How I Became a Feminist

Like becoming a goddess, it didn’t happen all at once. It was a process. Thinking back, I realize I had many early signs that continued as a constant thread with growing awareness and frustration at the social inequities. The world just didn’t seem fair. At first, I wondered why. Then, in succession, I grumbled, got angry, and eventually depressed. And, if you can believe it, my AHA! moment, what I consider the birth of my feminism, came with the issue of a very mainstream magazine.

Image of 1950s happy housewifeI was born in 1946 and raised in the post-war era of strict gender roles for men and women. The unspoken rules for male and female behavior were embodied by everyone I met and validated with movies, TV shows, and magazines. Think Father Knows Best and the Donna Reid Show. It was the world as I knew it. I never heard the word “patriarchy”, witnessed any rebellion, or met any renegades.

Wondering why

In grade school, there were things about being a girl that I just didn’t like. I would rather climb trees and build fires than play with dolls. I made my own sling-shot and hoped to join the boys’ Shooters Club. (Didn’t happen, no girls allowed.) I wanted to wear pants instead of dresses to the playground because, when you went up the ladder to the slide or to swing on the monkey bars, the boys would stand underneath to peek at your underwear. Not nice! My sister and I had to wash and dry the dishes every night after dinner while my brother could go out to join the street games. Not fair! And, when I got my first pair of jeans (dungarees), I was disappointed that they had a “girlie” side zipper instead of a front zipper like my brother’s, like real western jeans. Not cool! My complaints were never taken seriously. I was dismissed as being a “tomboy”, which was considered a tolerable abberation.

Grumbling along

Things got worse in high school when the discrepancy between what was acceptable for boys and girls became annoying. Girls were still not allowed to wear pants to school and were expected to be ladylike while the boys seemed to have all the fun. I was envious of their exciting, daredevil adventures. They stayed out late, smoked and drank, climbed the water tower, hopped on and off the LIRR trains, dove (jumped) off the bridge across the Great South Bay, and camped out overnight on the beach. That last one was the real killer for me. I begged and pleaded with my parents but was never allowed to camp out with my girlfriends. Too dangerous!! Of course, we know what the danger was. The boys (and men) at the beach were the danger.  How was this fair?Why should boys have all the fun?

Getting angry

It continued. In college, at SUNY New Paltz, we still had a dress code for women. Yet, that was minor compared to the infuriating rules about curfew. The women had to be in their dorms at 11 PM Monday through Thursday, midnight on Sunday, and 1 AM on Friday and Saturday — after which they locked the women’s dorm. If you were late, you had to ring a bell to get in, and you got into big trouble for it. Meanwhile, the men had NO curfew. We had to be locked up to be protected from them and they could come and go as they pleased! That REALLY, REALLY seemed unfair.

Becoming despondent

Access to birth control being what it was, in 1965, I had a child out of wedlock. (Its own long story) Then, after one year of college, I became pregnant again. quickly married and, by the time my second son was born, became a very depressed housewife. I loved my children, I truly did; I just hated being stuck home with them, isolated, all day, every day. I couldn’t drive, my friends were still on campus, and my family was 100 miles away. I had to depend on my husband to take me anywhere I needed or wanted to go, and ask him for money for anything I needed or wanted to buy. Mind you, none of this was uncommon! My only social outlet was the other stuck-at-home moms who gathered for an hour or so in the common area of our apartment group to let the toddlers play together. We were friends by convenience rather than compatibility. It kept me from insanity, quite possibly from suicide. I felt trapped in some inevitable feminine destiny, a prison without parole.

One afternoon while my boys were napping, a young man came to my door selling magazines. He was in college and this was his summer job. I was desperate for company. I invited him in, sat him in a lawn chair in my living room (we didn’t have much furniture), and listened to his pitch. He was sweet and engaging and, although I really didn’t want one, I bought a 5-year magazine subscription. My mother had slipped me $20 on her last visit, so I actually had hidden money of my own. With no forethought, I decided on Ladies Home Journal (LHJ) because I knew it from one of my babysitting jobs in high school. It cost me my entire stash.

The magazine itself was not enlightening or intellectually stimulating. I read the monthly propaganda about celebrities, beauty, fashion, cooking, cleaning, and decorating. None of it really appealed to me. The idea of marriage counseling did interest me; I always read the advice column Can This Marriage Be Saved? The answer was consistently YES, as long as the wife was more understanding, more accommodating, more feminine…or so it seemed to me. The magazine did not report much about the social and sexual upheaval that was happening at the time or the ground-swell of unrest surrounding the Vietnam war. There were protests and demonstrations going on everywhere, my school friends went to Woodstock and sit-ins, things were blowing up, and the LHJ just kept rolling out the old party line.

My epiphany

And then, on March 18, 1970 something important happened at the Ladies’ Home Journal that trickled down into my life. The New York headquarters of the LHJ was occupied by over 100 women—outraged feminists demanding a change in how the media portrayed women. They brought a mock magazine titled the “Women’s Liberated Journal” and displayed a banner with that same name from the office windows. For 11 hours, these women engaged in a raucous standoff with the magazine’s staff, bringing the magazine’s motto, “Never Underestimate the Power of a Woman” into an unexpected light. They won a concession to publish a section of the magazine in August that would recognize a wider variety of choices for women’s lives, as well as give greater attention to women’s issues.

Cover of Ladies Home Journal, August 1970 issue

I was able to find an image on the Internet of the issue that arrived at my door in August 1970. Its appearance was not at all different; the top stories were typical fare. The big item, “WOMEN’S LIBERATION” AND YOU, did make it onto the cover as the last entry and it really rocked the boat with articles that celebrated the female body, outlined discrimination and sexism, and called housework domestic slavery. And, guess what? The psychologists decided that this marriage could NOT be saved … and the wife, the woman, went on to live happily ever after! This issue spoke to me. It gave me a new outlook. It gave me hope. It was my AHA! moment. I started to think that it would be possible for me —one day, in some way— to get out of the box that I was in and live a more fulfilling life.  And, as they say, the rest is history.

It was a first mental step, followed by many, many mental, emotional, and physical steps on a long, bumpy journey to happy-enough ever after. A driver’s license, a P/T job, a divorce, three college degrees (one in Women Studies!), a professional career, a social life …all with the support of my family, my many wonderful women friends, and a few equally wonderful men.

I have immense gratitude for the women that staged that sit-in and all the others with their brave and continuing acts of protest that helped forge the path to equality we have been trudging ever since. Goddess blessings on them all!!

Resources

I have paraphrased from these resources:
When Angry Women Staged a Sit-In at the Ladies Home Journal
Ladies’ Home Journal Sit-In
Ladies’ Home Journal (wikipedia)

I have used royalty-free photos from:
Seventeen
Sammiches & Psych Meds
familyeducation

Some of my favorite feminist quotes (feel free to share yours):
“Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.”
― Margaret Atwood
“Feminism is the radical notion that women are human beings.”
― Cheris Kramarae
“I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat.”
― Rebecca West
“I’m a feminist. I’ve been a female for a long time now. It’d be stupid not to be on my own side.”
— Maya Angelou

7 thoughts on “How I Became a Feminist

  1. Susan Trevillian's avatar Susan Trevillian June 15, 2023 / 1:11 pm

    Another wonderful post, ML.

    You really have a gift and the generosity of spirit to share…… Grazie mille ❤️

    I hope you are feeling better !

    >

    Liked by 1 person

    • accidental goddess's avatar accidental goddess June 15, 2023 / 1:50 pm

      Thank you! Being stuck home with a bad cold has given me time to sit still and write. Silver lining 🙂

      Like

  2. Sarah's avatar Sarah June 15, 2023 / 3:42 pm

    I was born 13 years later and I had choices you did not… because of the willingness of you and your peers to speak up. It’s still not equal, but thank you for documenting the struggle. From one “tomboy” to another.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Ron Moore's avatar Ron Moore June 15, 2023 / 10:17 pm

    and I always thought of you as the prettiest girl in 6L1; I hope you don’t take that as sexist. I hurt with you when I read of your experience. Our value is not in our gender, but we are a spirit in the eyes of God. Mankind is the problem.

    Liked by 1 person

    • accidental goddess's avatar accidental goddess June 16, 2023 / 5:05 pm

      Ron: Not taken as sexist. Physical appearance is always noted by both genders. It’s only a problem when it becomes the most important quality a person has. For girls and women, it can still overshadow their intelligence and capabilities, and we have a long way to go on this issue. Check out what i’ve written about it: https://accidental-goddess.com/2014/05/30/the-burden-of-sexual-attraction/.

      Like

  4. Nancy Greenman's avatar Nancy Greenman June 17, 2023 / 5:48 pm

    While reading your post I began reflecting on how much of the internal conflict in your life I was blindly unaware of. Probably because I was indoctrinated to the same cultural conditions and just blithely accepted it all – at least for awhile. HAH!
    Well, hopefully we are both better informed and in a much better place.
    Keep writing, ML. You have a gift.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. accidental goddess's avatar accidental goddess June 17, 2023 / 7:21 pm

    Yup. We lived through this era…and survived. Social change happens slowly and always with backlash. There is a big movement right now to take us back 50 or so years. I just saw this article in the news today about a NC school: https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/skirts-only-school-case-4th-circuit-says-innovation-great-inequality-aint-2022-06-15/

    We’ve come a long way baby, but we still have to fight the same battles over and over again.

    Like

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