Tuesday, May 01, 2007




Anj had this up on her blog today and I just sat and cried.

8 comments:

Sandra said...

To embedd this on your page, copy and paste the portion to the right that says "embed".
I'm going to go watch it again before I commnet.

aola said...

Thanks, Sandy for helping me.

Kristen said...

Woah.

R said...

fits my mood today. just finished reading bastard out of carolina by dorothy allison, and finding myself angry, very angry.

so help me if anyone ever physically hurts my child. . .

aola said...

Becky - I'm with you - shame on 'em.

anj said...

Oh Becky - I read that book for my book club a few years ago. It was hard to get through, and it was worth getting angry about. Aola - thanks for posting this, I know Jennifer the woman who made it would appreciate it too.

Anonymous said...

When I was in "Fort God" one of my biggest issues of fitting in was that I was not a 'meek and quiet' woman.

I was a woman who was raised by a single mother, and even though I didn't realize what I was; I was and AM, a feminist to the core. (They called them Feminazis)

I worked and paid my bills.
I made my own decisions.
I didn't have a 'daddy' or 'big brother' to tell me what to do.
I fixed my car when I had to.
I killed bugs.

I also harbored a core belief that my work should be just as valuable and pay just as much as any man.
I was the first woman to take "Bible Greek" in the 'Big 3' schools. For this I was mocked, ostracised (even though I had dean approval!) and nobody would study with me. I was not allowed to give the same oral presentations in that class as the men because of the bible verse that prohibits women from teaching men. I got a B+ (because of the lack of oral presentations).

I feel for truly spiritual women who just want to contribute and do their part, whatever their beliefs are. It pains me to watch the ones that I know and love deal with those issues of less pay for equal or more work and less authority but complete responsibility.

E. Michelle said...

amazing.
erica