I jumped in to help
on our college Facebook
page. A mother posted
concern about her daughters,
two of them, who don’t
like online learning,
though pandemic
college can’t be fully
face-to-face, not just
yet, and I thought I
typed “daughters,”
but I typed “daughter,”
and some man jumped
on the thread and said,
“Daughter are? And you’re
an English professor?
I’m not surprised.” And
all 23 years of my career
reared up behind me
and begged to be allowed
to respond. They wanted
to say, “You want to go
head-to-head on grammar,
fuckbucket? Because I’m
down for that, you inbred
single-celled shitgibbon.”
But I was on the college
page, so I took a couple
of deep breaths and wrote,
“Thanks for the catch!” (Note
the exclamation point. It makes
it friendlier. It’s how women
are socialized to appear
less aggressive. I would
love to see a study that
compares exclamation
point usage between women
and men, though I don’t
really need official data.)
As I breathed through my
response, I thought
about how common
snark has become, toxic
thrusts and parries, and
how people will throw
schoolyard taunts at
others without any
knowledge of who
they really are. And
I wondered how this
man would feel if I
questioned him in a
snide manner about his
life’s work. And then I
wondered if I had ever done
just that to someone. It’s
possible, though I don’t
recall details. So I looked
in the mirror and let that
man go.
© 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
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