Tag Archives: nablopomo

Gaslighting

Person A: I am saying something offensive.

Person B: I take offense.

Person A: Stop freaking out! Don’t you have a sense of humor?

Ouch.

Earlier this week a friend shared Yashar Ali’s A Message to Women from a Man: You Are Not “Crazy.” Ali explains that mental health professionals define gaslighting as “manipulative behavior used to confuse people into thinking their reactions are so far off base that they’re crazy.”

No wonder some women are unconsciously passive aggressive when expressing anger, sadness, or frustration. For years, they have been subjected to so much gaslighting that they can no longer express themselves in a way that feels authentic to them.

They say, “I’m sorry,” before giving their opinion. In an email or text message, they place a smiley face next to a serious question or concern, thereby reducing the impact of having to express their true feelings.

You know how it looks: “You’re late :)”

These are the same women who stay in relationships they don’t belong in, who don’t follow their dreams, who withdraw from the kind of life they want to live.

I do know how that looks. Do you? Does having a name for this phenomenon help?

It helped me set resolutions for the coming week: I will not use a single emoticon. I will not apologize before I express an opinion. I will call out gaslighting when (unfortunately, not if) I see it.

Photo: Lamp in stairwell, St. Istvan’s Cathedral, Budapest (August 2007).

November blog post count: 3.

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Stick Fly

When it comes to family…you’re STUCK.

That’s the tagline of the new play Stick Fly, which premieres on Broadway in a few weeks. On Wednesday, my friends and I went to The Greene Space to see Terrance McKnight interview playwright Lydia Diamond, director Kenny Leon, and the cast. You can see a video of the event here. (You won’t be breathing the same air as Dule Hill and Tracie Thoms—what was that I said earlier about this being National BRAG Posting Month?—but you can do that if you buy tickets to the show!)

As Colorlines and the New York Times noted, this season marks the first time Broadway will simultaneously mount three shows by black women playwrights (and five Broadway plays total this fall will be penned by women, according to Women and Hollywood). Hearing Lydia Diamond speak about how it feels to revise her work and to see the revisions come alive in the hands of actors “at the top of their game” was a highlight of the evening – and the actors and director gushed about the material in return. They couldn’t give away plot secrets, which meant they used words like “universal” and “complicated” and “funny” over and over. But somehow no one seemed to mind – we all just left wanting to hustle and buy our tickets.

So who else is going? Let’s debrief after.

art direction


Photo: some of the family I’m “stuck” with (July 2011).

November post count: 2.

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