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Thunder Thighs

I wore a pair of shorts out in public today that I normally reserve exclusively for around the house.  They are old.  They fit.  But they don’t cover much of my thighs.  They are short shorts.  I’m not prancing around at risk of my labia falling out. I’m not that brave.   However, a month away from 40, both etiquette and culture would tell me these shorts are too short.

Let me tell you about these shorts:  They were my brother’s back in the 80s.  I am sure he was like 8 or 10 when he wore them.  They have DEEEEEEEEEP pockets that girl shorts would NEVER give you.  All though they are short, they are not hugging.  They somehow fit better than any short I have ever owned in my entire life.  They are made well. They are Burgundy.  And I love them.  But until today I would never have allowed myself to be seen in them.

I’m working on this confidence thing.  And failing. Hard.  But the more I think about it and the more I fail I recognize a complacency that is overtaking much of the vanity part of my brain.  I know that some of the complacency is really bad for me, but I have to admit there are parts of it that are really healthy, too.  And while I struggle to find my lost confidence, this complacency is allowing me to let go some of the areas that I have never been comfortable with about my body, or perhaps rules about myself deeply ingrained based on cultural expectation.  Like how I never used to leave the house without make-up.  I can count on one hand in the last 18 months the number of times I’ve put on makeup and I firmly believe my skin and my mental health are better for it.  I am seeing a potential bridge from the “give no fucks” to a new confidence I hope to achieve.  Which I think will require deliberate steps on my part.  To embrace The Who Cares mentality and dive into some serious culture defying behavior.

So today, I wore short shorts in public for all the world to see me in all my cottage cheese, chub rub, thunder thigh thick glory.  Check me out!

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And I was ok.  Actually I pulled on them once, not out of physical discomfort but out of mental discomfort.  Omigosh!  They’re riding up!  But I stopped myself.  No one was looking.  No one cared.  Who am I to any of these people?  No one.

The thunder thighs thing was one of those hateful teenage taunts that left residual awareness.  I don’t walk around hating my legs.  I appreciate them.  They are strong.  I was a dancer.  Then I was a runner.  Now they just continue to hold me up and get me to and from and that is worthy of love and acceptance enough.  But I was always very matter of fact about how I don’t have nice legs.  I don’t think it ever bothered me that I didn’t have nice legs.  I just was very accepting of the standards of nice legs and how mine didn’t fit.  Ok.

I had an old boyfriend try and tell me he was really a leg guy and thought I had nice legs.  That was 20 years ago, and even with my young legs I never allowed his perception to be my reality.  Perhaps it was real.  perhaps what he liked about my legs didn’t necessarily follow cultural slim tradition.  All I knew, was he was wrong. Didn’t he know?  These legs were not nice legs.  And even now, I have a gay best friend that always compliments outfit choices because “I have the legs for it.”  I call bullshit every time.  Gay besties aren’t suppose to lie to you.

But things started to change for me and my legs a couple summers ago.  Miss Eaves put out a music video called Thunder Thighs.  It made such an impression on me.  Normal women of all sizes, ages, dressed in all things, bouncing and dancing and walking in slow motion with their “jelly” wobbling all over.  An anthem for real women everywhere.  It allowed me to let go of the bathing suit issues and relax at a water park so I could just enjoy myself and not waste my energy comparing myself to the people around me.  I would sing this song in my head and it helped me a lot.

As some of you know, I have been binge watching Ally McBeal.  Another anthem for women and body positivity.  In this series the characters have theme songs to give themselves a boost.  Pump themselves up.  Before a date, before a trial.  Doesn’t matter.  In the summer I walk around with Thunder Thighs in my head.  I invite you to embrace it’s glory.  You can watch Thunder Thighs on Youtube here.

So one of my goals this summer is embrace my chub rub.  I don’t need to hide these things because society thinks I should.  Normally I would skip shorts most of the time and continue to wear jeans.  I don’t have a lot of shorts.  I struggle to find functional shorts I like that fit well. So I just stay hot.  Or steal my husband’s basket ball shorts that do nothing but make me look like a slob.  And in my brain, looking like an average woman in a decent pair of well made short shorts that fit well is way better than looking like a slob. So, I’m gonna wear these shorts around town.  With my cell phone deep in the front pocket because I can.

Feminist!: The greatest insult to hit woman-kind

Feminism has been on my mind a lot lately.  Sadly, the focus has not been on the movement, but the concept and it’s perception.   Many current topics should be flooding our day-to-day conversations.  Human trafficking.  Equal pay for women.  The public criminalization of female assault victims, and the victimization of their attackers.  The de-humanizing legislation regarding women’s bodies and reproductive decisions.  The objectification of the female form, and the media and fashion industries’ dictate over self-worth.  Worse, yet, our own perpetuation of such ugliness in a society where People out sells Time Magazine by nearly half a million copies a year.

The debate regarding equality for women is being overshadowed by the idea that being a feminist is a bad thing.

The majority of the population is quicker to disassociate themselves with feminism than the inequality that spurred the movement in the first place.  This is alarming to me.  I think it should be evident and concerning to more people.

Katy Perry, sadly a role model for young girls with great influence and media attention, was quoted denouncing feminism, but that she liked strong women.   Excuse me?   These two things being separate in the eyes of the people is mind-blowing to me.  Because they are not separate.  Who ever thinks that strong women would have a voice in this country without feminism have missed the point.

Those strong women created feminism.

The misogynistic patriarchal mindset feminism fights against created this disdain and misrepresentation of Feminism.

Feminism is radical.

Feminism is angry.

Feminism is hateful.

 

Feminism is an evil word women are shamed to be associated with.   Being branded a feminist is a bad word, like whore. . . .   Nazi. . . .  Socialist  *gasp*.  The best way to combat an enemy is through negative propaganda and controlling public opinion.   And it worked.   Because here we are decades, centuries, into the fight of women’s equality, and we are loosing troops because they are afraid to stand up for what’s right because it’s not popular and they don’t want to be called a bad person.

Wait.  Am I coming across as too radical?   I must be one of the crazy feminists!  Man hater!  Lesbian!  (Seriously, could we be more hateful?)

 

I am not the only one thinking about the connotation of the term feminist.  Joss Whedon has declared a name change is necessary.  Utilizing the term Genderist.   Worth a listen, you can watch it here.  I love Whedon.  A man who writes strong female roles, supports the ideals of equality, tries to use his celebrity for awareness and good, and makes movies that fit into my favorite genre, Hot Men Blowing Things Up.  What’s not to love?   But it’s really not a name change that is required.  But a perspective change.

I am not a man hater.  I am not a lesbian.  I am not radical.   I am not “loose.”   I am not angry.     I am a feminist.   I wear a bra.  I shave my legs.  I wear make-up.  I wear both skirts and pants.  Because I can and it is my choice to do so.

I strongly believe I represent the largest portion of women.  Most women who want the choice to be feminine while remaining equal.   Women who understand that the two are not mutually exclusive.  Women who embrace their independence and want to rise to equality to stand at the spot men have dominated for millenia, not to conquer it.  To share it.

This fight is not “us vs. them.”   It is not men against women.  It’s not some radical faction of crazy females trying to take over the world.  Though, arguably there might be some good things to come of that…    The concept is that TOGETHER, as EQUALS, we can make the world better for not only women, but for everyone.

 

Feminism is not just women for women.  Some of the most important people in the feminist movement are men.  Yes, it is about our daughters, and sisters, and mothers, and wives, and girlfriends.  But it is also about our future.  What future do we want for ourselves and for our children?  What opportunities?  What kind of love and acceptance?

 

 

What’s the label for anyway?  Be a person.  Be a good person.  Want for yourself and for the next “guy” fair and equal treatment, regardless of gender, race, age, sexual orientation, etc.   And don’t make the person standing up for those rights out to be the bad guy.  That’s just sad.  And not being a good person.

 

 

 

 

“When something needs to be done in the world to rectify the wrongs, if one is really concerned with benefitting others, one needs to be engaged, involved. ”  – Dalai lama