‘For people who don’t respect the social contract (rapists, predators, assholes, pickup artists) ‘no’ is something we have to earn’ – Jennifer Peepas

Women are socialized to make men feel good. We’re socialized to “let you down easy.” We’re not socialized to say a clear and direct “no.” We’re socialized to speak in hints and boost egos and let people save face.

People who don’t respect the social contract (rapists, predators, assholes, pickup artists) are good at taking advantage of this. “No” is something we have to learn. “No” is something we have to earn.

In fact, I’d argue that the ability to just say “no” to something, without further comment, apology, explanation, guilt, or thinking about it is one of the great rites of passage in growing up, and when you start saying it and saying it regularly the world often pushes back. And calls you names.

Jennifer Peepas (Captain Awkward), excerpted from The art of “no”

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Adapted to identify the underlying pattern, one of status/power:

People are who lower status are socialized to make people who have higher status feel good. They’re socialized to ‘let them down easy’. Lower status people are not socialized to say a clear and direct “no”. They’re socialized to speak in hints and boost egos and let people save face.

People who don’t respect social contracts (rapists, predators, assholes, boundary pushers) are good at taking advantage of this. “No” is something people with lower status have to learn. “No” is something they have to earn.

The ability to just say “no” to something, without further comment, apology, explanation, guilt, or thinking about it is one of the assertions of power/status. When you start saying it and saying it regularly, the world often pushes back if they don’t believe you have that status or power, or if they don’t believe you should have that status or power.

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Invah Note: I wanted to preserve Jennifer Peepas’ fantastic comment, while also analyzing it for the underlying pattern. Because it is important to recognize that low or lower status men or non-binary individuals will also be dealing with this dynamic. When you frame it in context of gender, it misses the essential pattern, alienates people who are also victims of it, as well as doesn’t appropriately contextualize why women are often the focus of this behavior. If someone is vulnerable because they aren’t as physically strong, because they don’t have as much social power or clout, or because they don’t have allies, then they will be the recipient of this kind of behavior or response to asserting their power instead of opting for appeasement behaviors.

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