updated 2025 You know what truly angers and frustrates me about this Olympic boxing issue? It’s not just the debate—it’s the pattern. Whenever th
updated 2025
You know what truly angers and frustrates me about this Olympic boxing issue?
It’s not just the debate—it’s the pattern.
Whenever there’s a challenge involving identity, ability, or medical conditions, women are automatically expected to slide over, adjust, accommodate, and stay quiet about it.
Be nice.
Be friendly.
Be gracious.
Be “kinder.”
Or else.
If a woman dares to say, “This doesn’t work for me” or “We need a better solution,” the backlash is immediate.
She’s labeled unkind, bigoted, exclusionary, or accused of “policing” others.
For simply saying no.
Meanwhile, what’s being asked of men?
Nothing.
No behavioral adjustments.
No language changes.
No accountability.
Just sit back and watch while women are berated, threatened, and sacrificed—again.
Let me be clear: the word “kinder” is officially banned in my vicinity until it’s applied equally. I’m through with being targeted while men are allowed to do whatever they please with no social consequence.
🤕 When Disability and Identity Are Weaponized to Target Women
As someone with firsthand experience with rare conditions and disabilities, this hits especially hard.
I come from a family where disability is common—and yet, we’ve lived full, active, purpose-driven lives. We’ve worked alongside others with disabilities for decades, not just surviving but advocating, organizing, and contributing passionately to the cause of accessibility and dignity.
So when I see what’s happening in sports—particularly women’s sports—I can’t help but notice something:
There’s a growing group of males with rare conditions whose presence demands attention. That in itself is not the issue.
There’s actually an opportunity for education, solidarity, and innovation in that space. Why not create celebratory, well-funded competitive categories that honor difference and make room for excellence?
Why, instead, are we demanding that able-bodied women bear the burden of accommodating everyone else—at the expense of their safety, dignity, and hard-won spaces?
💰 Where’s the Sacrifice from Men?
Why is the labor of empathy, adjustment, and inclusion always dumped on women?
If we’re truly talking about fairness and equity:
Where are the male athletes stepping up to sacrifice their categories?
Where are the financial contributions to create expanded divisions?
Where is the organized male advocacy for building a bigger, more inclusive tent?
Because threatening women, slurring women, and demanding more from women is not activism—it’s bullying. And it’s cowardly.
As my Granny used to say to all of us kids:
“Make yourself useful.”
If all you do is come for women, curse us, dismiss us, and shame us—you’re not building justice. You’re standing in the way of it.
⚖️ We Can’t Keep Wearing Out the Same People
You can only ask the same group—women—to carry the burden of “fixing” society for so long before the whole thing collapses.
Women have carried and corrected society more times than we can count.
And while we’re fighting, folding ourselves in half, and extending grace at every turn—men remain untouched, unchallenged, and unaccountable.
That is what needs fixing.
Because if we’re not willing to ask men to do their share, then we’re not truly seeking solutions.
We’re just dressing up imbalance as progress.
And women? We’re no longer falling for that.