An unfortunate cultural reality

Sastra reminded us today of Freddie deBoer and I’m wondering why I haven’t been reading him all along. From August: Prologue to an Anti-Therapeutic, Anti-Affirmation Movement. I like it already – I’m beyond tired of the constant demands for “affirmation” of utter bullshit.

Dude has a way with words.

It frequently seems like canceling has run out of steam, as a disciplinary tactic; you watch people on social media trying to get somebody canceled, these days, and it sometimes feels like watching them trying and failing to get a pull-cord lawnmower started.

I need to watch the people he’s watching, because the ones I see have all too much success – but I love the punchline.

I’m not predicting a major social change writ large so much as I am predicting a new or newly invigorated response to a preexisting cultural reality, an unfortunate one. I think there’s gathering dissatisfaction with a common set of tropes regarding personal agency and mental health. In particular, I think that the dominance of the therapeutic assumption in American life, and the role of affirmation within it, will be challenged. Currently, an inescapable American cultural mode, particularly among the educated, is one of mandatory therapeutic maximalism and an attendant tyranny of affirmation.

Yes but only for some. Mandatory therapeutic maximalism for some, and brutal shouting and shunning for others. Tyranny of affirmation for some, and loud insistent ceaseless negation for others. But, again, “tyranny of affirmation” is top-notch.

The therapeutic/affirmational mode assumes

  • Wanting and not getting is disordered and a kind of identity crime
  • Human life is meant to be spent in a ceaseless state of feeling “valid,” which is to say, affirmed and respected and paid attention to and liked; any deviation from this state is pathological and a vestige of injustice

For the chosen recipients. Not everyone; just the Truly Madly Deeply marginalized, like for instance trans women, and trans women, and trans women. Women are most definitely not meant to be in a ceaseless state of feeling “valid” (not, admittedly, that I would want to).

  • Good people spend a great deal of their time categorically and uncritically affirming others – telling friends and strangers alike that their desires are all legitimate, their instincts always correct, their perceptions of their own needs never mistaken or misguided, their self-conception compelling
  • Correspondingly, we should all assume that anyone who is not affirming us is necessarily doing so out of a particular kind of politicized wickedness, that they are likely motivated by racism, sexism, homophobia, or other kinds of bigotry, and if these specific accusations are not plausible, then by simple evil

Again, for the chosen few, and not for others. Trans women yes, women absolutely not are you out of your mind.

We do the best for others by affirming what they already believe and validating what they already want; people are happiest and healthiest when they are encouraged to think that vulnerability is more valuable than resilience and that their pain is more beautiful than their strength.

Which is interesting because it means women are the winners here after all. Who would want to be babied and cooed over the way trans women are? Who would want to be treated as fragile invalids the way they are? I sure as hell wouldn’t. Rebel energy yes, whining malingering fragility a thousand times NO.

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