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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Car just drove by and one of the guys in it made the 🐈👅 gesture out the window at me.

Car just drove by and one of the guys in it made the 🐈👅 gesture out the window at me.

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  • h3mmy@lgbtqia.spaceH This user is from outside of this forum
    h3mmy@lgbtqia.spaceH This user is from outside of this forum
    h3mmy@lgbtqia.space
    wrote last edited by
    #101

    @31113 @irene It may depend on the context. Compliment something that someone has clearly put effort into.

    If I haven't really done much with my hair except leave it be for a few days, or if I feel it's having a scraggly day, it feels weird to get a compliment on it. But if I've put effort into it, then sure! I'll probably joke about how I put water in it, but that's more because I'm not always practiced with receiving compliments.

    But things like a well out together outfit, coordinated nail color, etc make for appearance themed compliments that land much better than just body parts.

    irene@discuss.systemsI 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • negative12dollarbill@techhub.socialN negative12dollarbill@techhub.social

      @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?

      irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
      irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
      irene@discuss.systems
      wrote last edited by
      #102

      @negative12dollarbill @alice @Colman @blainsmith @rbphotographic it’s better to compliment them on their work. Women are so use to being objectified and only there to be looked at that they sometimes want to not be looked at and judged on their appearance. I’m not speaking for all women but for me at least, I don’t think of how I look at work at all. It can be jarring to be reminded of it when I’m at work, I think of myself as a sort of formless blob talking about operating systems. You might think it’s a compliment but it might be difficult for the women to have to stop their work and think about how to respond. I might recommend you read this blog post that I wrote for more insights. https://irenezhang.com/blog/2024/07/24/misogyny.html

      blainsmith@fosstodon.orgB 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • irene@discuss.systemsI irene@discuss.systems

        @negative12dollarbill @alice @Colman @blainsmith @rbphotographic it’s better to compliment them on their work. Women are so use to being objectified and only there to be looked at that they sometimes want to not be looked at and judged on their appearance. I’m not speaking for all women but for me at least, I don’t think of how I look at work at all. It can be jarring to be reminded of it when I’m at work, I think of myself as a sort of formless blob talking about operating systems. You might think it’s a compliment but it might be difficult for the women to have to stop their work and think about how to respond. I might recommend you read this blog post that I wrote for more insights. https://irenezhang.com/blog/2024/07/24/misogyny.html

        blainsmith@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        blainsmith@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        blainsmith@fosstodon.org
        wrote last edited by
        #103

        @irene @negative12dollarbill @alice @Colman @rbphotographic When my daughter first started getting into dressing herself with outfits of her design I never replied with "you look so pretty/cute/etc". I always phased it as "you're outfit choice today is so creative" and then followed up with asking how she ended up choosing it. This way it still support her in a way she wanted to be support, but never about her looks and always about her choices of creativity she wanted to share with me.

        irene@discuss.systemsI 1 Reply Last reply
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        • h3mmy@lgbtqia.spaceH h3mmy@lgbtqia.space

          @31113 @irene It may depend on the context. Compliment something that someone has clearly put effort into.

          If I haven't really done much with my hair except leave it be for a few days, or if I feel it's having a scraggly day, it feels weird to get a compliment on it. But if I've put effort into it, then sure! I'll probably joke about how I put water in it, but that's more because I'm not always practiced with receiving compliments.

          But things like a well out together outfit, coordinated nail color, etc make for appearance themed compliments that land much better than just body parts.

          irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
          irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
          irene@discuss.systems
          wrote last edited by
          #104

          @h3mmy @31113 agreed. I really don’t do anything with my hair but I have had a terrible time finding people that know how to cut and style it because it is stiff and very straight. Only after I moved to Seattle and found a Japanese hair stylist was I able to get a decent hair cut. So my hair has always felt like a struggle. Of course it’s nothing compared to what black women go through. So you might think hair is kind of neutral but our shitty system has politicized it, like basically everything else about women’s bodies. https://legaldefensefund.substack.com/p/black-people-face-hair-discrimination

          irene@discuss.systemsI 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • irene@discuss.systemsI irene@discuss.systems

            @h3mmy @31113 agreed. I really don’t do anything with my hair but I have had a terrible time finding people that know how to cut and style it because it is stiff and very straight. Only after I moved to Seattle and found a Japanese hair stylist was I able to get a decent hair cut. So my hair has always felt like a struggle. Of course it’s nothing compared to what black women go through. So you might think hair is kind of neutral but our shitty system has politicized it, like basically everything else about women’s bodies. https://legaldefensefund.substack.com/p/black-people-face-hair-discrimination

            irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
            irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
            irene@discuss.systems
            wrote last edited by
            #105

            @h3mmy @31113 oh also my PhD advisor banned me from dying it pink during grad school, especially when I was interviewing because “you want people to remember your work and not your hair”. He wasn’t wrong and that’s the most fucked up part of it.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • blainsmith@fosstodon.orgB blainsmith@fosstodon.org

              @irene @negative12dollarbill @alice @Colman @rbphotographic When my daughter first started getting into dressing herself with outfits of her design I never replied with "you look so pretty/cute/etc". I always phased it as "you're outfit choice today is so creative" and then followed up with asking how she ended up choosing it. This way it still support her in a way she wanted to be support, but never about her looks and always about her choices of creativity she wanted to share with me.

              irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
              irene@discuss.systemsI This user is from outside of this forum
              irene@discuss.systems
              wrote last edited by
              #106

              @blainsmith @negative12dollarbill @alice @Colman @rbphotographic Awesome yes! I almost never have an issue with women complimenting me because it’s almost always about a specific item of clothing that I’m wearing. Then because I’m Asian and Midwestern, I have to tell them what a good deal that I got on it. 😂

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