Mayim Bialik: How Women’s Studies Classes Changed My Life [View all]
<...> Womens Studies is not a class about women. It is a class about our culture and our society and the structure of our relationships. The lens is not for women only, although about 95% of my class was female. In Womens Studies at UCLA, we learned about sexual relationships, hormones, psychology, development and politics. We explored our prejudice and our intolerance, and we confronted things about our perceptions and assumptions that transformed the way I view the world.
The most powerfully life-changing thing that Womens Studies did for me was to make me concretely and acutely aware of the race and class injustice in the world. I bet you think that the feminist movement is only about empowering women. That is a part of it, of course. But the true movement of feminism seeks to use the lens of the womens movement to empower all people regardless of race, class and gender. Men, women, however you identify. Rich, poor, black, white, brown, whatever you are. Womens Studies taught me to see the world as that struggle for equality and it changed me forever.
One of our assignments one week was to start observing workers in the world. I started watching and I have never stopped. From literally that day forward, I became the person who says hi to service workers. I wave at garbage men. I say hello to janitors and custodians. When I see city workers doing construction I wave and say thank you. When construction was being performed in our neighborhood for a long enough time that the workers set up a tent, my sons and I baked cookies and took them over. I am that lady who makes eye contact with people in service positions in hospitals, schools, parks and at the mall.
You know why? Because in womens studies we learned that if you want the world to be better and more equal, it starts with respect. Many people I say hi to are shocked or look behind them to see who I must be talking to, because people so rarely say hi to service workers and construction people and garbage men. That makes me so sad. Imagine if your job was to collect garbage and drive around in a huge old truck all morning and its noisy and you rarely get breaks and you dont make as much money as you should and you have to wake up early and its just exhausting. Imagine that you go through your life without anyone saying hi. Or thanking you. Everyone should thank the garbage man and say hi. Thats my feeling. Because human beings are social, and we need to feel like we matter, because we do. Everyone matters. <...>
linkI was fortunate enough to have lunch with Ms Bialik when she was working on her PhD at UCLA; she's an incredibly smart, aware, inquisitive, and lovely person. I'm glad she wrote this.