I'm going to start by picking up where I left off Sunday (been a little hectic here...) and then get to a ruling on the forum moderation.
I'm still high from
@mystic's point about being
men and
women. I thought that was brilliant. We of all people should acknowledge the difference, and any talk of being "grownups" or "adults" should be countered with the question, "Do you mean a male adult or a female adult"? While individual exceptions to general rules can always be identified (duh...), statistically we are just different, and we have to account for that in our interactions. [NB - If you didn't see the most recent newsletter, it would be pertinent to take a look at it now at
this link.]
What follows is based on my personal strategy for male/female interactions, which I have found effective for me. If you don't think it will help you, do something else. By the time I've finished I expect to offend everybody, but I hope once we look at it together from all sides it will all make sense.
I disagree with
@IshChayil's proposition that men should 'hold something back' because reasons. But I'm not going to argue with him about it, and I'm not offended it by it. It's a strategy; maybe it will work for him. And he practically bent over backward qualifying his statements and positioning them as a speculation for further discussion (not saying it as well as he could, 4:00am where he was, might be better in a mens-only forum, asking for help from other guys to unpack the idea, etc.). So he deliberately opened the door for debate and discussion.
@FollowingHim2's response was, shall we say, a bit peremptory. A bit judgmental, too, in the technical sense of 'rendering a judgment' about what IC had said. That didn't offend me, (a) because she wasn't responding to me, so easy out, and (b) because I don't expect women to communicate the same way men do, and I automatically translate everything to manspeak (see note below). So what I 'heard' was "Careful, IC, because what you're suggesting sounds like it's headed in the direction of some kind of weird control/domination thing, and that makes me feel threatened personally as well as concerned for what other people, particularly women, will think reading this later. Where are you headed with this?" Call it a 'shot across the bow', delivered woman-style.
Coming from a man, however, them's fightin words. A guy who stands up in front of the room and calls what the last guy said "manipulative nonsense" (or just "nonsense", really--we could probably live with "manipulative") is throwing down a challenge, even if it's done indirectly (lady style) as in the sense of "if what you just said means what I think it means, it's manipulative nonsense". A statement like that has plausible deniability ("I wasn't insulting you personally, I was just saying "if"...), but it still makes an insulting point.
So IC understandably was insulted by what FH2 said, and took offense. I get it. As a performing artist I am acutely aware of the vulnerability of "putting yourself out there" and then waiting for responses, positive or negative. And the more risky or edgy (if we're talking about art) or speculative or politically incorrect (if we're talking about ideas), the more vulnerable. So now IC and FH2 are both having a bad experience here, for different but related reasons. FH2 feels threatened by IC's speculations, and IC feels shot down by FH2's critique. Trouble ensues.
Meanwhile,
@FollowingHim's job as moderator is potentially compromised by the fact that his bride is one of the parties to the conflict, and he properly recuses himself from adjudicating it to avoid even the appearance of partiality. So here we are.
Samuel, leave the thread where it is. I have no essential problem with IC's OP, and think his points are worth discussing further if we can move on. And the relatively mild kerfuffle between FH2 and IC is a good illustration of a fairly common situation in male/female communication dynamics that's also worth examining. The thread stays.
IshChayil, my personal opinion is that the private fora are best suited to matters that are deeply personal, and for topics of general interest it is useful to get the ladies' perspectives as we go, even if it can get a little awkward sometimes. That just gives us moments such as this to examine the ways we relate to each other across the gender divide and hopefully improve our communication. I respect your choices, however, regarding how and in what context you want to share speculative or tentative thoughts going forward, and recommend that you give some prayerful consideration to whether to continue with this particular topic in this thread or open a new thread in the men-only forum and then do as you see fit. Your call.
Finally, I commend Samuel for doing a yeoman job of balancing the equities. He did a subtle job of showing that he
is Sarah's husband and he
will defend her if necessary (I would expect any husband to do the same), but ultimately he did an unimpeachable job of maintaining impartiality as demonstrated ultimately by his recusing himself altogether.
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Note (see ¶5 above): I don't really "translate". It's more like I'm fluent in womanspeak, so I can think in womanspeak and understand it without translation. Anyone fluent in multiple languages knows what I'm talking about. Now women may laugh at the idea that I can understand women or that any man can understand women, but whether I do or don't or whether anyone (including myself) can
know whether I do or don't isn't the practical problem. As a good scientist, I am looking for theories that accurately predict future results in repeatable tests, and I have found that I get along pretty well thinking the way I think. It's a practical solution that works for me, whether it meets anyone else's abstract requirements or not. And in any event, I think anyone who treats manspeak and womanspeak as two different languages and cultures is going to be steps ahead of anyone who wastes time trying to conform the two to one standard.