers, that I have more fun when I don't drink myself sick, and that not all compliments come with expectations. Oh, and to check before sticking two fingers up at the person who just sounded their horn at you in the street, sometimes it's your partner's dad behind the wheel and he's just saying hello...
faewitch: (Default)
2014-07-15 08:16 pm
Entry tags:

Talking to the voices in my head

Something I came across in the depths of my writing files. I was having issues with a character's motivations and a hugely important chunk of her backstory...So I had a conversation with her. It didn't particularly tell me what I needed to know but it helped me get a handle on the character and generally get into the swing of writing for the day (it was a nano project).

Me: So Bri, this whole destruction thing that you're supposed to do. What is it?

Bri: *Shrugs* Maybe if you actually got around to writing the prophecy someone would tell me and then I'd know.

Me: Great idea with one minor drawback, I need to know what you can do before I can prophesy you doing it!

Bri: You remember this whole thing about planning before you start right?

Me: Don't start with me, I might be just the author but I will kill you off if I have to!

Bri: Kidnap attempts, death threats. God you're a bitch!

Me: Right, we've established I'm a bitch. I could have told you that from the start. Anyway, you appeared in my head telling me that you had some destiny or other that involved destruction and needed you to be brought up in Faerie! And besides, Novel writer keeps telling me that I shouldn't make your life too easy.

Bri: Fine. *rolls eyes* Well what's wrong with the whole 'destroying the mists' idea?

Me: I don't know, it just doesn't seem to work so well anymore. I just get the feeling that there's something missing and I don't want to end up needing a sequel which is what will happen if we run with that.

Bri: Why do you need a sequel?

Me: Duh, because there are suddenly faeries all over the place and that makes a fun world to do stuff in!

Bri: Well there's always the vague 'let's jump on the supernatural detective bandwagon' idea you had.

Me: Yeah but I wanted magic to be relatively unknown in that one. I refuse to write LKH fic!

Bri: So don't make it porn.

Me: Not helpful!

Bri: Sorry. *Pause* So why does it have to be actual physical destruction?

Me: Well I suppose it doesn't, I just got the feeling that it was from the random draws I did with the oracle deck at the start.

Bri: What they suggested was the possibility of overwhelming growth, something that went so far that it became destructive rather than a positive thing.

Me: And...

Bri: Well destroying the current power structure by giving them back the ability to walk between worlds would apply pretty well don't you think?

Me: I guess so. It would upset Bran though, he likes being special.

Bri: He deserves to be upset once in a while, it might stop him being so smug all the time!

(Interjection from Bran): Hey!

Me: Honey I love you but this situation is complicated enough, just ignore her ok?

Bri: Oh right, you come asking for my help and then tell the others to ignore me!

Me: Bri you are not a stroppy thirteen year old at the moment no matter where you might be in most of what I've written lately.

Bri: I like being a stroppy thirteen year old.

Me: I like writing you as one, it's fun. I don't like talking to you as one though, it makes you less than helpful.

Bri: *pout* Fine, I suppose if I don't you'll just threaten to kill me again.

Me: Destruction remember? That should be plenty stroppy enough for you.

Bri: Yeah but not if it's unintentional. Do I at least get to punch Aedan or something?

Me: Why not, or possibly Cael, I feel kinda sorry for Aedan again.

Bri: *rolls eyes again*

Me: No he isn't going to change sides, he's just feeling a little put upon.

Bri: So aside from upsetting the pretty boy do you have any issues with the whole walking between the worlds thing?

Me: Not really, I still don't know where it brings in the Wild Fae as big bads though unless you're making it easier for them to come into the world as well and they want to run amok or something.

Bri: That makes sense

Me: But it gives them the same motivation as the Unseelie though and I don't really want that.

Bri: No it doesn't, the Wild Fae know what's going on, the Unseelie don't. Cael and Aedan just want shiny new powers to make them the new big bad in town.

Me: Hmmm.

Bri: Wow, I'm stunned by your eloquence oh mighty author!

Me: Why are you never this chatty when I'm trying to write you somewhere that needs a word count?

Bri: Why aren't you writing something that needs a word count?

Me: Because I'm talking to you.

Bri: You shouldn't be.

Me: You realise that you are a figment of my imagination and I have no intention of taking orders from you right? I am going to post this little ramble on LJ and probably check the forums again.

Bri: *Shrugs* That's up to you...Ok, ok, shutting up now.
faewitch: (Default)
2014-07-11 06:18 pm
Entry tags:

A glorious return

I had entirely forgotten that I had this journal until I started wanting somewhere other than facebook for my rambling. I have the horrible suspicion that there are several such neglected sets of rambling out there in the depths of the internet.

So, this will hopefully be, once more, somewhere to muse on the deep, the meaningful, and the utterly random parts of life. Creativity, sexuality, politics, all those fun things. Starting with a cross post from the nano boards.

I've had a vague bunny floating around my head for a while, not even a bunny really, more like the kernel of something that might become a bunny if enough ideas stick to it.
It comes from the fact that I'm wanting to stretch my sci-fi wings again (soft, definitely soft. Although I have a science background, my physics will not hold up to trying to write hard sci-fi) and has been fed by starting to re-read Ann McCaffrey's Pern series - one of those series that I always put off starting when I was younger because there was SO much of it, and somehow have only read bits of even 20 years later. The world has two moons, because that is the image in my head, with a third satellite which passes more regularly than every 200 years, possibly once a decade. This satellite affects the tides of the planet and the people as well.

We're not talking Thread here, rather more dramatic tides, a greater potential for natural disasters. I have a reasonable idea of how it would affect the planet. What I am dithering on is how it would affect the people. I am thinking that the people affected are women (the whole lunar cycle association) and children conceived/born during the proximity of this satellite. What I am not entirely certain of is HOW. Something niggling at the back of my mind says look at psychic phenomena, but it doesn't suggest how to link that to the changes. The cultural situation seems to be very patriarchal and misogynistic, to the extent that women are shut away 'for their own good' during these times and are likewise forbidden from trying to conceive children.

My plot would almost certainly revolve around one of these special individuals but I don't have a clear idea of it, or the character yet. I realise that it also has shades of Misty Lackey and Andre Norton's Halfblood Chronicles.

I suppose what I'm doing here (aside from getting my thoughts in order) is wondering whether anyone but me finds the idea interesting, whether it is too derivative, whether it is worth trying to flesh this out into a full bunny for anything more than a short story purely for my own entertainment.
faewitch: (Default)
2009-09-03 03:33 pm

Musings on belief

Random conversation came up earlier, prompted by (of all things) a random born again fundie comment on a youtube ghost hunting video. It has had me thinking about my beliefs and magic and things again and I thought I would post here to get my thoughts in order as much as anything else.

I believe that the "God" of Judaism, Christianity, Islam and their offshoots existsm alongside those whom I worship and those I don't. All things considered though he seems to be a bit of a stroppy teenager who wants more attention than anyone else. In various places and forms in the bible the commandment that "Thou shalt have no god but me." appears. Now, why would this be necessary if there were no other gods? Why not just proclaim that no other god exists and therefore that it is pointless to worship them? (ok, that happens later but this is a whole other debate that runs along with the idea of 'elohim' being both singular and plural).

I believe that if there is a supreme deitic force then it is Gaia, the earth mother in any of her forms. Without the earth we do not exist and without our worship (for want of a better word since I think this one is over and often mis-used. Again, a different debate) the gods are nothing.

I'm not sure what I would classify my magic/workings as. I am a celtic pagan in that I feel closest to the celtic gods (with a few additional people who I've developed relationships with thrown in). I will ask those deities I have a relationship with to help me at times, to defend me, strengthen me, give me a kick up the arse (not that they need much encouragement for that) or help me see what is under my nose. I don't expect them to sort my life out for me or solve all problems. That is my job. When it comes to 'real' magic I suppose my outlook is similar to that involved in Chi/Qi. Energy flows through the universe, energy flows through us, the energy is the same. With focus and (self) belief we can manipulate that energy to produce results, healing, harm, scrying, confidence.

I am a firm believer in conceptual reality as well. Especially where these things are concerned. Without belief the gods fail, without belief 'magic' doesn't work. The old thoughts about a curse only working if the subject is aware of it? Psychosomatic illnesses are well documented, stress brought on by a niggling doubt that maybe someone has done something to you...which of course you don't believe in and can't talk about because people will laugh at you... Even the most sceptical of people are prey to psychological aspects playing on fears. On the other hand, look at the 'magic' that happens when you're going out somewhere. You get changed into clothes that make you feel good, take time to put on makeup, do your hair. When you glance in the mirror and like what you see, confidence soars.

Pseudo-science stuff aside, I also believe in the fae. Not pretty little pixie winged flower fairies, the Fae, the Sidhe, creatures from celtic myth and Grimm's tales. What and who they really are? Not a clue. That they are powerful creatures in their own right who I don't really want to fuck about with? Hell yes! They are not something I'm going to try and analyse here and now but I felt the need to touch on the subject.

The last thing I will say (before my ramblings become incoherent or I am talking in circles) is that I am NOT a wiccan (and nor are half the people who label themselves as such!). I believe in Karma not the three fold law and I think that karma occasionally needs a helping hand. Nor (although I feel no need to defend myself from anyone on my flist ^_^) am I a satanist. I do believe in the concept of evil (although not strictly in the same manifestation as the judeo-christian version) and am firmly of the opinion that it needs dealing with in a swift and permanent manner. Yes, I believe vengeance and justice should be served, yes there is a reason that Jenet follows the Huntress and yes many of her views are based directly on mine. :P
faewitch: (Default)
2009-09-03 03:30 pm

Beginnings

I have come to the general conclusion that this journal is going to be used to post stuff that I don't want to put on LJ, want to share with select people who are not on LJ themselves or is 'deep and meaningful'(tm) Some things will be cross posted to both but this will come without the spam I hope.