Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 99: Women's Safety - It Belongs To All Of Us
Episode Date: March 29, 2021I believe in talking about ideas that matter and can help people lead better lives. It’s hard for me to think of anything that fits that description more than the issues this video deals with. I’v...e done my best, but I know it won’t be perfect. It’s not meant to be. I just want to begin the conversation in our community. I look forward to learning more from all of you as I go. Women of my community, I did not create this episode for you to do anything. It’s a message we men need to hear. I hope you’ll help me share it with more of my brothers, because the change has to come from us. And I’d love for you to join me in the comments to share your experiences and further educate us. We have your back here, and we love you. Matthew x
Transcript
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Hey everyone, I wanted to set some context for the video that you're about to watch,
the purpose of which is to open up a conversation about male violence towards women and the kinds
of everyday issues that women face when it comes to male behavior. This video was shot initially
as a response to something that has been transpiring in the UK. Earlier this month, a woman, Sarah Everard,
was murdered, abducted and murdered in London,
and it began a nationwide conversation
around the challenges and the issues
that women face when it comes to men.
So as you watch this video,
you will no doubt sense the tone of it
is really a reaction to that debate that was going on and even conversations that I'd,
you know, before I shoot a video like this, I have many conversations. I talked with women that are
very close to me, the women in my company, to really understand what was going on for people
during this. So understand as you watch this video it
was shot in the heat of that moment and that's why we sat on it for a couple of weeks. You know
we shot this a couple of weeks ago and Jameson and I sat with it because we didn't want it to
be reactionary and we certainly didn't want it to be a form of virtue signaling or point scoring
simply because something was fashionable to talk about in that moment.
But having sat with it, we believe just as deeply, if not more so, that these issues are historic
and they're timeless and they need to be talked about, whether the news cycle brings our attention to it or not.
So I hope this sparks conversation for us all. This isn't designed to be any kind of a final say. I've not been
perfectly pitched in this video, I'm sure. I'm sure I've been clumsy or heavy-handed in parts
of it, but I hope that it does begin a conversation, which is the intention of it. With that said,
here's the video. I'll get into it because I don't know where to start it. This morbid, disgraceful, disturbing event that has sparked a widespread conversation direct male violence towards women but the ways that men continue to
make women feel through their behaviors and the things that they do what we've seen over the last
week is a big conversation start and then a roadblock that gets put in place when a hashtag like not all men starts to be put at the end of
men's posts because they're desperate immediately to assert that they're not part of the problem
that it's not them who are responsible and of course it's extremely easy at that point to say we're not responsible for
someone who is a murderer or a rapist to put us in the same category as them is a disgrace and
that becomes fuel for that argument not all men this is obviously seen immediately as a slap in the face by women who see it as just another moment
where men, instead of listening and understanding what it is to be in that situation, what it is to
have lived a life of constant acquiescences, constant maneuvering around the habits, the tendencies, the actions of men,
constant living at a level of alert and hypervigilance for anything that could happen,
even if it doesn't happen, that instead of men listening to this, they've made it about them.
They have halted the conversation before it's even had a chance to begin because they've
been too busy making sure that they're not at fault to hear how half of the population
is actually feeling.
Sometimes I think of these macro conversations as like a representation on a macro level of what happens in a relationship between a couple.
It's like one person comes along and says, there's something that's really upset me today.
And the other half of the couple starts by saying, well, it wasn't me.
And this person thinking, did you hear what I just said?
I'm saying there's something that's deeply affecting me and always has, perhaps.
And your first response to that is, it wasn't me. I, in this situation, tried to do what I do in all of these kinds of situations, which is before I talk about it, I try to have as many conversations as I can with people who are actually affected by it. Because true empathy is, in my opinion, the route to change.
Empathy, unfortunately, is a word that gets stripped of its meaning, stripped of its potency.
But if we can return to what is an extraordinarily powerful word in its origin and say, how do we get to a place of greater empathy? And I can tell you because I'm reacquainted with the
futility that women face in dealing with these things and by the way let me just
make this very clear this is a video that's for everyone but I'm addressing
my brothers my fellow men here in this video. This is not a video where, ladies, I'm asking you
to do a single thing, but perhaps share this with more men in your life. And by the way, and I will
also say this is not a video where I'm, you know, for the men watching, I'm not coming to you on a
pedestal in any way. I'm not coming to you righteously. I'm coming to you as a companion
on this journey because this is not a time for a certain group of men to stand up and be all
righteous and use it to virtue signal about how great they are in comparison to other men.
That's theater. What I want is a genuine dialogue, a genuine conversation
where we can explore what it really is like for our sisters out there, for our mothers out there,
for our daughters out there, for our female friends and colleagues who are dealing with this
every day. And how futile, this is the word that keeps coming up in one way or another
is just this sheer maddening nature of this that what do i do you know i've spent my whole life
dealing with things that i rarely even bring up to the men in my life they're so every day
that the banality of it that that's the crazy part is the banality that the women who speak to me
have as a tone in talking about being followed in talking about having people safe shout things
across the street hey gorgeous you know or being groped on a train, on a crowded train.
Or having their drink spiked.
Or being spoken to aggressively, being yelled at by men.
And when they stand up for themselves, only finding that it fuels the flames of this. And now all of a sudden they've got someone who's not just shouting at them but making genuine threats you you hear all of these problems and they will readily admit there's all these
problems but i don't have any idea how to solve it because how do you solve it how do you solve
that feeling of walking past a guy and he gives you a look or he does something or he says something
and you're on hyper alert
and you tense up and your adrenaline spikes because you have no idea which way this could
go.
And is it someone with good intentions or is it someone with the worst intentions?
And if it is someone with the worst intentions, what's my escape plan?
How do I get out of this?
Just having to think that way and knowing that if you stand up for yourself, it could only make the of day and finding yourself on a street with the wrong person,
with no one around or with everybody around and no one doing anything.
With, well, you shouldn't walk the street.
You should get a car home from work.
Well, maybe I don't have the money.
And if I do have the money, what service do I use?
Where I'm likely to be getting in a car with a man I don't know, hoping that he has good intentions.
So where is the escape from that fear?
And men, if we want to understand this,
we need only imagine a scenario where we walk out onto the street
and someone comes up to us and says,
can I ask you a question?
Now I want you to imagine that same scenario,
but the person who comes up to you and says, can I ask you a question, has a gun in their belt.
Now I ask you honestly, men, does that produce a different mood for you?
If someone approaches you asking, can I ask you a question, one of them has a gun in their pocket. Now the gun's not pointed
at you. So it's not like they're threatening to shoot, but you know they have a gun.
Does it change the mood? Does it change the spirit of the conversation a little bit,
knowing they have a gun? Knowing that in this situation, there is something on
their person, there is something they have that makes them a much greater danger to you than you
can be to them in this moment. That's the experience of women every single day. Now, I truly believe most men have good intentions. I believe this.
And that's why so many men speak up and say not all men, because they're frustrated at the things
that are being thrown around about men and the accusations being made about men and their
attitudes towards women or how they make women feel when many men associate with having done right by women in their lives. Which doesn't mean they've always got that
right by the way and that's another thing we have to talk about is sometimes we think we're getting
it right and we're still getting it wrong. But I know that there'll be a lot of men out there that
feel they've done it right or they've done a pretty good job and they're being associated
with the worst types of men. But what we have to understand as men is that your good intentions don't take away the gun that women see in your belt when you come over.
And we may never actually be a threat in practice, but it doesn't mean that a woman can tell the difference in that moment.
There's still the possibility of someone going to hyper alert because the danger is there. Because it's a possibility. And so I look
at this whole thing and I say everything that we do on this channel, in my work,
over 14 years has not been just about outlining a problem. But what practical thing can be done?
Insight meets practicality.
That's been my whole brand over time.
Us as men can do three things that can actually make a difference. And I'm not talking here to the guy who is on the end of the spectrum where he's going out of his way to be a pig to women, to harm women and has the worst intentions.
This video isn't changing that man.
This is for everybody else.
The first thing we can do is look at ourselves and ask, in my everyday life, am I doing things that would make someone else feel uncomfortable?
You know, I've had moments where I'm walking down the street and I'm coming home from the gym in a hoodie and my hood is up.
And I see someone coming from the other side, man or woman.
I see someone on the same side of the street as me and we're the only two people on the street.
And as I get closer or before I get too close, I'll pull my hood down. Now, I know I'm not going
to do anything bad to this person, but they don't. And taking my hood down in that moment is just my
way of saying, I come in peace. There's nothing you need to worry about. We can all find ways
of making other people feel more comfortable.
Look, we as men, we're in a difficult situation these days.
We are.
We want to meet someone, right?
We have dating apps for that, but we're also being told that,
oh God, you know, I wish a guy would just, you know, say something to me in real life. Or I wish that I just meet someone in a real setting and not on an app. I'm sick of these apps. Women will say that. But then men are left with the
predicament, I need to approach a woman in real life. Apparently that would be the sexy thing to
do. But at the same time, I'm trying my best not to come across as a predator, as a sleaze,
as someone who's going to, at the very least, make her feel awkward and at most make
her feel threatened. The navigation of that has become, it feels borderline impossible.
I get that. But what we can do is say to ourselves, okay, I know that in my life,
I would like to talk to women. I would like to approach someone now and again that I think is
attractive. But our first priority has to be someone else feeling comfortable, feeling safe.
That has to be priority number one. Firstly, just because somebody attractive walks into a room,
we are not entitled to their time or their energy. Now, we can open a door to a
conversation and see if that person walks through that door. When you want to approach someone,
how much are you paying attention to the context of the situation? To what might make them feel
at ease or comfortable? Could you ask a question about something that's going on in the room or
make a conversation that just feels like good conversation? Or even if you want to give someone
a compliment, what compliment would put them at ease and not make them feel immediately sexualized?
How can I give someone their space? Furthermore, how can I let this person know that I exist whilst allowing them to continue in whatever they're doing anyway and not making it so that if they don't want to continue the conversation, they're the one that has to leave.
They're the one who has to leave.
But they were the one who was there because men aren't giving them space because men are approaching and making it uncomfortable if it doesn't go their way.
We don't have to master being a smooth operator when it comes to approaching women.
But we do need to get competent at making people feel comfortable even when we want to take a small risk.
We have to be aware of ourselves.
And it goes beyond having good intentions. It's focusing on how our behavior plays out in practice and how it actually affects somebody.
The second thing we can do is to be an ally in the room. because of something that's going on, when we see that something that's happening could either be genuinely threatening
or just making them feel uneasy,
that we show we're an ally in the room wherever we can.
Without that becoming something,
this is the tricky part
because that could easily turn into something
that seems weird or seems like we have an agenda
in going over there.
But I believe if you're coming from a place of sincerity
and genuine care
and authenticity, that we will be able to convey that. So if we see something that could be making
someone uncomfortable, just checking in with someone and saying, are you okay? You know, I
don't know if I can see there's a situation here that might make you feel a little uneasy or might
be a little strange. I'm over here if you need me or if there's
anything I can do please let me know. This doesn't mean the movie version of
going up to the men who are creating the issue and standing up to them and being
the guy who stands up to the bully. We know as men that we're no strangers to
male violence as men. It's different but we're no strangers to male violence as men. It's different, but we're no stranger to male
violence. We're no stranger to male intimidation or how quickly things can escalate between men
and how dangerous that can be for a man. So this isn't me saying that your job is to go and approach
every bully in the room and shut him down.
That could be dangerous for you. But you can ignore that person and still go and stand with the person that you're worried may be a lot of women that would feel less mad
towards men in general if they felt they were their allies. The third thing us men can do
is listen. And listening means seeking to understand without rushing to being defensive.
And I'm not minimizing how difficult this is
because in any argument, forget,
let's remove the dynamics of this particular issue
from the situation.
Any of us, men or women, struggle when we're criticized.
We all have a tendency to immediately rush
to defend ourselves and that's our ego talking.
But men, we have to recognize that our ego is our enemy in this conversation.
And that what has to come forward is a genuine, pure, loving, compassionate desire to help women.
To make them feel safe.
To help them feel like they have allies, that they're not alone,
whether it's on the street or in this conversation.
I'm not someone who easily buys into
different self-development philosophies
that can get a little bit out there for me. If you followed
me for a while, then you know that I'm a practical, logical, rational humanist.
And that I don't tend to speak in flowery language. But what I do believe is that every human being on this earth is just layers of conditioning and habit and biology and genetics built on top of just a core consciousness, a core essence. And that, you know, in the movie Soul, the new Pixar movie,
there are all the little blue beings that have not yet been sent down to earth to occupy a body. And at that stage, they are just this essence, this being
that hasn't taken any fleshy form yet. And then they go down to earth and they inhabit a body.
Well, I truly think of life like that, that we are all just consciousness and essence.
And every single one of us woke up on this earth one day having not chosen the body that we woke up in.
We didn't choose our genes.
We didn't choose our biology.
We didn't choose the part of the world we were born in.
We didn't choose the color we were born in.
We literally, that, all of that, we just woke
up into. The only difference is that 50% of those beings woke up in a body that begun with a whole
set of challenges that the rest of us don't have to face. Not caring about the experience of women
is a version of not caring about ourselves.
Because there's a version of life
where we woke up in that body,
through no choice of our own,
but had to deal with those challenges.
And think what we would want,
the support that we would want, if that were true.
We have to be there for each other.
And there is no perfect solution to any of this.
But fuck would it make women feel safer and more acknowledged and less alone
if we actually spoke up as allies. If we actually did what we can to make the world
feel like a safer place. Whilst acknowledging the reality that there will always be malevolent
forces in the world. There will always be men who have the worst possible intentions,
but that women can afford to worry a little less when we're in the room.
I love you guys. And I will see you in the next video. you