More Information about Women's Health Care Providers:
-Planned Parenthood Official Website
-Description of Services and Options
-Locate an Abortion Provider
-State by State Abortion Laws
Other Comics and Art Blogs:
Domestic Animal by Naomi Rubin
Left Over Soup by Tailsteak
Wicked Off Kiltah by Mike Jandreau
Glorianna by J Kevin Carrier
Puka Hunter by Chelsea Lange
Blind Thistle by Amanda Zito
Alone in a Crowd by Thomas D. Szewc
April 18, 2012
April 18, 2012 - I'm generally not a huge fan of the belief that men and women handle emotions differently, or that it's okay for one gender to display an emotion and not the other. No one seems to have much of a negative reaction to a woman getting sad, but a man expressing sadness is often viewed as pathetic. Likewise men seem to get much more leniency if they get angry or aggressive, while women must be crazy if they show the same emotion. In addition to expectations regarding expressing emotions differently men and women also have expectations regarding how to react to others expressing emotions. Women become stereotyped as being better at comforting people as they're "stereotypically" better at handling sadness. Men are supposedly better fighters because it's "socially more acceptable" for them to get aggressive in arguments or business dealings. I haven't done research determining if men and women experience emotions that differently, but I have a very hard time believing that men and women are that different emotionally. | ||
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