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Women's
Dissatisfaction--Can It Be Beautiful? |
| "If
that computer goes down again, I'll scream!" "I
never seem to meet the right person for me." I speak tonight
about "Women's Dissatisfaction--Can It Be Beautiful?" because how
we are dissatisfied has centrally to do with whether we like ourselves
or not. What is the basis for our dissatisfaction? In The Right of Aesthetic
Realism to Be Known Class Chairman Ellen Reiss explains something which
has never been understood before Aesthetic Realism:
Tonight I will talk about a woman whose art shows how our dissatisfaction--both with the world and ourselves--can be beautiful: the ceramist Beatrice Wood. Now 104, in her twenties she was a Dada artist. Her life also shows how the desire in a woman to be dissatisfied, to feel this world and its people aren't fit for us, hurts her. Why I Was Dissatisfied When I was 17 looking toward my last year in high school in San Antonio, Texas, I wrote in my journal: DT. Yes. ES. Why? There's a tendency to think that anyone we know is an invader. DT. Oh yes. ES. (referring to the man I was seeing then) And what do you think Mr. R. has against you? DT. I think he thinks I'm trying to take him over. ES. And is there truth in that? DT. Yes. ES. Well, most people see themselves as mean, and rigid and stubborn, and human, and all that kind of thing. And
I saw, too, why the more I was dissatisfied with myself, the more
I had looked for a man to show he liked me. I was acquisitive with
men, while being deeply aloof. Who a man was, was not real to me, and because
I was after contempt, I became dissatisfied with every man I was with.
This one was not sure enough of himself, this one was too sure; one was
too intellectual, another not intellectual enough. And every conquest I
had in love made me even more dissatisfied with myself because, I was later
to learn, I was using a man to get further away from satisfying my own
deepest goal which is--"to like the world on an honest or accurate basis."
A man couldn't make me satisfied with myself: only trying to be fair to
the world, which includes the depths of a man, could.
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| Continued: click here for part 2 "Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction in Love" |
© 1998 by Devorah Tarrow