Gralson has expressed a "discomfort" with the idea of me having sex with other men. He's never dared suggest that I can't, or even requested that I don't, so it's not a "control" thing because he's never suggested anything like a OPP. What he has said is that it would be really weird for him, and he would have some inner work to do around that if it happened.
Now, I don't see him as a misogynist. Gralson loves women. All his best friends are women, and have been since childhood. He's never been that close to guy friends. When he was a kid, boys used to beat him up, and his dad beat him up, so basically, to him, men aren't trustworthy: they'll fuck you up.
He's a railroader, runs a crew of 41 men and 1 woman. These past 3 weeks, he's been fighting for her, risking his job even, because his supervisor wants him to give her a menial job, and he thinks that's sexist and bullshit. He's printed her out the harassment form to file against his supervisor, offered to help her fill it out, involved the union rep to make sure they're aware of what the supervisor's trying to do as well as what he's risking to stop it from happening... So yeah, basically not what you would expect from a misogynist.
Anyway, he happened to phone just as I was reading this thread, thinking about what he would have to say for himself regarding his discomfort surrounding me and other penises. So I read him
London's comment and here's his response:
"In a nutshell, no. I would be... hehe... I would be more surprised if you left me for a man than a woman. (Not you speficially, that's just anybody, maybe at some point you will meet Prince Charming Man who is perfect, and then that will be that). But uhh... I don't think that I see... there's... there's definitly been a thought, there's definitely a perception ... and it's not even a sexual thing, it's a mental thing. I think that a lot of guys have a thought, so I don't disagree with what she says, for many guys... Yeah, I can remember having many conversations with guys, [them:] "yeah I want to be with two girls" [him:] "Oh, so you don't have a problem with bi girls?" [them:] "Oh no, bi girls are disgusting." [him:] "So... what are they doing together?" [them:] "They're doing...stuff..." [him:] "Uhhh, that makes no sense to me." And oddly enough, that's not an uncommon conversation to have in that area... so, I don't know."
He never really got clear on what "the thought" was. I asked him to clarify:
Him: "I don't necessarily think she's wrong. I don't really know, it just goes into the whole jealousy thing, is what I've come up with it. Yeah, I think it's just jealousy."
Me: "Like, fear of losing, you mean?"
Him: "I... don't... know. Possibly, I guess. I don't really know what it is. I don't know. What was that word she said? The M-word?"
Me: "Misogyny?"
Him: "Yeah. What does that man?"
Me: "Hatred of women."
Him: (thinks) "No, I wouldn't say that's what it is. I don't hate women. I just, I don't know, I think guys are more threatening."
So that's one man's take on it. He doesn't hate women, even subconsciously (in my subjective opinion), but he thinks men are more threatening. He definitely believes that males and females are socialized differently (can't argue with that) and that there are also some inherent biological differences (can't argue with that, either). But we've talked a lot about sexism and "guy things" because he does use that excuse a lot, and I call him on it... "Oh, it's just a guy thing." "No, he's being an asshole. It's not a 'guy thing' to be an asshole. It's an asshole thing." I'm trying to break him of the belief that being socialized one way excuses behaviour.
But I really and truly don't believe he's a misogynist, i.e. that he hates women or thinks they're inferior. I just don't see it, not in the way he treats me or his daughter or the one woman on his male-dominated team. I mean, how many misogynists would risk their jobs to prevent a woman from doing menial tasks? He's always encouraged his daughter to speak up, stand up for her beliefs, not to take no gruff from her boyfriends. He doesn't have any close male friends, but his female friends can't tell me enough stories about all the times he's stood up for them, helped them out, been there just to listen...
But maybe that's also what makes the difference between "I would feel uncomfortable about it" vs "I'm asking you not to do it." I mean, just feeling uncomfortable about something doesn't make someone controlling, obviously. Telling your wimmins what to do is what makes you controlling...