As a white woman, I am allowed to be emotional.  I am allowed to cry, to be angry, to want to give up.  Most of the time people are sympathetic when I talk about “that creepy man in the grocery store.” Â
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Everyone understands when I ask for a ride home from work rather than walk by myself at night, even though I enjoy the time to listen to music on the way there.
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And because of the wage gap, the higher chance of rape, the outdated idea that I should yearn for the day when I am a mother—I can complain. I can complain along, although in a different way, with the LGBTQ+ community, all of America’s racial minorities, and the rest who have been societally granted this right to be angry.  In the process, white, straight men have been villainized.
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In this villainization, white, straight men have lost their sympathy from other demographics. Anyone can have anxiety and/or depression. Physically and sexually abused men rarely step forward because it is somehow not as extreme as it is for women. Â Not being allowed to express their emotions is the biggest contribution to the problem.
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I am not saying that men should not step up their game. I think the recent Gillette advertisement really nailed it and hopefully inspired some men (and women, I felt inspired) to be better. I am saying that we all need to step up.
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Every single one of us needs to be a better person, to call each other out on our crap, and get better at treating one another kindly and with respect.
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Just because you are not a white, straight man does not mean you get a free pass. It does not mean your opinion matters more. It means that you get to be angry and use that anger to help inspire others.