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alfa wrote:What if I identify as a woman, would I be allowed?
alfa wrote:I see a couple people replied to her saying there are already such gyms that exist, one woman even stitched the vid saying she owns a gym like that and these are her opening hours etc so it seems a popular thing. Meen no gym man so meen know
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:thoughts?
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMYNfKy98/
MaxPower wrote:Lol so women want their own gym and allyuh thirstmen vex?
I know quite a few respectable women, educated, married, kids and they always complain about being harassed and stared down by some of you creeps. And when they blank allyuh MC what then? Stush? Pompous? Rude? Anti-social?
Stop the harassment.
DMan7 wrote:Women crave attention from men, that women only gym won't last long as they don't want attention from other women. Again that woman complaining on TikTok for a woman only gym probably had bad experience with the men at her existing gym that she deems undesirable.
FuadAdnan wrote:guys she don't want all yuh watching this at the gym
https://www.tiktok.com/@______lee______ ... 9869496581
https://www.tiktok.com/@______lee______ ... 7772367109
Commentary
Return of the 'soft man'
Gabrielle Hosein 2 Days Ago
DR GABRIELLE HOSEIN
CARNIVAL cannot pass without calypso and soca flinging up issues of gender and sexuality.
Patrice Robert’s tribute to Penguin comes at a highly contested moment in the negotiation of contemporary manhood, in a region transformed by Caribbean feminist struggle for social justice and a male backlash which retributively accuses women of becoming too powerful.
Yet, feminist transformation also made it possible to speak positively about men’s emotions and allowing boys to cry, men’s emotional fragility under the rigid mask of manhood, and men as human beings who embody qualities of gentleness as well as strength. In this context, there are complex, contradictory and even problematic meanings in engaging Penguin’s Soft Man today.
Much has been written about this 1984 Calypso Monarch winner which documents the threatened status of the erect penis or phallus, or stickman’s bois, as the ultimate representation of manhood and its dominance over women.
Such dominance included a division of household roles into masculine and feminine, such that a soft man was also undesirable because of his failure to live up to an ideal of tough masculinity, instead becoming associated with the emotional and domestic responsibilities expected of women.
In calypso, the threat to the phallus and its sexual potency was frequently portrayed in terms of an emasculating female demand, power and sexuality. Indeed, softness was a kind of death or castration, leaving men aberrant and unwanted. This became particularly risky in a changing world where women were becoming more educationally and occupationally dominant, sexually assertive, difficult to subordinate and unwilling to settle.
read more..
She's talking about men who don't need to minimize and pretend that they don't have emotions.paid_influencer wrote:Just want to say a big Thank You to Dr. Hosein's article in yesterday's Newsday. As a 'soft man' myself, it is good to see women and feminists standing up for us as well.Commentary
Return of the 'soft man'
Gabrielle Hosein 2 Days Ago
DR GABRIELLE HOSEIN
CARNIVAL cannot pass without calypso and soca flinging up issues of gender and sexuality.
Patrice Robert’s tribute to Penguin comes at a highly contested moment in the negotiation of contemporary manhood, in a region transformed by Caribbean feminist struggle for social justice and a male backlash which retributively accuses women of becoming too powerful.
Yet, feminist transformation also made it possible to speak positively about men’s emotions and allowing boys to cry, men’s emotional fragility under the rigid mask of manhood, and men as human beings who embody qualities of gentleness as well as strength. In this context, there are complex, contradictory and even problematic meanings in engaging Penguin’s Soft Man today.
Much has been written about this 1984 Calypso Monarch winner which documents the threatened status of the erect penis or phallus, or stickman’s bois, as the ultimate representation of manhood and its dominance over women.
Such dominance included a division of household roles into masculine and feminine, such that a soft man was also undesirable because of his failure to live up to an ideal of tough masculinity, instead becoming associated with the emotional and domestic responsibilities expected of women.
In calypso, the threat to the phallus and its sexual potency was frequently portrayed in terms of an emasculating female demand, power and sexuality. Indeed, softness was a kind of death or castration, leaving men aberrant and unwanted. This became particularly risky in a changing world where women were becoming more educationally and occupationally dominant, sexually assertive, difficult to subordinate and unwilling to settle.
read more..
<3
https://newsday.co.tt/2023/02/01/return ... -soft-man/
What so hard about Rincon?My wife does breeze through that like is nobody businessmatr1x wrote:All woman feminist until they gone on a Ricon falls hike. Ria ramsamooch, is you we referring to
timelapse wrote:What so hard about Rincon?My wife does breeze through that like is nobody businessmatr1x wrote:All woman feminist until they gone on a Ricon falls hike. Ria ramsamooch, is you we referring to
Teenage girls go there to swim all the time.timelapse wrote:What so hard about Rincon?My wife does breeze through that like is nobody businessmatr1x wrote:All woman feminist until they gone on a Ricon falls hike. Ria ramsamooch, is you we referring to
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