1. To be oblivious of the meanings and values assigned to gender roles means that one does not speak so clearly in relation to those who make these the be-all and end-all of their existence! The use of the term, "fluidity", for instance in the post below, does not at all mean what it has been assigned to mean by those who would like to give fluidity a gender.

    One could  approach this topic in an Eastern, allegorical fashion (by talking about stiff and supple trees in violent winds), but I will venture forth in a more practical note to say that I find improvements in my boxing (and kickboxing) practice these days, which are related to a re-orientation in style back towards natural movements, where the body is so fluid that it allows one movement to simply follow through upon another. This way I can get combinations in, rather than just a single strike. I do not lose out in terms of power, by this method, since the greater speed with which I move lends greater force. "Fluidity" is trusting the body to do the right thing by you in those moments when you do not have time to think. The only key is to stay supple -- and it does enable you to deflect the blows in a superior fashion than if you were to be rigidified.

    Let those who believe that masculinity equals rigidity embrace their particular point of view, as perhaps a linguistic orientation to life will indeed serve them best. But I have found that the actual practice of fluidity knows neither male nor female identity.
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  2. Hattie has some points "on Neechy", some of which I agree with and some of which I do not. As I cannot respond to her blog (something to do with my security settings I suspect), I will riff off a few of her ideas here.

    To begin with, the culture of Neechianism (notice I already observe the corruption taking place between the philosophy and its popularisation with my term) is really a 19th Century throwback, and those who use Nietzsche in order to do their thinking for them, rather than doing their own thinking in relation to Nietzsche are very much to be ignored. Once they learn how to think for themselves, by producing nuances and reflections that take into account their own experiences within a 21st Century context, we can start to pay attention to them again. Until then they are followers and hangers-on who reflect the values and ideas of another.

    Secondly, Nietzsche was right about a number of things, not least, as Hattie has pointed out, the Unconscious. Freud seems to have derived many of his own speculations from Herr Nietzsche, as Hattie recognises. A problem with Nietzsche's understanding of the Unconscious -- henceforth referred to here as "lizard brain" -- is that he tended to hypostatise his insights about it. Instead of allowing that its functions may be very fluid, and changeable depending on any situation, he wrote his philosophy as if certain people or entities were entirely responsible for certain facets of the lizard brain. So, for instance, "women" were held entirely responsible for all "reactive forces". It didn't matter that women were sometimes not reactive, or that it really depended what context they were in within society, not for Nietzsche. For Nietzsche, women represented all of the negativity of lizard brain consciousness, manipulating in a hostile fashion behind the scenes, without ever coming forth and articulating what is on its mind. (Contemporary feminism takes the polar opposite approach to this, which Nietzsche attributed to all women. It speaks directly what is on its mind, but is still ignored by those who live their lives half-way up Nietzsche's asshole.)

    The point is, Nietzsche hypostatised the identity of "women", to make them appear to be a single facet of the neurobiological functioning of the lizard brain. Neurobiology itself, however, suggests that no human being necessarily functions from the basis of using only one part of this endowment. Lizard brain it itself the source of psychological and interpsychological plasticity, so hypostatising lizard brain's "reactivity", so that it seems to perform only one function for one sort of person is at best misleading and at worst downright unethical. To repeat -- women are not to be reduced to the negative functions of their lizard brains. That is an unethical move, to make them seem this way, the repressive nature of the 19th Century social context notwithstanding.

    On the other hand, Nietzsche wants to make out that males can appropriate their lizard brains in a more appropriate fashion. He wants to show that by accessing their lizard brains more fully, males can renew themselves and live more fully. This idea that Nietzsche has seems more laudable. Unfortunately Nietzsche is his own worst obstructor, blocking the way to obtaining this end result -- an outcome that I call "shamanising" -- because his hypostatisations concerning "masculine" and "feminine" prevent entrance into the realm of lizard brain consciousness as pure fluidity.

    To try to make plainer what I am getting at in terms of "shamanising" -- it is important to renew oneself by letting go of the heavy burden of one's socialised values, and entering into a psychical realm where everything about life and reality becomes fluid again. It is from having experienced this "melt down" that one is able to be creative in the most radical fashion. (Cf. Anton Ehernzweig, The Hidden Order of Art, for a discussion of this relational dynamic pertaining to the Unconscious). However, one does not let go of one's burden of socialisation whilst one remains attached to reified notions of masculine and feminine. Remaining fixated on these strongly socially conditioned values of the 19th Century will prevent one from accessing the lizard brain's functioning in the deepest possible way. (One has to become liquified - Dionyson - in order to do it.) Instead, one will remain fairly rigidified and on the surface of consciousness. Attachment to one's socialised values will keep one there. In Nietzsche's terms, one will be unable to access the "Overman" (who gains the power to transcend social values by accessing the powers of the Unconscious).

    So it turns out that Nietzsche himself (his mode of writing) was the greatest obstructor in relation to the aims of his own philosophy -- which was to enable a revaluation of values through incorporating more awareness of the unconscious life of the mind (i.e *awareness*, not the contents, necessarily, of the unconscious) into social life.

    Lastly, I would like to say that Nietzsche's general ideas can still be redeemed through what he proposed as "aristocratic values" -- namely reciprocation. I find that I do this automatically -- I reciprocate no matter what the circumstances are. When someone is kind, I try to return kindness, but when they are dismissive, I also tend to return that attitude (although I am not always aware of doing so!)

    I think that women who want to be free of misogynistic idiocies, (for example, in behaviour), should do no more and no less than reciprocate, as a way of responding to the behaviour that is directed at them. Those who are kind to women will therefore be positively reinforced, whereas those who treat them negatively will have negative reinforcement for their behaviour.

    To me reciprocation is a conditioned instinct due to my kickboxing training. If someone wants to play rough, I play rough back, but otherwise, I tend to keep things going at an even pace.
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  3. I write on patriarchy here with the implicit view that the patriarchy does not have a window on itself. If it did have, then it would not so easily be able to seduce so many into walking in lockstep with it! (My very slight apology for my mixing metaphors here, but I think this jumble and confusion also convey the tactics and strategies of patriarchal hegemony.) Patriarchy cannot appeal to human beings in general on the basis of logic or rationality, since its methods and practices are antisocial. One can see it in a very accurate light as an antisocial virus, or in Richard Dawkins' term, a "meme". Since it cannot appeal to reason, patriarchy must find various ways to perpetuate itself by appealing to aspects of unreason within human sensibilities. To do so it must cloak itself in darkness and pretend to be acting for the common good, whilst maintaining a sharp division between what it is in public and what it is in private. Like a cockroach, it must take care not to emerge into the light.

    The signs that patriarchy doesn't know itself are ample. The very schizoid nature of patriarchal thought leads to the inability of those who have succumbed to this meme to openly discuss what's in their hearts and minds. Instead, we see a manner of combativeness that seems to indicate an animal attacking itself -- as if it were an autoimmune disorder. What I see is that those women who associate (often unknowingly) with those afflicted by patriarchal thinking are always punished for it. The patriarchs themselves, it seems, don't seem to realise that they are teaching women not to associate with them! More likely, though, they do not care. They are being attacked by an autoimmune disorder -- they are itchy all over!

    It amazes me how often my attempts to be conciliatory with an arch patriarch have led directly to what BF Skinner calls "extinction" of conciliatory behaviour. One learns not to do this, after a while: For a woman to be seen to willingly associate with any patriarch, to any extent, is seen by other patriarchs in the light of her conceding that she is of lowly value.

    Simply put: If one wants to maintain that one values oneself immensely, the best thing to do is to keep as far away as possible from any patriarch, and anybody else who might be one, who is on the Right!
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  5. Klein versus Herman—according to Judith Herman's approach, psychological splitting is not caused be "envy" as Klein thinks, but rather by external trauma. I would hypothesise that it is the result of not being humanly able to connect—for instance to make a normal, empathetic connection despite a feeling that one needs to -- when the other "subject" confronting one is a hostile, unknowable or ferocious force. This psychological "splitting" seems to be, in Herman's views, automatic (occurring at a preconscious level). I imagine that the neurobiological systems activate it as an emergency mechanism, to protect the vulnerable psyche against psychological overload – ie. One loses consciousness as one does when fainting, but in this case of splitting, only in part.
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  6. Experience has taught me that women are considered as the glue to any social system. They are what holds it together, despite the cracks that inevitably start to develop within any political or social system. Philosopher Moira Gatens says that patriarchy considers women as the dogs outside the city gates, warning the real humans, the males inside the city, of any approaching dangers, by their howling. But that is a slightly different analogy to the one I want to put forward, which is that women are considered to be glue.

    Glue has a certain texture -- it is viscous (mushy) and transforms its shape to fit between existing hard shapes to hold them together. The hard shapes are not supposed to adapt to fit the "glue" -- which wouldn't make any sense -- but rather vice versa.

    I find that generally within political and social systems, women are expected to be the glue. If there is a crack in the system, a systemic quality of dysfunction within it, women can be used to hide this. One can appeal, for instance, to women's supposedly volatile nature and claim that they caused the cracks appearing in the system. That way, the system can just go on, dysfunctional as it is, with women's "nature" acting as the glue. (Of course women do not really have negative attributes, but it is necessary to suggest that they do, if you want to use women as "glue")

    Women are also compelled to function as glue to the degree that they are believed to be more empathetic than male humans. They are compelled to function as glue to the degree that they believe the system is worth saving -- which, generally, it isn't.

    "Watch my back, but I will not watch yours!" says the male who wants women to function as glue. "I'm sure you care that the system we are in should not fall apart and that we should act as a team. So watch my back. But I'm sorry, I'm in no fit mood to reciprocate. My testosterone is getting to me."
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  7. The rational mind might not be in any more of an advantageous position than the lizard brain is, when it comes to discern the presence of implicit bias in the mind of the beholder.

    I am of the opinion that this is the precise reason why those who are victims of implicit bias(for instance, because of their race or gender) are unable to draw attention to their predicaments by appealing to rationality. It is because rationality is quite empty, quite abstract, without the input of data that comes from the more instinctive parts of our minds. But these instinctive parts are already, as I have said, biased due to having incorporated and internalised cultural standards of normality as if these were universal and objective standards. (Once the standards have become internalised, the brain doesn't know the difference.)

    And this is why shamanism and its notions of "double vision" are important -- because by distrusting the dominant matrix of values and ideas, one can realise that these values are actually CREATED , rather than being genuinely objective values. (I am speaking of such values as patriarchal values, nationalist values, and so on.) The point of shamanism is to realise that even our felt certainties have actually been CREATED by our early experiences. So, we see things as we feel that they objectively are, but then we we have the shamanic "second vision" where we see things as being totally contingent (I mean, that they are dependent on our particular circumstances of upbringing and suchlike).


    2.

    Despite this, it does seem that Paul MacLean's model of the triune brain could be very liberating for feminism. What it seems to indicate is that gendered consciousness does not actually go all the way down to the bottom of our beings. It seems that gendered consciousness is more likely linked to processes of the paleomammalian brain, which came after the development of lizard brain. Our basic levels of consciousness are concerned with survival and an orientation towards power systems in the abstract. By this, I mean that the hardware of this brain is extremely open and flexible, not that this brain system isn't oriented towards the world in terms of actual, tangible or semi-tangible relationships.

    A lot of my views come from Kleinian psychology, but it is also present in, for instance, Julia Kristeva's work, which deals with this level of consciousness, and argues that it is power rather than gender that early childhood psychology is concerned with.

    Lizard brain is not even determined by its own self conscious appropriation of values about "biology", since it experiences itself as lacking physical boundaries, and therefore able to move parts of the mind effectively BETWEEN bodies (this is one of the weirder things about Kleinian psychology -- it is somewhat disembodied). Lizard brain is oriented towards group think, the power of the tribe (in a way, a better conceptualisation than "herd", since it invokes the sense of primeval identification mechanisms), and towards fight or flight. It is NOT concerned with mammalian issues of mating and reproduction (ie. issues relating to what we understand as "relationships"). Lizard brain has only orientations, it is not capable of having relationships, except on the basis of mechanics. It fundamentally does not "relate" as is has no personhood, nor even any specific personality. (When people play the role of Internet troll, they are like this.)
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  8. CLICK ON THE ACTUAL IMAGE TO ENLARGE IT IN ANOTHER WINDOW.
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  9. click on above image to expand!
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  10. The question of what it actually normal is a fundamental one, because our way of knowing this sense of normality does not arrive at us via logic, or reason, or intellectual knowledge. Rather, it is a distinctly inwards way of knowing. I will hypothesize that this sense of what is normal arrives to us via the primitive mechanisms of the 'lizard brain', which latches onto certain rules and regulations that a particular cultural and environmental set of circumstances have imparted. In other words, learned information is hypothesized by neurobiologist Paul MacLean to be stored in the "striatal complex" --- "the major part of the reptilian forebrain" ( p 137):

    "[I]n addition to being a neural repository for innate forms of behavior, the striatal complex constitutes part of a storage mechanism for parroting learned forms of emotional and intellective behavior acquired through the participation of limbic and neocortical systems." [p 145, Paul D. MacLean, CEREBRAL EVOLUTION AND EMOTIONAL PROCESSES: NEW FINDINGS ON THE STRIATAL
    COMPLEX].
    Also see:

    Is it possible that through these neural elaborations nature has revamped the striatal complex so that it serves as a playback mechanism not only for ancestral behavior, but also for currently learned performance? We are all aware that once having acquired a verbal or other skill, we can later repeat it, so to speak, almost instinctively. Indeed, if we stop to think how we do it-as, for example, playing a musical piece learned by heart-it may interrupt the continuity of performance. As Plutarch taught us to say, custom or habit is “almost a second nature.” Moreover, we recognize in other people, if not in ourselves, a tendency to a life style in which they are as set in their ways as the proverbial reptile. (p 146, MacLean)

    Maclean's theorising suggests that what may appear to us to be most natural, most normal, is in fact probably learned behaviour (and I would say, in accordance with the above, it is learned CULTURAL behaviour) that has become naturalised in our brains.

    We are not able, therefore, to distinguish between what feels like normal or abnormal behaviour in a way that transcends the functioning of our own brains. And, our brains are instruments that take in information that is certainly relative to other forms of information, and makes this information seem objective, by making it the main reference point for "normality".

    Here, I am alluding to the necessarily hidden nature of cultural bias on the part of abitraters who concern themselves with issues of human normality. The psychological nature of their sense of what is normal is no longer evident to them after the point that they have internalised cultural norms as an inward standards of normality.

    This also concerns guardians and policemen of normality, who believe they are unbiased because you have clear inward emotional signals about what is "normal". That clear sense of things -- far from being a sign of your lack of bias -- is actually the normalisation of your bias. It has been writ large, for instance, in your feeling of having a clear conscience about your estimation that the other is less than normal, and needs to be brought into line.

    Every person's lizard brain polices zones like national and social boundaries, on the basis of their cultural and social conditioning, in order to maintain and defend a precious feeling of normality. It is "natural" and "normal" for all of this to take place -- but this is no basis for ethics.
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