Most modern women subscribe to the feminist movement. But 
what is the Feminist movement aimed at? Is it a effort to equip women 
with masculine qualities so that they can fight men for equality in the society? Or is it an effort to reawaken and nurture the light of the Sacred 
feminine that is the innate divine quality of a women. The following is one of 
the best articles I have read on Feminism. 
FEMININE 2.0
When
 I went to college in the 1970's, the Women's Liberation movement was all
 the buzz. Women's "consciousness raising groups" were growing up 
everywhere, as women shared with each other their secrets - and anger --
 that they, their mothers and their great, great grandmothers had held 
tight to their chests for centuries.
Feminists of the time
 were right about some things, but wrong about others. On one hand, 
there's no underestimating the explosion of formerly unavailable choices
 that became ours at last as a consequence of the Women's Movement. 
Sisterhood truly meant something then; we realized that none of us would
 succeed in life unless all of us were allowed to. And it became 
unequivocally clear that women could think as well as men, work as well 
as men, and deserved the opportunity to do whatever it was that we 
wanted to do. It's almost hard to believe that that was still somewhat 
of a radical proposition only forty years ago, but it was.
As
 with any movement, however -- whether a person's individual journey or 
the collective journey of a culture -- there were sometimes two steps 
forward and one step back. While women were powerfully liberated both 
externally as well as internally by the feminism of the 1970's, we made 
some serious mistakes as well. Looking back on it now, it's clear that 
in some ways we denigrated the feminine in the name of feminism. Too 
often we took liberation to mean simply that we were free now to behave 
just like men. In the name of feminism, we denied some essential aspects
 of our authentic selves. While feminism should have been nothing if not
 a celebration of our own unique characteristics, we insisted that we 
had no unique characteristics... that gender differences were hogwash, 
and a feminine woman was nothing more than a plaything for men. Calling a
 woman "feminine" was practically an insult! Words like nurturing and 
maternal weren't viewed as feminine and therefore feminist; rather, they
 were viewed as weak. If men could be tough as nails in the corporate 
boardroom, then so could we. If men could have sex and not get 
emotionally involved, then so could we. If men could make business their
 bottom line and not factor in the welfare of children in formulating 
social and economic policy, then so could we. Yippee. We were liberated 
to become their clones. 
The last thing the world needed, 
of course, was twice as many paternalistic thinkers as there were 
before. But you live and you learn. In the last two or three decades, a 
great correction has been underway, as women of my generation have 
recognized the psychic scars left by our self-inflicted wounding of the 
feminine self. Too often, having become men, we then had a harder time 
with men. And having denied the importance (even the reality) of our 
feminine yearnings, we too often lay havoc to what is for many women a 
natural yearning of the heart, born of millions of years of evolution, 
to make a home and raise a family. Choosing to be a "traditional 
housewife" was seen as relatively unimportant at that time: so much less
 important, say, than having a real job. 
I looked at my 
own mother -- at her passionate devotion to husband, children, home and 
extended family -- and I thought I could improve on that! I would go out
 into the world, you see -- out where the important things were 
happening. It took me - as I think of took millions of other women, as 
well - a few decades to see how very wrong I was. 
In 
time, I came to understand that spiritual, mythical and archetypal 
forces are just as powerful and influential as are political, cultural 
and social ones. Indeed, we overemphasize either category at the expense
 of something precious that the other has to offer. And in a 
metaphysical sense - given that as Einstein said, "time and space are 
illusions of consciousness" - you come to realize that as far as a 
difference between being "out in the world" and "being at home" is 
concerned, there actually is no difference. The concept of "out there" 
or "in here" becomes pretty meaningless once you realize that everything
 out there is simply a reflection of one's consciousness. If anything, 
if we tended to the within better, there wouldn't be so many problems 
without: if we raised our children better and tended to our own psyches 
more effectively, then we wouldn't have so many political and social 
problems to begin with. 
I ultimately realized that my 
mother's very traditional role was far from meaningless. I now see that 
is a woman's God-given role to tend to the home and take care of the 
children: it's just that the entire planet is our home and every child 
on it is one of our children. Hell yes, women need to be out in the 
world if that's where we feel led to be, but not at the expense of our 
spiritual mission. Rather, we're in the world to fulfill that mission, 
by proclaiming that the world is our home and that we're responsible for
 all of its children.
And that would change the world.
Just
 as we wouldn't tolerate elements to enter our home that needlessly 
endanger our own children, so we shouldn't tolerate elements in the 
world that needlessly endanger anyone's children. Homemaker and 
motherhood are not just material conditions that belong to a few; they 
are states of consciousness that belong to any woman who assumes them. 
Women should be the keepers of the conscience of the world. We are 
keepers of the internal flame - the light of humanitarian values and the
 primacy of love - and our greatest power lies in keeping it lit.
Corporate
 profits should not be our economic bottom line; the safety and welfare 
of this planet, our collective habitat, should be our bottom line. On 
this, we should insist. For we are the homemakers of the world....
Money
 should not be our societal bottom line; the welfare of our children 
should be our bottom line. On this, we should insist. For we are the 
mothers of the world...
Any mother, should she see 
something dangerous in her home, would say, "No, not in this house! No 
way! Not here!" And as women of the world become the strong moral force 
that in our collective state we are capable of being, then when 
dangerous elements born of unrestrained greed and aggression enter the 
world, it is we who should lead the cry, "No, not on this planet! No 
way! Not here."
A common anthropological characteristic of
 every advanced mammalian species that survives and thrives is the 
fierce behavior of the adult female of the species when she senses a 
threat to her cubs. From the lioness to the tigress to the mama bear, 
any threat to her cubs is met with the fiercest response. The adult 
female hyenas even encircle their cubs while they're feeding, not 
letting the adult males get anywhere near the food until the babies have
 been fed. 
Imagine if we were to insist -- as with our 
collective political and financial power we could insist that the 
amelioration of unnecessary human suffering become society's new bottom 
line. From the 17,000 children on this planet who starve to death each 
day to the millions who lack a basic elementary education, from the 
relative complacency of the industrialized nations to the brutalization 
of women through the world to the billion souls among us living as best 
they can on less than $1.25 a day, it is the sleeping giant of a 
conscious and awakened womanhood that can provide the only sustainable 
solution: putting human civilization back on the track to probable 
survival by giving back to it its heart.
Women worked hard, and 
many at great personal sacrifice, to provide for the modern Western 
woman the extraordinary opportunities and powers that we now enjoy. 
While not all our battles for equality have been won, still enough of 
them have been won that our focus should not be solely on getting more 
power, but on how to use most effectively the power that we have. We 
have not only the right but also the moral responsibility to speak out 
loudly not only for our planet and our children, and for the millions of
 sisters around the world who cannot speak up for themselves. Not 
centuries ago but weeks ago, a fourteen year old girl in Bangladesh was 
raped, then caned as her "punishment," and then died of her wounds. Let 
us speak, and act, for her.
In honor of our foremothers, 
for the sake of our oppressed sisters around the world, and for the love
 of all of our children both born and not yet born, we should wake up 
now... kick ass now... and change this world before it is too late. For 
that kind of thing is woman's work. Twas always thus, and will always 
be....
Marianne Williamson

 
 
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