Crumbs Made Her Unhappy
Speaking of ladies who write for The Atlantic, here’s senior editor Honor Jones a-gush with expression in the Family section:
I loved my husband; it’s not that I didn’t. But I felt that he was standing between me and the world, between me and myself… I had caused so much upheaval, so much suffering, and for what? He asked me that, at first, again and again: For what? So I could put my face in the wind. So I could see the sun’s glare.
It’s a tale of divorce, you see, and rather sad, and just a little confusing. For instance, exactly why the divorce came about is not immediately obvious. There’s no mention of affairs, or hardship, or emotional cruelty. In fact, and despite 3,000 words, the husband is barely mentioned, except as an unwitting hindrance to some nebulous fantasy of self-exploration, or at least self-dramatization. Indeed, we’re presented with a loving husband and comfortable middle-class life, in which one chats with architects and browses the Instagram accounts of cabinet makers, while weighing the merits of soapstone kitchen counters.
Slowly, I realised, I didn’t want this life. I didn’t want to renovate. I wanted to get divorced… I started imagining other lives. Other homes.
Here, I should point out that Ms Jones also has three small children. Though their wellbeing doesn’t appear to figure too heavily, or much at all, in the extended ramble of the article. However, we do hear a lot about other, more important matters:
the crumbs got me down.
Crumbs are a recurring topic, mentioned seven times, along with a dislike of vacuuming. Truly, a life of unrelenting hell. Albeit with a cleaner to do much of the heavy lifting:
I hired a woman named Luba to clean… I loved talking with her. She was full of sensible advice, like how I should really stop washing the cleaning rags along with the children’s clothes, because the chemicals could irritate their skin.
Not the worst opinion we’ll hear today.
We’re then informed that a comfortable middle-class life, in which time can be spent choosing new kitchens and chatting with the cleaner, is actually an oppressive experience:
I wanted to be thinking about art and sex and politics and the patriarchy. How much of my life—I mean the architecture of my life, but also its essence, my soul, my mind—had I built around my husband? Who could I be if I wasn’t his wife? Maybe I would microdose. Maybe I would have sex with women. Maybe I would write a book.
At which point, I’m tempted to suggest that a more adventurous adolescence and some teenage experimentation might have saved a lot of later heartache. But it seems we’re expected to share Ms Jones’ belief that the only thing preventing her from being exciting and fabulous – from blossoming as a fully switched-on and progressive woman who drops acid and dabbles with lesbianism, which can then be mentioned for effect – is her family and her obligations to them. And obviously, it’s physically impossible for women who are mothers and wives to think about art and sex and politics.
Hence the betrayal, the breaking of vows. And hey, divorce is such an adventure.
The subject of remorse does crop up, briefly:
There were days when the magnitude of what I’d done bore down on me. I kept wondering if I’d feel regret, or remorse. It is hard to admit this—it makes me cold, as cold a woman as my ex-husband sometimes suspects I am—but I didn’t. I felt raw, and I liked it. There was nothing between me and the world.
Oh lucky world.
And then the rewards for this feat of selflessness and bravery:
On my nights alone, I caught up with old friends, frantically made new friends, said way too much about my personal life over drinks with colleagues. Out in the city, I felt solid: a capable woman taking care of her family.
Today’s words are unintended irony.
Update:
In the comments, Jacob asks,
Is her first name ironic?
Well, there’s quite a bit of irony, albeit unintentional. Such that we’re expected to believe that Ms Jones is somehow being robbed of self-expression, presumably by “the patriarchy,” despite her life of minimal drudgery, and despite being a contributor and senior editor at the New York Times and a senior editor at The Atlantic. Resulting in the self-indulgent ramble quoted above.
Needless to say, Ms Jones has dozens of blue-tick Twitter followers, many of whom are her peers in ‘progressive’ institutions of one kind or another, merrily gushing about her “courage” and capacity for introspection, her glorious humanity, her “brilliant soul.” Her tale, we’re told, is “beautiful and moving.” And none of those applauding apparently raised an eyebrow at a self-involved woman shattering the lives of her three small children, and her husband, in order to concentrate on herself even more than before.
Reading Ms Jones’ outpourings, I was reminded of a conversation in which someone was telling me about how a number of her female friends had spent years and large sums of money on a series of activities and retreats in order to “find themselves.” I suggested that if someone is in their fifties, having spent half a century on this Earth, and still can’t find themselves, then maybe, just maybe, there isn’t much there to be found.
It didn’t go down terribly well.
Update 2:
Regarding the gushing mentioned above, Rafi notes,
It’s like a parallel universe.
It is a little odd. And it does, I think, reveal the psychological gulf – and moral gulf – that can exist between we, the unremarkable, and our glorious betters. But then, like so much else, The Atlantic seems increasingly geared to the preoccupations of neurotic middle-class lefties. Which is why you’ll find self-satisfied articles on how we should prioritise the feelings and wellbeing of brazen and habitual thieves over those of the people they prey upon. And on how insufficiently woke crossword puzzles are one of “the systemic forces that threaten women.”
Things of that kind.
It reminded me of this, in particular the last paragraph.
As has happened so many times before, David, following that link led me down a rabbit hole, re-visiting many other other blogs and periodicals.
For instance:
Alex Tabarrok tries to shoehorn basic economics into the mind of Ursula K Le Guin
The socialist Le Guin never understood economics–and since economics is about how people interact and live together one can make a case that Le Guin never understood people.
SF writers Sarah Hoyt and Charlie Martin criticized her anti-Amazon rant:
Indeed, indeed. I doubt that Le Guin cared at all about the conservatives and other Wrong Thinkers who could not get published because the sf editors disapproved of their opinions. Leftists, for all their pious talk about “marginalized voices”, are in reality the ones most comfortable with silencing views they disagree with.
Le Guin was an anarchist socialist–a risible concept in itself, when you consider that socialism is by its very nature tyrannical, in stark contrast to the claimed ideals of anarchism.
Wikipedia quotes Le Guin as saying “Democracy is good but it isn’t the only way to achieve justice and a fair share.” which is a good enough reveal of her longing for a way to force people to live as she wishes.
But what other “just as good” way? How would she have forced people to give up the fruits of their labor? Their buying and living preferences? Leninism? Stalinism? Maoism? Chavezism? Laurie Penny-ism? Some impossible-to-implement anarcho-socialism which will quickly collapse into fascism or Stalinism?
So what does “justice and a fair share” mean in the mouths of people like her, other than tyranny and universal poverty? (Except for the exalted literati like herself who will have nice things because they “deserve” them?)
One last observation: Le Guin described Isaac Asimov as “the old chieftain of the Cold Warriors”, which is laughable in light of his concealment of the activities of American Communists, his minimizing of Soviet tyranny, and his strong disapproval of Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four for paying “too much” attention to Communist tyranny.
Note also the implication that there is something deplorable about being a Cold Warrior. Given the reality of Communist tyranny and imperialism, that once again shows that Le Guin’s hatred of tyranny was more a pose than a reality.
some of you have given this more thought than one would assume were strictly necessary
One can never be too careful. Just think of all the crimes that have been solved because of a simple error or omission by the perpetrator.
I’m not sure everyone has read it the way that you have.
I mean the novels, not the post.
Obviously, you have read your own post correctly.
Well she thinks about and writes about herself an awful lot. Is there any room for art and politics and sex in there? She seems…too preoccupied for those things.
Comment heard elsewhere: “university level bullshit”
In Star Trek (all versions) it is a military setup–captain and crew. The captain is a benevolent dictator. No one has money or a job. No one is rich or poor. This seems to be the ideal of US socialists. Along the way to utopia, they are demonizing the Right. Twitter just banned a US congressperson Marjorie Taylor Greene. Dems are talking about banning from office the 140 repubs who called for a challenge to the vote last year. They have arrested 700 people for Jan 6 but strangely no one charged with more than trespassing. Some generals are discussing pre-emptive action (!) to prevent a coup by the right–which is simply backwards.
Catering to psychopathology.
“university level bullshit”
And here comes another example:
“consider 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, who used his semi-automatic weapon to kill two Black men in Kenosha, Wisconsin, while waging a glorious race war on behalf of his inherited White power.”
–The Good Kings, by Kara Cooney, UCLA professor
Not just bullshit. Deadly poisonous bullshit.
Not just bullshit. Deadly poisonous bullshit.
Which she stands by. Essentially, “I got it all wrong, but I’m still right.” I paraphrase, of course, but not by much:
https://twitter.com/KaraCooney/status/1478567323975913473
That is a mighty swing and a miss.
True in trad publishing. Indie publishing allows for some marginalized voices to be expressed. And the range of kinks expressed in indie romance / erotica is, um, breathtaking.
Which she stands by. Essentially, “I got it all wrong, but I’m still right.”
In which she says “I stand by the sentiment of white supremacy”.
If we take her at her word, then “white supremacy” means defending people and property from rioters, looters, arsonists, and thugs. Which makes “white supremacy” sound rather praise-worthy.
In which she says “I stand by the sentiment of white supremacy”.
Which has bugger all to do with Pharaohs, I can’t wait for her take on the lack of a DIE director during the Ming dynasty.
I can’t wait for her take on the lack of a DIE director during the Ming dynasty.
Ming dynasty – hell – what about the lack of a DIE director anywhere in modern China?
The Han Chinese very much pride themselves in being Han Chinese, and do not give much of a damn about minorities of any colo(u)r, or men who think they are women, or the religion of peace. The same groups that hold the West in a vise grip of emotional blackmail have little to no sway in China. And yet Obama was so sad he couldn’t as president boss American citizens around like the Chinese premier could his citizens.
The admiration expressed by so many on the left for china and the blockage of the congressional resolution condemning muslim labor camps in china says lots about the dems beliefs. Check out who a person’s friends are.
Which makes “white supremacy” sound rather praise-worthy.
Doubly so when you consider that the “victims” included a white child molester and a white wife beater. I think there’s an argument to be made that culling child molesters and wife beaters is something that other races might look into as a means of putting them on a level playing field…
“2022 predictions from 1922”
Road & Track magazine published a 50th(?) anniversary issue, in which one of the regular contributors declined to offer his predictions for the automobile.
As a tyke, he’d been reading vintage issues of Popular Mechanix (or something similar). The prediction for the future of air travel had terminals with smartly dressed travellers, spacious public areas and floor to ceiling windows. Pictured outside those windows were 300 passenger wood and fabric biplanes…
If you want to read someone else reading feminist literature, Robert Stacy McCain did a series of posts doing a deep dive with extensive quotes about certain books…”The Indecent Mind of Andrea Dworkin” is a good starting point.
From that link:
“she and fellow radical Catharine MacKinnon tried to pass anti-pornography laws in Minneapolis and Indianapolis. The mayor of Minneapolis vetoed the Dworkin/MacKinnon law there…”
Note that Minneapolis did pass the law. This should remind us that Minneapolis liberals have little but contempt for the Constitution and for the rules of facts and evidence.
This should remind us that Minneapolis liberals have little but contempt for the Constitution and for the rules of facts and evidence.
Not to mention a serious lack of concern for the victims of crime enabled by “de-fund the police” policies. Only when those liberals are themselves the victims of crime to they start to change their minds.
This raises the question: Are liberals human beings? Or are they something less?
A typical liberal.
OK, I’m not up on what the kewl kids are saying these days, but could someone explain, using small words, what “[group] showing their [letters]” actually means?
Ta.
could someone explain, using small words, what “[group] showing their [letters]” actually means?
Does your question relate to something in this thread?
A very old meaning of “wear your letters” is literally for a member of a fraternity or sorority to wear the Greek letters and/or badge of that organization. And by extension to publicly show pride in that organization.
But today? Maybe it has additional meanings that I am unaware of, or maybe people have broadened its use to metaphorically mean public display of any sort of membership or affiliation or ideology. Damned if I know.
The letters are “W” and “L”, which in sports, and now in Real Life, are used to tally wins and losses.
“Showing one’s L” is equivalent to “Look at me! I don’t realize it, but I’m a loser!”
could someone explain, using small words, what “[group] showing their [letters]” actually means?
It always helps, when asking a question, to give specific examples.
From one of the twit links here…

@pst314:
“Does your question relate to something in this thread?”
Actually, it relates to *your* twitter link (DefiantLs) “A typical liberal”
So, yes.
And thanks, Herp McDerp. I’m not a sportsball type, so the reference completely passed me by.
I’m not a sportsball type, so the reference completely passed me by.
Heh. Don’t sweat it. I know sportsball people who don’t get sportsball references.
I understand the twit group “Dudes showing their W’s” – Guys showing off personal “wins” – that much I gathered from the context of their posts. And “DefiantL’s” with their examples of lefties saying two opposite things depending on which political party they are speaking about did seem to mean “Defiant Losers”. Or I guess it could also mean Defiant Liberals – embrace the power of “and”? Whoever is compiling those DefiantL’s – my hat’s off to them.
But there’s another twit group I see posting, called “Women showing their L’s” – the opposite of the winning dudes. After having seen so many posts fisked here from Scary Mommy and Everyday Feminism, and other such places, I can’t tell if the loser women twit group is in earnest, or is people making fun of the Scary Mommy types who seem to fetishize their neuroses. What I have not seen in my limited twitter exposure is “Chicks showing their W’s”. It seems the GenX and older feminists would be all over that trying to show they can be as winning as the men, but the new batch of feminists seem to be more interested in tearing down and complaining about whatever the men do. Or writing long articles like Honor Jones in the OP, glorifying their loser behavior, to be gushed over by other feminists. Maybe it’s like the N word with black people – they’re “owning it” or something. So maybe, given all that, “Women showing their L’s” is serious and thinks they are doing something great. Who knows – that’s as deep an analysis of that data as I want to do.
Actually, it relates to *your* twitter link (DefiantLs) “A typical liberal”
Didn’t see anything about “showing” letters there.
“Women showing their L’s”
Ah, now I get it. Quotes always help.
…I can’t tell if the loser women twit group is in earnest
I’ve tracked down a few such posts from various “L’s” accounts and verified that they were screen shots of real Twitter posts and that those Twitter accounts seemed to be sincerely left-wing.
There’s a lot of stupidity out there.
It reminded me of this, in particular the last paragraph.
I twice visited the college my sister attended. On the first occasion I saw a dorm room decorated with hard core Communist tracts and song books. On the second occasion, I almost stepped in multiple piles of cat feces when walking up the stairs.
that was stairs inside student housing.
Maybe I would have sex with women.
Uh, look up “lesbian bed death.”