โMisogyny or misandry is not a status or a belief; it is just a sickness.โ โ M.F. Moonzajer, LOVE, HATRED, AND MADNESS
Microaggressionsย are those subtle (and sometimes not so subtle) things we do to distance ourselves from minorities, be they someone from another race, or culture, LGBT people, etc.
The term โmicroaggressionโ was coined by psychiatrist and Harvard University professor Chester M. Pierce in 1970 to describe insults and dismissals he regularly witnessed non-black Americans inflict on African Americans[1]. Most people are well-intended and do not mean to be offensive at allโbut they are.
Some of these include:
- โWhat are you?โ (to a biracial person).
- โYou donโt act like a black person.โ
- โI am colorblind.โ
- โWhy do you sound white?โ
- โIs that really your hair?โ
- โAre you the first in your family to go to college?โ
Today the term โmicroaggressionโ is also being used to describe insults and dismissals of women and LGBT people. Kevin Nadal does a great job describing microaggressions against LGBT individuals in his book,ย Thatโs So Gay: Microaggressions and the Lesbian, Gay,ย Bisexualย andย Transgenderย Community[2].
Someย microaggressionsย against LGBT people include:
- โIโm not being homophobic; youโre being too sensitive.โ
- โHave you ever had realย sex?โ
- โSo, whoโs the man in the relationship?โ
- โThatโs totally cool with me as long as I can watch.โ
- โYou are so Jack on โWill and Graceโ or Cam on โModern Family.โโ
- โI would never date a bisexual man he canโt commit or make up his mind.โ
- โWhatโs going on down thereโ (To a transgender person).
Some verbal microaggressions Iโve heard against women are:
- โI wouldnโt work for a woman.โ
- โIf you dress like a slut, youโre asking for it.โ
- โShe thinks like a man.โ (Intended complement)
- โYouโre being too emotional. You need to look at this logically.โ
- โIโm impressed that a woman could do that.โ
- โWhy donโt you just get back in the kitchen.โ (Supposed joke)
Related: 6 Ways To Stop Hating Women
Misandry
I have been noticing more and more microaggressions toward men, but Iโve found surprisingly little discussion of this trend. There is a word most people have never heard of: Misandry, meaning hatred of men. It corresponds to misogyny, hatred of women. By noticing microaggressions directed against men, we can uncover a lot ofย hiddenย misandry.
Here are some examples Iโve come across:
- โMen only think with their dicks.โ
- โA man wouldnโt understand.โ
- โMen just want a hole to put it in.โ
- โMen canโt hear the wordย no.โ (When rejected sexually)
- โMen are obsessed with lesbianย porn.โ
- โReally? You donโt like sports?โ
- โHeโs, you know, โartistic.โโ
- โBe a man.โ
- Men are womanizers, man-whores, man-sluts.โ
Iโve even heard women say things like, โBalls are gross. I hate them.โ If a woman overheard men talking about vaginas being dirty and disgusting, sheโd surely think this was misogyny and microaggression, but why not the other way around?
Many otherwise enlightened people seem to think that putting a man down by shaming him for the transgressions of a few criminal men or for his inadequate physicality is a sort of privilege or entitlement. They are not even aware of their misandry.
Related: 6 Ways To Stop Hating Men
Patriarchy
Mostly we know that men, especially heterosexual white men, have a privileged status in our society, that they are mostly blind to their privilege, and that we live in a patriarchal world. But letโs look at our assumptions for a moment. What does it mean, for instance, when we tell someone to โman upโ or โtoughen up?โ
We often think of patriarchy as hurting women, but we donโt talk about how it also hurts men. Patriarchy includes a rigid standard of looks and behavior, and men who fail to follow the standard are tormented ruthlessly. Conforming men may be โblind to their privilege,โ but nerds and sissies are fair targets for contempt. A man who dares not be โmanlyโ is scorned by women as well as men. Those โcrybabiesโ deserve what they get.
In his book,ย I Donโt Want to Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Maleย Depressionย [3] author and psychotherapist Terrence Real says, โBoys and men are granted privilege and special status, but only on the condition that they turn their backs on vulnerability and connection to join in the fray. Those who resist, like unconventional men or gay or bisexual men, are punished for it.โ I completely agree with him.
The language of hate and love
The old adage, โSticks and stones may hurt my bones, but words can never hurt me,โ is wrong. Words can and do wound. They perpetuateย normsย that give rise to bigotry, misogyny, misandry,ย racism, homophobia, and more. Given how โmanlinessโ is enforced by both men and women, is it any wonder that men have become fair targets for a running commentary of contempt?
Even the absence of online discussions of microaggressions against men is itself a microaggression because the absence renders the problem invisible. Some discussions of microaggressions toward women and minorities even say that because men are privileged they canโt experience microaggressions. But many men are not privileged. These men have been rendered invisible and at the same time marked as fair game.
Related: Only Real Men Cry: Men Who Cry Are Not Weak, They Are Stronger
It pathologizes men when we assume something is wrong with a guy who doesnโt like sports, isnโtย tall, dark, and handsome, or otherwise doesnโt fit aย manlyย stereotype. It also pathologizes men when we assume the worst transgressions of a few are characteristics of all. It doesnโt help women (or blacks or LGBT individuals) to engage in the sport of putting down men.
We might begin by extending to men our sensitivity about the harm done by microaggressions. It could open the door to compassion and help us build a more humane world.
References:
[1]ย https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microaggression_theory [2] Nadal, Kevin. 2013. Thatโs So Gay: Microaggressions and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community. [3] Real, Terrence, 1998. I Donโt Want to Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Male Depression.
Written By Joe Kort
Originally Appeared In Psychology Today
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