-
So sometimes I get angry,
-
and it took me many years
to be able to say just those words.
-
In my work,
-
sometimes my body thrums, I'm so enraged.
-
But no matter how justified
my anger has been,
-
throughout my life,
-
I've always been led to understand
that my anger is an exaggeration,
-
a misrepresentation,
-
that it will make me rude and unlikable.
-
Mainly as a girl, I learned, as a girl,
that anger is an emotion
-
better left entirely unvoiced.
-
Think about my mother for a minute.
-
When I was 15, I came home
from school one day,
-
and she was standing on a long veranda
outside of our kitchen,
-
holding a giant stack of plates.
-
Imagine how dumbfounded I was when she
started to throw them like Frisbees...
-
(Laughter)
-
into the hot, humid air.
-
When every single plate had shattered
into thousands of pieces
-
on the hill below,
-
she walked back in and she said to me,
cheerfully, "How was your day?"
-
(Laughter)
-
Now you can see how a child
would look at an incident like this
-
and think that anger is silent, isolating,
destructive, even frightening.
-
Especially though when the person
who's angry is a girl or a woman.
-
The question is why.
-
Anger is a human emotion,
neither good nor bad.
-
It is actually a signal emotion.
-
It warns us of indignity, threat,
insult and harm.
-
And yet, in culture after culture,
anger is reserved as the moral property
-
of boys and men.
-
Now, to be sure, there are differences.
-
So in the United States, for example,
-
an angry black man
is viewed as a criminal,
-
but an angry white man has civic virtue.
-
Regardless of where we are, however,
the emotion is gendered.
-
And so we teach children to disdain anger
in girls and women,
-
and we grow up to be adults
that penalize it.
-
So what if we didn't do that?
-
What if we didn't sever
anger from femininity?
-
Because severing anger from femininity
means we sever girls and women
-
from the emotion that best
protects us from injustice.
-
What if instead we thought about
developing emotional competence
-
for boys and girls?
-
The fact is we still
remarkably socialize children
-
in very binary and oppositional ways.
-
Boys are held to absurd,
rigid norms of masculinity --
-
told to renounce the feminine emotionality
of sadness or fear
-
and to embrace aggression and anger
as markers of real manhood.
-
On the other hand,
girls learn to be deferential,
-
and anger is incompatible with deference.
-
In the same way that we learned
to cross our legs and tame our hair,
-
we learned to bite our tongues
and swallow our pride.
-
What happens too often
is that for all of us,
-
indignity becomes imminent
in our notions of femininity.
-
There's a long personal and political
tale to that bifurcation.
-
In anger, we go from being
spoiled princesses and hormonal teens,
-
to high maintenance women
and shrill, ugly nags.
-
We have flavors, though; pick your flavor.
-
Are you a spicy hot Latina
when you're mad?
-
Or a sad Asian girl? An angry black woman?
Or a crazy white one?
-
You can pick.
-
But in fact, the effect is
that when we say what's important to us,
-
which is what anger is conveying,
-
people are more likely
to get angry at us for being angry.
-
Whether we're at home or in school
or at work or in a political arena,
-
anger confirms masculinity,
and it confounds femininity.
-
So men are rewarded for displaying it,
-
and women are penalized
for doing the same.
-
This puts us at an enormous disadvantage,
-
particularly when we have to defend
ourselves and our own interests.
-
If we're faced with a threatening
street harasser, predatory employer,
-
a sexist, racist classmate,
-
our brains are screaming,
"Are you kidding me?"
-
And our mouths say, "I'm sorry, what?"
-
(Laughter)
-
Right?
-
And it's conflicting because
the anger gets all tangled up
-
with the anxiety and the fear
and the risk and retaliation.
-
If you ask women what they fear the most
in response to their anger,
-
they don't say violence.
-
They say mockery.
-
Think about what that means.
-
If you have multiple marginalized
identities, it's not just mockery.
-
If you defend yourself,
if you put a stake in the ground,
-
there can be dire consequences.
-
Now we reproduce these patterns
not in big, bold and blunt ways,
-
but in the everyday banality of life.
-
When my daughter was in preschool,
every single morning
-
she built an elaborate castle --
ribbons and blocks --
-
and every single morning the same boy
knocked it down gleefully.
-
His parents were there, but they never
intervened before the fact.
-
They were happy to provide
platitudes afterwards:
-
"Boys will be boys."
-
"It's so tempting, he just
couldn't help himself."
-
I did what many girls
and women learn to do.
-
I preemptively kept the peace,
-
and I taught my daughter
to do the same thing.
-
She used her words.
-
She tried to gently body block him.
-
She moved where she was building
in the classroom, to no effect.
-
So I and the other adults mutually
constructed a particular male entitlement.
-
He could run rampant
and control the environment,
-
and she kept her feelings to herself
and worked around his needs.
-
We failed both of them
by not giving her anger the uptake
-
and resolution that it deserved.
-
Now that's a microcosm
of a much bigger problem.
-
Because culturally, worldwide,
-
we preference the performance
of masculinity --
-
and the power and privilege
that come with that performance --
-
over the rights and needs and words
of children and women.
-
So it will come as absolutely no surprise,
probably, to the people in this room
-
that women report being angrier in more
sustained ways and with more intensity
-
than men do.
-
Some of that comes from the fact
that we're socialized to ruminate,
-
to keep it to ourselves and mull it over.
-
But we also have to find
socially palatable ways
-
to express the intensity
of emotion that we have
-
and the awareness
that it brings of our precarity.
-
So we do several things.
-
If men knew how often women were filled
with white hot rage when we cried,
-
they would be staggered.
-
(Laughter)
-
We use minimizing language.
-
"We're frustrated. No, really, it's OK."
-
(Laughter)
-
We self-objectify and lose the ability
-
to even recognize the physiological
changes that indicate anger.
-
Mainly, though, we get sick.
-
Anger has now been implicated
in a whole array of illnesses
-
that are casually dismissed
as "women's illnesses."
-
Higher rates of chronic pain,
autoimmune disorders, disordered eating,
-
mental distress, anxiety,
self harm, depression.
-
Anger affects our immune systems,
our cardiovascular systems.
-
Some studies even indicate
that it affects mortality rates,
-
particularly in black women with cancer.
-
I am sick and tired of the women
I know being sick and tired.
-
Our anger brings great discomfort,
-
and the conflict comes because
it's our role to bring comfort.
-
There is anger that's acceptable.
-
We can be angry when we stay in our lanes
and buttress the status quo.
-
As mothers or teachers,
-
we can be mad, but we can't be angry
about the tremendous costs of nurturing.
-
We can be angry at our mothers.
-
Let's say, as teenagers --
patriarchal rules and regulations --
-
we don't blame systems, we blame them.
-
We can be angry at other women,
because who doesn't love a good catfight?
-
And we can be angry at men with
lower status in an expressive hierarchy
-
that supports racism or xenophobia.
-
But we have an enormous power in this.
-
Because feelings are the purview
of our authority,
-
and people are uncomfortable
with our anger.
-
We should be making people comfortable
with the discomfort they feel
-
when women say no, unapologetically.
-
We can take emotions and think in terms
of competence and not gender.
-
People who are able to process their anger
and make meaning from it
-
are more creative, more optimistic,
-
they have more intimacy,
-
they're better problem solvers,
-
they have greater political efficacy.
-
Now I am a woman
writing about women and feelings,
-
so very few men with power
-
are going to take what I'm saying
seriously, as a matter of politics.
-
We think of politics and anger in terms
of the contempt and disdain and fury
-
that are feeding a rise
of macho-fascism in the world.
-
But if it's that poison,
it's also the antidote.
-
We have an anger of hope,
and we see it every single day
-
in the resistant anger of women
and marginalized people.
-
It's related to compassion
and empathy and love,
-
and we should recognize
that anger as well.
-
The issue is that societies that don't
respect women's anger don't respect women.
-
The real danger of our anger isn't that
it will break bonds or plates.
-
It's that it exactly shows
how seriously we take ourselves,
-
and we expect other people
to take us seriously as well.
-
When that happens, chances are very good
-
that women will be able to smile
when they want to.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause) (Cheers)