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Love and Lip Gloss

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DEAR SUSAN: I recall the original letter from a woman regretting in her 30s her rejection of some really good guys in her 20s. As I recall, the letter suggested to me that she might have realized her rejections were not so gentle as they could have been. Thus, karma has now set in. As to your point, Susan, about the alleged contradiction in the letter from "Single By Choice," yes, you have forever pitched gender reconciliation, but you also wrote (not too long ago) that "any woman worth her lip gloss knows that a good man is hard to find." Is this not a contradiction also? On the one hand, you continually preach that genders are neither opposite nor enemies. On the other, that "lip gloss" quote seems to suggest there aren't enough good men out there to make gender reconciliation a reality. You can't have it both ways. I believe that for you to make a comment like that means the acrimony between the sexes is too far gone to ever be reconciled, and (I believe) you now realize deep down that gender reconciliation is more a fantasy than you will publicly admit. — From the "Single File" blog

DEAR BLOGGER: Lip gloss is meant to enhance, not stir controversy and confusion. Yet that one remark about a good man's being hard to find is still reverberating its shock waves. And for the life of me, I cannot fathom the reason. A good woman is equally as difficult to find, the way I see it. In my experience, the person who can touch your soul is a rare being, male or female. And aware that I can at times be too serious, lip gloss and a good man were put into the mix of words. Not as an anti-male gibe, but as leavening. To lighten my too-serious bent. Nothing more. That one remark has gotten me more negative reaction than any other. Well, almost any other.

The zinger of all time has to be the reaction to my thought that "sometimes men can be better mothers." Imagine the mail — e- and snail — those words inspired! But the lip gloss remark will go down in the "Single File" annals as pretty darn close to it. So let's make up and agree to disagree at times. But make no mistake; I firmly believe the sexes will in time reconcile and come around to the wisdom that friendship is at the heart of romance. And men and women will finally realize that friends make the best lovers. That I believe.

DEAR SUSAN: One of the hardest things to do is to look at oneself critically and objectively. Self-examination is uncomfortable for lots of folks and unnatural for many others. You recently received a letter from a woman who was treated badly by a man. I think we should all feel sorry for him. Why? Because unless he has family or friends who can "wake him up" to his self-sabotage with women, his patterns will continue to be negative with women. (And sometimes, even when someone does recognize he is undermining himself, he just doesn't have the will to change.) — From the "Single File" blog

DEAR BLOGGER: Sounds as if you've been there yourself. Such deep understanding and forbearance come only from quiet self-examination with a skilled and caring guide. (In this case, a therapist.) And even when you uncover the misconception you've been harboring about the world as it relates to you, there is always the possibility that changing those misconceptions requires more courage than you have available. Sad but true. Many people live with limitations and self-imposed fears that could, with effort, be surmounted in time, but the damage done to their psyche prevents them from tackling the project and realizing their full potential. Growing is a risk, always, but faith in one's own instincts and abilities can help one overcome it and realize long-sought confidence in oneself. Getting to that point takes strength of will and faith — well worth the effort.

Have a question for Susan? Send it to her in care of this newspaper or online at www.creators.com.

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Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Yet that one remark about a good man's being hard to find is still reverberating its shock waves. And for the life of me, I cannot fathom the reason.
*******
Well, there you go, Susan. You've just been burned by a fire you helped spread -- the idea that men are being bashed everywhere in popular culture by this monolithic beast -- the MEDIA! Turns out, you're the media! Someone took an innocent remark, and gave it a spin you didn't intend, because everyone is primed to find offense everywhere.

Numerous times in this comments section, I have asked for the anti-male material that is supposedly put out by mainstream media (not the extremist blogs, newspapers or such... mainstream). The very few links that people have offered up turned out to be either satire or misinterpreted by people so eager to prove their point that they didn't bother reading past a sensational headline. They assume that with a title like "Are men necessary?" the resulting essay will be espousing an anti-male viewpoint -- even if the writer goes on to give a resounding YES.

Homer Simpson's bumbling is evidence that people think men are incompetent? No more so than Lucy Ricardo, Peg Bundy or Edith Bunker were evidence that all women are incompetent

Men are in no means suffering the kind of discrimination women did for centuries (they can vote, run for office, own land, work outside the home, drive cars) and it is counter-productive to encourage them to believe they are, because it discourages presumption of good will and trust, and promotes instead hostility and fear, and as such continues to promote division between the genders.
Comment: #1
Posted by: hedgehog
Wed Dec 21, 2011 10:31 AM
Well, heck, hedgehog, now I'm just going to have to go and cancel tomorrow's meeting of the "Male Liberation Front". Shucks.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Mike H
Thu Dec 22, 2011 6:55 AM
LOL -- I did go on a little, eh? Want to start me up about how Xmas is NOT a secular humanist invention designed to get Christ out of Christmas? Or how saying "Have a happy holiday season" is insulting Christians? Or how requiring drivers over 75 retest more frequently is NOT age discrimination? Or...never mind...
Comment: #3
Posted by: hedgehog
Fri Dec 23, 2011 7:59 AM
LOL Hedgehog, Mike, you guys crack me up. You make reading some of these silly columns worthwhile.
I love you man! Never change. ;-)
Comment: #4
Posted by: Claudia
Sun Dec 25, 2011 9:52 PM
Shakespeare said something to the effect of "Many a truth is spoken in jest." Therein lies the problem: with all the politically correct misandry out there, the so-called male bashing "satire" is really and truly how a lot of women feel about guys in this day and age, in an attempt to dress it up as comedy.

As I see it, this "satire" is really the functional equivalent of insulting someone and then saying "just kidding" after the fact. In the meantime, the "satirists" get their shots in and their saying "just kidding" or giving a fake apology after the fact will somehow make everything right. The damage has already been done, and that was always the intention, leading to the desired result.

With all due respect to Hedgehog, the next time I see a book or article titled "Do We Really Need Men?", or words to that effect, I'll keep walking as I do not need to be insulted yet again by someone else's "satire".

No matter how someone tries to dress it up, the ugly truth is that one person's satire is another person's not so thinly veiled hostility.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Mickey
Tue Dec 27, 2011 2:48 PM
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