Meyers, maybe actually listen to the women on this board who live this every day.
Maybe some of you could listen to me?? Why doesn’t it go both ways??
And for the record I have been. Just because I don’t agree with some of the things you all have said, doesn’t mean I don’t listen. You don’t agree with me, does that mean you aren’t listening?
It's not something you can possibly understand if you don't live through it,
Then what’s the point of listening to you? If you’ve already determined I can’t understand it?
I'm currently pregnant, and do you know how many times I get asked if I'm going to stay home with my kid? At least once a week. Do you know how many times my husband gets asked that? Exactly zero. Why is that? Why is it assumed that my role is to quit my job and take care of my child?
Congratulations. To the both of you. You’re first? But to answer your question, probably because lot’s of women do. Are they wrong in their choice? Maybe they think you would be a great mother? Maybe they think your husband would be a terrible father? And just because people ask doesn’t mean they think you should. They may just be curious? Or concerned, i.e. what are we going to do without you if you do?? Why do you assume they think you should quit your job?
Women have made enormous strides in this country, but we are still seen sometimes as "lesser". You can see it in the way that the sport that we all love, women's college basketball, is talked about. Geno's accomplishments will never be seen in the same light as Wooden's, no matter how many championships he wins. (Obviously we on this board see it that way, but talk to anyone who isn't a rabid fan of WCBB and you'll see what I mean.) And his accomplishments at UConn are worth less in the eyes of basketball fans because it's "just women's basketball".
The few sports where women are actually respected are typically individual sports, like tennis. And to be honest, much of that is because there are a lot of conventionally attractive female tennis players. Women are rarely talked about as simply "athletes". It's their looks, or their backstory, or the fact that they had a kid, etc, etc, etc. (And I'm talking mainstream media here and your casual fan).
I agree, I know all about that. I follow WBB. I get ribbed by my brothers and other guys about watching WBB. So what? I like it. Do I let it make me feel inferior? No. Same for soccer. It’s made great strides in this country but it’s still looked down upon. As a lesser sport. Not one of the big 4. Do I let it make me feel inferior? No.
Growing up with this and living through it can make you extremely sensitive to remarks like "throws like a girl." I was a three-sport varsity athlete, and yes, I play sports like a girl, because I am a girl. No, I can't beat my husband in basketball. Does that lessen my accomplishments somehow? No.
Exactly. You play like a girl, you throw like a girl. You are a girl. There is nothing wrong with that. So why take offense when someone points out the obvious truth? Do you not want to be a girl/woman? I like being a guy. I would never want to be a girl (well maybe for a couple days to get a better perspective). And you as a girl should never want to be a guy. Be happy in who you are.
Do I take offense when some female says something like “typical guy”? No, I take it as a compliment. I know it wasn’t, it was meant as a put down, but I don’t let it define who I know I am. I don’t let it make me feel inferior.
It's hard enough to live with the casual, everyday s e xism.
Hey, we live with it too. I can’t, as a man, go up to a little crying girl in a supermarket to see if she’s ok or lost. I can’t drive my daughters friends home alone. I can’t go to a park by myself where kids are playing. Women can do that and nobody would bat an eyelash. As a man, I would be looked at as a creep or worse. (And for the record I wouldn’t ever do that.) And I would much rather be thought of as inferior (in gender) than a creep or worse.
It makes it much harder when people who care enough to post on a women's basketball board are so dismissive of our opinions.
I don’t think I’m dismissive. I just don’t agree with all of them. Just like you don’t agree with all of mine. Doesn’t necessarily make you dismissive. Right?
We are sharing our experiences and saying that, as women, we don't enjoy hearing terms like "throws like a girl".
I get that. I would just like to see you all be more confident in who you are as women. Have a greater self worth. Such that what other people may say or do does not make you feel inferior. Be a wolf, don’t concern yourself with the opinions of sheep.
Can you just put aside your biases and try to hear our side of it? Please?
Can you? (And I don’t mean that sarcastically. I know, unusual for me

)
This has been a very enjoyable conversation. Really. I know it bothers you guys, but I love having conversations like this.