I’ve been trying to write the next 3 posts for almost a year. I’ve written and re-written countless pages, trying to figure out how to accurately describe my perspective, but it just hasn’t felt whole or right. I realize there was something I danced around in those three posts that I just need to address separately. So before I can get into the rest of my divergence from popular feminism, I need to talk about fear. I need to delve into its causes, consequences, and forms.
We are mortal. We feel pain. We get sick. We die. We know these are always possibilities because of our ability to imagine and anticipate, and many of us go to great lengths to avoid, mitigate, or put off those events. This aversion to death and pain is deeply rooted in our primitive brains and has helped to perpetuate the human race through countless dangerous and traumatic circumstances. It’s a useful tool and an extremely powerful motivator, meant to help us avoid unpleasant and deadly circumstances. But I strongly believe that fear itself is a poor companion and guide. Like our sex drive, fear is just another survival process built into our physiology that doesn’t give a lick about our overall sense of peace, joy, fulfillment, or even love. The process is there to propagate our carbon-based existence, not our spiritual or temporal happiness or wellbeing. Thus fear must be perpetually and properly managed, or else it will pathologically influence and control our choices.
Sidenote: those that haven’t seen Inside Out need to stop reading this and go take care of that right now. It does an incredible job of creating a verbal framework around some of the intangible and often unintelligible concepts I’m going to be describing.
If you think about your different emotions and rationale as the team that runs your cognition and decisions, fear is the absolute worst kind of team leader. It is neither concerned with nor capable of things like trust, faith, or forgiveness. Its 100% interested in self-preservation and its sole focus is avoidance of unpleasant things. It has no long-term vision and is bad at managing priorities. It avoids transparency and vulnerability and is constantly in competition with others for greater security and safety. It forms relationships to find protection and assurance, not love or progression.
If fear is the driving emotion or motivator in our lives, it’s the white-knuckled crank that refuses to enjoy the drive because to it, the purpose of that drive it to survive, not thrive. It is overly reactive, easily stressed out by any unexpected circumstances, and it absolutely abhors chaos, risk, or getting too close to others. It refuses to take detours for scenery or pleasure, and it doesn’t want any new thoughts or other emotions distracting it from the task at hand. The irony is that fear's ‘task at hand’ is to avoid conditions that are ultimately inevitable; namely, pain and death.

We are complex, gregarious, and mortal creatures, and full joy is rarely achieved in the absence of pain. Often we find fulfillment, happiness, and peace by trudging through perilous circumstances. Fear would steer us away from all threats, but much of that effort accomplishes nothing. Life is hard, unjust, and temporal. Pain is a part of that life. Fear tries to avoid it, but life has little respect for that evasion, and eventually forces us down one path of pain or another. Like a two year old avoiding her bed time, these wasted efforts are sometimes more painful than the fate itself. Living to avoid pain and death is like jumping to avoid gravity. Good luck.

Oh, and one more thing. Fear has a hard time distinguishing between psychological threats and mortal ones. And while modern society has mitigated a lot of mortal threats, it has created countless new psychological ones in the process (whether they should or not is another topic for another time). The blog “wait but why” addressed this brilliantly in Taming the Mammoth: Why You Should Stop Caring What Other People Think. Read it. It may change your life.

In a diverse world, our fear-fueled impulses to conform to and get approval from society (because there is safety in numbers) becomes more intense but also incredibly taxing. Think of how much mental energy it takes to empathize or feel safe with a stranger who views the world very differently from you. Now multiply that unit of energy by the number of people you have the potential to interact with. The more connected we are, the more opportunity we have for disagreements, conflict, social chaos, and, therefore, anxiety. Add anonymity and the element of surprise to that potential conflict (like, say, an internet troll or terrorist), and social anxiety can quickly escalate into paranoia, bigotry, and demographic isolation. These divisions are a product of fear's hyper-vigilant efforts to find protection in the herd. Thus, the ability to incite fear in diverse groups is one of the best ways to divisively turn people against one another.
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Again, I don’t think feminism is bad. Again, I am absolutely on board with the objective of gender equality. I just feel no need to declare myself as part of a herd that disparages or vilifies other herds. Gender equality (and human equality) is a fundamental part of my faith, and I feel a spiritual obligation to support any measure that promotes it. However, I do not accept that equality will ever be achieved if one group is fighting, disrespecting, or marginalizing another. Inequality hurts us all, and I think the best way of progressing toward equality is by encouraging empathy, self-knowledge, and mutual empowerment, not fear, blame, and shame. Pockets of feminism are adopting the attitude of addressing disparity is by lifting the whole. Perhaps if they become the majority, the name will change and I could jump on board that train. We're not there yet though, and the next three posts are going to address the current practices that I think are getting in the way.