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We Hear You, Trust Me.

“From Maude to Murphy Brown, I Am Woman to All About that Bass, we’ve been lectured about women’s issues….I’ve listened. And I’ve treated women with respect and empathy my whole life. But I want the same. And I think, deep down, so do most men.”

“I know I need to listen to People of Color to learn their perspective, just like they need to listen to me to learn about the white male perspective.”

These are two comments I have heard or read recently in discussions about women’s issues and racism in my community.  Look, guys, I know this is a difficult time for you.  I mean, #metoo is really scary, almost as scary as being raped.  But here’s the thing: we listen to you ALL THE TIME.  You just don’t realize it because it’s the water we’re swimming in every day, 24-7.  When you say “women/POC need to listen to US” this is what happens in my brain:

Socrates, Aristotle, Homer, Odysseus, Achilles, Agamemnon, William Shakespeare, Falstaff, Henry V, King Lear, Macbeth, Hamlet, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Edgar Allan Poe, James Fennimore Cooper, Hawkeye, Charles Dickens, Pip, Walt Whitman,  Mark Twain, Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby, Tom Buchanan, William Faulkner, Thomas Sutpen, Ernest Hemingway, Frederic Henry and every other Hemingway protagonist, Arthur Miller, John Proctor, Willy Loman, Biff, J.D. Salinger, Holden Caulfield, Atticus Finch, Kurt Vonnegut, Vladimir Nabakov, Humbert Humbert, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Rodion Raskalnikov,  Ray Bradbury, David Sedaris, Raymond Carver, John Updike, Harry Angstrom, William Golding, Jack, Ralph, Piggy, Simon, John Irving, Owen Meany, John Wheelwright, Jack Kerouac, Dean Moriarty, Carlo Marx, Cormac McCarthy, and Tim O’Brien…

Sigmund Freud, B.F. Skinner, Lawrence Kohlberg, Erik Erikson, Carl Jung, Jean Piaget, Ivan Pavlov, William Wundt, Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers, Harry Harlow, Steven Pinker, Jonathan Haidt….

Friedrich Nietzche, Immanuel Kant, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, David Hume, Jean-Paul Sartre, Karl Marx, Thomas Hobbes, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson….

George Carlin, Steve Martin, Robin Williams, Louis C.K., Jerry Seinfeld, Rodney Dangerfield, Woody Allen, Patton Oswalt, Will Ferrell, Chevy Chase, John Belushi, John Candy, Dan Ackroyd, Bill Murray, Bob Hope, Dane Cook…..

Johnny Carson, David Letterman, Jay Leno, Conan O’Brien, Jon Stewart, Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyer, James Corden, Bill Maher, John Oliver, Trevor Noah….

Archie Bunker, Bob Newhart, Hawkeye Pierce and B.J. Hunnicut, Frank Burns, Charles Emerson Winchester the third, Felix Ungar, Oscar Madison, Hogan’s Heroes, Marcus Welby, John Cleese, Eric Idle, Colombo, Richie Cunningham, The Fonz, Captain Kirk, Scotty, Spock, Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin,  Matt Stone, Trey Parker….

Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Indiana Jones, George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorcese, Quentin Tarentino…..

Tom Brokaw, Walter Cronkite, Dan Rather, Jake Tapper, Bill O’Reilly, Tucker Carlson, Brian Williams, Matt Lauer, Anderson Cooper…

Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs…

Bruce Springsteen, Billy Joel, Elton John, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Mick Jagger, Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton….

And then there’s George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Abraham Lincoln, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, John F. Kennedy, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John McCain, George W. Bush, Donald J. Trump, Mitch McConnell, Lindsay Graham, Orin Hatch, Dick Durbin, John Roberts, Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia, Brett Kavanaugh, and on and on and on….

We’ve heard you, trust me…..we’ve HEARD you.  You have told YOUR stories through our literature, our laws, our history, our art, our music for three hundred years.  We have needed to hear you in order to survive in this world.  You have not needed to hear us.  Yet.  So when you say “women/POC need to listen to US,” we may roll our eyes.  Please.  Pass the mic.  It’s time to listen to US.

And yet, we persevere

I’m sitting here typing this with a feeling in my lower abdomen that I can only describe as being punched in the cervix.  For those of you without a cervix, imagine having a splitting headache in the deepest, most inaccessible part of your body.   I just returned from the gynecologist– I have had some abnormal cervical cells on my pap smears for the past few years, and they’re not going away.  They’re not getting worse and I do not have HPV, so that’s the good news.  But my doctor advised that I have them looked at every six months just to be on the safe side.

Today the gynocologist and I discussed my IUD and whether to leave it in for two more years or take it out now.  I told him I preferred to leave it in– I’m only 52, I still have occassional spotting, so I think I’m still ovulating from time to time.  He agreed, and he proceeded to do the biopsy which suddenly felt like a balloon had exploded inside my body.  Then he calmly said, “Your IUD came out.  It was attached to the biopsy piece.”

Here’s what I get to take home: 1. Cramps like I haven’t had since I was a teenage girl getting her period.  2. Two requests for blood work– one three weeks  from now after my hormones regulate and one for three weeks after that to see what my follicle stimluating hormones are doing.  Based on those results, my gynocologist will tell me if I still need and IUD.  3. The gyno’s suggestion that I use a condom if I have sex between now and the last blood work results.  (Thanks for the reminder that I haven’t had sex in six months and have no good prospects in sight.) 4. A nagging question– When will there be a MALE birth control pill or device?? and 5. An overwhelming sense of shock and awe that any women my age have a positive attitude toward life.

Being an aging woman is hard enough.  Being a middle-aged woman who is going through a divorce and then grief is indescribably difficult.  I remember one day when my husband had just moved out of our house and I was cleaning up the piles of stuff he had left behind.  I was feeling sad and angry and scared about the future and wondering if anyone would ever find me attractive again.  I picked up a beautiful wooden hand mirror that I had received as a gift in my twenties, and in my reflection I saw my neck skin, loose and crepey and old looking.  I literally fell to my knees and cried in a heap on the floor.  Why now?  Why did I have to be “resingled” when the ravages of old age were just around the corner?

After that, it seemed like one slap in the face after another.  My ex got a girlfriend right away and was flying to Baltimore every other weekend at her expense.  Then his lawyer decided he should ask for alimony from me since his hearing loss might prevent him from working in the future.   The first man I slept with was less than forthcoming about his sexual history, and when I learned the truth, I rushed to a walk-in clinic to be tested for everything, crying as I sat in the exam room.  The nurse who did the tests said quietly “Maybe you’re not ready to be dating yet?”  She was right.  Five months after my husband died, when I did feel ready for dating, I ended up with a genital wart (which, by the way, condoms do not prevent) and an abnormal pap smear.

I got the IUD when I met a decent guy who was patient with me as I tried various methods of birth control and finally opted for the Mirena.  I feel like the hormones in the IUD screwed up my emotions for the first six months I had it in, although my doctor assures me that it is too small a dose of hormones to do that.  My emotions have been rocky for six years– is it because my marriage ended? Is it grief due to the tragic death of my soon-to-be-ex-husband? Grief over my mom’s death a year later?  The empty nest syndrome?  Peri-menopause?  Birth control?  Who the hell knows?  Now I am going cold-turkey on the hormones my body had become accustomed to– what hormonal joys do I have to look forward to next?

All I know is this– aging is not for sissies.  Older women are portrayed in our culture as weak, out of touch, clingy, and useless.  (They are not.  If they persevere and keep their heads up, they are the strongest creatures on earth.)  Men write articles about why they date younger women, saying “Older women are so negative.”  Really?  I wonder why?  It’s not as if biology and society hit women with a double whammy at mid-life.  Women are the ones who deal with birth control, pregnancy, breast feeding, and the bulk of child rearing.  Then at mid-life, after we’ve given our best reproductive years, many of us are left by the fathers of our children so that they can puruse younger women.  And yet we persevere.  We keep caring for our children and grandchildren, we keep learning new things and exploring the world.  We keep showing up.

So if you see me, or any woman my age, and we have a positive attitude about life, give us a pat on the back.  If you don’t, I’ll punch you in the cervix.