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Below are the 20 most recent journal entries recorded in frofickle's LiveJournal:

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    Sunday, April 20th, 2008
    9:24 pm
    DIssertation Help
    So after months of trying I have finally come up with a dissertation topic that has been approved by my adviser and I am looking for some thoughts of people outside of my research lab to bounce ideas off of to make sure that I get this project right. Any thoughts, or stories that you/or your friends have would be greatly appreciated.

    Long story short I am going to be looking at “coercive” or “unwanted” sexual experiences of men and women. A “coercive” or “unwanted” sexual experience is anything from...

    I wasn't in the mood but....
    I thought that I would get in the mood
    my partner was begging me
    my partner got me drunk
    I thought that if I didn't my partner might leave me
    I thought that if I asked for a condom my partner might think I don't trust the relationship
    I thought that my partner would get violent

    These are just some examples. I am looking for additional scenarios or the ways in which people tell (verbally or nonverbally) their partners they are not in the mood.

    I am also looking for other factors that may play a roll in these situations such as self-esteem or assertiveness.

    You can e-mail me any of your thoughts or suggestions at
    cllhendrick at gmail dot com


    Thanks!
    Crystal
    Thursday, February 21st, 2008
    3:27 pm
    More Robotics
    The professor that I TA for is a mentor on a Robotics Team and they are trying to get more people to their website for some sort of ranking. Anyways I thought a few people might be interested in the robotics stuff, they do some pretty amazing things for being in Junior High and High School, (also the grade school kids build robots out of Legos!)

    So anyways if you are interested in Robotics Competitions check out this site
    www.morerobotics.org

    Crystal
    Wednesday, September 5th, 2007
    2:06 pm
    300 Freshmen think I know what I am talking about
    So today I taught my first course as a lecturer. I have 300 students. That is a lot of people staring at you, thinking you know what you are talking about. Luckily today I did know what I was talking about.

    Weird
    Crystal
    Thursday, August 23rd, 2007
    11:19 am
    Happy Birthday to Dave
    Happy Birthday to Dave
    Happy Birthday to Dave
    Happy Birthday Dear Dave
    Happy Birthday to you

    ..and many more (but picture that part with jazz hands!)


    I love you

    The Babe
    Thursday, April 19th, 2007
    11:48 am
    Thursday, February 1st, 2007
    4:46 pm
    Winter Update
    Holy Cow I haven't updated in a long time this is what's been going on

    1. Fall Semester super busy TA'ed for Psychology Stats good experience a ton of work
    2. Christmas was really excellent got to spend a lot of time with family and friends, nobody ruined christmas, and I got a kitten (named The Moon) and an ice cream maker!
    3. We moved, if you would like our new address let me know
    4. Our new apartment is awesome!
    5. Two weeks into Spring Semester and I am already getting my ass kicked
    6. I am taking a Preliminary Exam on Wednesday (cross your fingers for me)
    7. I am presenting at two conferences this spring and one is in San Fransisco!
    8. Dave and I celebrated the 10th anniversary of our fist date yesterday! Awesome!


    Crystal
    Thursday, August 31st, 2006
    3:07 pm
    Red Panda's Rule!
    So yesterday was my birthday. I turned the big 28. Dave and I got some Bean's and Barley deli and rented the original The Hills Have Eyes. Food was great movie was ok but not as scary as Dave had hoped.

    Today in honor of my birthday and me begging for two years, Dave took me to the zoo and it was awesome. We must have watched the Red Panda's for an hour. If those critters were not endangered I would get me one.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/wildfacts/factfiles/6.shtml

    Anyways Dave is awesome for taking me to the zoo but Red Panda's are also awesome.


    Crystal
    Wednesday, August 23rd, 2006
    8:00 am
    Happy Birthday to Dave
    Happy Birthday to Dave
    Happy Birthday Dear Dave
    Happy Birthday to you!


    I love you and wish I could be with you today, I guess I will have to eat all your birthday cake by myself.


    YTICWACOM
    Crystal
    Sunday, June 11th, 2006
    5:10 pm
    I "Heart" Things
    About a month ago the College Democrats were selling pink shirts that said

    I "heart" birth control
    Vote No on the Republican Birth Control Ban.

    I love this shirt

    However now I feel the need to express myself within the context of what I "heart" and what I don't "heart". Thus my next few entries will all be about what I heart and what I don't

    Today I am really excited for the season premiere of The 4400
    I heart The 4400 WAY WAY better than LOST

    Tomorrow I am really excited for the season premiere of The Closer
    I hear The Closer

    Tuesday I am excited for Dave's Job Interview
    I heart Dave getting a job

    For the past two weeks I have been unable to get a part-time job for the summer
    I don't heart being jobless

    Hope everyone had a great weekend
    Crystal
    Saturday, April 29th, 2006
    7:31 pm
    Pity Parties are easy to throw
    Why is it that the bad stuff is so easy to remember sometimes.

    This morning I was having myself a little pity party. Yesterday we had a graduate student research symposium and I presented some of my research. I thought that I did a pretty good job, I got the "good job" from my adviser and friends. This should be good enough right? Later on I got the judges evaluations back, now keep in mind the purpose of this day is to get practice presenting your research and to get constructive criticism from the faculty. I got lower scores than I expected but what really pissed me off was that there was no feedback at all, no "you sucked" no constructive criticism, "next time try this" nothing, so automatically my stupid brain fills in "you suck"

    Luckily Dave makes sense and told me to call Molly. When she asked me about the rest of the day I remembered all the really awesome things that happened that day.

    I got to meet one of my heroes!
    Dr. Janet S. Hyde was our keynote speaker.
    She is a research goddess she has over 100 publications and has written over 10 books about gender and women's issues and is really awesome. Great thing is that she is a good person, she was super nice and supportive and encouraging, to everyone she interacted with.

    On top of that I got to go to lunch with her! And she thought my research was interesting and she was impressed that I was able to get such a big sample.

    Why was it easier to remember the minor bad things about yesterday instead of the really really awesome things that happened yesterday?

    Grad school is making me even crazier

    But I got to meet a hero and she was better in person than I ever hoped she would be. So no more pity party and on to write a paper.

    Have a great weekend,
    Crystal

    Current Mood: good
    Thursday, April 20th, 2006
    12:45 pm
    April is...
    Sexual Assault Awareness Month

    I was sent a copy of this article and I thought it was well writen and I have been pondering ever since I read it this morning, so I though I would share it. It is long but worth the read.

    Crystal

    The new issue of the APA *Division 51 Bulletin* includes an article,
    "Men's Violence Against Women," by Christopher Kilmartin, Bulletin Editor.

    Here's the article:

    April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, and too often we see domestic
    violence and rape defined as "women's issues." Since men do the vast
    majority of the damage, I think it's a men's issue. I'll begin with a
    story, not a very happy one, to set the tone.

    A little while back, The Washington Post ran a story about a Northern VA
    country club that held an event called the "Vodka challenge." It was a
    men-only event, a standard country club golf tournament. What made it
    newsworthy was the mode of celebration in the men's locker room. The day
    before the tournament, one of the club managers purchased an ice
    sculpture of a nude woman, sitting down with her legs spread. The vodka
    was served in the locker room from a fountain stream that came out from
    between her legs.

    When some of the women members found out about this ice sculpture, they
    were outraged. Most of the men seemed puzzled by this reaction. After
    all, this was a sculpture, not a real woman, and it was in the men's
    locker room, where none of the women would even see it. Quite
    predictably, there were a lot of statements about angry feminists who
    have no sense of humor, and the overly rigid atmosphere of political
    correctness. After all, any one with an open mind would see this as
    harmless. I think it's good to have an open mind, but it's not good to
    have a mind so open that your brain falls out.

    What does this vodka challenge story have to do with violence against
    women? There was nothing in the story to suggest that any of these men
    had ever beaten their wives. But, although I'm sure they didn't realize
    it, every one of them made it just a little more possible for any one of
    them to commit an act of violence against a woman.

    In order for violence to occur, several things have to be present.

    First, there has to be a lack of identification with the victim.

    Second, there has to be a perception of the situation as one that calls
    for violence.

    Third, there has to be a decision to act violently, and fourth, there
    has to be a means of doing harm to the other person.

    All-male social groups that are disrespectful towards women provide the
    first part of this formula: a willingness to view women as being
    different from and less valued than men. Symbolically, the ice sculpture
    provided an atmosphere that says women are here for men's pleasure, and
    we will bond around our shared masculinity in this place where we don't
    have to deal with women as human beings. Seeing them as lower status
    others allows us to justify mistreating them in many ways, including
    violence. There is an attitudinal undercurrent of women as enemies, in
    spite of the fact that most of these men were married to and raising
    children with the enemy.

    Unfortunately, this vodka challenge was most likely not some isolated
    incident of insensitivity. In fact, country clubs have a history of the
    exclusion and disrespect of women, from men-only eating areas and tee
    times to the outright banning of women members. Many clubs also have a
    history of excluding Jews and people of color. The controversy over the
    exclusion of women from Augusta National is a case in point - Martha
    Burk has been called every bad name in the book just because she has
    pointed out the bigotry of this incredibly wealthy group of men and
    suggested that we all do something to ensure that they don't become
    wealthier from the Master's tournament.

    I am only using country clubs as an example of all-male enclaves that
    implicitly and subtly condone violence against women. Other
    institutions, like many fraternities and corporations, also have these
    histories. And, of course, all-male social groups do not have to be
    organized and institutional to provide this violence-condoning
    atmosphere. We can find informal men's groups in workplaces, college
    dorms, athletic teams, and corner bars, telling demeaning jokes about
    women, calling them by animal names or the names of their genitals, and
    these men rarely confront each other for fear of being attacked or
    ostracized. There is an unconscious, implicit conspiracy in many men's
    groups to keep women in their place. What better way to do it than by
    causing them to feel perpetually fearful of being physically attacked?.

    Men's violence is the single most serious health problem for women in
    the United States. It causes more harm than accidents, muggings, and
    cancer combined. For women aged 15-44, an estimated 50% of emergency
    room visits are the result of violence at the hands of their husbands,
    boyfriends, ex-husbands, or ex-boyfriends. Every year male partners or
    ex-partners murder more than 1000 women - that's about 3 per day It
    happens so often that people don't even pay attention to it. When a
    stranger murders someone, the story is on the front page of the metro
    section. If it's an intimate, it's at the bottom of page 4. A stranger
    rape always makes the papers; an acquaintance rape never does unless the
    rapist is somebody famous. The two most frequent crimes against women
    are largely invisible to the media. We expect it so much that we don't
    even notice it.

    I want to point out that I chose my words very carefully there I very
    intentionally did not say "when a person is murdered by a stranger."
    Maybe it's just because I'm a college professor, but I am an absolute
    believer in the power of language, and there is some everyday language
    that smuggles in prejudices against women and contributes to the
    cultural atmosphere that enables gender-based violence. I have 5 examples.

    The first is the one I just pointed out - passive voice - 1000 women are
    murdered. The victim, not the perpetrator, is the subject of the
    sentence. When you see this language often enough, the perpetrator
    becomes a kind of afterthought. Imagine if sportscasters talked like
    this: "The score was tied when a three-point basket was scored." "Many
    dollars were earned." Wouldn't everyone ask, "Who did it? Who is responsible?"

    Example #2: the use of the term "opposite sex" and the phrase "battle of
    the sexes". I challenge you to tell me one way in which the sexes are
    opposite. Calling men and women opposites is like calling an IBM
    computer the opposite of an Apple. And "battle of the sexes" implies
    that men and women are at war. We will never solve this problem until we
    work together and emphasize our commonalities rather than our differences.

    I see research studies reported in the popular press - "a recent study
    proves what we have suspected all along - that men's and women's brains
    are different." And what they do is find some infinitesimally small
    portion of the brain that has some minor difference that accounts for 5%
    of the variance in a population with wide variability, completely
    ignoring the fact that men's and women's brains both have frontal
    cortex, amygdalas, thalmuses, hypothalamuses, and on and on. And at the
    end of the story, the anchorman on the news says, "Well, that explains
    why I can't understand my wife at all." (If you can't understand your
    wife, I recommend the much-overlooked method of listening to her).

    Example #3, when I tell people I'm a psychologist specializing in gender-
    based violence, people always ask, when a man is beating his wife, why
    does she stay with him? That's question #2; they never ask question #1:
    Why would a man hit his wife? Men's violence is considered to be a
    given, and women's responses to that violence are seen as choices. This
    subtly makes women responsible for the violence.

    Example #4: self-defense classes for women that are advertised as "rape
    prevention." Is it women's job to prevent rape? Don't get me wrong - I'm
    all for women learning self-defense if they want to, but let's call it
    what it really is - risk reduction. It is men's responsibility to
    prevent rape.

    Example #5 comes from the recent scandal over sexual assaults at the Air
    Force Academy. It turns out that there numerous male cadets who have
    sexually assaulted female cadets, and the men who run the Academy
    intimidated survivors into keeping silent about it. The newspaper
    stories said something like, 54 rapes occurred between male and female
    cadets. I'm sorry - rapes do not occur between people. Does a bank
    robbery occur between a robber and a teller? Does vandalism occur
    between a kid with a can of spray paint and somebody's property? And
    here's another flash of brilliance - in reaction to the scandal, the
    head of the academy said that the problem was that men and women live in
    the same residence hall and that men would see women walking down the
    hall in their bathrobes, and that he was going to now have the men and
    women living in separate residence halls. So, let's get this straight:
    the problem is that men are raping women and so the solution is to get
    rid of the women?! It's a new height in victim-blaming. I know I get out
    of control when I see a woman in a bathrobe. How does that work,
    physiologically? Prostate exerts pressure on the spinal cord, cutting
    off oxygen to the brain? And, newspapers reported the Air Force problem
    as a "sex scandal." I would submit that the victims were not having sex,
    and we could also argue that the perpetrators were not either.

    When we see gender-based violence, women-hating is just around the
    corner. Therefore, if we can turn this attitude around, we can go a long
    way toward solving this problem. And, the people who are in the best
    position to do so are men -- we have the social status, power, and
    privilege. We can speak out and affect the attitudes of our fellow men.
    Just as white people have a special role to play in ending racism, rich
    people have a special role to play in ending economic inequality, and
    heterosexuals have a special role to play in ending homophobia, it is
    vitally important that we, as men of conscience, take seriously our role
    in ending sexual violence.

    In the locker room at the vodka challenge that day, I'm betting that
    there was at least one man who was uncomfortable with this ice
    sculpture, just as there is when someone hires a stripper for a bachelor
    party or makes a woman the butt of a joke. It's not unlikely that more
    than one man felt this way. But nobody spoke up because each man feels
    that he may be the only one, and taking on the collective opinion of the
    rest of the group can leave him out in the cold. There is tremendous
    pressure to laugh along with the boys or at least not say anything. It
    would have taken tremendous courage for a man to stand up and say, even
    matter-of-factly, "That ice sculpture is really offensive; what could
    you have been thinking? Why don't we just get rid of it before we're all
    embarassed? We can have just as much fun without it." And it's ironic to
    me that courage is supposed to be a hallmark of masculinity, but there
    are so many men who find it impossible to display this kind of courage.
    They would sooner run into a burning building or have a fist fight. Men
    are also supposed to be independent, but there is tremendous conformity
    in most all-male peer groups, whether they are adults or younger men.

    Social psychologists have known for a long time that one of the biggest
    barriers to being able to disagree with a group is unanimity. When the
    group opinion is unanimous and you don't have an ally, the pressure to
    conform is tremendous. But if even one person voices a disagreement with
    the rest of the group, others are much more likely to follow suit. There
    were probably several uncomfortable men in that locker room that day. If
    one of them had spoken out, he might have found that there was more
    support in the room than he had imagined. But somebody has got to go
    first. Somebody has got to take a risk. Someone has to be the leader.
    It's masculine to take a risk, to be a leader; why are so few of us
    doing it? The research indicates that 75% of college men are
    uncomfortable when their male peers display these kinds of attitudes.
    Most men don't like it; we need to let other men know that we don't.

    Along with changing our attitudes toward women, we've also got to change
    our attitudes toward ourselves. For several years, I have been involved
    in efforts to fight the alarming prevalence of sexual assault on college
    campuses. When this problem was first identified in the 1970s, colleges
    began to provide self-defense training, teach women how to avoid
    dangerous situations, and provide better lighting and emergency phones
    across the campus. Obviously, these are very important measures. But,
    these kinds of strategies constituted the basic extent of campus
    programming for about twenty years, and all of these measures have one
    thing in common: they only address potential victims. It is only been
    the last few years that people have begun to try to do something about
    the potential perpetrators? Why did it take us so long to come to this
    obviously important strategy? I think it is the pervasive perception
    boys will be boys and the only thing we can do is to wait until they
    commit a crime, and then put them in jail. Some still consider rape an
    act of male sexuality gone awry, rather than an act of violence. But we
    know different, just as we know that if a person hits another person
    over the head with a frying pan, we don't call that cooking.

    If men's violent behavior is perceived as an unchangeable constant, then
    violence toward women is a women's issue, never a men's issue. "Boys
    will be boys" not only provides a measure of excuse for violence against
    women, it is a very disrespectable attitude toward men, as if we are
    animals, with absolutely no control over ourselves. And again, there's
    an irony here. Self-control is another hallmark of traditional
    masculinity, but aggression and sexuality are considered to be
    completely out of control -- a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do. I
    want men to have more dignity than that. I saw this book title recently,
    "All men are jerks until proven otherwise." It made me sad - and I also
    realized, how am I ever going to prove what I'm not? Maybe I was a nice
    guy today, but who knows what's going to happen tomorrow. It's a sad
    state of affairs when so many men have behaved so irresponsibly that the
    rest of us have to carry the burden of understandable suspicion from women.

    So, besides becoming more respectful toward women, we have to regain our
    self-respect. We are human beings who are capable of caring for others.
    We are not animals who lash out instinctively, poisoned by testosterone.
    Violence against women is a men's issue, and men have to take a
    leadership role in building a more positive male community. A man's
    gotta do what a man's gotta do. Thanks to those of you who have been
    doing this work.

    Ken

    Current Mood: contemplative
    Current Music: Both
    Tuesday, April 11th, 2006
    4:22 pm
    Whats new
    So,

    The past few weeks flew by. I went to Superior for part of my Spring break and then I got the plague. I was really really sick. Luckily I started to feel human the day before I was set to leave for a conference in Michigan.

    The conference was great. After I sat down for the first morning speaker, the woman who wrote the textbook I taught from sat down next to me. I briefly panicked, was certain it was an April Fools joke that I was supposed to present my research to women who did the research that I cited in my thesis. But everyone was really great and supportive. I got excellent feedback on my research and no one asked a question just to make me look dumb. I can't wait to go next year, it is in San Fransisco.

    Now I am working on finishing the write up of my research to turn into the graduate school as well as working on class work and TA stuff. The next month should fly by in a haze of stress and caffeine.

    Here is a survey if you are interested in letting Planned Parenthood know what you think of them.

    I just took a quick online survey for Planned Parenthood, and I
    hope you'll take it, too. The survey is to help Planned
    Parenthood build up strength for their Stand with the States
    Campaign to protect the right to choose and promote prevention,
    not punishment.

    South Dakota has banned abortion, and lawmakers in 11 other
    states have proposed their own bans. This is something you can
    do right now to get involved at this important time. It just
    takes a few minutes, and it's fun!

    You can take the survey right now at:
    http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?u=678872004357&c=ppol_fwd


    Have a great day
    Crystal
    Wednesday, March 15th, 2006
    3:16 pm
    Beware
    Beware of the Ides of March!


    Crystal
    Friday, March 10th, 2006
    2:58 pm
    I Passed my Defense!
    Hello Everyone,

    Sorry I have been out of touch lately, I have been working hard finishing up my
    Masters research. As you could probably guess from the subject line, today I
    defended and passed! I have earned my Masters degree! Technically I wont get
    my diploma until May, but the hard part is over.


    A bit about my research if you are interested,
    I proposed a model of risky sexual behavior I found that

    having a lower sexual self-esteem was associated with risky sexual behavior

    more media exposure was associated with lower sexual self-esteem

    more sexual communication with your parents was associated with higher sexual
    self-esteem

    Abuse was associated with a low sexual self-esteem

    This is generally what I found.


    Anyways I wanted to share my good news and let everyone know that I would be
    better at responding to e-mails now.


    I hope everyone has a great weekend.


    Love,
    Crystal
    Friday, January 6th, 2006
    5:17 pm
    Yeah for me!
    I just found out that my paper, Sexual Risk Behavior: Impact of Abuse, Family Communication, and Media was accepted for presentation at the annual conference for the Association for Women in Psychology. I am super excited!!

    Now I just have to finish it.

    Crystal
    Wednesday, January 4th, 2006
    12:00 pm
    What a year!
    So another year is done, what a year it was, I ...
    1. Went to Amsterdam (I recommend it to anyone)
    2. Got Married
    3. Became an Aunt
    4. Got a 4.0 for fall semester
    5. Gathered my masters data
    among other things. All in all it was a good but stressful year. I am powering through data entry for my masters I should be done by then end of the week then fun with SPSS to get results, cross your fingers for me.

    Plans for the New Year
    1. Finish masters project
    2. Graduate with masters
    3. Take preliminary exams
    4. Honeymoon in Anguilla
    5. Move to a different apartment
    among other things.

    Hope the New Year is starting out well for you
    Crystal
    Monday, October 31st, 2005
    11:58 am
    I am an Aunt
    My sister had her baby


    Aubrey Kay Guttormson arrived into the world Saturday October 29th weighing 7lbs and 7oz 18 inches long

    Everyone is happy and healthy

    She has already sassed off to Dave. Awesome!
    Thursday, October 20th, 2005
    8:48 am
    Naomi Wolf
    Last night I got a chance to hear Naomi Wolf talk. AWESOME. She is the author of several books but last night she was talking about The Beauty Myth, which she wrote in like 1991, she was talking about what has happened with the beauty myth since the release of the book. Anyways she is fabulous and you should go read all her books, I am going to start with Fire with Fire.

    Also by Naomi Wolf
    The Beauty Myth
    Promiscuities
    Misconceptions
    The Treehouse (very different from the rest)

    Anyways it was an awesome night
    Monday, October 3rd, 2005
    11:40 am
    Rock and Roll Wedding
    I just wanted to thank everyone for helping make the wedding so awesome. I had a blast and I hope that everyone else did too.


    Thank you


    Crystal
    Tuesday, September 27th, 2005
    11:37 am
    Stuff Stuff Stuff
    So I promised to talk about my research. I will do that very briefly because I have a lot to do because..............


    I AM TOTALLY GETTING MARRIED IN 4 DAYS!!!!!

    I am so excited!

    But now on to the research, I am conducting a survey of heterosexually active women older than 18. I am asking about media consumption, family communication, abuse, sexual self-esteem and also sexual history. I will not give away my hypotheses in case anyone wants to take it. However results are coming in and so far so good.

    By the way the research in my previous post was brought to you in part by my adviser, she did a statewide survey of teens 12 to 18 who were using planned parenthood clinics. Found some interesting things, we are also working on the paper for the second part of that study. It is amazing to me how much legislation can look at scientific evidence and then do something to completely contradict that evidence and think that their actions will solve problems.

    Anyways off to meet with my RA's and then on to the candy store for the wedding candy!!!

    Crystal

    Current Mood: excited
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