Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,516 members, 7,819,860 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 03:56 AM

Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation - Romance - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Romance / Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation (1882 Views)

This Is Why I See White Wedding As A Waste Of Time And Money In Africa. / I Said No To My Girlfriend For The First Time And She Feels Like Dying / I Want To Link With Lagos Based Matured Friends To Chat With From Time To Time. (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (Reply) (Go Down)

Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by MissWrite(f): 9:16am On Nov 26, 2017
Everyone now seems to have an opinion about feminism. It seems fashionable to talk about it. It doesn’t even matter if you know anything about it or not. I want to join the fray, not necessarily to start any arguments, but hopefully to answer some questions. So y’all please indulge me. Fair warning, this is long. And it’s only the first part which deliberates on emancipation. I’ll save my thoughts on equality for another day.

If I don’t speak with reference to recent history, or in the easily recognizable jargon of the trade; and if I don’t acknowledge the relevance of founders and key players – feminist icons like The Suffragettes, Simone de Beauvoir and Gloria Steinem – it’s not out of ignorance or a lack of respect, but because I consider feminism to be contextual and organic in nature. It grows out of the ground on which we stand, and doesn't necessarily require a precursor to exist in any given place, (even if a precursor can be a catalyst). It is reactionary just like any other movement that resists oppression. And the oppression which it resists is the deliberate disenfranchisement of women (by constitution, common law or culture) on account of their gender alone. Feminism seeks to give acknowledgement to the full human value of women, by permitting the uninhibited expression of their content (intellect & desires) within unbiased limits of the law, and to validate a woman’s right to an independent social standing. The premise of feminism is that all human beings are equally human and should be allowed equal human rights. This does not mean that all human beings are equal. In fact, our inequalities as human beings go far beyond gender. There's race, height, weight, complexion, IQ, the list is practically endless. But we don't (and shouldn’t)apportion rights to people by considering any of these differences; even when certain physical attributes can have significant ramifications on a person’s performance and ability to contribute as a citizen of the world. In the end, what matters is that we are all human beings, and equal in our humanness. And as human beings, we should have human rights. Not men's rights and women's rights. Not black people’s rights and white people’s rights. Not tall people’s rights and short people’s rights. Not strong people’s rights and weak people’s rights. That's really all there is to the mantra of equal rights and gender equality which feminism disseminates.

I don’t believe that, as a feminist, I ought to belong to a world club, subscribing to a definitive code of practice; that feminism must be copied ‘correctly’ or even copied at all, from anywhere. I believe that the prevailing conditions of a place are enough to inspire a reaction if it is warranted; and that the prevailing conditions would uniquely shape that reaction to suit the specificity of the stimulus. It’s the wearer of the shoe that knows exactly where it pinches and would adjust his toes accordingly. Unifying feminism, under one large umbrella of a particular creed, would only breed confusion and it would not solve any of the problems which necessitated its inception in the first place; because every region deals with very unique issues of misogyny which feminism seeks to address. And these issues of misogyny are dynamic and so feminist reactions must be equally dynamic. Standardized feminism would be akin to creating a new world religion that would only enslave people to a specific dogma instead of emancipating them. Feminism isn't a religion or a political party, it is a natural instinct to survive and thrive in one's own environment. Therefore, to be a feminist as a woman, I only need to value my own integrity as a human being. And to be a feminist as a man, I would have to have equal regard for others as I do for myself.

Most men think that feminism is redundant in Nigeria (but if that were the case it wouldn’t even be discussed or find the legs to stand on); they say that women have nothing to complain about anymore since they already drive cars, vote, own property, run for office and don’t walk around under a sheet in the scorching heat. But can they really know? I don’t suppose I could (or would) tell someone else how to feel about things when I am not the one directly immersed in the situation. It would be arrogant and insensitive of me to do that. Men, no matter how powerful their sense of imagination, would never know what it’s like to be a woman in Nigeria until they spend some time in a woman’s skin. I imagine that they would be in for a surprise because I don't believe that their ignorance about the endemic misogyny of our society is willful. I don't believe that they are malicious in their intent when they ask women to shut their mouths about feminism. I believe that they just don’t know. Not really. So, I imagine that it would surprise them to wake up one morning to find themselves relegated to a position where they would be required to shrink their egos, and step into miniature boxes that only allowed them to be tightly censored versions of themselves; and where their respect and visibility depended on another human being.

We don’t just fight legislations (God knows those battles are easier to win), we fight an endemic social bias. That is where the misogyny of our culture lies. We are a society that legally permits the participation of women in public affairs, but we are also largely a society that doesn’t believe a woman can excel on the merit of her own intellect. A woman in a position of esteem is viewed suspiciously like a floating object – a magic trick. It deserves a closer look because, surely, that object must be balancing on structural support (Which essentially is a man). And that’s why no one is impressed enough, by that floating object, to give it the respect it deserves. People tend to invent imaginative background stories: if her husband or father is not connected enough to get her into that position, she must be fucking someone who is. And sometimes, for a woman, it’s more respectable to have visible structure than to allow people to speculate on her sexual activities. It is ultimately demeaning. This type of mindset cannot simply be eradicated by making laws; we can only wait for it to fade with time and exposure to a new way of living. But in the time before that happens, women are justified to be indignant.

We still consider female participation in public office an indulgence. One position is a chance given (not to Mrs Okeke alone) but to all women to prove themselves worthy of holding such positions. One man fails himself; but a woman fails for all women. And that is why names like Patricia Etteh, Stella Oduah, Allison Madueke and Maryam Sanda stand out as caveats; reasons cited to stifle the emancipation and the advancement of women. It doesn’t matter that for every corrupt woman politician there are easily ten corrupt male politicians. Or that Maryam Sanda stands in the company of men whose names we never even bothered to learn: Edwin Vincent, Sakiru Bello, James Uguru, Dominic Iyayi Ogar, Okon Ubem and Omolaja Shodipo – all perpetrators of heinous crimes, with victims equally real and deserving of the justice that Bilyaminu Bello deserves. It is clear that the popularity of this particular story in the news is due to the social caliber of the individual involved, but that hasn’t stopped people from making this an anti-feminist campaign (even here on Nairaland) – beware the revolution of the feminazi. This is an unwarranted generalization and it greatly undermines the relevance of feminism in our society. I would even go so far as to say that women are being bullied from all directions.

But the misogyny of our culture cannot be overlooked so easily.

In Africa, female disenfranchisement begins at birth. All too often, a woman’s place in her husband’s home is only secure after she provides him with a male child, someone to ‘carry on his name’. Because women are not qualified to keep a name, they are branded by their fathers or husbands, and that in itself speaks to the objectification and ownership of women (a practice that culminates in the exchange of a bride price upon the head of a woman). If, however, a woman has daughters (it doesn’t matter how many), she never balance well for chair be dat. She continuously gets harassed by impatient or worried family members, who would even go as far as finding a substitute wife for her husband – a woman who has ‘boys in her womb’. People conveniently forget science, and blame the woman for the sex selection of the child. So the point is that, boys are considered to be more valuable than girls, right of the bat, in African culture. And this notion often translates into the over-pampering of boys. We indulge them, massage their egos and fill them with a sense of entitlement. And girls are groomed to make ‘acceptable’ sidekicks. We teach them that a woman can only be complete as long as she is tethered to a man – any man.

So, even when we send girls to school and teach them to achieve personal goals, they must also transition successfully from their fathers’ houses to their husbands’ houses, or become social outcasts. We stigmatize women who fall between these two stools. If, for instance, Chimamanda Adichie does something praiseworthy, we first have to examine if her achievements are valid by asking ourselves if she has dutifully submitted herself to a husband in marriage before we can clap our hands for her. But Rita Dominic, Genevieve and Linda Ikeji, who are unmarried, are somehow still languishing in limbo awaiting society’s approval; still incomplete and un-established in spite of their giant strides in their chosen industry. And this type of social discrimination seems to be more important than ever these days, since women are becoming increasingly independent. Back in the day, a girl would marry, naïve and incapable, at sixteen; and all she could do was depend on a husband for her sustenance, and everything, including her raison d'etre; she would accept a life of total submission to him with gratitude and never challenge the boundaries of the small sphere of her existence. But now, when women have access to the tools to survive independently - education and life skills, when they have begun to have ambitions for themselves beyond the home, marriage ceases to be a necessity for financial security, and instead becomes a matter of personal choice. But still, society does not trust that enough women would chose to be married for the pure joys of companionship and procreation, so it stigmatizes single women and, thus, propagates marriage as a stamp of social approval.

A man can be whatever he wants, but a woman must fit in within the boundaries of a man’s expectations. Because she is the one who needs him to ratify her standing in social context. That’s the crux of the imbalance of social power. He can therefore dictate the margins of her existence and she must decide if she would rather be suppressed or ostracized. Case in point: the clamor for feminist ideals; some women would rather not be associated with feminism at all for the simple fact that it makes them less attractive to men and endangers them to singlehood. Some men even threaten feminists that they won't be rewarded with husbands if they didn't abandon their foolish cause. And women are aware that they risk being ostracized by embracing feminism, but the light at the end of the tunnel is that we would all get to that point where women are no longer validated by men in society. A point where women can make independent choices for themselves and not worry about how ‘sellable’ or attractive it makes them to men, as though women were derivative human beings.

Fitting in with men’s expectations has caused some women, over time, to bend in unnatural ways. Women are held to higher moral standards than men, not because they are naturally more virtuous, or biologically more capable, but because men are in the position to impose those standards that women have to conform to (if they wanted to be taken off the shelf). Female virginity, for instance, is still a requirement amongst many African men, while male virginity isn’t even a thing anymore. In an effort to present themselves as required, pure and sacred on a platter of divine offering, girls conceal and suppress ugly histories of sexual abuse, or even just a healthy appetite for sex (a God-given libido). Girls are shamed for their sexuality and even mutilated to control it, until her only reason for engaging in sex is to help achieve the male orgasm. A derivative human being. And although the cutting of the clitoris has been widely abolished in Nigeria, the fundamentals remain: that women ought to be sexually coy and repressed. If it isn’t being achieved with a razor blade, it’s being done by slut-shaming girls who explore their sexuality.

And girls, who are abused every so often, do not speak up for fear that the whole community would become privy to their ‘defilement’. And that would diminish their worth to a man, which is ultimately the worth of a woman in general in the African context. And if girls are discouraged from speaking up about these acts of violence, they only enable the perpetrators and encourage the cycle of abuse. Again, a girl must decide whether she would rather be suppressed or ostracized. And a lot of times, a mother makes that decision for her daughter who is not even ten years old. She chooses what she considers to be the easier path: to swallow your demons and fit in with society. It is true that boys are often victims of abuse as well, but they are not the ones tossed aside like rotten food over it. They are not the ones that have to deal with the conflict of needing to portray outward virtue when the knowledge of internal corruption plagues the mind.

The dictates of men go even further: a woman must like to cook and do domestic work, must not talk back to a man, must not be smarter than a man, does not need as much money as a man, must fit into specific standards of beauty, and with every requirement, they set limitations, amputating parts of a person designed by the same God, in order to create a new and entirely different being: A man’s woman. The danger of this approach is that the pressure of subjugation is external and does not conform to the internal desires of the person. And ultimately, tension is created. It’s battle of man versus God. Or, to avoid confusion, since people only see God from a variety of highly subjective perspectives, I should say: Man versus Nature. When women no longer require to be validated by anything other than their own integrity; when they are autonomous and self-determining in society, then they can dare to break out of the tiny boxes which men have determined for them for so long. They would no longer be compelled to fit in with a woman's definition according to a man. Of which most elements stem from wishful thinking rather than a keen observation of her true nature. And instead, women would be free to define themselves for themselves and accept only the limits that their nature (and not legislation or culture) imposes upon them. They can be products of their own desires.


Many men fear that if women were allowed to be products of their own desires, they would depict the image of ‘girls gone wild’. And that is probably because pro-feminist icons like Madonna have expressed such total lack of restraint in public to sell their brand. But they only feel the need to be so provocative about making the statement “I own myself, I can be myself, and Bleep you” because people still largely doubt that this is true. But feminism is not really about exhibiting a lack of decorum, it is about asserting one’s self; and the manner in which a person chooses to do so is a reflection of their personal morality. A person can be immoral as a feminist or non-feminist; it’s ridiculous to qualify the demand for female social emancipation immoral simply because some feminists are baring their privates on stage. A woman’s desires would still lead many women into traditional family lives, and this is not an un-feminist position at all. And if you’re asking what the hassle is about, imagine you were sitting in a room with the door locked and the key thrown away. And now imagine you were sitting in that same room with the door standing wide open. Choice, even if it is just an illusion, makes some positions more acceptable (attractive even) to one’s mind. It relieves pressure and gives us room to breathe.

19 Likes 10 Shares

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Nobody: 9:28am On Nov 26, 2017
The biggest mistake Man will make is to tamper with the makings of That which govern us.. . Those who know... Know

1 Like

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Tozara(m): 10:02am On Nov 26, 2017
grin grin grin grin

Yeah, everyone is talking about feminism. It's a good thing.

Atheism has taken over the religion section = DESIRABLE. grin

Feminism has taken over romance section = PERFECT. smiley

Tribalism has taken over politics section = Oh..... THE BAD ONE. sad
This is perfect, MissWrite. I enjoyed reading it. You're Fire. kiss kiss kiss

Daeylar, you need to see this.

3 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by MissWrite(f): 10:05am On Nov 26, 2017
Tozara:
grin grin grin grin

Yeah, everyone is talking about feminism. It's a good thing.

Atheism has taken over the religion section = DESIRABLE. grin

Feminism has taken over romance section = PERFECT. smiley

Tribalism has taken over politics section = Oh..... THE BAD ONE. sad
This is perfect, MissWrite. I enjoyed reading it. You're Fire. kiss kiss kiss

Daeylar, you need to see this.






Thank you, sweetie. kiss

1 Like

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Tozara(m): 10:11am On Nov 26, 2017
MissWrite:



Thank you, sweetie. kiss
kiss smiley wink

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by holocron: 10:15am On Nov 26, 2017
You have written a long one. This is a complex case as the power relationship between the sexes can be intertwined. Some affirm that men may rule the world, but Women are ruling the men who rule the world.

All these cultural attitudes you have enumerated were defined and instituted by women in the first place for their benefit and protection and to preserve their God given natural advantages over men. Women define future cultural attitudes since they are in charge of child rearing (both male and female). The staus quo today was defined by women and benefits them. Is there any woman who would rather trade places with a man, and give up all her natural advantages? Never.

All the expectations of society on women you wrote about as impositions by men you should have substituted WOMEN for the Men you accused. Who taught you the role of women in the kitchen etc? MOTHER and other women. Who taught you from childhood to see yourself as a 'beauty' object? MOTHER and other women. Who is scared of Feminism producing sex liberated women? Certainly not Men, but majority of women who feel that would cheapen the chief weapon of female power and render it less potent. Feminism is riddled with hypocrisy. There are only very few true feminists espousing an ideology whereby men and women enjoy equal and non exploitative relations in society.


Most feminists are not really serious about it. For those of them that are dead serious, their enemies are the majority of their fellow women who love and benefit from the status quo. Most men would welcome true feminists as real sisters and companions and not the liabilities, burdens, slave masters most women become in traditional relationships.

1 Like

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Daeylar(f): 1:38pm On Nov 26, 2017
I love this,

2 wonderful topics on feminism, starting with blackmanta's topic and now this,

Blackmanta, how do you see this?

Shaybebaby, do you like?

2 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Daeylar(f): 1:38pm On Nov 26, 2017
Tozara:
grin grin grin grin

Yeah, everyone is talking about feminism. It's a good thing.

Atheism has taken over the religion section = DESIRABLE. grin

Feminism has taken over romance section = PERFECT. smiley

Tribalism has taken over politics section = Oh..... THE BAD ONE. sad
This is perfect, MissWrite. I enjoyed reading it. You're Fire. kiss kiss kiss

Daeylar, you need to see this.




I really did, it's so nice, thanks for the tag kiss kiss
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by MissWrite(f): 1:50pm On Nov 26, 2017
Daeylar:
I love this,

2 wonderful topics on feminism, starting with black.manta's topic and now this,

Black.manta, how do you see this?

Shaybe.baby, do you like?




kiss kiss kiss, how've you been, hun?
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by shaybebaby(f): 2:07pm On Nov 26, 2017
Daeylar:
I love this,

2 wonderful topics on feminism, starting with blackmanta's topic and now this,

Blackmanta, how do you see this?

Shaybebaby, do you like?


Beautiful, MissWrite has written an exceptional piece.

I am in awe and a bit jealous too. Wish I could convey the message as succinctly as she has.

I hereby proclaim this: THE GOSPEL OF FEMINISM.

Can I get an Amen?

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by WeirdoNg: 2:08pm On Nov 26, 2017
Una no dey tire
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by shaybebaby(f): 2:12pm On Nov 26, 2017
Cc Mindfulness and Cococandy.
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by BlackManta(m): 2:30pm On Nov 26, 2017
Daeylar:
I love this,

2 wonderful topics on feminism, starting with blackmanta's topic and now this,

Blackmanta, how do you see this?

Shaybebaby, do you like?




It's a beautiful peice.

Anybody that reads this peice and still hates feminism obviously has a problem.

They will soon come for OP's head.

I dont blame all of them sha.

Religion,culture and feminazi are the three major stumbling blocks facing feminism.

I was an anti-feminist until i read Chimamanda Adichie's We Should All Be Feminist and i realized that feminism it's not what feminazis and mysogynist make it out to be.

4 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by supaNOVAE(m): 2:33pm On Nov 26, 2017
All facade.
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by ubunja(m): 2:39pm On Nov 26, 2017
if women could make a change to society they cud have done so millions of years ago grin grin havent the human civilization been around for aeons?? grin grin
truth is they cant do sh!t grin
thats why thru-out history there is NOT EVEN ONE feminist society that has thrived cheesy cheesy cheesy NONE...ZERO...ZILCH....VOID... grin Coz they cant do anything apart from men cheesy grin Now they wanna raise their heads coz men have done all the work to make society a cozy place to live in grin grin MEN HAVE BUILT THE CITIES,ROADS,HOSPITALS etc without any help from women. grin and NOW that its all good they claim they matter grin grin grin
oppose them they call THE POLICE on u grin and the police are just MEN WITH GUNS...men still.. grin she will sit on a chair made by a man with a phone designed by a man in a house built by a man feeling safe her father or husband is home (both men) yet have the ovaries to scream "women can do everything a man can do grin grin grin grin grin. babygal u had ONE JOB, ONE JOB ONLY AND U FVCKED IT UP SO WELL grin grin
your job was to make babies but u failed.But men that ever-resourceful creature has a Plan B. the female robot in Saudi Arabia is about to be given a womb and be made pregnant grin grin grin that one job u royally failed to do is about to be given over to robots grin grin grin grin go google "Sophia wants a baby" grin grin
its so hillarous im peeing myself right now grin

5 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Tozara(m): 3:21pm On Nov 26, 2017
shaybebaby:

Beautiful, MissWrite has written an exceptional piece.

I am in awe and a bit jealous too. Wish I could convey the message as succinctly as she has.

I hereby proclaim this: THE GOSPEL OF FEMINISM.

Can I get an Amen?
Amen. smiley

Good afternoon, ma. How're you doing?
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Daeylar(f): 3:26pm On Nov 26, 2017
BlackManta:



It's a beautiful peice.

Anybody that reads this piece and still hates feminism obviously has a problem.

Lol, they'll soon come for your own head for this sentence.

They will soon come for OP's head.

I dont blame all of them sha.

Religion,culture and feminazi are the three major stumbling blocks facing feminism.

I was an anti-feminist until i read Chimamanda Adichie's We Should All Be Feminist and i realized that feminism it's not what feminazis and mysogynist make it out to be.

It was a beautiful read.
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Daeylar(f): 3:31pm On Nov 26, 2017
shaybebaby:

Beautiful, MissWrite has written an exceptional piece.

I am in awe and a bit jealous too. Wish I could convey the message as succinctly as she has.

I hereby proclaim this: THE GOSPEL OF FEMINISM.

Can I get an Amen?

Ami grin

2 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Daeylar(f): 3:32pm On Nov 26, 2017
MissWrite:



kiss kiss kiss, how've you been, hun?
Thanks I'm good.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by cococandy(f): 3:35pm On Nov 26, 2017
So beautiful it made me cry.
This is all of my posts since I joined nairaland rolled into one, simplified and made more beautiful .
No need to type anymore

7 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by cococandy(f): 3:38pm On Nov 26, 2017
In the end, what matters is that we are all human beings, and equal in our humanness. And as human beings, we should have human rights. Not men's rights and women's rights. Not black people’s rights and white people’s rights. Not tall people’s rights and short people’s rights. Not strong people’s rights and weak people’s rights. That's really all there is to the mantra of equal rights and gender equality which feminism disseminates.
If after reading this part, some simple mind still wants to parrot the idea that feminism is about making women into men, then it’s safe to say the person is just being willfully ignorant or hopelessly lacking brain matter.

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by morgan844: 4:09pm On Nov 26, 2017
Feminist are those women who want to be treated when it is to their advantage but they will quickly hide under i am a woman to get undue advantages. in the military when a female soldier is sent to war front together with their male counterpart you will see them withdraw from the army but when it come to promotion they will want to be equal with man. the movie titanic come to mind in that accident women were rescued and and the men were left to die. feminism is an idea design to gain undue advantage over man.

3 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by NightHound(m): 4:34am On Nov 27, 2017
ubunja:
if women could make a change to society they cud have done so millions of years ago grin grin havent the human civilization been around for aeons?? grin grin
truth is they cant do sh!t grin
thats why thru-out history there is NOT EVEN ONE feminist society that has thrived cheesy cheesy cheesy NONE...ZERO...ZILCH....VOID... grin Coz they cant do anything apart from men cheesy grin Now they wanna raise their heads coz men have done all the work to make society a cozy place to live in grin grin MEN HAVE BUILT THE CITIES,ROADS,HOSPITALS etc without any help from women. grin and NOW that its all good they claim they matter grin grin grin
oppose them they call THE POLICE on u grin and the police are just MEN WITH GUNS...men still.. grin she will sit on a chair made by a man with a phone designed by a man in a house built by a man feeling safe her father or husband is home (both men) yet have the ovaries to scream "women can do everything a man can do grin grin grin grin grin. babygal u had ONE JOB, ONE JOB ONLY AND U FVCKED IT UP SO WELL grin grin
your job was to make babies but u failed.But men that ever-resourceful creature has a Plan B. the female robot in Saudi Arabia is about to be given a womb and be made pregnant grin grin grin that one job u royally failed to do is about to be given over to robots grin grin grin grin go google "Sophia wants a baby" grin grin
its so hillarous im peeing myself right now grin


grin, All these emojis.............if I were you, I would also have trouble saying that BS with a straight face. C'mon, man!

2 Likes

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by ubunja(m): 4:59am On Nov 27, 2017
NightHound:



grin, All these emojis.............if I were you, I would also have trouble saying that BS with a straight face. C'mon, man!
if i were to write in support of feminism the whole post would have been nothing but emojis grin grin
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by shaybebaby(f): 8:00am On Nov 27, 2017
Tozara:
Amen. smiley

Good afternoon, ma. How're you doing?
Good morning sir, we are alright. Hope you had a swell weekend. smiley
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Nobody: 6:35pm On Nov 27, 2017
Misswrite grin

Come identify yourself angry I feel like I know the person behind this moniker wink

*Pulls her ear open* whisper it in my ear grin
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by SirMichael1: 6:38pm On Nov 27, 2017
Dimples129:
Misswrite grin

Come identify yourself angry I feel like I know the person behind this moniker wink

*Pulls her ear open* whisper it in my ear grin

Is it worth reading? Don't wanna waste precious time
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Nobody: 6:41pm On Nov 27, 2017
SirMichael1:


Is it worth reading? Don't wanna waste precious time

It's very well written, and the sister is sitting on some big brains grin
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by MissWrite(f): 6:50pm On Nov 27, 2017
Dimples129:
Misswrite grin

Come identify yourself angry I feel like I know the person behind this moniker wink

*Pulls her ear open* whisper it in my ear grin



Hahaha! grin. Yes, you do, sweetie. *whispers* ¥@%%#?!@**

kiss
Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by Nobody: 6:53pm On Nov 27, 2017
MissWrite:




Hahaha! grin. Yes, you do, sweetie. *whispers* ¥@%%#?!@**

kiss

My soul sister, I can spot you in a crowd! Well done, the op is everything and everything with nothing to add grin

kiss

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by MissWrite(f): 6:56pm On Nov 27, 2017
Dimples129:


My soul sister, I can spot you in a crowd! Well done, the op is everything and everything with nothing to add grin

kiss


Awwn....thanks, hun.

1 Like

Re: Feminism Relevant To Time And Place: Emancipation by SirMichael1: 7:02pm On Nov 27, 2017
Dimples129:


It's very well written, and the sister is sitting on some big brains grin

Alright, let me get on with it then

3 Likes

(1) (2) (Reply)

Guys I Need Your Advice. My Gf Said She Need A Break But We Can Still Be Friends / The Untold Problems With Dating/marrying A "Ready-made" Rich Guy / Handsome Short Guy Or Ugly Tall Guy? ....LADIES!!!

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 83
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.