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Heather Louise Porter's avatar

I hear your call.

In order to be heard and respected in professional/academic/male-dominated/public spheres of discourse, I’ve had to embrace my masculine nature, offering a precision and articulation to my arguments and ideas that I rarely need to offer when gathering with women alone.

In my experience, even when gathering with highly intellectual women, it is my sentient and spiritual awareness, rather than my intellect, that is respected and responded to; my ability to translate challenging scientific or heady spiritual concepts becomes a second or third source of interest/connection behind my ability to sense and feel and truly ‘see’ the wisdom of the other woman/women present.

I have also experienced this with men, though almost exclusively in one-on-one settings, rather than in groups, where they too feel safe to shed their conditioning and connect with the wisdom of the feminine, whether in its graceful or rage-full forms.

In my experience, women also need far fewer words to convey meaning to other women. There is a sentient quality to our common communion that doesn’t require hours of discourse, though we can, of course, meander down thought streams that are rarely linear, branching like tributaries, something women have an easier time tracking than men, in my experience. I rarely need to explain a tangential thought to a woman.

When it comes to safety, well, that’s a fundamental piece of this equation, for me. To expose myself in my truest form, it requires a level of safety that public discourse has yet to consistently provide. I am an animist, I feel and see the world in infinite and animate reciprocity. My walk and work flies in the face of separatist, religious, political and capitalistic lensing. I commune with the non-human world as equal. Plus, as someone who lives with a trauma condition from a violent and abusive youth, coupled with having been raised in the bullying misogyny of the Australian over culture, even the thought of mere digital heckling is enough to keep me away from more public speaking. So I have a range of mountains to climb, in order to feel capable of speaking publicly (to men) without shaking for several hours from spiraling into a nervous system response. I’m not alone in this, sadly.

I do hear you, though. I am listening. I desire very much more sharing between women, especially those upholding the divine feminine.

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Sarah Wilson's avatar

Jonathan, I read this not realising I was mentioned. I had to get up and walk around - I think it’s the first time I’ve read something by a man writing about women as agents in a curious exploratory way. I'll be interested to see if men's responses here.

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