I just heard this girl say, "If men didn't have to wipe their ass, toilet paper would not be free in public spaces. bleeding is also a natural bodily function, but because men don't do it, it's not treated as universal."
A man’s dream of fatherhood is often carried in a woman’s body... through pregnancy, risk, recovery, and the quiet reshaping of her time, health, career, and freedom.
Yet when a woman asks for stability, care, and a life that doesn’t cost her everything, she’s often told she’s asking for too much.
i always felt like doctors were incredibly lazy with c section surgeries.. they barely treat it like it’s a scar that a woman has to look at everyday for the rest of her life
According to psychology. when someone knows they treated you wrong, they avoid you. It's called guilty conscience. They don't have the maturity to apologize for their disrespectful actions, and since they lack accountability, they simply remove themselves from your life.
THINGS I WON'T DEBATE WITH MEN:
1. Abortion
2. Breastfeeding
3. Menstruation
4. Female body hair
5. Birth control
6. Access to feminine hygiene products
Why? Because none of these topics involve the male body and therefore do not warrant male opinions
Most women do not cry over the man. They are crying over themselves, the effort they put in, the hope they had, the delusion they believed, and the reminder that love has not rewarded them.
A man's desire to become a father is always paid for by a woman with her body, her health, her career, and her freedom.
But when a woman expects a comfortable life, she is somehow shamed for wanting too much
A nurse I used to work with got fired so suddenly it didn’t make sense. She was always the first one on the floor and usually the last one to leave. She picked up extra shifts when people called in sick, trained new hires without being asked, and even brought food for the team during long rotations. Patients would literally ask if she was working because they trusted her that much.
One afternoon she got called into HR. Ten minutes later she walked out with red eyes, holding a small box with her things. Management told everyone she had an “attitude problem.” No warnings. No write-ups. Nothing.
A few weeks later we found out she had reported a senior doctor for making comments about her body and asking personal questions that made her uncomfortable during shifts.
He’s still there. Still respected. Still mentoring younger staff. Still laughing in the hallways like nothing happened.
She lost her income, her routine, and the career she worked years to build. All because she spoke up.
thinking about how in barbie land where everything is perfect for women, men still aren't suffering. they aren't in servitude, they aren't being objectified or harassed. they are just not the main characters. but in a world run by and for men, women are NEVER safe. that's the difference between feminists and misogynists. women just want to be left alone, while men don't see us as humans.
7 months post break up, my ex & i were hanging out and he asked if i’m wearing a different perfume. i told him that it’s the same one. he picked my wrist to smell it and said no something is different, and asked if i used any lotion. i had, indeed, used lotion…