1. Not All Women Are Crazy and Not All Men are Dicks
Oh man, my head is just burning now because I am attemping to comprehend some more about free
live cams. I suppose it is just not my subject. I thought I should simply stop it and hit the sack but
since those confusing thoughts are roaming in my scalp at the moment, I will be unable to sleep. So
what to do!? Well... I am going to pour everything out on my web-site :D. Sorry if you think all the
information below pointless but I will want to write it up. It would help me relax and sleep in
harmony :D Do not hate me guys!
Recently an article was published in The Washington Post noting that men really need to stop calling
women "crazy." In the same vein as "bossy" or "slutty" this adjective is predominantly applied to
women in a way that is meant to demean or undermine who they are. Typically when a man is going
through a traumatic time, he's referred to as "going through something," or "acting a bit emotional,"
but usually never "crazy." This is one of two double-standard terms that I'd like us to end today.
The other is calling men "dicks." These two terms, "crazy" and "dick," often come up when there is a
break-up afoot. Imagine your best friend parting ways with her long-term boyfriend. You're sitting
there over drinks and she is complaining how things ended poorly. An easy go-to would be to say,
"He sounds like a real dick. You deserve better," and move on. I've found that in talking with friends
in this situation, some women tend to justify break-ups without obvious endings by the man being a
dick in the same way that some men I know will blow off a break-up by saying the woman was simply
crazy. Both are incredibly offensive.
First of all, just because a woman has different emotional needs than her partner does not mean she
has a mental illness. It's disrespectful to say that a woman who may come off as clingy, or
controlling, or just wants different forms of communication than you, is mentally ill. I have no idea
how it came to be such common parlance but for any men reading, let's please cut that adjective out
of our dating/break-up vocabulary.
On the flip side, I have no idea how it became okay to reduce men to a physical body part when they
act like a jerk. A guy blows you off and pulls the slow fade? Wow! What a penis. See what I did
there? Instead of calling a man a coward I said that he is simply nothing more than that one part of
his physical anatomy. I mean, it's ridiculous that either of these terms are used so frequently. But
seriously? A dick? That's almost as bad as a group of men sitting around a pub calling a woman the
c-word.
2. But I offered the complaint so I'll also offer a potential solution. Without further ado, here are some
ways we can describe that person who mistreated us:
Emotionally unavailable
Unkind
Distant
At a different point in their life than you are
Manipulative
A horrible communicator
Not ready to be in a serious relationship
Not the one for you
All of these terms of more descriptive than saying someone is "crazy" or a "dick." They actually
describe one aspect of the problem at hand, and looking at that problem directly is going to help you
long-term, as opposed to glossing over it with catchy derogative phrases. Plus, the writer in me feels
like we are butchering the English language when we reduce our complicated emotional framework
to words like "crazy" and "dick." Let's expand our vocabulary, treat the gender we prefer with some
kindness, and be a bit clearer when we explain how our exes are just motherf*ckers.
Related:
How to Be The Best Sex He's Ever Had
5 Relationship Faux Pas We've All Made At Least Once
The Accidental Threesome
The 10 Best Rom-Coms to Watch With Your Man (Who Hates Rom-Coms)
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Photo Credit: Getty Images; Lodro Rinzler is the author of "The Buddha Walks into a Bar" and the
founder of the Institute for Compassionate Leadership.
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