As a writer on relationships, sex, and feminism, I often get e-mails from readers along the lines of βIβm a feminist, but my partner isnβt β can the relationship still work?β or βIs my partner sexist?β or βHow can I make my partner a feminist?β
First of all, to all those people: I hear you. Iβve been in this situation myself.
My first serious partner was definitely not a feminist. If I tried to talk about sexism, heβd come back with a comment about how men have it hard, too. While this is true, these comments derail conversations about major problems by making them about other, smaller ones.
It was like being in the ER for a sixth-degree burn and hearing, βYeah, I get that, but we need to acknowledge that I burned my hand on a stove once.β
I constantly felt invalidated.
He was also anti-choice and once said that βpro-choice girls shouldnβt have sexβ (though apparently, if his own behavior was any indication, having sex with a pro-choice girl was A-okay in his book).
My next boyfriend wasnβt much better on the feminism front. When I first referred to myself as a feminist in his presence, he said he was cool with it β under the condition that white men donβt owe women or people of color special treatment for βpast wrongsβ because βall we have is now.β
Yeah, he was also one of those people who βdidnβt see color.β
What did I put up with these people? Well, for one thing, I didnβt realize at the time how important feminism was to me.
Thatβs the problem with forming morals and values: It gets really hard to date people who donβt share them.
Oh, and there was one other glaring factor: the fact that I loved them. When you love someone, being with them and putting up with sexism seems worse than not being with them at all.
But the thing is, it wasnβt.
With my anti-choice boyfriend, I worried about what would happen if I got pregnant. I would feel pressure to keep the baby, and if I didnβt, he would feel as if Iβd wronged him.
And with both of these people, I felt the need to censor myself. I knew that if I complained about sexism, theyβd accuse me of being biased or overly sensitive, and Iβd end up questioning the validity of my own experiences. So I saved those conversations for my friends.
But as feminism became more and more important to me, hiding it felt more and more like hiding myself.
I also noticed gender stereotypes creep into those relationships. Once, my ex boyfriend told me that he felt I took a more emotional approach to our relationship, while he took a more logical one. He said that βfeminine energyβ was based on going with the flow, while masculine energy was based on structure and planning.
Looking back, this wasnβt true at all. In fact, one big source of conflict for us was that I was always planning and organizing and he always wanted to be spontaneous.
Why am I telling you all of this?
My point is, if youβre wondering if a relationship between a feminist and a sexist can work, my short answer is βno.β Chances are, youβll be either arguing all the time or repressing your thoughts so you donβt argue.
But I think you already knew that.
The problem is, the logical conclusion of that statement is that you should break up with your sexist partner. And when youβre in love and attached to someone, youβll do anything to avoid a breakup, including convincing yourself that their sexism doesnβt bother you or that it can change.
Then so be it. Donβt break up with somebody because I told you to. In my experience, if you break up with someone just because someone else thinks you should, youβll end up pining over them or back with them anyway.
But do know that if the possibility of a breakup has been on your mind, this is a valid reason. Itβs hard to make a relationship work if your strongest morals conflict. If you donβt share your core values, one of you is eventually going to get fed up. Itβs just a question of who will first.
But, you may be thinking, are there any exceptions? (I know youβre probably thinking that, because we all want to be the exception.)
There is one situation where a feminist might be able to date someone whoβs not a feminist: when the latter person just doesnβt quite get what feminism is or why itβs necessary, but still holds feminist values.
Maybe, for example, theyβd be really angry about sexism in the workplace if they realized how often women are harassed, belittled, and excluded at work. But since they havenβt experienced it themselves, they assume women who are angry about it must be overreacting.
Maybe they just need a little push to see how bad things are and why feminism is in fact a movement to make things less bad for women and gender minorities, not to make things worse for men.
But I can tell you from experience that if they’re not actively trying to learn more about the issue, these conversations are really freaking exhausting.
Plus, it’s not your place to try to change someone’s values, no matter how misguided they are. If you can discuss gender in a mutually respectful manner, great. There’s hope. But if you keep having the same conversation over and over again and nobody wants to budge, that’s just going to frustrate you both.
At the end of the day, you can’t be in a relationship with someone’s potential. If they’re not particularly interested in becoming a conscious feminist ally, you need to assess whether you want a relationship with them. As they are. Right this moment.
Think of it this way: If you end a relationship because you disagree about feminism, you’re actually doing the other person a favor. Just as you want someone who accepts your feminism, they probably want someone who accepts them as they are.
Again, if you’re already in this situation, I’m not saying you have to slam the door in your partnerβs face and walk out right this minute. If leaving is unfathomable, just keep it in the back of your mind and know the option’s there.
And know that if your partner tries to gaslight you about feminism or complain when you bring up sexism, you are not the problem, no matter what they say.
If you’re single, on the other hand, you may be in a better position to take my advice. You have the chance to avoid getting into a relationship like this in the first place.
You might even want to consider instituting a feminist-only dating policy. That way, you’ll get out of relationships with anti-feminists before you get attached and breaking up becomes easier said than done.
I know it’s shitty not to be able to make things work with someone you would’ve gotten along with just fine before your feminist awakening.
But whether you’re a feminist or not, that’s part of growing up.
When you first start dating, you often just want someone who is cute and nice and likes you.
As you become more sure of who you are and what you believe, the pool of people youβre compatible with shrinks. And thatβs nothing to be ashamed of.
You deserve someone who embraces every part of you, feminism and all.
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Suzannah Weiss is a Contributing Writer for Everyday Feminism and a New York-based writer whose work has appeared in The Washington Post, Salon, Seventeen, Buzzfeed, The Huffington Post, Bustle, and more. She holds degrees in Gender and Sexuality Studies, Modern Culture and Media, and Cognitive Neuroscience from Brown University. You can follow her on Twitter @suzannahweiss.
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