a very unpopular opinion i have is that "hysteria" is actually a very real thing and a largely female problem that we're losing the ability to deal with as a society, much to our detriment
there is this particular behavior/thought pattern i have noticed in myself and other women, particularly women with bpd but most of us seem to do this to some extent or other (perhaps hence the observation "all women are a little bit borderline"), where, when we get too emotionally aroused, we tend to enter this state of just lashing out at convenient targets, whether that's a friend, a colleague, a drunk at a bar, a subordinate, or, most of the time, a husband. from what i've seen we seem to latch onto men preferentially as targets. we'll yell, scream, cry, make outrageous and inane accusations that we 100% fully believe in the moment, and in general make a scene until one of several things happens.
there are a couple ways of responding to a hysterical episode. the first is to try and calm her down with Facts And Logic, or argue/fight back (there is no difference between these approaches in outcome); this always results in continuous escalation until the victim backs down, violence erupts, or the woman runs out of steam. too many men try this and it's really stupid for a couple reasons. obviously, you can't reason with someone who's being driven by their inner chimp and is running on pure emotion; i think men don't realize how easily we wind up in this state because usually they can keep their cool for longer. less obviously, it legitimizes the attack, it tells the attacker she's hit a nerve, and that just incentivizes her to keep on going, particularly if you're her husband (or really, any man at all) because you've just displayed submissive or conciliatory behavior, which women universally *hate* like little else (with the possible exception of some lesbians, i think). if you've seen feminists rage about "nice guys" you know how this goes. you have failed to take charge of the situation, you are letting her push you around, you are a failure as a man and your effete, undersexed omega-male existence is an insult to all womankind.
the worst possible response is to try and placate her outright. arguing is a failure to take charge of the situation, but placation is outright submission. it will either unleash a dramatic escalation of white-hot rage, probably involving dredging up or inventing outright past slights (or twisting events so she has something to blame you for -- i want to emphasize this is a subconscious process for most of us, not an active attempt at abuse, we genuinely feel victimized and believe what our brains are telling us. people with bpd especially alternate between idealizing and devaluing people, and often cannot even access memories that contradict our current state), or she'll seem to calm down for the moment after lecturing you a bit and issuing demands, but her behavior will get more pushy, more bitchy, more controlling, and the frequency of hysteric episodes will increase until you dump her or she dumps you. because you've demonstrated you're unwilling to defend yourself even with words, and that you can be cajoled into doing whatever she wants with a bit of screaming and yelling. there is nothing on this earth that will make a women disrespect a man more.
the only good response, the only response that will prevent your relationship from deterioriating, that will cause her to respect you and like you and look up to you as a reliable partner/friend/boss/whatever, is to take charge of the situation. demonstrate clearly that you are unaffected by what she says, maintain outward calm, don't show strong emotion (even if you feel it), don't engage with her words (not even, and i cannot emphasize this strongly enough, not even if you think she has a legitimate point or even if she's completely in the right and you just realized you're the biggest asshole on earth) or do anything that might indicate to her that she's getting to you, physically restrain her until she calms down if you have to. be a little bit mean, but show care and affection as well. that's the only chance of getting her to calm down safely.

if she said things that genuinely merit further discussion, or if you think you need to get down on both knees and beg for her forgiveness, do that *after* she's back in the driver seat and not jacked up on adrenaline. it's vastly better to have a serious conversation about relationships and try to resolve conflict when the brain's flooded with black tar endorphins and weepy post-fight oxytocin rather than racemic rage and freebase spite -- trying the latter is all but guaranteed to wreck your shit.
(well, that's not entirely true, there's another option: walk away. only do this if you 100% sincerely do not give a shit what happens to her because if you leave her alone with all that anger boiling her blood there's a good chance that emotion gets turned inwards and she'll end up doing something stupid and self-destructive, if not outright suicidal. and if she's outright borderline, expect suicidality. these situations always feel unfair, and they are, to both parties -- believe me, it's not FUN having your brain screaming at you that the person you would do anything for secretly hates you and was always going to betray you from the start "AND THIS IS JUST MORE PROOF YOU KNEW IT ALL ALONG WHY DID YOU LET IT GET THIS FAR" -- and it's understandable to feel angry in the moment, to feel like "she can deal with her mess on her own for all i care and if that hurts her, well, maybe she'll understand how *I* feel", but seriously do not ever do this unless the possibility of your girl winding up dead doesn't even make you flinch.)
call it hysteria, call it a transient psychotic reaction, call it whatever you want, but this is a real phenomenon that affects i think probably most women, especially young women, *especially* hormonal young women. part of being a functional human culture is training your young men to deal with this problem, so they know how to handle it when it arises, because most men (at least, men who interact with women…) are going to confront this at least once, probably many more times. take away that training, and relationships start falling apart, gender relations get strained to all hell, women get blinded and controlled by our psychotic impulses and delusions, and end up doing things like, oh, falsely accusing men of rape for no discernible reason.

and unfortunately, as part of the ongoing program of feminist cultural engineering and enforced Gender Equality®, western cultures have largely deemed it Officially Misogynist to admit the existence of hysteria, much less teach men how to handle it.

@velartrill I'm pretty sure you are massively overgeneralizing. Neither is this kind of mental state as common as you describe, nor as drastic, nor exclusive to women (although I guess you might not be saying the last part?). And the effects of reactions you describe are definitely not as clear cut – different people react massively differently in emotional situations and generalizing to "always attempt to take charge when a woman is emotional" is a recipe for disaster.

In general I think you are overstating the importance of gender in many areas. Do you really think it's that crucial, or is it just an attempt to (over)correct for the liberal/parts of feminism insistence that gender is completely irrelevant?

@timorl i never said it was exclusive to women (tho if it happens to (cisgender) men, it must be very rare, because i've never once heard of a case), and if you haven't seen it for yourself, consider yourself very lucky. i hope your luck continues.

but while hysteria may not happen to all of us all of the time, it definitely happens to most of us some of the time. i've experienced this first- and secondhand and heard from enough men about their experiences from so many different corners of society that i have no doubt of this whatsoever.

> I'm pretty sure you are massively overgeneralizing

i'm pretty sure you are. i am not the outlier here.

> generalizing to "always attempt to take charge when a woman is emotional" is a recipe for disaster.

this is bluepill nonsense. it's the one thing that works in the vast majority of situations, and doing anything else will make matters worse. (i'll note that the first response i got to this thread, while i was still in the middle of writing it, from was a man who experienced exactly this phenomenon, was baffled and traumatized by it, and was grateful to me for helping him understand what was going on. it really is that common.)

> In general I think you are overstating the importance of gender in many areas. Do you really think it's that crucial, or is it just an attempt to (over)correct for the liberal/parts of feminism insistence that gender is completely irrelevant?

men and women are radically different creatures, as literally every culture before ours had no problem acknowledging (it's even in sociologist Donald Brown's famous list of "human universals"). we share a common humanity but the details are very different, and why wouldn't they be -- virtually every other mammal is like us in that respect. the stark divergence between male and female gender psychology clearly long predates the human race; it would be far more surprising if we had someone contrived to evolve such as to magically eliminate the majority of those differences.

frankly, it's monumentally arrogant to believe that our civilization, and only our civilization understands the truth about the sexes, and that every other civilization that came, conquered, and flourished before us (and most that are contemporary to us) was completely ignorant and foundationally wrong about everything. we've had millions of years to work out the kinks in our gender relations, and there's a very good reason every human culture we have been able to reconstruct or study in vivo was patriarchal, despite what a fantastically diverse species we are. there is also a very good reason that our culture's refusal to adhere to these common norms has been so disastrous for everyone, while the cultures that followed their traditional gender norms built empires that lasted centuries or longer. (hell, our cultures were doing pretty well for themselves before they went and bulldozed Chesterton's Fence). and it astounds me that simply saying the things that have been common knowledge for as at least long as we have had language to express them with now incur disbelief and anger when we do so. (c.f. https://pleroma.site/notice/9x7V50W1y2PU9RQRWK )

i'm not interested in getting sucked into yet another redpill/bluepill debate; i've made my position clear and i've heard every feminist argument so many times i could recite them by rote in my sleep, because five years ago i was the one brandishing those arguments. i have seen fully convincing refutations for all of them, which is why i abandoned my former beliefs, and there is no more of a chance i'll ever go back to them than there's a chance i'll go back to being the idiot anarchist hellion i was in high school.

@velartrill
> if you haven't seen it for yourself, consider yourself very lucky

I have, both from women and men, but extremely rarely. I can think of maybe up to 10 instances over my life, depending on what exactly you consider an instance.

> i am not the outlier here

Well, IIRC you do have a mental ilness, so I wouldn't expect your experience to be typical. On the other hand I don't know the details, so I'm not sure how relevant this is.

Perhaps more to the point this might be culture dependent – I'm not american and I expect there might be some cultural differences in emotioinal expression. We might have also lived in somewhat different subcultures within our cultures, which could explain the difference in our experience?

> it's the one thing that works in the vast majority of situations, and doing anything else will make matters worse.

My experience is completely different. In such situations I attempt to empathize with the other persons emotions, listen to what they are saying and respond. So far this has served me well, and my relationships with the people involved seem fine. I am pretty sure that in at least one of the cases attempting to "take charge" would have made matters much worse.

This advice is dangerous not only because situations and the people going through such episodes vary, but also the responders. Maybe some people are better at taking charge, but others have different conflict resolution strategies. I suspect it's more important that the person executing such strategy does it well, rather than tries using a specific one.

Yes, men and women are different, contrary to what liberalism would like to believe (and I actually too, but well, not believing in reality seldom helps). But the difference is not *that* big – humans have some significant cognitive differences from other mammals, which I would argue diminish the relative importance of gender differences. The variance in character traits is big enough that any sweeping generalizations over all, or even just most, people of one gender must fail. You still get strong statistical evidence for any specific gender related trait, but there is enough of these that a majority of people will have some of them atypical for their gender.

I'm not convinced that our civilisation is failing (maybe the US is, but that's not the whole civilisation), so this argument doesn't convince me at all. Some parts of Chesterton's Fence have definitely been buldozed with too much zeal, but from my point of view the net effect was still positive.

Besides, our civilisation went through many changes unrelated to gender roles in a very short period of time. Focusing on just these changes oversimplifies the whole thing.

I understand you won't go back to being a feminist – I suspect that even if we agreed about all the facts, there would still be enough value differences between us that we would disagree about overall goals. I'm just trying to point out that I think you have overcorrected from the feminist beliefs into something that is again not accurate – I hope you stay open to the possibility that this is the case. My thesis is that gender-related forces are not the main thing driving human behaviour – they are massively more important than your previous ideology stated (which might make them appear larger), but they are only one of many factors influencing people.

Sorry for the shitty psychoanaysis in the last paragraph, but I think it was necessary. If it's any consolation, writing it down made me wonder if I'm not overcorrecting for some of the ideologies I have held previously (not related to gender at all), but this requires more introspection to fully explore.

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