The Friendzone and Me
So, Nice Guys of OKC has shut down. For those of you who missed it, it was a tumblr posting screenshots of okcupid guys who claimed to be "nice," then proving elsewhere in their profile that they were racist, homophobic, sexist, or otherwise assholish. The main legacy of the blog is inspiring a lot of posts (seriously, a lot) about the use of the term "friendzone." According to Nice Guys of OKC, the mere use of the term precludes one from actually being nice.
Most posts on the topic rely on the "nice guy" stereotype. It looks like this:
1. You become attracted to a woman. 2. You are friendly to that woman in the hopes she will show you her vagina. 3. She mistakes your friendliness for friendliness and befriends you, neglecting to show you her vagina. 4. You act like a butthurt little asswipe, forever placing yourself firmly outside of the circle on the Venn diagram of dudes she will ever show her vagina to. 5. You complain about it on the internet, and 1000 other maladjusted bro-dudes go, “I know that feel,” and you are validated in your misogyny.
Like all stereotypes, some people fit it, and those people deserve the collective derision they've been receiving throughout the the internet for the past week or so. But, like all stereotypes, it unfairly lumps people together and makes a lot of assumptions based on very little information. In my mind, the view that use of the term "friendzone" implies all of that is a bit much. Wikipedia defines it as "a platonic relationship where one person wishes to enter into a romantic relationship, while the other does not." Urban Dictionary, as it tends to, has a few more colorful definitions, some reflecting Wikipedia's simple definition, some reflecting the Nice Guy stereotype.
I recently had a discussion about this on my friend Angie's blog:
the term [friendzone] itself always made sense to me. Unrequited feelings suck, and hearing “let’s just be friends” from your crush sucks. To me, the “friendzone” often bespeaks entitlement both ways. Both sides seem to think that, if the other person weren’t such a jerk, THEY would be the one to dictate the terms of the relationship* (i.e. a sexual relationship vs. a platonic friendship), and the other person ought to acquiesce to their preference. To me, getting “put in the friendzone” is being forced into a category that I don’t want. I HATE being categorized, and I hate being assigned labels that come with arbitrary baggage.
It also makes sense because I always saw the “friend zone” as a different thing than just being friends. As many recent articles point out, if you’re complaining about being friendzoned, you’re not really a friend. But you’re not a lover. You’re occupying a strange friend-like place that has its own rules. I view it as a term akin to monogamish. It’s LIKE being friends, but not really.
Angie makes some really good points, so I encourage you to read the whole discussion.
I'm still figuring out how I feel about all of this, but I think a lot of my discomfort with the negative judgments going around is because I can envision a number of situations which I think are rather common where a man (in these articles, it's always a man) gets friendzoned merely because of a miscommunication, and not out of anything more malicious or blameworthy than that.
Men and women tend to interpret signals differently. Men tend to interpret things as being far more sexual than women do. I can easily envision a situation where a man is behaving in a way that he believes is sending romantic/sexual messages, the female object of his affections interprets his signals as friendly. Then, she reciprocates, sending only friendly messages, but the man interpreting them as sexual or romantic. Then, when the rejection comes, both sides feel as if they have been misled and lied to, and may get angry and/or whiny. Textbook friendzoning.
In that situation, I see the parties equally at fault. They've both misinterpreted the other's signals while being less-than-explicit about their own. However, I don't think either party is feeling entitled or misogynistic. It's just been a misunderstanding. The man's anger isn't because he's owed sex. It's because he feels like he's been misled and used. In his mind, he was being obvious about his feelings, and the woman in question ignored his feelings and tried to force him into a relationship model that he didn't want. He's wrong, of course, but there's nothing entitled or misogynistic about his view.
I don't know. I haven't heard the term "friendzone" much (though according to Wikipedia, it was coined by Friends, the worst show ever). Is it exclusively used by entitled douchebags? Is there a better word to use that means "wants to be friends, but not touch each other's genitals"? Is it routinely accompanied by the type of entitlement and misogyny noted above?
______________________________________________ *in the comment, I expanded on what I meant by "dictating the terms of the relationship":
Each participant always and without exception has an absolute right to dictate what the relationship will NOT be. But inversely, neither participant has the right to dictate what the relationship IS. When I hear the term “friendzone,” I sort of automatically assume the dude (let’s face it, it’s always a dude) in question does not actually want to be friends. The presumption on his part is the he thinks the object of his affection is obligated to touch his naughty bits. The presumption on the other side, though, is the presumption that he wants to have a nonsexual relationship. Maybe he does, maybe he doesn’t, but it’s not cool to assume that he does if that hasn’t been discussed.