Monday, May 20, 2019

a woman's place


Michele Bratcher Goodwin recently headlined an event that I helped organize. She spoke about "a woman's place, where we stand and what's at stake." Michele did not sugar coat anything. Nor did she disappoint. 

This gathering of about 60 Orange County women was held at the Museum of Woman, a unique and beautiful space run by a goddess queen named Ava Park. The venue created a comfort and intimacy that really made the evening special. Michele (like Ava) also has a timeless quality, and a sort of royalty about her. 

I wish I had taken notes on Goodwin's remarks, but here are a couple take-aways, with apologies for any misrepresentations. Yes, there is indeed a war against women the United States today. Michele shared many stories about women across the country who have been or are being denied their basic rights and dignities as humans. It is not unlike the treatment of African Americans as chattel during and since slavery. Hundreds of women in Southern states and elsewhere have been locked up for things like miscarriages and abortions in the past 2 years. At the rate this roll back is going, a fetus will soon have more rights than a woman. I believe Goodwin compared the country to a family in crisis, where one parent is on a power trip, abusive and dismissive of all others. The other parent is nurturing, validating, healing, listening to the young ones, holding up the family -- and society -- by extension.

My interpretation of where we stand is this: The unchecked structural and cultural power inherent in our entrenched racist, misogynistic patriarchy plays the leading role in the attack on woman's humanity. We have to keep calling that out. The media plays a part in perpetuating and masking these hidden forces. The majority of white women play a part by virtue of their voting record and ignorance. The challenges for thinking women today include
  • keeping control of the microphone of our own movement
  • inviting nuance, complexity, empathy, and compassion into public discourse and holding it there
  • telling stories that help lift the veil of ignorance and unite our species
  • staying focused 

As women in the US, we stand in a scary place. But we stand together. I don't know all the ways this resistance will manifest for me or for us, but I know we need to lean on each other and try to have fun along the way. Tomorrow, some of us will turn out at the local versions of a nationwide protest themed #stopthebans (re: abortion bans or restrictions, which have passed in 30 states since Trump was elected). Katie Porter's campaign was also such a powerful Trump resistance experience too. . . so maybe that’s my best vehicle for focusing my energy and reclaiming woman’s place in 2020. Here's to chalking up the next win for KP and to staying on this journey, for my daughters, my sisters, and the nieces I'm about to go adopt (thanks to Michele). 

PS  The day after Trump was elected, the women’s march brought millions onto streets around the world in protest. It felt like a movement. A mere two years later, it has been torn apart. One might argue that this is another case of a patriarchal media unable to accommodate the intricacies of differing opinions amongst leaders and factions. The movement has not gone away… #metoo happened, and we are all still here with intent to keep progress moving forward in the face of increasing horribleness of rightwing minority rule. But it’s a shame we can’t hold it together and claim more power faster.  I still believe that if women had been in charge, we would not have looming climate disaster, a culture of hedonism and rampant greed, a government sponsored system of corruption (citizens united), a federal budget that prioritizes military spending over everything else, or a government trying to gain more control of women’s bodies and keep brown bodies out. Boy, I really hate this period in history we’re suffering through! Michele Goodwin says we’re living in a time when we’re all in a constant state of PTSD. That idea stuck with me, but that’s another post.