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[personal profile] pastwatcher
I don't smile a lot, naturally, and occasionally strangers will cajole me to smile. This happens in stores, at gas stations or bus stops and other such places where I'm not actually meeting a person. I used to favor them with cold glares or looks of puzzlement, as it felt quite intrusive, but these days I might laugh briefly. I thought this was friendliness or a criticism of my lack of sufficient politeness. But after reading a recent post I wonder if this is sexist behavior. I honestly can't remember whether it came mostly from men, though it generally has been from people obviously older than myself.

So, is it? Care to jot down a quick comment of
1) whether/how much you've been asked to smile by strangers and
2) what gender you present?

It'd be fun going around telling people to smile, though it's California where they do so freakishly often. This merits further investigation. Then again, so does my math homework.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-10 07:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timmypowg.livejournal.com
I think you're holding as ideal an impossible picture of intrapersonal gender relations. People treat men differently from how they treat women for a variety of reasons, and -- I can't believe I'm arguing *for* this -- this isn't necessarily outrageous. Perhaps some men prefer to be friendly with women than with men, for example, and this is nothing more than personal preference (and if women did this back symmetrically, there wouldn't be much of a problem). The thing is that people of various genders cause people of various genders to feel variously^2.

Not that I think that men calling out to women is an acceptable practice in general, but come on, you view being asked to *smile* as anything more than friendly stranger conversation? Next time someone asks you to smile, why not actually do it? You can connect with someone, even if it's only a momentary connection. (:

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-10 10:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timmypowg.livejournal.com
First, let me correct something -- I'm talking about intRApersonal gender relations, in the sense of how you feel about interacting with different genders of people, rather than how you interact with people themselves. I made up the phrase. ;p And you may call me sexist or homophobic, but I prefer the company of women. Not that I hate men or anything, but I'm more likely to become emotionally closer to women and to seek them out as friends. It shouldn't be that way, I agree, and if someone approaches me, I'll be friendly regardless of who did it -- I'll chat with the guy at the pizza place or some guy on the T or whatever, especially if they talk to me first, but I'm more likely to *want* to talk to women (but won't because I'm too shy). I don't think this perpetuates any sort of gender roles or stereotypes. In particular, I think you're reading too much into the smiling thing. Women shouldn't be treated as ornaments with permanent smiles, but hey, when some people see someone frowning, maybe they think that a little bit of positive, nonsexual attention might bring a genuine smile to that person's face! If I'm upset and someone asks me to smile, my day *will* get brighter. (And, in relation to something another commenter said, I might be more likely to give some change to a homeless person who brightens my day.) Maybe what you say is true in some cases, but I don't see anything at all sexist about this, except perhaps in who tells whom what and only because the situation lacks perfect symmetry (which doesn't mean it's *wrong* necessarily). This is entirely unlike a hypothetical scenario in which men ask women to zip down their jackets so that they can see cleavage.

As for fitting in those outside the two traditional genders/orientations, I just don't think there really is much of a picture here to talk about. If you're a gay male, for instance, you might be a little more likely to strike up conversations with other men and ask them to smile if they appear blue. What you mention about chivalry -- and you're right, I'm a strict egalitarian when it comes to relationships between me and another person -- is, I think, not very closely related to the issue at hand. I think that the part where we disagree is where you ascribe a sexist motive or a sexist context to the "smile" thing, and then you strongly disagree with this motive or context -- I completely agree with you on that -- that I think is not actually present -- we disagree on that.

I think heterosexual men's attitudes towards women as objects of desire -- objects in the grammatical sense, not the inanimate sense -- aren't likely to change to something gender-neutral, ever. Their views about what other people are expected to do can and should change to something gender-neutral, and I -- and, apparently, you -- am personally working towards that goal. I think it's OK for men to prefer the company of women, just as I think it's very much not OK for people of any gender to automatically assume that the man pays for dates and talks about "man things" in the drawing room while the woman sews and gossips and just looks pretty for the man.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-11 03:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] midnight-sidhe.livejournal.com
Just for the record: sexist or not, I also find it invasive. I don't mind being hit on by strangers nearly as much as I mind being told to smile.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-17 05:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lowellboyslash.livejournal.com
I'm late to the game, but thank you, THANK YOU for writing this. I'm amazed by how often women are told that these daily oppressions "don't matter" or are something they should just "get over." People should have their attention called to their behavior. This is something that can change.

I'm sorry, [livejournal.com profile] timmypowg, but it is an invasion of personal space, and it is sexist. All the good intentions in the world wouldn't make it all right for a strange man to put his arm around me in a bar; why would they make it okay for him to invade my mental space and force his idea of what women should be like onto my behavior?

Lastly, to answer your survey: I can't ever remember someone asking me to smile in public. However, the times I've been called "sir" by mistake are too numerous to list, so take that as you will.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-11 04:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] midnight-sidhe.livejournal.com
Next time someone asks you to smile, why not actually do it? You can connect with someone, even if it's only a momentary connection. (:

When it happens to me, I usually do smile back - not because I want to, but because I have no spine. It's never a genuine smile, though; it's a nervous reflex that probably doesn't reach my eyes.

If I'm going to connect with someone, I want to connect with the person because I want to, not because I'm being ordered/forced to. Being ordered to smile feels invasive, regardless of the intentions of the person (or, in my case, even whether I know the person). What if I am not smiling because I don't feel like smiling?

(no subject)

Date: 2010-01-12 01:52 pm (UTC)

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