women


16
Feb 12

Things Are Bad For Women, And Getting Worse

Releitura - Cindy Sherman © by BrunoEddy

Women are the bitch of society – and it’s getting worse and worse -

Between inequality in the workplace – TV shows starring domestic abusers – a political climate focused on diminishing women’s rights -

My question is – why aren’t we outraged?

Why aren’t women everywhere getting loud, and angry about this?

Why, in this moment where our rights and our respect are vanishing faster than boyfriend tees at a sample sale, are we more invested than ever in cutesy, girlish stuff  – our Pinterest boards and our eyeframes without lenses and our Etsy hair accessories and our Young Adult novels – the kinds of clothes, hobbies, conversation topics, professions that are sure to never, ever make erections disappear -

Here’s why I think.

I think we have a strong interest in pleasing those who are in power.

And I think we have an instinct not to do anything that feels threatening, aggressive, masculine. We have been strongly warned (culturally, inter-personally, professionally) that getting assertive, threatening dicks in any way, will sideline us, turn us into laughing stocks, leave us the single spinster alone with her handmade cat blankets and her angry diatribes. If we speak the truth – if we even say the same thing a man might say – we risk being marginalized socially or even losing jobs, as we make ourselves vulnerable to looking ridiculous by going against the tide.

And we risk love, being loved, if we seem up in arms, angry, embattled. Standing behind lines drawn in the sand.

So I do see why this is happening – and why we’re letting it.

But I don’t think those are the only two choices.

I know for a fact it’s possible to be both assertive and feminine – to both stand up for the rights and respect of women and still value and hold the respect of men. I think if change is going to happen anywhere – it’s going to be with the 51% of Americans who are women, who have to be watching what is happening with some dismay, and who need to know they can still be loved, still be part of the great club we call society, even if they speak out and stand up against these trends.

We are powerful. But we have to stop undercutting our power with every sartorial and conversational choice we make. If we’re afraid of being sidelined, marginalized, ridiculed, we have to know that over there where we’re going to be is where the cool people hang out – the adults. The ones who don’t put up with this sick psychosexual infantilizing game where one gender is on top, one is on the bottom, and both work hard to keep it that way.

*

This is a great breakdown of the current and most recent numbers of women of all the different jobs in Hollywood. All the numbers are flat around or (way) below 25%. This is obviously my area of interest in terms of employment – but it also affects us all because this is our culture, what we see on TV, what we see in movies. The piece mentions that studies show that the more women involved with a project, the more likely it is to have a woman character.

 

 


3
Aug 11

On Narcissism And Dating Writers

I’ve been thinking about this guy I dated.

He was smart, engaging, interesting, sexy. Great writer. (Most of the guys I date are writers – not because I have some rule or fetish about it. Instead I think it’s because I love my career so much, and I want to spend time with people who are interested in what I’m interested in, and who can talk with me about the stuff of my life.)

This guy made a big show of being interested in what I was doing. Would even flatter me by saying he thought I was a great writer. And then, as reality set in, I realized we were always talking about his writing (not mine). The fact that I was a writer too just made talking about his writing easier and more natural.

No matter how many of my scripts he read, I read more of his.

He always wanted to give me notes (which was great and which I appreciated, mostly, unless it felt like it came from a place of needing to be superior to me.) He got prickly and resistant if I gave him notes.

And then there came a point when the sitch no longer served him. So he moved on and found someone – else. Maybe someone who didn’t have any scripts she wanted read, who knows. But who could still talk about his. Maybe.

More than one guy I’ve dated is going to think this story is about him.

It’s about all of you.

It’s about that sinking feeling in my stomach when it seems like no one likes a woman who doesn’t think or feel or act like she’s less.

It’s about my father – a narcissist – and his maid/child-bride -

And that I’m struggling to reach escape velocity in terms of who I’m attracted to. My dad’s pull on me has the gravity of a planet.

Most of all it’s about me. Because chances are those guys don’t act like that when they’re dating someone else. Or maybe they do – hard to say – but I’m trying to be kind and take responsibility for my piece in this. I’ve definitely thought about what I’m doing, what’s in me, that generates this. Maybe it’s just my determination to see it like this.

It’s about me trying to never feel less again.

*

For the record: I haven’t dated that many guys. In fact, I tend to hold relationships at arms’ length. I’m working hard on releasing the need to do that.

*

And for the record: dating writers has never helped me in my career. Except maybe in the sense that I’ve gotten some great notes from great writers, and I’ve learned from them. Which I’m grateful for. But they would have done that even if we were just friends – that’s what writers do for each other. I think dating them removes me from the realm of where they might help me make contacts, etc, and I sort of regret those lost opportunities (that I might have had if we had just become friends). However, I’ve always put love first, even ahead of my beloved career. This might be a mistake.

*

One more thing for the record: I realized after writing this there’s something very narcissistic about mainly dating people of your own profession. I’m not opposed to dating to someone who’s not a writer – that’s just who I usually find myself liking.

*

I’m finally reading and it’s pretty great, as everyone says. I’m reading it on audio, from my Audible subscription, but I couldn’t figure out how to link to that.


1
Aug 11

How My Migraines Help Me Suss Out Relationships Part 2

migraine drugs

In Part 1, I talked about “highly sensitive people” and the similarities with people who have migraine. Now I’m going to address what having a migraine disorder has to do with me sussing out relationships.

Last week, ex-staffers of Rep. Michele Bachmann revealed she suffers from migraine disorder and that they’re worried whether she could fulfill the duties of the Oval Office considering her condition.

In an article subtitled “Migraine is miserable, but manageable,” neurologist Christina Peterson responds with the following. I’m quoting her at length because she says everything I want to say, and says it with the authority of research:

When Minnesota congresswoman and presidential candidate Michele Bachmann was revealed to suffer from migraine disorder, it caused a lot of debate. Bachmann herself, however, was eager to change the subject.

This is understandable. When it comes to migraine headaches, lots of sufferers clam up. In fact, as a doctor, I’ve found that people are more willing to admit to chronic depression or bipolar disorder than they are to having migraine. (You’ll notice I write “migraine” and not “migraines.” That’s because migraine is a disorder and not an incident. For the same reason, we say “epileptic attack” instead of “an epilepsy.”)

It’s not clear why this is. Part of it may be due to insufficient funding for migraine research. Part of it may be due to sexism. (Migraine affects three times as many women as men.) But most of it is probably due simply to misunderstandings about what’s in fact a very common, although painful, disorder.

When I was a neurology resident in the early 1980’s, the Handbook of Clinical Neurology explained that migraine disorder often seemed to strike frigid, uptight, and perfectionistic housewives who might be neurotic. To be fair, this edition was written in 1952, but it reflected a mindset towards migraine that remains surprisingly prevalent. For instance, the notion of a “migraine personality” is still with us, even though it’s of dubious validity.

Over thirty years ago, in her essay “In Bed” from The White Album: Essays (1979), Joan Didion wrote:

There certainly is what doctors call a “migraine personality,” and that personality tends to be ambitious, inward, intolerant of error, rather rigidly organized, perfectionist. “You don’t look like a migraine personality,” a doctor once said to me. “Your hair’s messy. But I supposed you’re a compulsive housekeeper.” Actually my house is kept even more negligently than my hair, but the doctor was right nonetheless: perfectionism can also take the form of spending most of a week writing and rewriting and not writing a single paragraph.

My neurologist – who used to run the neurology program at UCLA – said “there is no such thing as a migraine personality.”

However, perhaps what some perceive as the migraine personality is as I wrote in the last post – that migraine sufferers might actually be “highly sensitive people” – a set of traits which are also, like migraine, a neurological variation and biologically based.

I suspect the myth of the “migraine personality” has lasted because it’s more convenient to blame the victim than it is to ask – why do doctors have no idea what causes this extremely common condition?

The fact that it’s an overwhelmingly female disease (and very poorly understood) means it’s easy to write off as the by-product of a hysterical personality. It would have been called “nerves” a hundred years ago, and that’s essentially what they’re calling it now.

Migraine is sort of like rape – sufferers don’t want to talk about it because the implication is always “what did you do to get it?”

Peterson writes:

How bad is the stigma?  In 2010, at the American Headache Society Annual Scientific Meeting, researchers presented some numbers on the subject. These were based on the Stigma Scale for Chronic Illness, a tool created at Northwestern University to measure factors such as how often people feel criticized or outcast for having an illness. The scores for those with episodic migraines were only slightly lower than for those with epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, or Alzheimer’s.

So let’s clear up a few basic facts. “A migraine” isn’t just a really bad headache. Migraine is a neurologic condition, often inherited, and it affects more than one in ten Americans…..

The sufferer of migraine disorder does not bring it on himself or herself. Strength of will cannot prevent an attack. Nor do women get migraine attacks because they are “hormonal.”  (Estrogen does play a role in the migraine process, affecting certain receptors in the brain, but it is only one of many, many neurotransmitters involved.)

What we know today is that several genes, some identified and some not yet tracked down, appear to be responsible for migraine. It is a brain disorder of intricate complexity. It does not spring from neuroticism or repressed anger. Certainly, some people with migraine might have repressed anger, but there’s no sign that this causes migraine disorder. People can have migraine without repressed anger or repressed anger without having migraine.

So basically – just because I’m angry doesn’t mean I’m causing my migraine condition.

That’s not what the neurologist/headache experts I saw at the Mayo Clinic seem to think however. The hospital’s procedure is to send every patient the contents of their patient file (which is actually pretty great – many doctors resist and get controlling when you want your records, even when they already know you’re seeing multiple doctors in an effort to control your disorder.)

I received not only my lab reports but also the notes the doctors wrote about me. The doctor who was a real prick (Dr. Vargas) wrote this:

Her mood and affect are somewhat defiant, somewhat abrasive, and suspicious at times. Overall there does not appear to be any outward sign of depression or anxiety.

Impression:

1. Probable chronic migraine; rule out secondary causes.

2. Probable medication overuse headache.

3. History of emotional abuse with history of anorexia and bulimia.

4. Probable underlying psychologic contributors.

The Mayo Clinic doctors didn’t tell me anything I didn’t already know about migraine. And besides the spinal tap (to reduce my cerebrospinal fluid pressure), all they had to offer me were more drugs (all of which have significant side effects. The steroid they prescribed for me – dexamethasone – is used by Bangladeshi hookers to gain weight.)

I already knew I was using too much Immitrex (a vasoconstrictor that shrinks the dilated blood vessels in the brain). And I knew that Immitrex has serious side effects, including holes in the heart wall. But if there’s a pill that will take away your migraine in minutes, and let you live your life like a normal person, who wouldn’t take that?

I told my neurologist/headache specialist here in L.A. what the Mayo Clinic doctors had written. She laughed and said “they must not understand what those words mean. You are not abrasive. You do get teary when you get upset, but their egos must be too weak to have a patient stand up to them.”

Then she told me about how she had referred another patient to the Mayo Clinic. The patient came back without her uterus.

“I knew she had fibroids, and I saw the lab reports afterwards. But I never, before or after, thought she needed a hysterectomy,” said my neurologist.

So The Mayo Clinic’s approach for my doctor’s other patient was to cut the woman parts right out of her.

“Gave her a hysterectomy,” my doctor kept repeating under her breath as she prepared my injections.

In the Mayo Clinic office, I was never disrespectful, but I was assertive and direct. When they suggested antidepressants, I told them about the new books that have just come out where author/researchers have run meta-data analyses on the FDA clinical trials for antidepressants and found that they don’t work and possibly change your brain structure permanently. That’s when they started treating me like a hysterical housewife who doesn’t know what’s good for her.

They told me how much good these drugs would do for me. I told them that I didn’t travel long-distance to devote almost a week to being at a hospital just so I could find new drugs to mask the symptoms. I am trying to solve this problem – find the trigger to which I’m mounting an inflammation response in the brain. They kept patronizing and mollifying me and said what amounted to “this is not something that has a cause. It’s just genetic. You can’t solve it.” (I find this ironic considering they then wrote in the notes “probable psychologic contributors” – acknowledging they do believe there are contributors and it’s not purely genetic.)

They also were extremely patronizing about my desire to not want to spend the rest of my life on heavy-duty drugs if I don’t have to. I told them about taking an anti-seizure drug for five years which seriously impacted my ability to think and form words. (I’ll tell you that story in another post.) They reassured me by saying the new drugs they were giving me wouldn’t do that. I told them I suspected I was having a complex allergic reaction – say to mold or something else common – and the allergic response was triggering my migraine episodes. They said “we have no way to test for what that could be.”

As it happens, I’ve seen another doctor since then – an M.D. who practices “functional medicine” which treats disease as symptoms that the body’s complex, interworking systems are going off. This new doctor very quickly zeroed in on what’s going on with me, and I’m already starting to feel better. Which proves in my mind that my migraine disorder is not a result of anything going on with me psychologically.

The Mayo report ends by saying they were going to refer me for a psych consultation (which they never did – I suspect they already knew what I would say about that). Just to be clear – I have nothing against psychiatry or psychology. I see a therapist and find it very helpful and encourage everyone to do it.

Peterson writes:

The pain of migraine attacks is often severe, but migraine-specific medications often stop migraine attacks, and most people with migraine are able to function fully in life. Various articles written over the past few days refer to Bachmann’s “chronic migraines,” but this seems like journalistic shorthand for “occasional migraine attacks.” In the world of medicine, “chronic” migraine means having fifteen or more migraine headache days per month. It’s doubtful that this is Bachmann’s condition. Even if it were, many people are able to work and function successfully with it.

Should simply having a migraine diagnosis prevent a man or woman from becoming president? We know that Ulysses S. Grant and Thomas Jefferson suffered from migraine disorder, and that was long before the era of modern treatment. And lots of politicians presumably suffer from the disorder. Since 12 percent of Americans suffer from migraine, it’s quite possible that 12 percent of our Senators and Representatives do so, too.

I do suffer from chronic migraine, and I’m grateful to Peterson for pointing out that many people are able to work and function successfully with this condition. However, just because my migraines can be controlled with prophylactic and acute drugs doesn’t mean I want to be on drugs for the rest of my life. What I do want is to understand what triggers my attacks and do what I can to prevent or control my body’s response to those triggers.

So what does this all have to do with my ability to suss out relationships?

As I said in Part 1, I’m very sensitive, meaning I’m really good at picking up what’s going on with people, with the environment around me. A lot of scientists think what we call “intuition” is really the rapid absorption and processing of many small sensory clues that we understand on a subconscious level. This is what I have. Or, rather, this is what I do.

I often get migraines when I’m around toxic people – people in dysfunctional relationships, people who are not telling the truth to themselves or each other or me – people who are not good for me to be in relationship with. This isn’t because of the “psychologic contributors” the Mayo Clinic doctors blamed my condition on. This is because either consciously or subconsciously, I’m picking up all kinds of little clues about the person I’m interacting with. And some of those people (or relationships) are people (or relationships) my body needs me to not be around.

If I am one of the 15-20% of people and higher animals who have the neurological differences that make them “highly sensitive,” then it would make sense for someone like me to pick up something wrong in someone else and mount my genetically predisposed neurological reaction (migraine) to alert me.

So instead of migraine personality – you could call it “migraine nervous system.”

To put the theories together – if migraine evolved as a biological warning system to keep us away from stuff that can hurt us and our tribes (as many researchers think) – then I’m the member of the tribe you can ask to check out the newcomers.

To illustrate this ability in action: I got a migraine attack in the presence of those Mayo Clinic doctors.

 


26
Jul 11

How My Migraines Help Me Suss Out Relationships Part 1

migraine by owlana

 

Here’s the thing.

I’m very sensitive.

To many, that’s a bad thing. And I get that.

To me — it’s like a secret weapon. Some scientists think migraine developed through evolution to make some members of the tribe into human barometers. We always know when a storm is coming because Tik-Tuk gets a migraine. A human signaller that something nearby is dangerous, and we shouldn’t eat or smell or live in that.

By now migraine has probably overdeveloped – outstayed its usefulness. It definitely has in me.

But the same qualities that give me migraines also give me heightened insight, an outside that’s extremely permeable (“spongey” as my friend P calls it) and liable to take in whatever’s around me – someone else’s mood, that there was just a fight in a room, etc.

I recently heard about this thing called “Highly Sensitive People” – people having the innate trait of psychological sensitivity. Apparently these people process sensory data more deeply and thoroughly due to a difference in their nervous system. Research shows that about 15-20% of humans and higher animals have a nervous system that is more sensitive to subtleties.

On this self-test, I answered yes to every question except “I make a point to avoid violent movies and TV shows.” Not only do I not avoid them, I write them.

What’s interesting is that the descriptions of highly sensitive people are very similar to the descriptions of people who have migraine, or even their symptoms (reacting to smells or visual triggers, etc.) Since migraine is a nervous system disorder, and highly sensitive people appear to have altered nervous systems, maybe they’re related?

I want to note that clinical studies have found that stress or psychological factors don’t contribute to migraine, even though doctors such as the ones I visited at the Mayo Clinic continue to tell patients that’s a cause.

However, what I’m theorizing is that perhaps many people with migraine are highly sensitive people, and migraine is one of the ways their body signals there’s something wrong in the environment and they need to remove themselves from the offending trigger.

An offending trigger like – people in bad relationships anywhere near me.

Ok, I’m tired now and have to adhere to my strict bedtime. But I will write part 2 of this post tomorrow.

*

I’m reading “The Gifts of Imperfection” by Brene Brown. She said this amazing thing about shame – something like “shame doesn’t like having its story told.” That is what this blog is about.


30
Jun 11

Every Day I Wake Up From Anesthesia To Find My Phone Has Been Stolen

Annotated Sagittal T1 Midline MRI Scan of Reigh's Brain by Reigh LeBlanc

When you have a chronic illness, you wind up seeing a lot of doctors. You start counting the number of times you’ve cried in front of a doctor. (At least twenty.)

Eventually, you start traveling to see doctors. Spending time and money you don’t have in the hope that an expert at the Mayo Clinic can fix your problem. Then when the Mayo experts are like “der, it’s genetic. Here’s even more drugs for you to take” you just want to punch them in their stupid faces. Or say “how about this. Why don’t I be the doctor and I’ll tell you I have no idea what’s wrong with you or how to fix it but we’ll just chalk it up to genetics and I’ll fill you up with toxic steroids and beta blockers and hope something changes!”

Today I got the third injection in my spine in a month. But that wasn’t the worst thing that happened today. At some point between arriving at the surgery center, going under anesthesia, and coming to, my phone disappeared. I had the phone when I filled out the paperwork (I had to look up phone numbers on it). Then when I was leaving, no phone. The nurse called the number and didn’t hear it ring, proof she used to convince me it wasn’t there. But I was out of it from being under and didn’t have the presence of mind to argue.

I always keep my ringer off. I’m not an animal.

It wasn’t till I got home that I realized — hey, my phone is gone and it definitely disappeared at that stupid fucking surgical center. Linden Surgical Center in Beverly Hills, if anyone wants a horrible outpatient place that will lose your stuff while you’re under.

Losing my phone makes me feel bereft. I know it’s not the actual phone — I can get a new phone. But spending an entire night, by myself, without my phone … I might as well be on a desert island. A desert island where my entire right leg is numb and painful from the epidural today, and my head hurts and I’m spacey and can’t focus and can’t drive for twenty-four hours. All I want to do is call someone — feel less alone — and I can’t because my phone disappeared into the black hole of anesthesia.

And because I’m a writer and my compulsion is to see meaning where none really exists -

I feel despondent about losing my phone. More than I should. Because now I’m in intense physical pain and I can’t call anyone, can’t text, can’t see who’s texted me, can’t flip through twitter, can’t see what’s on the calendar for tomorrow, can’t find anyone’s numbers -

I’m making it out like I’m on my phone all the time. I’m really not, not compared to a lot of other people. But the phone itself feels like a lifeline, when I already feel alone.

And more – losing the phone, having it taken maybe – brings up all the ache about what’s been taken from me, what I’ve lost.

Having a chronic illness robs you of time, energy, other people’s faith in your competence.

I’ve chosen to not really talk about it on here because I’m afraid people won’t hire me if they think I’m sick.

I’ve had chronic daily migraines for most of my life, and I’ve been working all that time. Every job I’ve had, I’ve had headaches. I think it’s a testament to my work ethic, my ability to just grit my teeth and muscle through pain, that I’ve done all that I have.

But I also wonder how much I’ve lost – how much faster would I have written my first novel, my first scripts, if I didn’t have a migraine 80% of the time. How much credibility have I lost? That migraines are suffered three times more often by women of child-bearing age takes from the condition’s legitimacy. A manuscript is judged to be significantly better if it has a man’s name attached, and my disease is judged more harshly with so many women’s names attached. Doctors imply it’s all in your head (which it is, I joke) and want to load you up with antidepressants, anti-anxiety meds, biofeedback. It’s like all doctors who hear the word “migraine” graduated in the 19th century and know how to prescribe a good corset loosening and the avoidance of upsetting topics of conversation.

This month I went to the Mayo Clinic to see their migraine “experts” and all I got for my trouble was an armful of new prescriptions and a spinal tap. The pressure of my cerebrospinal fluid was indeed a little high, so they reduced the pressure by half, removing four vials of clear spinal fluid (which they’re now going to test for infection.) But I got a migraine the next day, and the next, and the next … and by now my body has replaced the missing spinal fluid (and pressure). Now they’re saying I need another lumbar puncture.

The allergist thinks the migraines are an allergic reaction. The spine doctor thinks something might be off structurally with my neck. The GI thinks I may have a gut infection. The neurologist/headache specialist really doesn’t know what’s causing it but has some theories, including my large, hazel colored eyes which let in a lot of light. She says she sees three times as many hazel-eyed people in her practice as exist in the normal population.

The point I’d like to underscore is that I can and do work in spite of getting headaches almost every day. I feel like not talking about this is doing me a disservice as a human being – it’s sending myself a message that something is wrong with me (and not just in my head). When the fact is, this is a very common condition. This is this young woman’s experience, and if we don’t talk about the stuff of our lives (without fear that doing so will mean we won’t get hired), we may as well pack up and move back to the 19th century.

I’ve never missed a day of work because of this illness. But what I can’t calculate is – how much more energy would I have had without migraines every day? I can’t even see how long I’ve been under the influence of this — it started in childhood. How many nights would I have gone out if I didn’t have a headache, who would I have met?

It’s like every day I wake up from anesthesia to find my phone has been stolen.

 

*What I’m reading. I haven’t actually started reading this novel yet, but I wanted to put it up because this guy is paying for his chemo for melanoma with money earned indie-publishing his books. I wish him the best of luck and a speedy recovery. BASIC BLACK – A Tony Black Mystery by Scott Doornbosch

 

 


22
Dec 10

Bushcast Episode 4: You Are Not Alone

This is my contribution to the You Are Not Alone project. It’s sort of like the It Gets Better project, but instead of talking about what it’s like to be bullied for being gay, this is about talking about what it’s like to be sexually assaulted.

This story is about an upsetting sexual experience I had in college. This story is a good example of how grey and muddy these cases can be. If you’re blacking out drunk, how much can consent can you really give? If I, a relatively empowered young woman at an Ivy League school, felt this much shame and personal responsibility around what happened — and never said anything to anyone, not in any kind of accusatory way — it’s hard to believe that less empowered women are reporting what happens to them. Where is the line where we start calling something sexual assault? I don’t consider this assault, since I gave consent in the moment, and yet I was so drunk I couldn’t see. I feel traumatized by this experience to this day.

I alluded to this story in this post about my father abandoning me, making the point that my worst secret (abandonment) is the shame that leads to the rest — that’s what leads to eating disorders and blacking out drunk a lot in college and winding up beneath two football players.

Talking about it helps. Once I share stuff here, it hurts less, and I find it far easier and less charged to talk about in the world. When I alluded to the football players in that post above, that felt very dangerous, because that was one of the bad secrets. Then I knew I would have to tell the story here some day. Now is as good a time as any. I’m a storyteller.


2
Dec 10

Status

Hollywood is a status obsessed town.

It’s why credits matter so much. Credits don’t mean experience – you could have a 3 mile long IMDB page, but if all your credits are shit no one’s ever heard of, doesn’t matter. If you’ve got one good credit on something that’s in the canon – that’s better. Because that’s status and status beats experience.

It’s why women have such a hard time in this town. Because in our culture women inherently have less status than men. And in a town where status is everything – where people hire you because on a gut level they think you’re cool and want to hang out with you – people who came into the world with less status, like women and minorities and those with disabilities, are always going to be picked last for the team.

Writers rooms on TV shows are full of struggles over status – and rightly so, because everyone knows, consciously or not, that that’s the root of what they’re being evaluated on. The following can be applied to how people act in the room, in life — or how you write characters, to show them engaging in these power struggles.

How You Raise Your Status:

  • Give permission to do things — or withhold it.
  • Evaluate others’ work.
  • Keep others at arms’ length while appearing to summon them closer.
  • Talk frankly about things others find upsetting.
  • Look with with your eyes down at people.
  • Speak authoritatively, with or without the expertise to do so.
  • Make decisions for groups.
  • Speak cryptically, in code or inside jokes.
  • Surround yourself with an entourage of any kind.

How Others Lower Your Status:

  • Mock you.
  • Criticize you.
  • Correct you, especially in front of others.
  • Prove how you are wrong.
  • Insult you.
  • Tell you what to do.
  • Give you unsolicited advice.
  • Approve or disapprove of something about you or something you do.
  • Pick a fight with you.
  • Refuse to engage you — act as if they don’t hear you or aren’t concerned enough about you to notice.
  • Ignore what you’re saying and change the subject.
  • One-up you. Always top you with something better, or worse, or more absurd, or more dramatic in their own lives.
  • Win. Beat you at something.
  • Talk sarcastically to you.
  • Disregard your opinion.
  • Announce something great about themselves in your presence.
  • Make you wait.
  • Never wait for you.
  • Taunt you. Tease you.
  • Disobey you.
  • Violate your boundaries.
  • Beat you up in front of your friends or rivals.
  • Make you back down.

I’m not saying I endorse any of this. I’m just an observer, making sense of what I witness. And using it to inform my characters, and you.

**************

What I’m reading right now: 168 Hours: You Have More Time Than You Think by Laura Vanderkam


26
Sep 10

Poverty

My dad was rich and we were poor.

He abandoned us — and then he went and bought a mercedes and a big sailboat –

My mother and my sister and I didn’t have enough — my mother worked hard, all the time. She was always stressed, miserable. She hated her job as a secretary. She was always working and yet we didn’t have enough — the lights were always getting cut off, or the phone, or the credit cards were maxed –

There was never enough. We were always catching up.

And then there was our father mocking us, the way we lived — making little digs at our poverty –

We would go spend the weekend with him on his yacht — and he was so stingy at heart, he wouldn’t feed us. Or when I would complain that I was hungry, he would make comments about how I was too fat and needed to lose weight — I was just like my mother –

My father suffered from poverty of the heart — he starved and starved his children –

He was aloof and had a distant model girlfriend (then wife) and cared more about money than he did about us — he made that clear. He would go on and on about how much he resented paying our mother — when it was obvious to anyone observing that we were struggling to get by and he was living like a millionaire. His parents (our grandparents) didn’t want to have anything to do with us because they saw us as leeches taking their son’s money.

I grew up as working-class poor with my mother and my sister, and the message was clear — men have money, get money, deserve money. Women don’t.

Now I work in the arts — in publishing and in Hollywood, where I see that pattern repeat itself — men get and women don’t. I wonder if I see it because it’s in my head and I’m destined to see it everywhere, or because the world I grew up in is the world we live in. I’m making a generalization, and I believe there are a lot of exceptions. I believe I’m going to be an exception, and I’m on my way. But I do think it’s taken me longer, and it’s been harder, than if I had been a man.

But maybe it would have been different if I hadn’t grown up in poverty, if I hadn’t grown up with the message that I deserved to barely get by, that I deserved the least, the minimum.

I think we find our level, our comfort zone, and mine has been poverty –

I’ve been poor all this time, when I went to an Ivy League school and I’m such a great writer and I’m sharp and bright and warm and I’ve got so much going for me –

I think my poverty starts in my heart –

I starved to a point beyond which I can’t recover from.

Until I was 11, my sister and I visited our father every other weekend. Then he vanished. We got a call three months later from him — he was sailing his boat around the world. I couldn’t speak, I was crying so hard. Until that call, I didn’t even know if he was alive. I didn’t tell any of my friends what had happened, I was so ashamed.

He stopped paying our mother, so if we were struggling before, now we were fucked. Money became terrifying, at the age of 11.

Now my father is very rich. Sloughing us off was very good for his bottom line. He owns airplanes and boats and a Ferrari and a gaudy Versace mansion on the water in South Florida. He fucks his 29-year-old maid/fiancee and still pays her to clean the house.

He tries to talk about the amount of money we’re going to inherit, and I’m like — fuck you. From the bottom of my heart, fuck you.

This entire process of trying to make it as a writer, first as a novelist then as a T.V. writer — has been nothing but difficult — and every time I thought it couldn’t get more difficult it did –

Putting aside the fact that he could have helped me the entire time and never ever did — he hurt me in this. He criticized me the entire way through for trying it, criticized me for how long it was taking to make it, when I was working soul-sucking day jobs –

And I have this sense that how he hurt me the most was by raising me trapped in the dark cold box of poverty. By molding my head within those limits, he set an upper-limit for the most I could ever make or have — so that I would never stray too far, never feel independent, never get powerful.

My mother was a secretary and my father was rich. And when I was struggling to finish my first novel, I wound up having to get a job as a receptionist to support myself while I finished it. That was painful, because the reason I went to Princeton was so I would never wind up like my mother. It was just going to be for six months until I sold the book — and then the book never sold, and I would up staying there for two long, painful years. With my father criticizing and deriding my choices the entire time.

Now I want to let go of poverty — tell myself it’s okay for me to make money, that it’s not siding with my father against my mother, it’s not turning my back on women. It’s good for me to make money, because then I can help other people like me (or unlike me). The way I grew up has no bearing on the way I want to live now, and I want to feel safe and comfortable and secure, and most of all, powerful now. Making money now isn’t turning my back on working people — instead, it’s empowering me so I can give working people a voice.

I’m working on it. I’ll keep you posted.


23
Aug 10

Why The Publishing Industry Can Suck My Dick

I decided a year ago that I no longer want to publish books through the traditional publishing industry — even though that was my singular dream since I was nine years old.

The publishing industry is dead. Between ebooks overtaking print sales and chain stores dictating what gets published, the business is finished. It’s inefficient, outdated, bloated, corrupt, and it has willfully buried its head in the sand all these years, to the devastation of writers’ careers and literature.

It deserves to die. The publishing industry is racist, sexist, and it heavily favors white male authors over others, especially in literary fiction, which produces the next generation of American literature. If women and non-whites can’t get published and can’t get reviewed and can’t get on prize lists, we will not be able to contribute. For that reason alone it deserves to die.

Meanwhile, the rise of internet technology has brought authors closer to our audiences and given us the chance to give ourselves careers. No longer can an elite group of racist, sexist anachronisms shut the door to the rest of us. Any of us can make literature. The gatekeepers that kept so many of us out are failing because prejudice always fails — how can a business that limits the chances of large groups of people possibly succeed? Greatness always surges through.

I’ve been working on a new novel project that I’m very excited about and that will involve interaction and participation with readers. I’m not ready to publicize the project yet. However, Seth Godin’s announcement that he’s leaving traditional publishing behind is huge, and since I’ve already decided to do the same I decided I should say so. With a huge bestselling author like Godin going, the world will follow. I have no sympathy for big publishing. They had their chance, and thousands of young novelists like me had their careers thwarted or redirected because of their incompetence. I am very happy to have the T.V. and screenwriting career I have today, which I wouldn’t have had were it not for the inadequacy of the publishing industry. But now the way I feel about it is — they don’t fucking get to publish my novels. I will publish them myself. Because I’m better at marketing myself than they are. I’d rather sell ebooks than print — because that’s what I would rather buy.

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I just spent an hour searching the internet for statistics about the racism and sexism in the publishing industry. Couldn’t find any — I know I’ve read some before, so if anyone can send some, please do. However, anyone working in this business knows about it already. Here are a few pieces I did come across:

Literature Gender Gap. Majority of readers are women but 30% or less of books published by literary houses are by women: http://su.pr/2Ag3sO

Some male critics review male writers by a 3:1 ratio. http://www.bookslut.com/blog/archives/2011_02.php#017213

http://www.slate.com/id/2265910/pagenum/all/#p2

http://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2010/08/all-the-sad-young-literary-women/61821/

http://www.thefrisky.com/post/246-jodi-picoult-accuses-book-reviews-of-favoring-white-male-literary-darli/

http://amyking.wordpress.com/2009/11/04/why-weren%E2%80%99t-any-women-invited-to-publishers-weekly%E2%80%99s-weenie-roast/

http://www.complete-review.com/quarterly/vol3/issue4/sexist.htm

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And these statistics excerpted from an article by T. K. Kenyon (see link below): Percentage of book reviews for male authors vs. female authors for 2006 in major review publications: 56%:44% Percentage of book reviews for male authors vs. female authors for Jan-June 2007 in major review publications: 63%:37% Percentage of book reviews for male authors vs. female authors for at the New York Times Review of Books (very influential): 72%:28% Ratio of male book reviewers to female reviewers at the New York Times Review of Books: 2:1 Percentage of articles written by men to those written by women in the five “thought leader” magazines: 3:1 Percentage of male book buyers to female: 45%:55% Women constitute only 17 percent of opinion writers at The New York Times, 10 percent at The Washington Post, 28 percent at U.S. News & World Report, 23 percent at Newsweek and 13 percent at Time. Overall, only 24 percent of nationally syndicated columnists are women. From: http://www.bloggernews.net/112350


9
Oct 09

The Letterman Experience: How To Sell An Unlikable Character

Many women who have held or want to hold jobs have a Letterman cracking jokes in the hallways of their psyches.

Like most industries, Hollywood is built on relationships. If you’re trying to make it, you’re constantly being told (reminded, warned, threatened) that you need to be meeting as many people as possible, that contacts are the only way forward, that it’s all just who you know. And that under no circumstances can you afford to jeopardize a relationship with a contact or future contact.

Fuck that. I’ve decided I can afford to lose relationships with a lot of people — people I have known. People I have yet to meet who may not approve of what I’m about to say. People who might circle the wagons against those who speak truth to power, whom they may perceive (rightly or wrongly) as troublemakers.

So the prevailing wisdom round these parts is you never ever burn a contact. You never stop pretending you like someone no matter how they fuck you. You never just draw a line in the sand and say here is my integrity. Anything you do that falls outside this line is something I’m going to have to call you out on. Because they might be willing to help you some day (though they never do, because a person who has acted badly just wants to forget about it and you). Or, God forbid, they might keep you from getting a job. They know people.

So you keep other people’s secrets for them. Because you want to work in this town, you want other people to like you. You don’t want their emotional failure or indiscretion or moral problem to reflect badly on you.

And you wonder if it wasn’t your fault.

Here’s how it goes down:

You get a job. Maybe it’s your dream job. There’s lots of competition, lots of back-biting, cattiness from other women, dick-measuring from other men. And then there’s one person there who’s like, the star. He’s the boss, or the team leader, or the cool guy, or literally, the star of the show. Everyone looks up to him, the entire focus of the operation revolves around him. His personal charisma drives the machine forward and puts food on everyone’s table. People get excited when he smiles or calls them by name.

And suddenly, for whatever reason, this star takes an interest in you. It’s not like you’re amazing looking — you’re just a nice girl from whereever you came from, and that’s what makes you fun. Because you’re unspoiled, because you’re still capable of blossoming under the light of a powerful sun, because he can still make his mark on you. He’s as good as married, or he is married, or it doesn’t matter, because he isn’t having a real give-and-take relationship with you. He’s giving you as little as he possibly can in order to take what he wants—he gives you crumbs of attention, charisma, the illusion that he cares.

He has a good time, and so do you. Or you think you do at the time. You’ll never be unspoiled again.

As the gnawing unease of what you’ve done sets in, you wonder how you caused this to happen. Was he responding to something he sensed inside you? You could have stopped it before it started, or before it got to this point, or before you did. And now, you won’t tell anyone — because you’re ashamed. And he’s your friend.

Most of us have some kind of Letterman.

Say you’ve just spent years writing your first novel only to be told by editors that if you revised it it might be published, so you’re fighting your way through clinical depression in order to make the revision, throwing two more years down that rabbit hole. Say you finally made your way out to L.A., say you don’t know many people, you’ve got no money whatsoever, all you’ve got is this novel you’re trying to revise and the fact you know it’s good and will be published because people said it might. Say you’re living on hope, literally living on someone’s couch. And say because you don’t have health insurance, you’re taking an experimental antidepressant that makes you gain thirty pounds. You hate the way you look; you feel dead inside. Say you don’t know yet that that novel will turn out great but will never be published in the end.

And then in the middle of all this, some Hollywood guy befriends you. He’s married, but that doesn’t matter, because you’re just friends, and you’re supposed to be developing industry contacts, right? In a very hard, lonely time, he gives you attention, support, advice, counsel. Career perspective. You sincerely believe it’s totally innocent, that you’re just friends and he has no intentions otherwise. You certainly have no intentions otherwise.

You gradually feel more dependent on him emotionally. He tests your boundaries. He talks often about how wonderful his wife is, how great it is to be married. Occasionally you do get those red flag feelings, but you dismiss them because he keeps throwing carrots in your path. How he can help you. Why it would behoove you to stick around. And because you’re in Hollywood, you’re surrounded by the relentless drumbeat: You need more contacts, more contacts, more contacts ….

One day he calls to say he’s in your neighborhood and wants to take you to lunch. He’s at your door, then somehow, he’s in your apartment. Then he’s pinning you to the wall, he’s kissing you.

You feel gross and guilty and excited at once. Betrayed. So, so confused. This was someone you looked up to like a father. You thought you could trust him. You’re shocked, frankly, that he would do this—you’re also very naive. You feel humiliated, like you did this. Like you were some kind of cocktease, spending months leaning on someone emotionally … what the hell did you expect? And you’re excited too. Because here’s a man who is interested in you, despite what a mess your life is, despite how fat you are, despite everything you’ve revealed to him. And who are you not to repay him for his months of investment, if this is what he was doing it for? He’s been so kind.

I sucked his dick. The whole thing took less than an hour, and it’s haunted me for years. That was the only time—we didn’t see each other again. I get a knot in my stomach every time I think about it. Because before that moment I never ever thought I would do something like that. I’ve felt very ashamed of it ever since it happened. But I’m talking about it now, this publicly, because I’m tired of guarding myself, monitoring that everything I do and say is okay. Fact is—everything I do and say is okay. I have nothing to hide, and the more open I get, the more connected I am to the world.

I seriously hesitated to write this post, afraid I would alienate a whole lot of people. People who could hire me or get me work. And I didn’t want to sound like a victim or like I was blaming someone else for my mistakes. But you know what? We’re all going to get a lot further a lot faster if we tell the truth. And not just individually, but as a gender. As an age group. As an industry. As a people. We’re all in this together, and it doesn’t matter what you’ve done, what you’ve been doing. You can start now and decide to get honest with yourself and free yourself of the daily psychic burden of carrying your own secrets and those of other people.

I want to speak out for other women who don’t feel ready. For all of us who want jobs and are afraid that if we tell the truth, it’ll reflect badly on us. That no one will hire us. Because each one of us that does it makes it a little more okay for the next and the next. That’s how we help each other.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my blocks–what stops me up emotionally, what keeps me from writing, from relating to other people, what keeps me closed and afraid and frozen. What keeps me telling myself “I can’t,” “I won’t,” “I shouldn’t.” My blocks are mostly made of secrets, and shame, and fear. The fear of being found out.

But I’m a writer. I want to be found out. That’s what I wake up and do, every day. That’s what I strive for. So this is me, narcing on myself.

This was one of my Bad Secrets. The kind of thing I had only told a therapist. Until here now, where I’m telling the world. And ever since I started contemplating this post roughly a week ago, I’ve felt a little freer, a little less blocked. Just the thought that I could tell everyone something that previously I had told no one made me feel pretty okay.

The lesson here is this: I don’t like people who mess around with married people. I haven’t liked myself because of this incident. But your main character doesn’t need to be likable. Just tell your audience enough about her so they can grip emotionally. We don’t have to relate to what we find out about her — we can know a lot and not relate to a character. But knowing more sometimes helps us understand and at the very least helps us care about what happens next. We don’t need to like her, we just need to want to know more about her. And the more we know, the more we want to know.

Letterman played us like a fiddle in his series of apologies — wry and jokey and just a good old Indiana boy, mugging for the audience’s sympathy in finding out he’s a normal guy with flaws just like them. And that’s another strategy for selling an unlikable character: give him charisma, the power of persuasion, the ability to sell a crowd on the idea that despite his larger-than-life intensity and flaws, he’s really just like them. This is what makes us want to know more. Letterman’s apologies were a master class in how to develop an unlikable character that an audience would … like. But let’s not be duped by the charisma of a master showman who has spent a lifetime learning how to read and play on an audience’s sympathies.

Everyone made pains to point out that Letterman’s relationships were consensual. My relationship was consensual as well. And while I have no interest in outing or humiliating that man, I believe there were many factors that made us un-equal. The experience has been a deeply troubling burden I’ve carried ever since.

But now, having spent about a week digging around in this painful little place, probing it and really learning about what’s there, I like myself more.

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