“Dear Abby”
copyright 1992 by Matt Ruff
Dear Abby,
I just read your latest piece in the Boston Phoenix, and it looks as if you need
some advice for a change. Having been a fan of your famous column for many years,
I’m only too happy to oblige.
First, to answer your most burning question: of course men and women can be friends.
They can be pals, they can be good friends, or they can be true intimates, the sort
who think nothing of calling each other at 3 A.M. for sympathy and consolation. All
varieties of friendship—platonic and otherwise—are possible between males and females,
but as with so many things in life, you have to believe they are possible.
It sounds as if this is a big part of your problem, Abby. You have obviously been
brainwashed by persons both feminist and anti-feminist into thinking that men and
women are separate species, doomed by biology to remain forever incompatible. Not
only is this crap, it’s unoriginal crap. As a general rule, whenever Andrea Dworkin,
Norman Mailer, and your parents all agree on something, that is a sign that truth
has left the scene.
You might begin by giving men more credit than you do, and by expecting more adult
behavior from them in return. From your description of what happened, it seems as
if you were awfully quick to pidgeonhole your ex-pal Billy into a penis-brain stereotype.
He was a jerk for breaking off the friendship when it became clear you wouldn’t sleep
with him, and his sense of tact needs serious polishing, but I think you are wrong
to accuse him of “reducing you to an orifice.” When you feel sexual attraction towards
a male friend, as you admit you sometimes do—in fact you list the “certain spice”
of sexual tension as one of your reasons for seeking out male friendship in the first
place—does that mean you are reducing him to a protuberance? The fact that Billy
had sexual feelings towards you that he didn’t know how to handle doesn’t mean he
didn’t have other, “more noble” feelings for you as well; it just means he needs
to grow up a little. A heart-to-heart talk might have helped—or it might not—but
you simply assumed the worst and didn’t even try.
Even more telling is your response to Billy’s claim that he was hormonally incapable
of sustaining a platonic friendship with you: “I hung up the phone, feeling a little
annoyed but not really angry. After all, I thought, he nailed it—how could I blame
him for being a slave to his sexuality?”
The fact that you would accept such a transparent excuse without argument makes me
question the sincerity of your own desire to maintain a platonic friendship with
Billy, or with any man. What would your reaction be if a close woman friend suddenly
said she could no longer bear to be around you because you aggravated her PMS? Would
you simply say “Well, that’s a woman for you” and let her go? It may well be that
the intensity of Billy’s feelings makes it difficult for him to accept your wish
to keep things on a platonic level, but that’s not a male problem, it’s a personal
problem. By copping to a sexist excuse, Billy is trying to duck out on the hard emotional
work that might still save your relationship—and you’re letting him do it.
You claim to be frustrated by the lack of rules covering “the sex thing” in cross-gender
friendship. I can think of one rule right off the bat that would help you immensely:
learn to speak up as soon the ambiguities in a relationship start to bother you.
If I sense that a woman friend (or a man) is developing more intense feelings for
me than I can comfortably reciprocate, I sit that friend down for a talk. I may not
always want to talk—my gut reaction, like yours, may be to ignore the problem in
hopes it will go away—but if I truly value the friendship, I force myself to talk,
and I try to be as compassionate as possible while remaining clear about my boundaries.
I don’t condemn my friend for having the “wrong” feelings; it’s no sin to desire
greater emotional or physical intimacy with someone, just very inconvenient if the
desire is not mutual. Part of my own definition of friendship is having the patience—trying
to have the patience—to deal with such inconvenience, even if it means getting the
cold shoulder while the friend resigns herself or himself to the platonic reality.
Blaming the friend for behaving “just like a man” or “just like a woman” may be momentarily
satisfying—particularly if their advances have left you feeling panicked—but it will
also make the friend angry, guilty, and distrustful of you in the future, none of
which is especially helpful.
Finally, Abby, a word regarding your plan to head west “to the land where all women
would reside in a perfect world.” It’s true that we all need an occasional week off
from “the sex thing,” but you should ask yourself whether you’re running away to
rest and recharge or just to get yourself even more wound up than you already are.
Spending time with other women talking about how impossible men are will not improve
your attitude toward male-female bonding; neither will reading more books of feminist
theory, which, forgive me, are no substitute for real life trial-and-error in this
particular instance. You might be better served by devoting your summer to treating
your male friends as if they were “honorary” women: i.e., by drawing them out on
emotional, “feminine” topics of conversation, which believe it or not they do have
opinions on, by expecting and encouraging them to be attentive and supportive, by
refusing to accept spurious gender-based excuses for bad behavior, and by not resorting
to such excuses yourself. I don’t promise you that any of this will be easy—a lot
of men share the belief that cross-gender friendship is a pipe dream, and you will
sometimes feel as if you are beating your head against a brick wall (don’t worry,
the men feel the same way about you)—but once you get the hang of it, you’ll be glad
you made the effort. When you start thinking of your male friends as friends, rather
than “full-fledged penis-bearing individuals,” you’ll know you’re on the right track.
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