OPINION

A Woman Among Men

June 15, 2008
IdeaSmith

I went out this weekend with friends, in an age group ranging from 22 to 30. It was an evening well spent in the company of people who could be variously described as intelligent, witty, cute, silly and fun. And I was one of the only two women in the bunch.

Was I then 'one of the boys'? No, I don't think I'll ever be able to go back to that. Relationships, romance, love, flirtation and sex just make you view the opposite sex in a way that never quite leaves you.

Was I then flirting and being flirted with? Well, not exactly. I believe that there's an underlying current of sex lacing every male/female conversation, irrespective of age, geography or relationship. It is after all an awareness of how the other person is different from you, in a complementary or an opposing manner (depending on a lot of other factors). But the conversation flowed easily around the table and across it jumping from movies to technology to other topics of common interest. It's been so long since I've done this that I didn't realize just how much fun it could be.

On a date or in a relationship, anytime where the situation is charged heavily by sexual electricity, I think it's difficult to really see all aspects of a person. The attraction and all the rituals that we perform to sustain it and build it, seems to leave very little room for other things. Even in groups of people, you can tell the atmosphere is nearly crackling sparks, if its members are expressing their sexuality overtly or otherwise.

All kinds of by-plays happen that overlap and occasionally conflict with each other. Emotions ride high in all directions and it's a potentially explosive situation. Not that I'm saying that it's a bad thing. I've enjoyed being a part of these for long enough and there's much to be said for the mating dance in terms of its sheer entertainment value.

However, a different situation stands out simply because it is so different. There's no heavy flirtation happening, no competition for attention, no charades. That's probably true of the first few encounters of any group of people - at work, at school and college and even in social settings. However, those first meetings are alternately charged with an acute curiosity about each other as well as a need to fit in or 'impress' the others.

This weekend party was one that had neither, which is probably why I found it relaxing even in a noisy, smoky environment. I thoroughly enjoyed being able to be myself, not having to impress anyone. And alternately it was good to not have to keep judging various contenders for my attention, juggling them and playing them against each. Does that surprise anyone? Yes, I do it just as much as the next woman - or man for that matter. The party was great for not having to do any of those things.

All I was, was myself. A blogger, a twenty-something professional, an amusing conversationalist, a woman in the company of men.

Another step in being comfortable with your own sexuality is realizing that you need not use it all the time.

I call myself a chronic thinker. A few centuries ago, I'd have been called a Thinker. Or burnt at stake for being a witch. My degree is my passport to the world of respectability. I moonlight as a troubled poet, a warrior princess and a closet sorceress. I am all of these and yet none of them is all of me. All I was born to be really, was a story-teller. Scheherazade, Galelio, Cleopatra and Salvador have passed through. This time round, just call me IdeaSmith.
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#1
Deepti Lamba
URL
June 15, 2008
12:47 PM

Good article Ideasmith, its one of those things that make you go hmmmm;)

#2
temporal
URL
June 15, 2008
03:39 PM

IS:

this is:

Filed under: Culture, Culture: City Life, Culture: Men, Culture: Relationships, Culture: Sex, Culture: Society, Culture: Women.

the point?

no humour or satire!

so?

a digression:

you write of "juggling and playing each other"...this raises the bar...not in this context...which obviously is neutral and idle pass time...but...in more serious context...juggling and playing?...get serious girl

;)

#3
Deepa Krishnan
URL
June 15, 2008
09:55 PM

Very nice, ideasmith. I was almost 20-something again when I read it.

#4
Ruvy
June 16, 2008
09:53 AM

Nice piece, Ideasmith.

Reminded me of when we "adjourned to the bar" on Friday afternoons after class in 1979-80. We were in the same age group you mention, a mix of men and women where sex was always an undercurrent, but where it never openly intruded on the good company. You learn rapidly to "approach the bar" even as a first year law student in Minnesota....

#5
commonsense
June 16, 2008
02:15 PM

Ruvy #4:

[Edited: Address the issue. Not the person. Refrain from baiting]

#6
commonsense
June 16, 2008
04:42 PM

The Bait not Taken

by

Reuven Frost

#7
IdeaSmith
URL
June 17, 2008
08:15 AM

@ Deepti Lamba: Thengyu!!

@ temporal: I am serious, deathly so. Want a lesson in juggling sometime? Muhahahahha...

@ Deepa Krishnan: That's a lovely compliment, thank you very much!

@ Ruvy: 'Approaching the bar' as a euphemism for "I'm here. Come get me!!" I guess? Yeah, we do that too though a tad differently.

#8
Ruvy
June 17, 2008
08:56 AM

'Approaching the bar' as a euphemism for "I'm here. Come get me!!"

Actually, IdeaSmith, "approaching the bar" was meant literally in both of its normal senses - bellying up for a drink, and approaching the judge for a courtroom conference. Alcohol and law students seemed to go together in Minnesota, and I had never been a drinker. So, I'd nurse one or two beers through several hours of drinking, buy the required round for the bunch of us, and drive home sober, usually taking one or two less sober companions to their homes or to the campus.

I was married, supposedly happily, (my ex was happy I was in law school and happy to be in the Midwest where she had gone to college; I was happy that if I graduated and passed the New York Bar, I could return the Big Apple and make a lot of moolah; I failed law school which was our sole reason for moving to Minnesota from New York; my ex was unhappy and so was I - the rest is history, as they say) and chasing young students in law school could've gotten me into a passel of trouble.

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