» Articles » PMID: 37791093

The Missing Ingredient: How Misogyny and the Patriarchy Sabotage Our Clinical Practice and Research

Overview
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2023 Oct 4
PMID 37791093
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Discussing massive, unrelenting trauma, especially during a global pandemic, when the threat is not only personally affecting you, but also everyone else, is not an easy thing to do. We can see the consequences of two years of being locked inside. People's trauma responses literally came flooding out. It seems that the pandemic tipped us over an abyss that is hard to comprehend. In so many countries there are protests, laws rolling back basic human rights, the threat of fascism, and actual war. There seems to be widespread governmental corruption that cannot stop the favouritism of those who have wealth, and perpetually admonish those who do not. Our world seems very unstable. Change is deeply desired. Yet, this instability is predictable. It is predictable because the systems that created the structures that "run and rule" us are fundamentally destructive and violent. In never-ending ways, the only way that change happens is by utilizing violence as the only way to achieve change. This is the legacy of patriarchy. A system that not only is ruled by one group of people but also tends to be controlled by a very specific type of person. It is a system that cultivates human cruelty, selfishness, and violence. It is a system that is managed by those who do the "best" in violence. Most of us do not work this way but are forced to live this way because of the belief that humans are innately violent, selfish, and self-serving; a myth based on the traumatic reaction of fight. It is a dissociated, relational injury that is a direct result of not having our mothers and fathers able to be mothers and fathers. It is formed in misogyny. There are ways to heal, if one can comprehend what misogyny does to human beings, and what we would be like in its absence.

References
1.
Lebois L, Li M, Baker J, Wolff J, Wang D, Lambros A . Large-Scale Functional Brain Network Architecture Changes Associated With Trauma-Related Dissociation. Am J Psychiatry. 2020; 178(2):165-173. PMC: 8030225. DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.19060647. View

2.
Perkeybile A, Carter C, Wroblewski K, Puglia M, Kenkel W, Lillard T . Early nurture epigenetically tunes the oxytocin receptor. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2018; 99:128-136. PMC: 6231974. DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2018.08.037. View

3.
Hare B . Survival of the Friendliest: Homo sapiens Evolved via Selection for Prosociality. Annu Rev Psychol. 2016; 68:155-186. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-psych-010416-044201. View

4.
Barrett L, Finlay B . Concepts, Goals and the Control of Survival-Related Behaviors. Curr Opin Behav Sci. 2019; 24:172-179. PMC: 6541420. DOI: 10.1016/j.cobeha.2018.10.001. View

5.
Tronick E, Beeghly M . Infants' meaning-making and the development of mental health problems. Am Psychol. 2010; 66(2):107-19. PMC: 3135310. DOI: 10.1037/a0021631. View