Car just drove by and one of the guys in it made the ππ gesture out the window at me.
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@Colman one of the insidious things is that it's *so* easy to miss when you're not the target.
Of the 4 people in the car (one girl, 3 guys), only the guy making the gesture, and the guy laughing next to him seemed aware of it. So besides me and the two who found it funny, no one else on that busy street noticed.
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@irene @blainsmith @rbphotographic @alice and here I am trying to figure out non-creepy ways of complimenting my younger but adult ballerina colleagues on their dancing.
@Colman "you are impressively talented", "you are an amazing dancer", "I'm humbled to share a stage with someone who puts in so much effort".
Say it lightly, around other people, and then continue whatever else you were doing and let them decide whether or how to take your compliment. If they chase you up to say thanks, then you did good. If they don't, then you said something kind and that's all there is to it.
I hear a lot of guys saying things like "I don't know how to compliment a woman", and my best answer is that you do it without expecting anything in return. Most people can tell when a compliment is genuine and when it's manipulative.
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@Colman "you are impressively talented", "you are an amazing dancer", "I'm humbled to share a stage with someone who puts in so much effort".
Say it lightly, around other people, and then continue whatever else you were doing and let them decide whether or how to take your compliment. If they chase you up to say thanks, then you did good. If they don't, then you said something kind and that's all there is to it.
I hear a lot of guys saying things like "I don't know how to compliment a woman", and my best answer is that you do it without expecting anything in return. Most people can tell when a compliment is genuine and when it's manipulative.
@alice @Colman @blainsmith @rbphotographic Rule of thumb: comment on things that are changeable and they worked on, like your extension is great or you are looking solid on those turns. Absolutely do not comment on things they cannot control, like you look beautiful or you have lovely legs. For example, sometimes people say to me: you have beautiful hair and itβs weird because like itβs just my hair? What am I suppose to respond, thanks I grew it myself? I also make it a rule not to comment on peopleβs appearance at work.
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@alice need a gesture that is similar to "I like your shoelaces"
@wbud smiling and waving works pretty well.
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Car just drove by and one of the guys in it made the

gesture out the window at me.Not sure if it was an observation based on my aesthetic, or the threat of a
good time
, but either way...guys, this is why y'all're still single.@alice ewww! And men have the gall to ask βwhy wonβt anyone date me!β
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@stephaniepixie
Downloading this image and keeping it for other appropriate occasions. Thank-you.@GinevraCat Iβve had since my days on the bird app and it has come in handy

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@alice @Colman @blainsmith @rbphotographic Rule of thumb: comment on things that are changeable and they worked on, like your extension is great or you are looking solid on those turns. Absolutely do not comment on things they cannot control, like you look beautiful or you have lovely legs. For example, sometimes people say to me: you have beautiful hair and itβs weird because like itβs just my hair? What am I suppose to respond, thanks I grew it myself? I also make it a rule not to comment on peopleβs appearance at work.
@irene @alice @Colman @blainsmith @rbphotographic Which also relates to a word choice Iβve been trying to be more aware of: talent versus skill. Talent is often considered innate (like βgiftedβ), while skill is always considered developed.
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@alice a lot of replies to this make me think that hopefully I'm probably doing the right thing by acting "antisocial" around women in public. I'm gay/queer, but cis and I pass for straight, so I just assume women who don't know me will perceive me as a potential threat. It's fine, my dog and I can step off the sidewalk and give you space.
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@alice @spiegelmama @Aprazeth Mike Harriot has a pretty good way of shutting up the "not all men" or the "not all white people" crowd.
Paraphrasing, if I say "Elephants trampled my grandma to death," it would be idiotic to say "Well not ALL elephants trampled your memaw!" And that's true. It wasn't all elephants; it was elephants. I'm not saying all elephants are dangerous; I'm saying elephants are dangerous.
Also, if someone said "Elephants trampled my grandma to death", it would be very strange to say anything but "Oh no, that's terrible!"
And yetβ¦
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@alice need a gesture that is similar to "I like your shoelaces"
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@Colman "you are impressively talented", "you are an amazing dancer", "I'm humbled to share a stage with someone who puts in so much effort".
Say it lightly, around other people, and then continue whatever else you were doing and let them decide whether or how to take your compliment. If they chase you up to say thanks, then you did good. If they don't, then you said something kind and that's all there is to it.
I hear a lot of guys saying things like "I don't know how to compliment a woman", and my best answer is that you do it without expecting anything in return. Most people can tell when a compliment is genuine and when it's manipulative.
@alice @Colman @irene @blainsmith @rbphotographic
As an older guy who works with a lot of younger women, if I ever give them a compliment it is a completely neutral phrase like "you look amazing". No implication of attraction involved. "You look great" seems safe. What do you think?
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@alice @Colman @irene @blainsmith @rbphotographic
As an older guy who works with a lot of younger women, if I ever give them a compliment it is a completely neutral phrase like "you look amazing". No implication of attraction involved. "You look great" seems safe. What do you think?
@negative12dollarbill @alice @irene @blainsmith @rbphotographic I also have the disability of being brought up in London and Ireland in the 70s so compliments are a foreign language to start with.
Also, keep in mind that they are scantily dressed so I'm definitely safest not noticing anything about their appearance!
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@GinevraCat Iβve had since my days on the bird app and it has come in handy

@stephaniepixie
Brilliant. -
@alice
Ok
Old Guy hereALL men have been and are likely to be guilty of some degree of this, and ALL men need to step up and ~police themselves~ AND ~Police other men~
Add this as a duty to be performed on a regular basisIf you suddenly have an urge to shout "not me" or "not all men", suck that neck back in, and know that 100% you are trying to fool us, or fool yourself.
None of us are immune to this, and all of us need to do the effort to curb itStart now
@screwturn @alice This resonates. Another Old Guy here. I'm pretty sure I have never been The Problem (though I realize final judgement on that is not mine to make), but I have definitely been present when other men WERE the problem, and through some combination of my lack of awareness, lack of understanding, lack of surety (will I help or further harm by speaking out? will I be seen as trying to White Knight if I do?), and lack of courage, failed to address the problem.
1/3
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@screwturn @alice This resonates. Another Old Guy here. I'm pretty sure I have never been The Problem (though I realize final judgement on that is not mine to make), but I have definitely been present when other men WERE the problem, and through some combination of my lack of awareness, lack of understanding, lack of surety (will I help or further harm by speaking out? will I be seen as trying to White Knight if I do?), and lack of courage, failed to address the problem.
1/3
@screwturn @alice One day at a convention, I went utterly south on this pervy motherfucker trying to hit on my sixteen year old daughter. It was ugly. Years later my daughter told me that my reaction was the only reason she remembered the interaction at all. Before I stuck my nose in, this miserable fuck was just another day of being "a girl in public."
That kinda spun me, and I thought about so many times I'd been witness to the shittiness men are capable of.
2/3
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@screwturn @alice One day at a convention, I went utterly south on this pervy motherfucker trying to hit on my sixteen year old daughter. It was ugly. Years later my daughter told me that my reaction was the only reason she remembered the interaction at all. Before I stuck my nose in, this miserable fuck was just another day of being "a girl in public."
That kinda spun me, and I thought about so many times I'd been witness to the shittiness men are capable of.
2/3
@screwturn @alice I'd like to think I've done better since, been more aware, more understanding, learned some ways to help, been more courageous. Been more aware of the ways in which I am, however unintentionally, part of the problem. Again, not for me to judge whether or not I've succeeded. Certainly haven't writ-large. But I continue to try. I'm at least more aware.
3/3
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@jfparis @rbphotographic
Exactly that. And then you're wondering what you can wear and what you shouldn't wear. I wear sports leggings to run in because they are the most comfortable thing but, you want a dark colour so they don't draw attention and a tee-shirt which isn't too fitted. I always wear either a beanie or a baseball cap to cover my hair and would never run outside in shorts, unless I'm with other people.
It's actually fucking exhausting to have to think like this...@Jaimieserotica
And if you wear dark colours, you can also be blamed for not being visible enough if a driver runs you over.Catch 22
@rbphotographic @alice -
@Jaimieserotica
And if you wear dark colours, you can also be blamed for not being visible enough if a driver runs you over.Catch 22
@rbphotographic @alice@jfparis
Hi-vis tops are fine (as long as they aren't fitted) dark leggings don't show the shape of your legs and ass as much as lighter ones. Pale coloured running leggings seem to be an invitation to be harassed.
I would never exercise outdoors in anything other than full daylight anyway.
@rbphotographic @alice -
@alice Are you addressing *all* "guys"? I'm a "guy", but neither do I drive an insult on four wheels (also called "car"), nor am I single.

The shame of being a "human being" is enough already!
Funny. I read it as addressed to all the guys who think this behavior is appropriate.
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Okay, I'll bite:
When you read or hear complaints from men about us that are both generalized and not modified with words like "Some," do you also rush in then to tell them "Not all women, Dude!" ?
I expect consistency since all day long in other spaces I can readily find shit like, "Lol women are all just selfish, money-grubbing parasites for not sleeping with me right now."