So a lot of the things I hear defending the now-toxic women's movement of today seem to revolve around ideas such as:
Women used to not be allowed to own property, women could not have their own bank accounts without having a man co-sign, women were not allowed to file for divorces, husband's beating wives were common and socially acceptable, so on an so forth. I want to know how much of this is true. I know the divorce one is not true, along with the socially accepted abuse, as I know someone who divorced her first husband in the 50's and was encouraged by all her friends and family, including her husband's family, to leave her second husband after they found out he would pinch her if she wriggled in bed too much while he was trying to sleep.
What are your experiences? Ladies, when we're you allowed to own land and get a bank account by yourself?
Sometimes I have the honor of really getting to know someone and hearing what has really gone on in their life rather than the polished narrative they are used to giving most people.
One of the tough things about divorce is that for every divorced person, you have to have your "game answer" because everyone and their mother will ask. In other words, you have to be prepared with a public answer as to what caused the divorce, and there are just some answers that are considered more publicly acceptable than others.
Through various situations, I have known more than one Christian woman (I'm picturing their faces right now) whose husband preferred anal sex to normal sex, though these women were not consensual to it, their husbands would regularly force them (as in, pin them down and do what they wanted to them as they said no.) And these were, to the public, "good Christian" men who sat beside their wives at church every Sunday (as well as being leaders in their church.)
From what the wives told me, for whatever reason, their husbands had a preference for this type of sex but considered themselves to be 100% heterosexual because they were doing it with a woman. They also believed they were 100% Godly because they were married and not having sex outside of marriage.
Now I'm not trying to condemn what any Christian married couple decides to do between themselves and God, but my point here is that the women in these cases said they were not consenting and their husbands were forcing them.
I am NOT trying to somehow say in any way, shape, or form that men are evil or to blame.
But what I AM saying is, how exactly would you explain this as a reason for seeking a separation and divorce if the person doing this refused to change?
I understand that many will say this is still no reason for a divorce, but that's not the point here.
The point is that people HAVE gotten divorces over such things and that's not exactly something you share with the public, let alone your church family. I mean, how exactly, when the Mob of Those Who Are Throwing Stones at Others in the Most Perfect Way demands a reason as to why she got divorced, is Sister Sally supposed to say, "Brother Bob continuously raped me, and in a way that a man would have sex with a man"?
I know that some people don't believe in spousal rape and even some who did wouldn't believe it was grounds for divorce, but again, that's not the point of my post.
From the people I have talked to, there are often things going on behind closed doors -- and it's not really anyone's business except for God, the couple, and anyone they are seeking guidance from, such as a pastor or counselor.
Please don't misunderstand me. I'm not trying to excuse divorces for truly frivolous reasons. And I am certainly no expert, but I have spent many years living around and talking to people who are much older than I am, and many of them will say, "Yeah, the good old days? They weren't very good at all."
One woman in her late 80's was telling me that in her day, there were plenty of pedophiles, but the majority of people back then would say, "Oh no, so-and-so could never be like that." They didn't even believe such a condition existed. She said that she was very thankful that one of her parents knew something was amiss in a particular situation, and as an adult, she later realized that she and her sisters had been saved from sexual abuse. But she said that no one back then ever talked about it, and even in cases when people knew it was going on, they turned their heads and said it wasn't possible.
Likewise, while some people might just come out and say, "I divorced my spouse because our children were being sexually abused," back then, especially -- according to this woman -- other reasons were given because it just wasn't socially acceptable to claim such a thing, and even if they did, no one would have believed them anyway.
I understand that other people's experiences might be much different; these are just the ones I have personally heard.