Thank you all who’ve reached out, found me on other platforms, and subscribed to FEMINIST GIANT.
I’ve been on here since 2009 and have survived hate from every group imaginable, from the Saudi regime to white supremacist.
EM is new beast. Monitoring & will decide what’s best.
EM is the richest man on earth. He’s a new beast here.
It’s too early to say I’ve survived hate all these years so I’m not leaving. Moderation was awful before. And now?
He’s dangerous and we don’t know what he’ll do.
I am taking seriously what could come.
Twitter—or rather people who care about me on Twitter—saved me twice:
-November 2011 when Egyptian riot police broke my arms and sexually assaulted me and I managed to tweet from detention and #FreeMona trended in 15 minutes and helped get me released.
—September 2012 when NYPD arrested me for spray painting over racist pro-Israel ad in subway and I was held in overnight jail and activists urged @StanleyCohenLaw to come to my arraignment and he represented me pro bono for 2yrs until judge dropped charges in interest of Justice
I’ve shared rage and pain here.
I’ve shared various joys here.
Every anniversary, @rerutled and I share how we met here.
So so so many friends made here.
I take loads of pride in work I’ve done here and I take very seriously the opinions I’ve worked out, finessed, and shared here.
It’s taken guts to share my thoughts here, and I’ve got guts for fucking days.
And still, I say I don’t know what’s ahead.
Every morning, I start my day by tweeting love and solidarity to all.
There are many people I don’t give a flying fuck about.
I started doing that during lockdown as to signal I was still alive and to cut through the isolation so many of us felt.
That too is Twitter. ❤️✊🏽💜
So, being here for 14 years has meant the ways I’ve used this platform have changed.
I’ve changed.
I will see what will change and if the changes ahead are changes I want to stay for.
An Egyptian friend and I yesterday talked at length yesterday at how enthralled we are at the feminist revolution in Iran; especially that it centres feminism in the way ours in Egypt did not. We are thrilled that it will change the region and the world! feministgiant.com/p/essay-women-…
The in the Arabic-speaking countries were sparked by a man — Mohamed Bouazizi, a Tunisian street vendor–who set himself on fire and in so doing sparked revolutions and uprisings in the region that have stumbled and remain incomplete.
And here now are women in Iran reigniting our revolutionary hearts with the feminism those Arab uprisings lacked.
“This is one of the reasons why I’m talking about it…There are very few women who’ve been in top positions in politics, but of those who have been, if you think about Angela Merkel, Hillary Clinton, Thatcher they must all have gone through this,” Nicola Sturgeon on #menopause
Nicola Sturgeon is not the first woman to lead a country. But it is telling that the only other cis woman leader that she can compare her experience of the #menopause transition with is fictonal--Danish TV series Borgen’s Birgitte Nyborg feministgiant.com/p/essay-the-po…
For many reasons, women reach pinnacles of political power as they enter midlife–be it age requirements of certain political positions, more time because their children (if they have them) have grown, or simply because it takes years to accrue power and to make it up that ladder.
“There's an upside to this stage in life where menopause can reduce women’s confidence but I think getting to this stage gives you another kind of confidence…F it a little bit & say what you think & who cares what other people think...There's a liberating element to all of this”
The above quote is from First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon. She is not the first woman to lead a country, but it is telling that she is the only one who has spoken publicly about her menopause transition feministgiant.com/p/essay-the-po…
Because other than Sturgeon and Danish TV series Borgen’s Birgitte Nyborg, you would think that being elected into office rendered female political leaders immune from a life transition that affects everyone who has ever had a uterus. #menopause
“This is one of the reasons why I’m talking about it…There are very few women who’ve been in top positions in politics, but of those who have been, if you think about Angela Merkel, Hillary Clinton, Thatcher they must all have gone through this,” Nicola Sturgeon on #menopause
“And yet I can’t find anybody that has spoken about it and that would help me, I think, if I could go and hear or read somebody who had the same kind of anxieties that I have about the very public nature of the job.” feministgiant.com/p/essay-the-po…#menopause
October is Menopause Awareness Month, also known as World Menopause Month.
We need that awareness and more of it every day.
I've written 14 essays on #perimenopause and aging for FEMINIST GIANT, which are all free to read and share. feministgiant.com
Why would it require ovaries of steel or any other metaphors of courage, for cis women leaders to talk about a life transition that will affect more than half the population?
In August 2020 on her eponymous podcast, former U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama, 58, described in surreal detail what it was like to go through a hot flash as she was about to climb out of Marine One.
My new essay looks at why First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon is the only woman political leader who has spoken about her #menopause transition.
While Sturgeon talks about taking HRT, brain fog, rage, and insomnia, why are so many others silent? feministgiant.com/p/essay-the-po…
Listen and watch FM Nicola Sturgeon in her own words talk about her menopause transition through the links in my essay. 👆🏽
Support my work by sharing and subscribing. It's free--no paywall or ads.
Because other than Sturgeon and Danish TV series Borgen’s Birgitte Nyborg, you would think that being elected into office rendered female political leaders immune from a life transition that affects everyone who has ever had a uterus.