What Happens Next: A Gallimaufry: Lamenting The Friend Zone, Or: The “Nice Guy” Approach To Perpetrating Sexist Bullshit ›
Everyone’s heard of friendzoning – even if they don’t know the word, they sure as hell know the concept. It’s what happens time and again to unfortunate Nice Guys who, despite being nothing but sugar and spice to the girls they love, are nonetheless denied the sexual relationships they so obviously deserve and are instead treated like platonic equals – a terrible, unfair fate spawned by the dark side of feminism.
And if you thought even part of that statement was correct, Imma stop you right there.
To borrow the succinct, nail-head-hitting phraseology of one hexjackal*:
Friendzoning is bullshit because girls are not machines that you put Kindness Coins into until sex falls out.
Dear Hypothetical Interlocutor whose hackles just bristled with the unfairness of that statement; who thinks that girls can be in the Friend Zone, too, and that therefore this point is both invalid and reverse-sexist into the bargain. For your edification, I would like to submit the following definitions of the term Friend Zone as supplied by Urban Dictionary:
1. “The ‘friend zone’ is like the penalty box of dating, only you can never get out. Once a girl decides you’re her ‘friend’, it’s game over. You’ve become a complete non-sexual entity in her eyes, like her brother, or a lamp.” – Ryan Reynolds in Just Friends.
‘I’ve been locked in the friend zone with her since high school!’
2. A state of being where a male inadvertently becomes a ‘platonic friend’ of an attractive female who he was trying to intiate a romantic relationship. Females have been rumored to arrive in the Friend Zone, but reports are unsubstantiated.
Girl: “I love you (Insert the poor bastard’s name here,) but I dont want to ruin a great friendship by dating you.”
Guy: “Well why the fuck did I waste two months on you?”
and Wikipedia:
There are differing explanations about what causes the friend zone. One report suggests that some women don’t see their male friends as potential love interests because they fear that deepening their relationship might cause a loss of the romance and mystery or lead to rejection later…
Dating adviser Ali Binazir described the friend zone as Justfriendistan, and wrote that it’s a “territory only to be rivaled in inhospitability by the western Sahara, the Atacama desert, and Dante’s Ninth Circle of Hell.”
I therefore submit to you, Hypothetical Interlocutor, that the Friend Zone is not an equal opportunities habitat. It is where men go – or more accurately, where men perceive themselves to go – when women fail to reward their friendship with sex. Or, to quote the immortal wisdom of the internet:
Slut is how we vilify a woman for exercising her right to say yes.
Friendzone is how we vilify a woman for exercising her right to say no.
Here’s the thing, Hypothetical Interlocutor: if you truly are a self-professed Nice Guy (and I strongly suspect that you are), then you probably espouse the belief that women and men are equal. More than espouse – you believe! You know! Except that, somewhere along the line, you’ve got it into your head that if you’re romantically interested in a girl who sees you only as a friend, her failure to reciprocate your feelings is just that: a failing. That because you’re nice and treat her well, she therefore owes you at least one opportunity to present yourself as a viable sexual candidate, even if she’s already made it clear that this isn’t what she wants. That because she legitimately enjoys a friendship that you find painful (and which you’re under no obligation to continue), she is using you. That if a man wants more than friendship with a woman, then the friendship itself doesn’t even attain the status of a consolation prize, but is instead viewed as hell: a punishment to be endured because, so long as he thinks she owes him that golden opportunity, he is bound to persist in an association that hurts him – not because he cares about the friendship, but because he feels he’s invested too much kindness not to stick around for the (surely inevitable, albeit delayed) payoff.
And if she never sleeps with him? Then she’s a bitch.
I cannot state this clearly enough: if you really believe in equality, then you have to acknowledge the fact that women have a right to say no. That no matter how pure and true your feelings, your ladylove is under no obligation whatever to reciprocate them, because friendship is not a business transaction, and women are allowed to want male friends. Yes, it is difficult and sad and heartbreaking to love someone who doesn’t love you back, and doubly so when that person is a friend. Believe me; I speak from experience. This is not a fun thing to endure! But discounting the woman as a bitch, a user, a timewaster, a whore with no taste who only wants to sleep with arseholes instead of Nice Guys like you is not on. It is pure, unadulterated sexism: the attitude that friendship with a woman is only ever a stepping-stone to getting into her pants, such that if the pants-getting is off the table, then so too is the friendship.
Which, frankly, is bullshit. If you don’t care enough about someone to enjoy their company and respect their decisions when sex is off the table, then that person is right not to sleep with you, because enjoying someone’s company and respecting their decisions is pretty much how sex gets on the table to start with.
To quote the single best point in an otherwise deeply problematic Cracked piece:
What we learned as kids is that we males are each owed, and will eventually be awarded, a beautiful woman. We were told this by every movie, TV show, novel, comic book, video game and song we encountered…
In each case, the woman has no say in this — compatibility doesn’t matter, prior relationships don’t matter, nothing else factors in. If the hero accomplishes his goals, he is awarded his favorite female. Yes, there will be dialogue that maybe makes it sound like the woman is having doubts, and she will make noises like she is making the decision on her own. But we, as the audience, know that in the end the hero will “get the girl,” just as we know that at the end of the month we’re going to “get our paycheck.” Failure to award either is breaking a societal contract. The girl can say what she wants, but we all know that at the end, she will wind up with the hero, whether she knows it or not.
And now you see the problem. From birth we’re taught that we’re owed a beautiful girl. We all think of ourselves as the hero of our own story, and we all (whether we admit it or not) think we’re heroes for just getting through our day.
So it’s very frustrating, and I mean frustrating to the point of violence, when we don’t get what we’re owed. A contract has been broken. These women, by exercising their own choices, are denying it to us. It’s why every Nice Guy is shocked to find that buying gifts for a girl and doing her favors won’t win him sex. It’s why we go to “slut” and “whore” as our default insults — we’re not mad that women enjoy sex. We’re mad that women are distributing to other people the sex that they owed us.
In pop culture, girls who crush hopelessly on guys they can’t have are painted as just that – hopeless. Over and over again, we’re taught that girls who openly express sexual or romantic interest in guys who don’t want them are pitiable, stalkerish, desperate, crazy bitches. More often than not, they’re also portrayed as ugly – whether physically, emotionally or both – in order to further establish their undesirability as an objective fact. Both narratively and, as a consequence, in real life, men are given free reign to snub, abuse, mislead and talk down to such women: we’re raised to believe that female desire is unseemly, so that any consequent shaming is therefore deserved. There is no female-equivalent Friend Zone terminology because, in the language of our culture, a man’s romantic choices are considered sacrosanct and inviolable. If a girl has been told no, then she has only herself to blame for anything that happens next – but if a woman says no, then she must not really mean it. Or, if she does, she shouldn’t: the rejected man is a universally sympathetic figure, and everyone from moviegoers to platonic onlookers will scream at her to just give him a chance, as though her rejection must always be unfounded rather than based on the fact that he had a chance, and blew it. And even then, give him another one! The pathos of Single Nice Guys can only be eased by pity-sex with unwilling women that blossoms into romance!
Well, screw that. The Friend Zone is a fundamentally sexist construction based solely on the idea that women should be penalised for putting their own romantic happiness above that of an interested man. If a lady doesn’t want you, then either respect her decision and keep away to salve your heart, or respect her decision and stay because you still think she’s cool enough to be worth the effort of friendship. But if you don’t respect her decision, then you don’t respect her – and if you don’t respect her, then stay the fuck out of her life.
*Amendment, 11 April 2012: Originally, the first quote in this piece was attributed to Aeryn Walker. However, she has since informed me that the kindness/coins line originated with @hexjackal, and though I don’t have the exact reference for that first attribution, I’ve nonetheless changed it in the text.
I am not good at noticing when I’m happy, except in retrospect. My gift, or fatal flaw, is for nostalgia. I have sometimes been accused of demanding perfection, of rejecting heart’s desires as soon as I get close enough that the mysterious impressionistic gloss disperses into plain solid dots, but the truth is less simplistic than that. I know very well that perfection is made up of frayed, off-struck mundanities. I suppose you can say my real weakness is a kind of long-sightedness: usually it is only at a distance, and much too late, that I can see the pattern.
You threw me off guard. Never would’ve thought we’d get this close this fast. But I still feel like I have to walk around on my tippie-toes hoping that what I say isn’t annoying or obnoxious to you. You make me super self-conscious. And I don’t really know what you want. Am I just one of various girls you may get close with and then drift and not really care? I really would like to be best friends, not be in a relationship with you (at this point at least), but I’m getting way ahead of myself anyways. You just come off as a very flirty guy and I don’t know how to take what you’re giving me, all these compliments and everything. I’m just gonna assume you’re messing around with me, and if we get to continue being close, awesome. If not, okay.
I am the friend that laughs really hard at their own jokes.
(via izab3lle)
sometimes I think you're afraid to live, too: Often times I wonder what it would feel like to die, perish young in... ›
Often times I wonder what it would feel like to die, perish young in such a way to remind the ones around me that immortality is a myth and that no one really ever lives forever even if they were to be pressed into letters in the black and blues of memory colors. And I wonder who would miss me and who would not. I wonder who would remember me, and how they would remember me, or if it would be easier for everyone to simply forget my existence. I’d like to think that somewhere in between all the selfish things I did or the hurtful things I’ve said when I was angry there would be some sliver of a good memory for people to hang onto, a rare time when I gathered enough courage to show the tiniest bits of love because sometimes I tell people I love them when I really don’t, and other times I tell people I don’t love them when I actually do, so much; and I suppose that it might be the embarrassment of revealing too much of my vulnerability that keeps me from laying it all out on the table instead of quietly embalming their presences in my life in amber bits and pieces of prose.. or maybe it’s the overwhelming fear of being passed off as not good enough that makes me all the more secluded and privatized, as I have always been. Because when the vastness of alone creeps up on you, when it takes you over, when you withdraw within yourself because you feel so small and insignificant, sometimes you can’t help but wonder at what life would be like once you are gone, permanently- or, perhaps, if you had never graced its fleeting seasons, ever. Would it be changed?- but I’m not sure I really want to know; the scariest bit of it all is seeing that even in your absence there are no gaping holes left in the hearts of the people who tore abysses and grand canyons in yours; so no, I’m not sure I want to know. But I wonder. And I wonder if anyone knows just how fiercely I love and just how deeply I hurt, how empty I feel when the nothingness swallows me whole and devours me, skin and bone and heart and mind and soul. And most of all, at times like these I wonder what would become of my words when I am gone- will they dig them up from the archives, dusty and young and splintered with varying shades of crooked imperfection, and lay them to pages and voices and the grief of a world choking on the sheer enormity of silence? or will they fade, the way a warm summer’s evening does to a frigid winter’s chill, disappearing altogether in the folds of an perpetual autumn that will never give way to spring. I wonder if the things I meant to say would finally seep through their cold exteriors to rest beneath the pools in the burn of their gazes, or if these waters are truly too shallow for me to sink into; but I don’t think it really matters because I’ve drowned myself countless times already anyways, in books and broken words and saltwater and a few clandestine drinks that make my head spin and my fragility come undone, in hard kisses in backseats of cars that never meant anything and people who always leave in the end. I am tired and unraveling, to the ends of all my fingers and all my toes.. and I wonder a lot but it scares me to death to know just how much of a something I mean, or how much of a nothing I don’t.
For a while I was so unable to accept the fact that you were my first guy and everyone wants their first relationship to be beautiful and amazing and love-filled and blah blah blah but it wasn’t. I’m slowly realizing that doesn’t matter though. What matters is who’s my last guy - once I find him it won’t matter that he wasn’t my first because he’ll be the guy I spend my life with.
(via yanilavigne)



