Archive for category Women/ feminism
Free to Be You and Me Celebrates 40th Anniversary
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on December 12, 2012
After she’d divorced my deadbeat dad and we’d relocated from Connecticut to Massachusetts, my mom took me to my first NOW meeting when I was in the 3rd grade. She also bought me the album Free To Be You and Me which embraces independent spirits and gender neutrality. I loved this record in elementary school.
A few days ago I heard the podcast of Marlo Thomas on NPR and all the memories of the songs on this album and the importance of this project streamed right back into my mind. Marlo Thomas and her celebrity friends including Alan Alda, Rosey Grier, Cicely Tyson, Harry Belafonte, Carol Channing, Michael Jackson, and Diana Ross created fantastic songs that still resonate as they’re also still relevant and necessary. There’s still rapant sexism, racism and bullying in the United States.
NPR interview with Marlo Thomas
track listing:
“Free To Be… You And Me” – Music by Stephen J. Lawrence, Lyrics by Bruce Hart, Performed by The New Seekers
“Boy Meets Girl” – Written by Carl Reiner and Peter Stone, Performed by Mel Brooks and Marlo Thomas
“When We Grow Up” – Music by Stephen J. Lawrence, Lyrics by Shelly Miller, Performed by Roberta Flack and Michael Jackson on the special and Diana Ross on the soundtrack CD.
“Don’t Dress Your Cat In An Apron” – Written by Dan Greenburg, Performed by Billy De Wolfe
“Parents Are People” – Music and Lyrics by Carol Hall, Performed by Harry Belafonte and Marlo Thomas
“Housework” – Written by Sheldon Harnick, Performed by Carol Channing
“Helping” – Written by Shel Silverstein, Performed by Tom Smothers
“Ladies First” – Performed by Marlo Thomas (based on a Shel Silverstein poem
“Dudley Pippin And The Principal” – Written by Phil Ressner, Performed by Billy De Wolfe, Bobby Morse, and Marlo Thomas
“It’s All Right To Cry” – Music and Lyrics by Carol Hall, Performed by Rosey Grier
“Sisters And Brothers” – Music by Stephen J. Lawrence, Lyrics by Bruce Hart, Performed by Sisters and Brothers
“William’s Doll” – Music by Mary Rodgers, Lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, Performed by Alan Alda and Marlo Thomas (based on the children’s book)
“My Dog Is A Plumber” – Written by Dan Greenburg, Performed by Dick Cavett
“Atalanta” – Written by Betty Miles, Performed by Alan Alda and Marlo Thomas
“Grandma” – Written by Carole Hart, Performed by Diana Sands
“Girl Land” – Music by Mary Rodgers, Lyrics by Bruce Hart, Performed by Jack Cassidy and Shirley Jones
“Dudley Pippin And His No-Friend” – Written by Phil Ressner, Performed by Bobby Morse and Marlo Thomas
“Glad To Have A Friend Like You” – Music and Lyrics by Carol Hall, Performed by Marlo Thomas
POEM: the meds. the meds. the meds. I’m numb. nothing matters.
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on October 22, 2012
INSULT ME.
FLATTER ME.
CHARM ME.
HARASS ME.
SCARE ME.
COMFORT ME.
SEDUCE ME.
LEAVE ME.
COMPLIMENT ME.
CRITICIZE ME.
DETEST ME.
LOVE ME.
I DON’T CARE.
No Shame Day: My Name is Amy. I have depression and mood disorder and I have No Shame. #NoShame.
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on July 2, 2012
My name is Amy Steele.
I am a journalist, a nonprofit writer, a volunteer, a vegan, a medical assistant, a feminist, a compassionate individual.
I have major depression, anxiety and non-specified mood disorder.
everyone’s afraid of the truth. it’s easier to judge. to avoid. to stigmatize.
When I was 16, I developed bouts of anxiety when traveling to France –had an incident on the plane– but was fine during the exchange program. In college, I spoke to some therapists about feeling sad but no one ever said I needed medication or I was depressed. When I drove X-Country at 22, it got a bit worse. I felt strange driving in some wide open spaces or when camping but I managed it through visualization and breathing. After my first year of graduate school in Washington, DC, my housemate and I drove South and I just couldn’t make it beyond North Carolina. I went home to Boston and finished my masters degree at Boston University. I went to a psychiatrist and he prescribed Xanax which helped.
I really don’t remember anyone officially diagnosing me with depression but I had an awful time finding the correct medication and a decent psychiatrist. I started meds at age 27. I’ve tried beta-blockers, Zoloft, Paxil, Prozac, Serzone, Abilify, Lexapro, Wellbutrin and many others. I’m now 42 and in the hands of a resident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital department of psychiatry. I’m taking cymbalta for the depression, clonipin for my anxiety and topamax to keep my mood from swinging too far out-of-bounds (don’t want to be yelling or crying too much).
Over the years I’ve gained weight, lost weight and felt crappy. I’ve been briefly and mistakenly hospitalized and lost many friends. I’ve had people unreasonably judge me. I’ve had people who know nothing about me call me “bat shit crazy” or “insane” when I’m not. I’m *still* being harassed online due to my mental illness. I had to change my phone number and email and twitter. I lost my best friend two years ago because I had a breakdown and he cowardly wanted to get married and end our friendship.
People often don’t want to take the time to understand what you’re going through. Those are the people who should feel shame. Those people are despicable. If I had cancer or a physical illness, I wouldn’t be judged at all but because mental illness is just that people think that we have some sort of control over the chemical breakdown of our brains. A guy recently told me it was all “mind over matter” and being on meds was “BS.”
We do the best we can. We need support. We don’t need the stigma. We don’t need to be put into a box and told we’re having a bad day or going off the edge or that we’re crazy or that we’re having a meltdown. Don’t do that to us. You can hug us. You can listen but don’t label us.
I have an illness that I’m managing with a very good therapist (I’ve been seeing him for eight years), an excellent psychiatrist and medication. It’s not easy. I have good days and bad days and better days and worse days. I walk. I eat well. I do yoga.
suggested reading:
My name is Amy, and I have No Shame.
Please visit The SIWE Project to share their stories and hear others’ accounts of their battles with mental illness and to check out @thesiweproject on twitter, hashtag #NoShame.
RIP Erica Kennedy– author/ feminist/ friend
Posted by Amy Steele in Books, Women/ feminism on June 16, 2012
Gutted to hear that Erica Kennedy, feminist author, died a few days ago. Erica Kennedy was a novelist, screenwriter and social media strategist. After graduating from Sarah Lawrence College and Oxford University, she worked as a fashion publicist and then wrote for publications such as Elle UK, Vibe and In Style. Her first novel Bling, a New York Times best-seller, satirized the hip-hop industry.
We met via Twitter in 2009 when she published her second novel Feminista. She sent it to me, I reviewed it and we were tight for a while. She emailed me some Ukrainian websites where you could stream movies that were still in theaters. We talked movies, pop culture, politics, Oprah, Michelle, feminism and [everything and anything]. I later interviewed her in this piece I wrote about Why Authors Sign Books?
Erica was talented, opinionated, edgy and witty. Even the most successful, most beautiful people can be mentally ill. Erica dealt with mental illness, like me, daily. I’ll miss her presence immensely. We’re sista-friends forever.
*I’ll update when more details become available.
classic video: “Single Girl” by Lush
Posted by Amy Steele in Music, Visual/ Performance Art, Women/ feminism on May 26, 2012
classic video: “Beautiful Girl” by INXS
Posted by Amy Steele in Music, Women/ feminism on May 22, 2012
HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY: SEE, HEAR, READ
Posted by Amy Steele in Books, Film, Music, Women/ feminism on March 8, 2012
SEE: Searching for Debra Winger [written and directed by Rosanna Arquette]
–honest, refreshing examination of women in entertainment
purchase at Amazon: Searching for Debra Winger
HEAR: Oumou Sangare
download: Seya
READ: All the Stories of Muriel Spark by Muriel Spark
purchase: All the Stories of Muriel Spark
Women’s History Month: focus on 19th Amendment
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on March 3, 2012
Ratified August 18, 1920.
Section 1. The right of the citizens of the United States to vote
shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on
account of sex.
Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by
appropriate legislation.
in 1838, Kentucky allowed women to vote in school elections.
in 1889, the Territory of Wyoming gave women equal voting rights to men.
In July 1890, the Territory of Wyoming admitted as a state.
By 1900, Utah, Colorado, and Idaho joined Wyoming in allowing women to vote.
–in 1848, at the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, women’s voting proposed on a serious level.
— 19-year-old Charlotte Woodward attended Seneca Falls and in 1920 was the only participant in the 1848 Convention still alive but unfortunately too ill to vote.
–Susan B. Anthony and Alice Paul also very active in the suffrage movement.
Women’s History Month: quotes on feminism
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on March 2, 2012
The result is that we all know what feminists are. They are shrill, overly aggressive, man-hating, ball-busting, selfish, hairy, extremist, deliberately unattractive women with absolutely no sense of humor who see sexism at every turn.
Susan Douglas, Where the Girls Are
I told the women I did not believe in women’s rights or men’s rights but in human rights.
–Mary Harris Jones
Women want the seemingly impossible: that men treat them with the respect and fair-mindedness with which they treat most men.
— Joyce Carol Oates
I define as “feminist” any attempt to improve the lot of any group of women through female solidarity and a female perspective.
–Marilyn French, The War Against Women
Never met a wise man
If so it’s a woman
–Kurt Cobain
I myself have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is; I only know that people cal me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that distinguish me from a doormat.
–Rebecca West
CELEBS: Catherine Zeta-Jones and others can reduce stigma of mental illness
Posted by Amy Steele in Women/ feminism on April 14, 2011
On Monday, Catherine Zeta-Jones’s publicist announced that she’d been hospitalized for treatment of bi-polar disorder. She has bi-polar II disorder which means she has more periods of depression than mania. She’s had a stressful year and external situations take a toll on anyone and particularly those who already have a mental illness. The best part of this is that Catherine Zeta-Jones can provide a high profile example that mental illness is a disease like alcoholism that needs constant monitoring and treatment but shouldn’t mean that people feel the need to keep the person at a distance.
according to the CDC, 1 in 10 Americans reports depression at some time during their lives.
Although Tom Cruise disastrously stole away her true message, Brooke Shields wrote a wonderful book about her post-partum depression called Down Came the Rain.
Ashley Judd has a new memoir, All That is Bitter and Sweet, where she discusses her battles with depression.
Judd also stars in the film Helen [available via netflix instant] where she plays a woman who hides her depression and has a major breakdown. It’s an excellent performance and quite a good film. I have depression and I thought the depiction very accurate. Although depression manifests itself differently in everyone.
The rich and famous aren’t immune.





















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