There are many reasons women have offered for choosing bear. Here are a few of them:
- A bear’s motives are easier to understand.
- A bear's actions are easier to anticipate.
- No one will doubt you if you say you have been attacked by a bear.
- A bear can't gaslight you.
- You won’t be blamed for being attacked by a bear.
- A bear won’t sexually assault you.
- You won’t have to worry about whether you live in a state that forbids you to terminate a pregnancy resulting from a bear attack.
- If a bear attacks you, it will be punished harshly (i.e. euthanized).
- You don’t have to worry about running into the bear again.
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But, see, I already do those things when I’m walking down the street or in a parking lot at night or on trails (in a part of the world where there are no bears) or pretty much anywhere that I encounter a strange man when I am alone. Instinctively, I gauge how closely I am being followed and change directions or cross the street or duck into a store if a man is keeping pace or speeding up behind me. I have my keys ready and check the backseat of my car when I get into it at night. I also decide not to do things I want to do, like go hiking alone, because there is a chance it will be unsafe.
In a sense, women spend their whole lives preparing to encounter (or trying to avoid) bears.
I don’t know, but I imagine it would be hard for most men to fathom this. I imagine that most men don’t understand what it is like to start to learn about bears in elementary school when boys pull up our dresses. Or in middle school when they ogle or touch our budding breasts. Or in high school when they laugh about who is “easy” or refer to our classmates as sluts.
Do men know what it’s like to buy our daughters rape whistles, alarms, and/or mace and to teach them the same things our moms taught us? The list of dos and don’ts goes on forever: Don’t walk alone, especially at night. Always keep an eye on your drink. Don’t go alone to a guy’s room. Don't wear noise-cancelling earbuds when you are out running. Try to get an apartment on the second or third floor but never the first, etc, etc, etc. We have no choice but to prepare to defend ourselves and to follow this impossibly long list because we have friends, relatives, and acquaintances who have been assaulted and then asked why they didn’t protect themselves better.
Being a woman is exhausting for a lot of reasons, but one of the biggest ones is that we must always be vigilant against potential encounters with bears. And, it doesn't matter that a bear hasn't gotten us, yet, because there is always the chance that one will.
Of course not all men are bears, but enough of them are that we can never let our guard down.
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Listen, I love men. Some of my favorite people in the world are men. But that doesn't change the fact that I live in a world where being a woman is risky and exhausting. It also doesn't change the fact that we still have a long way to go before women feel safe and heard and respected.
Listen, I love men. Some of my favorite people in the world are men. But that doesn't change the fact that I live in a world where being a woman is risky and exhausting. It also doesn't change the fact that we still have a long way to go before women feel safe and heard and respected.
We need the help of all the good men out there. It's not enough to acknowledge the disparities between the experiences of men and women; men need to actively support women by working against the things that make life challenging for them. So, here are some suggestions**:
- Change directions or cross the street if you happen to encounter a woman alone.
- Speak out against sexist or misogynistic language or behavior.
- Listen to and believe women, even when what they are saying seems unbelievable.
- In meetings where their voices aren't being heard no matter how loud they are speaking, echo their statements while giving them credit for them.
- Be the first to volunteer to send emails, organize meetings, serve food, make copies, take minutes, or do any of the other tasks that tend to fall to women, even though that's not their job.
- At home, know when the kids have practice/lessons/school events and get them where they need to go without being asked or reminded.
- Take initiative on scheduling appointments for them.
- Take over the organization of household chores.
- Decide what to make for dinner and do the shopping yourself.
- Be emotionally available for the kids so they come to you with their problems as often as they go to their mom.
Maybe you are already doing these things. If so, awesome! If not and you want to know how to help, this is a good place to start.
**Obviously, you can take them or leave them.
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