These abuses are not the result of WOMEN having too much freedom, but of MEN still having too much power over them, and of a patriarchal, misogynistic legal system in many countries which protects the abusers rather than the victims.
I don't think it's necessarily men having too much power over women. I think it's men not understanding the consequences of what they are doing. It's men thinking they are entitled to certain things that they think the women can offer. I won't dispute that there are patriarchal societies and legal systems that protect abusers, but even in a non-patriarchal society, women can still suffer.
Actually in a non-patriarchal society, both can suffer. Women can abuse men and men can abuse women. Women can abuse men thinking that they are "entitled" to more things, living in a more equal society, and that the man should provide it. Men can abuse women thinking that they are not really abusing the woman, that what they are asking for is reasonable. They live in a society of gender equality. They are not beating up the women, so if they feel justified in asking for what they demand, they may put pressure on the women.
The sense of entitlement gives a person a feeling of authority over another person. I think a lot of domestic abuse starts with emotional abuse. The violence comes much later when a lot of damage has already been caused.
Emotional abuse could include things like, "You're stupid . . . you're ugly . . . you're an idiot . . . " It could include threats, insults, bullying and harrassment.
Abuse of women comes from the arrogant attitude of entitlement in a man, the belief that the woman owes you something when she very well may not. This belief may not be realistic. It may not take into consideration what the woman feels. Belief in entitlement asks more of another human being than you might reasonably ask of yourself.
It's an irrational attitude, but I can certainly understand why people have it. I think at an earlier part of my life I had it myself.
You probably don't think you're a misogynist (not talking about "you," Raksha, because I know you're a woman -- just generally). I don't think you need to be. I don't think it's misogynism that actually causes abuse of women in many relationships. I think it happens when men at a particular part of their lives entered into a relationship without thinking carefully what they could offer. They wanted a girlfriend or marriage because society expected it of them. They were under social pressure from their family and friends to get one. They didn't go into it because they really believed they were ready to offer someone love. It was more of an ego trip.
They get into a relationship to impress their friends. They do it more for their own sense of pride than because they really think they are capable of love. For a while things are ok, but slowly, it becomes more and more work and they are afraid that they will lose the person that has become so important for their sense of pride. The woman wants to leave the relationship. They become paranoid and fight back.
I don't know if all relationships where the man fights back out of jealousy or fear of abandonment are for pride. Maybe it wasn't pride that got them into the relationship. Maybe they're attached to the woman in the relationship.
But if you have to personally attack, insult, bully, harrass and threaten someone, your pride has got to have a lot to do with it. I don't know why else I would do that to another human being.
because after all--men have always had that freedom. MEN have to be taught from childhood that their are responsible for their own sexual feelings and their own sexual behavior, just as they are responsible for their own behavior in all other areas.
I used to think people didn't have sex until they got married. What a shock it was to learn at the age of twenty on a discussion on the Internet that some people thought that losing your virginity was an indication of your worth as a person,
rather than the other way round. I thought that not having sex before marriage and keeping yourself "pure" made you a "better person." Well, I found that a lot of people didn't agree with me on that.
I had the same attitude on this whether it was men or women, but I always believed that women were more reserved in their sexual conduct. Women tended to hold back. I was disappointed that men were wanting sex, that men were not holding back. I often saw in movies and TV shows that women were more defensive and guarded with what men wanted to do with them. I was disgusted that the men were so desperate for sex. I thought they were degrading themselves. It was embarrassing to watch. (That's why there are so many teenage fathers.
)
I'm more concerned about what men do sexually with their bodies than what women do. It makes no sense for me to judge what women do if I am not a woman.
Ok, the next thing I am going to say is going to sound a bit weird . . . but . . . I find the idea of sex as something you would actually do to be revolting and disgusting. (Well, I'm a virgin. I have no sexual experience.
) I am aware that never having done it before has a big influence on my feelings on this, but there are so many other reasons why I am so disgusted with the idea of sex as something you would actually do.
When I see advertisements on television, the Internet and in my email about Viagra, penis enlargement and erectile dysfunction, when I read about divorces and relationship problems, it makes me wonder why people are so obsessed about sex. Why do people want it? Sex to me seems to be an awful and horrible phenomenon that can ruin people's lives.
The fact that a woman can say "that was great" but be secretly thinking that you're no good with sex or that she thinks you're a bad kisser -- that just turns me off the idea of sex as something you would actually do. I know of course that is hardly what women want, but physically expression of one's passion for someone seems like a big issue for many (there could be other things wrong with the relationship). Many people feel judged for it. Many men feel like they have to perform. It's like the male equivalent of women wanting to lose weight. Women are judged for their body shape and men are judged for their virility and power to give pleasure.
I might as well not have sex at all and I am glad I never gave my body away to another person!! To those of you who have already done it it's probably going to not be a big deal. You're past it. But for me, the fact that sex is so awful for so many people, I don't feel very excited about it. The idea of sticking a part of my body in someone else's body just repels me.
You will probably infer from this that don't know much about women. Most of what I understand about males and females comes from books, television and the Internet. I'm more intellectual than sexual.
When it comes to the importance it has in my life, my brain (pardon me) is larger than my penis.