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  3. Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

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  • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

    Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

    "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

    In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

    The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

    I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

    Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

    ¹ not all men

    compfu@mograph.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    compfu@mograph.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    compfu@mograph.social
    wrote on last edited by
    #56

    @alice Like in Pixar‘s short film „Purl“ 😢

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

      ¹ not all men

      logwyrm@infosec.exchangeL This user is from outside of this forum
      logwyrm@infosec.exchangeL This user is from outside of this forum
      logwyrm@infosec.exchange
      wrote on last edited by
      #57

      @alice Good lord. What a toxic culture.

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      • _l1vy_@mstdn.social_ _l1vy_@mstdn.social

        @alice Yeah that is the case and I have done this exact thing too. BUT, it IS a gender thing because we are privileging the gender socialization of men. Because the thing is, why are we asking women to spend OUR energy leaning into men's socialized habits of domination in conversation, instead of asking men to lean into learning how to chill the fuck out and be more cooperative conversationally? (They might even like it better!)

        L This user is from outside of this forum
        L This user is from outside of this forum
        leto_fregar@wehavecookies.social
        wrote on last edited by
        #58

        @_L1vY_ @alice Probably because the centuries of patriarchy have shaped current business structures.

        This is not an excuse! Being aware of the history just helps to understand the issue.

        In this case change is necessary, but fighting expectations shaped over decades will take time as well.

        It is also a question of business type: I worked in marketing companies (85% women, meetings still dominated by dominance and hot air) and now industry (no nonsense attitude, even though 90% men).

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        • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

          Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

          "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

          In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

          The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

          I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

          Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

          ¹ not all men

          cyberspice@oldbytes.spaceC This user is from outside of this forum
          cyberspice@oldbytes.spaceC This user is from outside of this forum
          cyberspice@oldbytes.space
          wrote on last edited by
          #59

          @alice @pyoor I’m well known for sitting quietly whilst men talk bollocks and asking the mike drop question once I’ve listened to them all.

          pyoor@lgbtqia.spaceP 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • aprazeth@mstdn.socialA aprazeth@mstdn.social

            @momo @alice
            Long reply
            We all do it; we are human. Things we are passionate about we can't help ourselves.

            What I am **trying** to learn to do when I interrupt someone else, and I realize it during - I apologize. "Sorry for interrupting, I got ahead of myself. Please continue". If I realize afterwards, I apologize as well of course.

            cyberspice@oldbytes.spaceC This user is from outside of this forum
            cyberspice@oldbytes.spaceC This user is from outside of this forum
            cyberspice@oldbytes.space
            wrote on last edited by
            #60

            @Aprazeth @momo @alice Some of us did it at first but having lots of blokes talking over us has meant we soon leant not to. That’s the gender difference. Women get quietened and men don’t.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

              Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

              "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

              In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

              The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

              I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

              Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

              ¹ not all men

              xoriff@hachyderm.ioX This user is from outside of this forum
              xoriff@hachyderm.ioX This user is from outside of this forum
              xoriff@hachyderm.io
              wrote on last edited by
              #61

              @alice I remember this one coworker, Dave, who was so sharp, insightful, etc, but also soft spoken and didn't speak up that often. He had one of those vibes where everybody else could be talking over each other, but all he'd have to do is clear his throat and everyone else would stop their chest pounding and stfu because they knew whatever he was about to say was going to be gold.

              I aspire to be like Dave.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • cyberspice@oldbytes.spaceC cyberspice@oldbytes.space

                @alice @pyoor I’m well known for sitting quietly whilst men talk bollocks and asking the mike drop question once I’ve listened to them all.

                pyoor@lgbtqia.spaceP This user is from outside of this forum
                pyoor@lgbtqia.spaceP This user is from outside of this forum
                pyoor@lgbtqia.space
                wrote last edited by
                #62

                @alice @cyberspice fucking flawless.

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                • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                  Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                  "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                  In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                  The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                  I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                  Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                  ¹ not all men

                  mikemccaffrey@neurodifferent.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mikemccaffrey@neurodifferent.meM This user is from outside of this forum
                  mikemccaffrey@neurodifferent.me
                  wrote last edited by
                  #63

                  @alice I'm constantly talking the most in some meetings and I have no idea if it is because I'm a dude, I have ADHD and it takes effort to not talk, or because I'm the only extrovert in a room full of super quiet introverts.

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                  0
                  • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                    Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                    "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                    In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                    The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                    I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                    Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                    ¹ not all men

                    iballesty@mastodon.ieI This user is from outside of this forum
                    iballesty@mastodon.ieI This user is from outside of this forum
                    iballesty@mastodon.ie
                    wrote last edited by
                    #64

                    @alice great observation. It wasn’t until I moved to a foreign land in a language that I could not speak fluently that I learned to listen. And I realised of how much of an over talker I was. Unless there is someone pulling out the thoughts of all, the unacertive, the slow (analytical) thinker, the neurodivergent you will never realise the wisdom of the group. And as to video/audio calls... They need a moderator and allow individuals the medium the best like: audio, visual, chat 🏆

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                      ¹ not all men

                      isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI This user is from outside of this forum
                      isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI This user is from outside of this forum
                      isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nz
                      wrote last edited by
                      #65

                      @alice Yeah, I think it's a gender thing, but it's mainly about how privileged men are enculturated to talk over anyone, not just over women.

                      I do it all the time, and don't notice until I'm already doing it. I notice most often when I'm talking over anyone woman, because that's something I've been taught to pay attention to. But I don't feel like I know a lot about how to prevent myself talking over people in the first place. I can say stuff like that“Sorry, I think I cut you off there”, or “You go”, or “What do you think, Linda?” but those are retroactive acknowledgements that I've already talked too much. I'd like to be better at actually centering others first.

                      kims@mas.toK 3tomatoesshort@disabled.social3 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nz

                        @alice Yeah, I think it's a gender thing, but it's mainly about how privileged men are enculturated to talk over anyone, not just over women.

                        I do it all the time, and don't notice until I'm already doing it. I notice most often when I'm talking over anyone woman, because that's something I've been taught to pay attention to. But I don't feel like I know a lot about how to prevent myself talking over people in the first place. I can say stuff like that“Sorry, I think I cut you off there”, or “You go”, or “What do you think, Linda?” but those are retroactive acknowledgements that I've already talked too much. I'd like to be better at actually centering others first.

                        kims@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
                        kims@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
                        kims@mas.to
                        wrote last edited by
                        #66

                        @isaacfreeman @alice
                        A random data point: I stopped interrupting people once I started taking Adderall. I've compared notes with two other women who also take some version of Adderall, and they said they had the same experience

                        isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • kims@mas.toK kims@mas.to

                          @isaacfreeman @alice
                          A random data point: I stopped interrupting people once I started taking Adderall. I've compared notes with two other women who also take some version of Adderall, and they said they had the same experience

                          isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI This user is from outside of this forum
                          isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nzI This user is from outside of this forum
                          isaacfreeman@cloudisland.nz
                          wrote last edited by
                          #67

                          @kims @alice Interesting! I have some ADHD traits, and a tendency to infodump. But I do feel it's shaped a lot, at least for me, by being male. Gender norms have shaped my habits, and when I notice them that doesn't mean I suddenly have different habits.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                            Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                            "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                            In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                            The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                            I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                            Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                            ¹ not all men

                            piku@blahaj.zoneP This user is from outside of this forum
                            piku@blahaj.zoneP This user is from outside of this forum
                            piku@blahaj.zone
                            wrote last edited by
                            #68

                            @alice@lgbtqia.space another thing
                            ive noticed some people have a uh talent for talking at people without giving any gaps for people to come in

                            like

                            i really want to says smth but like u haven't given me space to say anything

                            and its only possible to converse with such people if you are comfortable interrupting people which i am not(unless i know you well)

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                            • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                              Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                              "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                              In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                              The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                              I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                              Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                              ¹ not all men

                              apolaroidboi@me.dmA This user is from outside of this forum
                              apolaroidboi@me.dmA This user is from outside of this forum
                              apolaroidboi@me.dm
                              wrote last edited by
                              #69

                              @alice I appreciate you sharing this, though it’s unfortunate to have happened at all. Even as a man (and to be clear, I’m not intending to compare by any means), I’ve run into a similar “lack of respect on merits,” if you will, because I’m… at least polite enough to believe interrupting people is rude unless there’s objective urgency!

                              It’s as if these people equate playground bullying tactics to proper communication, if not something even more ludicrous.

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                              • mkb@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mkb@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mkb@mastodon.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #70

                                @mloxton @alice And there’s often a double-standard. Women are chastised for doing the same things that are expected of men.

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                                • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                                  Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                  "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                  In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                  The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                  I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                  Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                  ¹ not all men

                                  nincowpoop@mastodon.onlineN This user is from outside of this forum
                                  nincowpoop@mastodon.onlineN This user is from outside of this forum
                                  nincowpoop@mastodon.online
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #71

                                  @alice

                                  The culture of a company or board is what the leadership allows. While certainly assertiveness is important, your former CEO suggesting that instead of soliciting, encouraging and listening to contributions from everyone is just poor leadership.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • ketmorco@fosstodon.orgK This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ketmorco@fosstodon.orgK This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ketmorco@fosstodon.org
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #72

                                    @mloxton @alice oh, that explains a lot

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                                    • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                                      Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                      "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                      In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                      The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                      I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                      Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                      ¹ not all men

                                      joykill@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                      joykill@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                      joykill@mastodon.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #73

                                      @alice That might actually explain why most of the high-ranking (super-white) women in my corporate job are much more likely to interrupt people than any other women I've met. Corporate culture is one of bulldozing over everything in your way, so the people who do well there either learn to do the same without respect for who they trample, or are that way from the start.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • msbellows@c.imM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        msbellows@c.imM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        msbellows@c.im
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #74

                                        @isaacfreeman @alice You aren't the grandchild of Serbian immigrants, I take it.

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                                        • alice@lgbtqia.spaceA alice@lgbtqia.space

                                          Recently, I was thinking about why men¹ talk over women, and I think it's less a gender thing, and more of a...

                                          "men¹ are taught to talk over anyone who doesn't talk more assertively than they do"

                                          In my roles as an executive at several tech companies, the one negative feedback I got on almost every review was that I wasn't assertive enough in meetings with other execs. One male CEO even told me "you need to interrupt more, talk more—even if you don't know the answer. Otherwise they'll think you don't have anything to say". Which, honestly, churned my stomach.

                                          The feedback was clear, if I wanted to succeed I needed to talk like the guys¹ in the boardroom—the same ones¹ who'd interrupt to ask a question I was already in the middle of explaining, who'd repeat a suggestion I'd just made—only louder, who'd make some cute comment that would derail my presentation, who'd explain my position back to me as though they'd just thought of it.

                                          I needed to do that...and I needed to do it louder.

                                          Otherwise men¹ weren't going to listen to me.

                                          ¹ not all men

                                          jef@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          jef@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          jef@mastodon.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #75

                                          @alice You can actually train yourself to keep talking when someone attempts to interrupt you. Eventually they stfu. But it does take practice.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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