How many times have you heard or joked about a woman being unable to make up her mind about what to have for dinner?
Have you ever considered it may be part of a survival strategy?
Indecision, deferring choice, might a way to attempt to conform to authority. Our resilience to groupthink and conformity may depend on our self-concept. If we believe we are efficacious individuals, that we are capable of evaluating, choosing and acting in our best interests, we are less likely to succumb to perspectives and behaviors out of fear and insecurity. When people lack the belief that they are capable of acting in their best interests - when they distrust that they are capable of surviving - they must develop secondary social coping strategies in order to personally ensure their survival.
Because women are, on average, at a far greater disadvantage physically than men, they must do one of two things to ensure their safety from men and nature1: 1) appeal to whatever consensus keeps them “in” the group or 2) hyper-individuate and influence the actions of major parties. We may be so preoccupied with bombarding our minds with ideas to ensure our survival that this second idea of how to survive unsettles us. However, we see this phenomena all the time: if someone goes “against the grain” but does it in a way that benefits, protects and/or uplifts others, they are considered a hero.
To return to that question, “What’s for dinner?”, how many layers of unseen cognitive processes are going on to avoid answering that question so that the woman will not be socially rejected (and implicitly die) for not being agreeable? I don’t know. I’m not a psychologist or social scientist, I am just someone interested in human behavior the way a writer might be. All I would like to propose is that our capacities for groupthink, conformity - and even indecision2 - ultimately boil down to survival strategies - and so do everyone else’s.
My next question might be, well, what about people who are lascivious creeps about shoving their ideas and opinions about the world down your throat? Another question for another day.3
Footnotes
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Men do this too. However, men, more than women, have an easier time biologically and socially developing their bodies into weapons to defend themselves. Physical confidence is real confidence. ↩
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I initially wrote this subconsciously assuming that indecision, deferring choice, is to attempt to conform to authority. As I continued working, I admitted that that may not necessarily be the case, although it is compelling enough as a premise to leave the piece majorly as-is and simply "fill in the gap" with the opening sentence. ↩
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I write a lot "like this" but do not share it much because I feel at times presumptive of understanding things I do not. But this is a tiny experiment in writing to test some of my bigger ideas for an audience. Please let me know what you think. Thank you for reading. ↩