A thought experiment: Imagine how people might react if Taylor Swift released an album made up entirely of songs about wishing she could get back together with one of her exes. Weβd hear things like: βShe canβt let go. Sheβs clingy. Sheβs irrational. Sheβs crazy.β Men would have a field day comparing her to their own βcrazyβ exes. Yet when Robin Thicke released βPaulaβ β a plea for reconciliation with his ex-wife Paula Patton disguised as an LP β he was called incoherent, obsessed, heartfelt and, in particular, creepy. But you didnβt hear men calling him βcrazyβ β even though he used it as the title of one of tracks. No, βcrazyβ is typically held in reserve for womenβs behavior. Men might be obsessed, driven, confused or upset. But we donβt get called βcrazyβ β at least not the way men reflexively label women as such. βCrazyβ is one of the five deadly words guys use to shame women into compliance. The others: Fat. Ugly. Slutty. Bitchy. They sum up the supposedly worst things a woman can be. WHAT WE REALLY MEAN BY βCRAZYβ IS: βSHE WAS UPSET, AND I DIDNβT WANT HER TO BE.β βCrazyβ is such a convenient word for men, perpetuating our sense of superiority. Men are logical; women are emotional. Emotion is the antithesis of logic. When women are too emotional, we say they are being irrational. Crazy. Wrong. Women hear it all the time from men. βYouβre overreacting,β we tell them. βDonβt worry about it so much, youβre over-thinking it.β βDonβt be so sensitive.β βDonβt be crazy.β Itβs a form of gaslighting β telling women that their feelings are just wrong, that they donβt have the right to feel the way that they do. Minimizing somebody elseβs feelings is a way of controlling them. If they no longer trust their own feelings and instincts, they come to rely on someone else to tell them how theyβre supposed to feel. Small wonder that abusers love to use this c-word. Itβs a way of delegitimizing a womanβs authority over her own life. Most men (#notallmen, #irony) arenβt abusers, but far too many of us reflexively call women crazy without thinking about it. We talk about how βcrazy girl sexβ is the best sex while we also warn men βdonβt stick it in the crazy.β How I Met Your Mother warned us to watch out for βthe crazy eyesβ and how to process women on the βCrazy/Hotβ scale. When we talk about why we broke up with our exes, we say, βShe got crazy,β and our guy friends nod sagely, as if that explains everything. Except what weβre really saying is: βShe was upset, and I didnβt want her to be.β Many men are socialized to be disconnected from our emotions β the only manly feelings weβre supposed to show are stoic silence or anger. Weβre taught that to be emotional is to be feminine. As a result, we barely have a handle on our own emotions β meaning that weβre especially ill-equipped at dealing with someone elseβs. Thatβs where βcrazyβ comes in. Itβs the all-purpose argument ender. Your girlfriend is upset that you didnβt call when you were going to be late? Sheβs being irrational. She wants you to spend time with her instead of out with the guys again? Sheβs being clingy. Your wife doesnβt like the long hours youβre spending with your attractive co-worker? Sheβs being oversensitive. As soon as the βcrazyβ card is in play, women are put on the defensive. It derails the discussion from what sheβs saying to how sheβs saying it. We insist that someone canβt be emotional and rational at the same time, so she has to prove that sheβs not being irrational. Anything she says to the contrary can just be used as evidence against her. More often than not, I suspect, most men donβt realize what weβre saying when we call a woman crazy. Not only does it stigmatize people who have legitimate mental health issues, but it tells women that they donβt understand their own emotions, that their very real concerns and issues are secondary to menβs comfort. And it absolves men from having to take responsibility for how we make others feel. In the professional world, weβve had debates over labels like βbossyβ and βbrusque,β so often used to describe women, not men. In our interpersonal relationships and conversations, βcrazyβ is the adjective that needs to go.
Men really need to stop calling women crazy by Harris OβMalley (via zubat)
















