Linda
Troeller / Marion Schneider
The Erotic Lives of Women - associated texts
Male
World 
In
our dominant world culture, the male world is one of success.
Man should be a winner. Man should provide for his family and
should not be powerless. If men are friendly with one another
they will support and help each other in this task, if they
do not know one another they will compete.
Women
or the woman is the essential status symbol in this world, more
than anything else. The choice of the right woman to represent
man and his power is essential. Once a man has made his choice,
he is expected to stay with her - after all he is expected to
demonstrate reliability. So when a relationship splits up or
a marriage is divorced, this is regarded as a failure, in some
cultures more so, in others less.
Men
should bring health and happiness to their family. If, however,
they are responsible for family property, especially out of
tradition, this property can sometimes be even more important
than the family itself. They feel responsible for keeping up
a tradition. This can also be the case with property they do
not own but are paid to keep care of and feel responsible for.
Even in such business relations, personal interests can be more
important than the business matters.
If
men are highly competitive and success-oriented, women cannot
expect them to change once they have passed into the matrimonial
home. They will still act in the way they have been brought
up to act in a world they have been conditioned for. So, they
will usually - unless they have trained themselves exceptionally
well - react very defensive and negatively towards any form
of critique. In the world of survival friends and staff are
expected to support one another.
The
same sort of negative reaction often occurs if their wife or
loved one is not happy. Most men interpret this as personal
criticism as they feel responsible for their wife's happiness.
And they react accordingly: they defend themselves, often even
getting angry. Their spouse feels more unhappy, as in revealing
her unhappiness she had hoped for help rather than admonishment.
Men
should be criticised only in the appropriate situation, which
is very often not right away. Likewise a woman's unhappiness
should not appear unless it is the right moment. What is the
right moment? It has to be a moment in which a man feels secure
of the support and love of his wife. There has to be enough
time to talk. The problem is that if women choose this moment
regularly for criticism, men will instinctively begin to avoid
such moments.
Women
are often the initiator of talks about problems and unhappiness.
Almost as often they find that men are unwilling to talk about
them. Most men do not like problems, conflict, pain or arguments.
They prefer not to talk about difficult topics and expect and
hope that their spouse will be able to resolve them herself.
For many women, however, it is most essential to be able to
talk about everything with the man they love. When the desires
do not match, and the man reacts as described, the woman must
attempt to solve these problems without his help.
It
becomes more difficult if the problems can only be resolved
with his help, i.e. the woman is unhappy as a result of his
behaviour, habits or what he says. A woman can, of course, make
a man listen to what she wants to say. She may even be able
to make a man do what she wants, but it is not certain that
he will do this beyond the one time she asked it of him. Most
men are set in their ways. If a woman wants a man to change
his habits, her chances of success are not certain. She then
has to decide how to live with those habits or if she cannot,
if she has to live separately.
Not
many men are prepared to change. Their defence-system and survival
techniques condition a certain way of behaving. The danger that
such systems dysfunction if changed is high, so they tend to
be very conservative in that respect. Fortunately we live in
a society in which personal freedom and liberty is possible
and so we, men and women, may be able to find new ways of living
together with greater respect, even where maintaining this respect
may necessitate more distance between one another.
