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The bottom line is she suppressed her feelings for so long, thinking she got over them, and she hadn't. Now she should know that she should seek some therapy to address her issues, particularly as a mother of girls. |
From what the author wrote, she is not blaming her former sorority sisters for her rape. Nor from what I read is anyone else alluding that she is blaming her former sorority sisters for the rape. What she has said is that they failed to support her during her crisis.
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"For the last 20-odd years, I’ve slapped Band-Aids on my wounds while avoiding any kind of group female intimacy. I begged off on baby groups when my children were born and haven’t been able to bear book clubs, the charity circuit, women’s fitness classes or the country club scene. Even finding myself among a group of cheering and chatting mothers at my children’s sporting events can trigger that familiar anxiety.
But to my enduring wonder, I have never felt the same anxiety about men. To be sure, their violence and misogynistic rituals stole my innocence and triggered the demons of shame and repression that shackle me still. Yet their actions, however crude and criminal, ultimately hurt me far less than the judgments, connivance and betrayal of women. The men in my drama acknowledged wrongdoing, apologized, showed remorse. Punishment, however minor, was meted out. They did not blame me, and they shouldn’t have. But the women shouldn’t have, either, and they did." Slapping Band-aids on a fear and distrust of women...all women, since she can't even join a fitness class or mother's support group is pathological. Sorry if I worry that her feelings about women WILL be felt by her daughters. At some point she has to see that her experience should teach her that her sisters were not worth being friends with, not that all women are worth avoiding and fearing! Do I really think that her 20 year fear of women really has to do with a few "sisters" (who she admitted not really liking) kicking her out of her sorority? No! She may think she has "forgiven" her attacker because it is easier for her to compartmentalize her pain over her situation, her embarrassment over her supposed "fault" in the incident and her inability to move past the event into distrusting women. This is just a defense mechanism, not an indictment of sorority life. Sure those girls were selfish scumbags, but this poor woman needs help to come to grips with an event that she obviously has not gotten over. |
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^^^ Every group of people can talk about the societal pressures applied to that group during childhood (and beyond). There are different societal expectations heaped upon everyone - girls, boys, whites, Muslims, Jews, etc... IMO, societal pressure has nothing to do with whether a mother has the potential to color her children's perceptions... of anything. Because we all know that she does indeed have that power. And so does the father. And so does the Jewish neighbor. And the Arab boy in Billy's class.
This woman, if nothing else, is conveying to me that she recognizes the perception-coloring potential she has over her children (or else she wouldn't bring up the fact that she has daughters), and that she's concerned that she doesn't know how to address it. |
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And there's the title of the thread and article too.
"My sorority pledge? I swore off sisterhood." I supposed we can assume that she meant only the sororities sisters who mistreated her (and I think they did), but I think other aspects about groups that she avoids indicate that she's condemning or fearing people pretty far removed from the college experience. She basically condemns all groups of women, and I think many of us know from personal experience that her condemnation is unfounded for many if not almost all groups, especially groups of women her present age. (Some of what she observes is true, but it's human frailty rather than female frailty, if you ask me.) Is she entitled to her feelings on a personal level? Sure. Does that mean all readers of her New York Times piece should reach a similar conclusion or validate her "groups of women are evil" mindset? Probably not. I don't blame her for feeling like she does about her college experience and the people involved, but I don't think it's particularly representative and I don't think it's a valid way to look at women today. |
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[Irony of post fully intended.] |
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Aha, I didn't mean it was *because* you were a member, I meant that every one I've met has been totally classy.
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It is just an article. You people act like she declared war on the NPC.
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