I remember the first troll that left me a comment. It was
about 3 years ago, when I had just started blogging and there was someone
trolling the ALI blogosphere leaving anonymous nasty comments that were meant
to tear down the authors. As I had set my comments to moderation and remove
Captcha, this author wrote three different versions, each more angry than the
last as they were assuming that Blogger was eating them. But the goal was
laughably clear: to hit with hatred in order to silence. To spread bitterness
to a group of women who were pouring their hearts out online as this individual
wanted to make others feel the way they felt about themselves.
Thought policing isn’t a new concept. The idea that people
need to be monitored and corrected for expressing ideas or feelings that are
undesirable has been around since before the written word. There’s something
desirable about this concept, with establishing rules and guidelines for a
community in order to serve the greater whole. Be sensitive, support those in
kind, don’t complain needlessly or compare pain, etc, etc. After all, there are
narcissists and incredibly selfish people who would otherwise suck a community
dry with the black hole that is their self-centeredness and inability to
empathize. But thought policing can also be dangerous, with a minority quickly
shutting down anyone who shares thoughts or emotions that they deem
unacceptable. In a way, it is a form of fascism, with a blood-lust that can
develop for attacking anyone who deviates even in reasonable ways.
“In the
Infertility community in particular, it becomes an issue when the vocal
minority shuts down long awaited joys, tough conversations and legitimate
feelings with cliché statements and judgmental tirades.
Just be grateful…
I’d never complain if *I* had a kid…
Can you believe she posted a picture of her
[pee stick, belly picture, ultrasound pic, etc]?
The problem comes when the quiet majority ends
up sitting by on the sidelines feeling afraid to share everything from
jubilant thoughts to frustrated feelings, simply out of a fear of facing
loud criticisms and hurt feelings from the vocal minority.”
Reading this post brought up some
mixed feelings and emotions. On the one hand, I have encountered blogs where
the author seems to be so incredibly unhappy with life, even after finding themselves
pregnant or parenting. In these cases, I’ve found myself so annoyed that continuing to
read, let alone comment, was a form of self-punishment thus unfollowing was a
far better option. But the flip is that there have been and continue to be
bloggers I follow who have the posts that ALWAYS start with them apologizing,
then writing carefully about difficulties they are facing either with their pregnancy
or while parenting. All the while peppering their posts with the required
statements that they are grateful for their children and their current
situation and ending their posts with some self-deprecating statement. Even
then, there are moments where the thought police descend, ripping into the
author for being so insensitive and thoughtless as it’s clear she just can’t
appreciate what she has or that somehow she is defective as a human being for
daring to think or feel that way.
The reality is, every person
in this community will find themselves at the end of their TTC journey one day.
Biologically, it’s impossible not to. In addition, most here will resolve
(though there will be the few that never will). Because of this fact and
because of the fact that we live in a diverse world, there needs to be a
general understanding that the next steps aren’t always filled with moments of
sunshine. There will be moments of fear and uncertainty, pain and despair.
Reality, as it usually does, will find fun new ways to smack you in the face.
That’s part of life and is true in all aspects.
During my pregnancy with the
Beats, I found myself growing more and more silent as time went on. There’s no
doubt that I was over the moon to final find myself carrying two rainbow babies
after all our losses and uncertainty how to even resolve. But the truth was
that pregnancy was very high-risk and scary. While my babies were growing and
doing well, my body was crashing with the Beats being delivered early due to me
going into both liver and kidney failure. After that, there were 4 weeks of
NICU, were I went to bed nightly praying that they would be alive in the
morning. I cried daily for a month. Though I know we were lucky and that there were
others who were in a far worse situation, with me having to watch parents lose
their children as a reminder. But a year later, all of this still haunts me.
Yet I felt like I couldn’t talk
about any of this. That by doing so, I believed others would see me as
ungrateful. I even had people tell me that I was lucky to have my babies come
when they did because I actually got to hold them and no longer worry about
having to be pregnant. Never mind the fact that it was general knowledge that
they needed more time in the womb and that without the technology we have today
they probably wouldn’t have survived. Instead it felt like I needed to be unilaterally grateful
because I knew others who weren’t holding their children or would never have
the chance to experience half the joy I did.
There’s a problem that emerges
when one is silenced. For most humans, voicing worries and frustrations
is a way to process what is happening. A form of problem-solving. By being heard one feels less isolated. By putting it out there, we give the
experience/trauma recognition and allow for it to be addressed, which, in turn, allows for processing and healing. In some cases, simple acknowledgement is enough, bringing peace to even the most vocal complainer. Silencing takes all of that away,
leaving the person instead involved with a growing shapeless form that tortures
and torments. It also instills a sense of shame and guilt, all the while
destroying.
I struggle with in all of this
because there is a need for sensitivity in this community. My experience with
individuals like Angie taught me that boundaries need to be established as otherwise there will be a free-for-all
will otherwise allow for the leeches to take over and suck everything dry. In
addition, we all need our safe havens. We need those places where we won’t be
blindsided when we are our most fragile. Hence the need for general
understandings and rules to ensure that community stays in tack.
But on the other end is that
silencing someone when we feel they’ve overstepped when they really haven’t.
Making it so that once someone goes past point X, they are no longer allowed to
speak freely because a random person might take offense. There will always be
people who eavesdrop, but that doesn’t this mean that we need to apologize
every step of the way.
The thing is, how does one address this? For me, I find that in the cases where I have said something, it's usually because I've developed a relationship with the person. But even then, I do so privately and try to express concern gently. I find calling people out in a public way to be far more telling about the person bringing the issue to light, especially since we are usually only getting one person's version. Sure, there are times for debate and conversation, but when it devolves into a screaming match I rarely find it useful. There are also times where I've defaulted with silence when I see someone venting in a way I don't agree with. I respect their right to speak and use their space, but I also know that I can exercise my right not to read. All that said, I also know that many don't agree with me as blogging is seen as an ongoing conversation. So the question is, how would you handle it? Is there ever a right time to silence someone?