I’m delving a little deeper into some root ideas
surrounding my first novel A White Room
and it’s had me thinking a lot about this idea – “women are crazy.” It seems to
be a phrase often used as a joke or tease and often times as an insult
disguised as a joke or tease, but deep down people often take this idea quite
seriously, both men and women - especially in a fight. This is all from my perspective of course, but I
love reader feedback so feel free to hotly disagree.
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| photo ©2008 , Flickr |
I remember writing a paper in my first women’s history
class where I recounted a scene when at 16 or 17 years old I watched American Beauty with several boys. In the beginning there is a scene where the wife Carolyn Burnham played by Annette Bening is upset because she tried with all
her might to sell a house and failed quite miserably. She starts crying but immediately
responds by slapping herself in the face and telling herself to shut up
repeatedly until she can collect herself and walk away. At the time I remember
thinking to myself – I’ve felt like that before – then seconds later one of the
males in the room laughed and shouted – “crazy bitch!”
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| photo ©2010 , Flick |
Technically, the character Carolyn did something that was
a bit dramatic and what therapists would probably call unhealthy, but her
reaction is relatable to many women, including myself.
Then I thought about all the times I’ve watched male
characters in a movie do something that therapists would equally call unhealthy
like physical violence or illegal activity to resolve problems. Yet male
audience members usually respond with equally if not more intense encouragement
of such behavior – “I would put him in the hospital!”
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| photo ©2008 , Flickr |
I’m not trying to pick on the healthy/unhealthy levels of female/male behaviors
and how they are used in entertainment but point out how in a setting, such as
watching a movie, I felt embarrassed by relating to the female’s questionable behavior
while the males encouraged their gender’s poor decisions openly as a positive.
Another interesting example is that the movie American Beauty could easily serve as a
comparison of how people deal with the crazy in their lives and when you focus
on the husband and wife, they are both acting insane, but the woman’s
insanity seems wrong and pathetic whereas the man’s insanity is liberating to
watch. Lester Burnham played by Kevin Spacey quits his
job and bribes his boss to keep him on the payroll, starts smoking pot, and
focuses his concerns on seducing an under-aged friend of his daughter’s.
To be clear, I am not trying to criticize this movie,
which I love by the way, or suggest that anyone involved in its creation are misogynistic
– they were reflecting societal norms. What I’m pointing out is how these
male/female breakdowns were viewed by and portrayed to the audience and how
these views are ingrained within our society – which includes both men and
women.
What’s my point in all this? I think my point in all this
is that even though this norm is somewhat unfair, our society is no longer
ruled by one gender, and there is no reason for women to agree with and
proliferate this idea – “Women are crazy.”
If anything, these comparisons show that men are crazy
too, so for whatever crazy women do have, I say embrace it!
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| photo ©2011 , Flickr |




Interesting perspective. It's interesting to me how "sanity" has been defined and redefined over the ages. Women used to be considered hysterical when often they were expressing appropriately to the insanity of their circumstances.
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