Look At My Shiny Identity
Via Mr Muldoon, a tale of what sounds like mid-life contrivance:
Imagine the fun.
The contriver in question is Amanda Elend, a scrupulously progressive woman whose list of causes is extensive, if somewhat predictable. She tells us,
Ah, the basis of any sound marriage.
Coinciding, oddly enough, with the big four-oh:
The idea of having an identity – one with boutique status and complications that have to be danced around in an affirming manner – is terribly important to Ms Elend. And as we’ve seen, self-definition is very in right now, and quite competitive. Plus, there’s so much potential for chiding and rituals of atonement:
Ms Elend’s children, aged six and nine, were also informed of their mother’s elevation to the role of Fascinating Being:
The word husband is used intermittently. Sometimes it’s partner.
“Can we still call you mom?” my 9-year-old asked.
You see, every small child wants a mom whose new pronouns have to be memorised, and who reveals that their family is suddenly conditional, one option among many. A mom who, in middle-age, is still on a journey of self-absorption – sorry, self-discovery – and who could at any moment become a radically different, and altogether more fashionable, kind of entity. Quite what a six-year-old is supposed to do with such information, beyond feeling confused or insecure, is unclear.
But children, being children, are at least easy to manipulate:
It’s a niche pleasure, an acquired taste. And any project of self-preoccupation must have its little accomplices – in supporting roles, of course. Even if the star of the drama sometimes fluffs her lines:
Hold that thought, madam.
And it’s so much easier to shift the focus of any interaction towards oneself if there are complications to mention and pronouns to stipulate.
Update, via the comments:
Nikw211 questions Ms Elend’s honesty, and adds,
Well, it’s hard to be sure exactly how much embellishment is in play. But as with other articles in much the same genre, these things are presumably intended to present the author or subject in a fairly flattering light – as sympathetic, resilient or long-suffering, even heroic. Stunning and brave, as they say. Which, again, suggests obliviousness and insufferable self-involvement. I mean, if this is the idealised, airbrushed version of the author…
It’s also worth bearing in mind the extent to which so many of these ‘progressive’ ladies seem to have ideals that are actually quite twisted and dysfunctional. Ms Honor Jones, for instance, our supposedly oppressed – and supposedly heroic – senior editor at The Atlantic:
Whatever the author’s embellishment in any instance above, the ideal itself is worth noting. As is the weirdly unanimous approval from equally woke and statusful peers. Because apparently there’s a moral universe in which such behaviour is considered boastworthy, a basis for applause.
I *do* wonder what percentage of their clicks are from sites like David’s.
You’re harshing my fantasy of being peerless and unique.
Meanwhile, another problematic problem which is probably also racist is discovered.
I was mildly surprised that intimations of racism didn’t crop up. Still, early days.
“60s pop psych”
Ah the heady days of Johnathan Livingston Seagull…
(OK, 1970…)
There have been lots of people, mostly women, who have left marriages to “focus on themselves”, in spite of children, in spite of a wonderful husband. This has been going on for a long time and not because they were “nonbinary”. It is children fleeing the responsibilities of adulthood and dressing it up in fancy language.
Still, early days.
Indeed, note that the article mentioned “research” and farming only in the UK, Urp, and ‘Murka, not a single thing from Africa, Asia, South ‘Murka, or anyplace where insects are already eaten.
Clearly hwite supremacy and colonization, or something.
Her script reads like the ad copy on the back of a box of chardonnay. Not the cheap kind, the really good kind you get at Whole Foods.
And in the interests of balance, we mustn’t forget the dramas of the ‘progressive’ father.
I blame Henrik Ibsen. Which reminds me, in all my years I still haven’t figured out what sickness I need to get that would require me to go to Italy.
Well, this is a uniquely congenial forum.
[ Looks nervously at door leading to correction booth. ]
[ Straightens coasters, bar-wiping intensifies. ]
I realized I was bisexual and nonbinary when I was almost 40
All I see is an aging 40 year old women with a massive ego and no wisdom screeching “PAY ATTENTION TO ME!!!”
It is children fleeing the responsibilities of adulthood and dressing it up in fancy language.
In the years leading up to menopause, the female endocrine system dumps huge amounts of sex hormones into the system in a belated attempt to encourage procreation before the egg factory shuts down for good. All that estrogen makes women in their forties batshit crazy. -er. Combined with the very real neurochemistry of the seven year itch and you have the driver behind so many women abandoning their families about this point in their lives.
So one part Sailer’s Law of Female Journalism, one part The Wall is Cruel.
some people have kids as accessories or a captive audience to their *lived* lives.
That’s not uniquely female. I have several male friends who seem to think that their children exist primarily to ensure they will always be able to find players for their favourite board game.
who have left marriages to “focus on themselves”,
Betty Friedan had a lot to do with that … she was utterly disappointed in marriage, so instead of looking inward, she looked outward and based her feminism on a foundation of the Marxism she grew up in.
@Steve E
Monty Python couldn’t have written it any better…
“I now identify as a bisexual, nonbinary person,”…while my husband thinks he’s a kumquat.
Monty Python did write it:
“We are now no longer the knights who say ‘NI’. We are now the knights who say… Ecky-ecky-ecky-ptannnng-ni-wah. Therefore, we must give you a test!”
“What is this test, O knights of – O knights who so recently said ‘NI’?”
<a few lines later>
“Stop saying the word!”
“What word?”
“I cannot tell. Suffice to say, ’tis one of the words the knights of NI cannot hear!”
“Well, how can I not say the word, if you don’t tell me what it is???”
“Aaaargh!!!”
Self-absorption? Check.
Dictating how others must speak? Check.
All that estrogen makes women in their forties batshit crazy. -er. Combined with the very real neurochemistry of the seven year itch and you have the driver behind so many women abandoning their families about this point in their lives.
Add to that in the normal course of life if you’ve had kids in your 20’s, they have or will soon be leaving home. This is a very vulnerable spot where women who see their ‘life’ as almost over rather than just a series of stages or milestones to embrace feel they have to abandon everyone and everything to “start over”. And if you don’t have an internalized value system that gives weight to one’s responsibilities to your family, there’s nothing to brake the rush to ‘find yourself’ sans everyone else.
To add to Darleen’s comment: “yourself” is best grounded in relationships (family), country, and faith. A pure individual devoid of these is empty indeed.
I still haven’t figured out what sickness I need to get that would require me to go to Italy.
TB used to be a favourite
It seems to me that finding oneself – or “getting to know myself,” as Ms Elend puts it – is usually a by-product of ageing and just getting on with the stuff of life. And yet some people seem to think their as-yet-undiscovered specialness requires some kind of project to that end. Some new and more fashionable identity, for instance. Such being the vastness of this supposedly untapped resource and source of wonder.
As I said a while ago, regarding Honor Jones, mentioned upthread,
And since you ask, no, it didn’t go down terribly well.
Ah. That’s what we on this side of the pond used to use Arizona for. Still, no pity for ‘poor’ Nora.
“finding myself”–through experience, I “found” that I like to run and lift weights and hate spiders. I “found” that I can tolerate annoying noises and have no sense of smell. It is good to know these things in relation to reality. There is no “self” absent reality and other people.
I knew one newly they/them who told its young children “i’m not mom any more. Call me “parent”. Its eldest daughter is now trans. Fortunately the father got full custody of the other kids.
I’m just going to leave this here and then run away.
then run away
To sea?
beware: rum, sodomy, and the lash.
beware: rum, sodomy, and the lash.
Not necessarily in that order.
Somehow, I doubt it. Like, I really doubt it.
https://twitter.com/seanferrick/status/1637621515553239040
rum, sodomy, and the lash
Thre traditional Royal Navy version, rum, bum and the lash, is more euphonious but I guess would be misunderstood on the wrong side of the Atlantic.
The fact that she has her nine-year-old in a booster seat should have been a bit of a warning flag as to her mental stability even before the pronoun silliness. (Unless the kid is the reincarnation of Herve Villechaise, in which case…)
Thre traditional Royal Navy version, rum, bum and the lash, is more euphonious but I guess would be misunderstood on the wrong side of the Atlantic.
I thought bum was yer bottom on both sides of the Atlantic, and it was fanny that means front part on the Brit side, and back part on the Yank side. Although bum could also mean lazy, shiftless, homeless type person on the Yank side; not sure if same on the Brit side.
Few Americans know that “bum” can mean bottom, and vanishingly few ever use it that way.
I recall it being used mostly by small children and slightly bawdy women pretending to be coy. As I recall as a child swapping out ‘bum’ for ‘butt’ about the time one stopped putting the word ‘tippy’ in front of ‘toes’. I had for some reason forgotten about ‘bum’ until as a younger teenager hearing it used in British TV like Two Ronnies and Doctor In the House. I did not know ‘fanny’ changed meaning crossing the Pond. I wonder if that has ever caused me confusion…Ummm…whose “front”? Fanny Flag was a moderately well known female comedian/comedienne/writer/game show panelist over here back in the 60’s & 70’s.
I think switching genders on your spouse counts as a breach of warranty. Repair needed.