I just got back from brunch with a group where one young woman, a couple of years older than me, single, no kids, made the following comments:
- "Seeing a video of someone's birth is just weird. It's like watching people have sex." --> (Note: She wasn't talking about the idea of seeing someone you know give birth on video, which, yes, could be awkward if it's not in your comfort level. She was talking about the idea of any labor/birth ever being recorded.)
- "Even if you don't see someone's genitals, I wouldn't want to see a woman in labor. That's just gross."
- "No one can do natural birth without screaming." (I was trying to explain that a lot of labor is pain, but not screaming pain, just you trying to cope with pain. She didn't believe me.
- "Seeing a woman in pain is disgusting."
This infuriated me for a variety of reasons, some of which may be more emotional than logical. But she's got a graduate degree, would consider herself intelligent, and the ideas she expressed were just offensive and pretty gynophobic. I know a lot of folks grow up with this ideology that bodies, especially women's bodies that aren't being sexy, are gross or sources of shame. But I don't care. I'm pretty dismissive of folks with advanced education clinging to upbringing as an umbrella to shield them from criticism, when they're essentially in the field of critical thinking.
Just because something makes you uncomfortable doesn't mean it should. It means those are your issues. And before you speak on them, a little introspective thought might be worthwhile.
It also just irked me that she clearly knowns nothing about labor or birth or this process women go through, but felt completely entitled to speak at length and say things to me like, "Oh, just wait and see. Come talk to me after you've done it." YES, BECAUSE YOU KNOW SO MUCH MORE. WITH YOUR ZERO MINUTES OF EVER RESEARCHING OR LEARNING ABOUT THIS.
Okay, rant over. Please feel free to join in with the ignorant, offensive crap you've heard.
Re: Rant: people who are dumb about babies and birth and bodies
Speaking of being dumb about bodies, vagina =/= vulva. The vagina is not on the outside, folks!
And i think we all know by now that childbirth pain can not be explained to someone who has never experienced it. Of course im dramatic so i like to tell my friends its like being crushed from tge inside wjile your organs are deciding whether or not you should live! They can call me a liar when they go through it themselves lmao
I call her gynophobic for being grossed out by women, period. That's kind of what it means.
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I don't think she was empathetic as a friend. I think she was being unsupportive of your desire for a natural birth and she should have kept her thoughts to herself at that time!
YES, WE KNOW. She said, "I don't want to know anything about that. Why would people look it up?" And then dr explained that her knowledge of birth comes from what her mom told her. Again, she's 30.
Keep in mind, she wasn't talking about watching someone you know. That would be deeply personal. She meant watching a documentary where a woman was in any stage if labor, like even early labor where she's in her home, was "gross." Because of the pain?
2) I used to have students who were single mothers write essays advocating for abstinence-only sex ed, which blew my mind.
I had a coworker whose H was a doctor so she did nothing to learn about birth, breast feeding, or baby care b/c she just thought he was all-knowing. It went terribly.
I don't feel that it was right for her to express what she thinks is an educated opinion to someone who is going to be giving birth, but I do feel that labor can get gross.
At the same time I think she should keep her opinion to herself until she has either gone through labor or has experienced it with someone close to her.
I would hope she wouldn't be focusing on the gross stuff, and be more focused on supporting that person, and encouraging them that they can do it, as well as be excited to experience new life.
Um Hello, you don't have to have your face down there. There are other places to stand where you can't see what is happening and still offer support and encouragement.
As someone who has witnessed births and complications that can occur with them, I concur that birth is gross. Fascinating, miraculous, and empowering... But gross