Member
How Do You Identify?: femme-bottom, lesbian, queer
Preferred Pronoun?: feminine ones
Relationship Status: Leather polyamorous family
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: with HER
Posts: 1,110
Thanks: 5,494
Thanked 2,856 Times in 905 Posts
Rep Power: 21474850
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kobi
Interesting point Dapper. Want and expect are two different balls of wax. What is your take on the differences?
For me, I agree with Island's choice of words. And, I am in love with Cheryl's brain.
I am a strong woman and an ardent feminist. I advocate for women breaking the molds that have confined and defined them for centuries. I advocate for making something new and different, not regurgitating something with a different spin on it.
Marriage and all that comes with it, has a history that is very derogatory to women. It is about women as property (of their fathers) being sold (dowries) to a new owner (husbands). Women took their husbands names in marriage to signify the change in ownership.
Just because one is a femme or lesbian or a butch or trans does not change the meaning or intent of these traditions. Reframing intent or meaning is a good exercise in semantics but does little to change the reality of these traditions as symbols of the oppression of women in service to the masculine. Reclaiming them does not change the meaning, the internalized and externalized misogyny or internalized or externalized sexism behind the traditions and the many ways these are expressed.
Simply, perpetuating intent is just perpetuating intent. Thus, "expect" is very much just maintaining the status quo albeit with queer overtones. Same symbols of subservience and superiority, of leadership and following, of power dynamics. Benevolent sexism is still sexism.
Want, to me, symbolizes just the opposite. It means being true to myself as a woman and a feminist and that truth isn't swayed by someone or something or tradition. It means being well aware of the symbols of my oppression and the way they play out in everyday life, in relationships, in communities, in id's and in orientations. My relationship status or marital status doesn't cause it to waver. It is who I am.
If I am involved with someone who needs to entertain taking my name, I'm pretty sure I am in the wrong relationship. This is not an honor to me. How you treat me, love me, respect me is honoring me.
Taking my name or wanting to take my name? To me, this says a whole lot of stuff that isn't me. I am not more important than you, I don't need or want you to defer to me, I am not the leader nor do I want to be the leader of this relationship (even ceremonially).
I am a her partner. We are equals. If I fell in love with her, it is because she is one heck of an amazing, strong, capable, independent woman, publicly and privately. She lives her truth as I live mine and our truths happen to fit together.
Of course I am obligated to say this is just my truth. It is not meant as a judgment of or to cast aspersions on anyone else's truth.
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The history is true. This is certain.
Taking a name can be seen as you say just another brand of the status quo. True.
Not taking a spouses name or using a hyphen makes a statement as well. True
The fact that lesbians and gays want to get married at all is in a way a support of the old time heterosexual institution.
i would marry my partner in support of equality. i will take her name as a statement for self that i belong and She wants me. There can be many reasons for taking the name or hyphenating a name.
__________________
i will wait to love You. i will wait another day
For You i'd leave all this behind. i will wait for you tonight. iwill waste another dream on You
Always run to You.
Uh Huh Her
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