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When sexism and ageism combine...

(167 Posts)
faringdon59 Tue 01-Jun-21 14:42:30

For the last month I have been attending an introductory group lesson to learn golf.
I was obviously the oldest in a group of 8 newbies. One other woman in the group, who I would guess is in her 30's or 40's.
A couple of times the male instructor referred to me as "young lady". I ignored it the first time, but this week he made a point of referring to the other woman by her name and me again as "young lady".
Did a sales pitch about the follow on course, but guess who will be going elsewhere for lessons?
In a supermarket queue last week the man in a suit in front of me was addressed as sir but I was called "lovey" three times during the transaction process. At the end I said thanks "little girl", to which the checkout operator looked stunned!

welbeck Tue 01-Jun-21 14:52:34

good for you.
that is the point i was trying to make on another thread, about familiar terms of address in shops etc.
people were saying it's just friendly, but would they presume to use such familiar terms to higher status people, eg men.
when i got my second jab, the middle-aged man, who did not introduce himself by name or job, called me, my dear.
it rankled with me, but din't feel i could say anything, given the context, grateful for vaccine, never see him again etc.
but i bet he didn't say that to a male person.

Chestnut Tue 01-Jun-21 18:19:46

I have never had a problem with being called anything, love, lovey, me duck, darlin', sweetie, my dear, although I never get called gorgeous now!

Chestnut Tue 01-Jun-21 18:26:45

I would be a bit miffed if someone said 'mind the old lady'.

Tea3 Tue 01-Jun-21 18:26:58

‘Young lady’ riles me. It did at work when I was actually young, and it does now I’m old! The comment seems to come from a particular type of misogynist creep.

Talullah Tue 01-Jun-21 18:33:03

My father was often referred to as a spring chicken by his carers when he was anything but. He thought it hilarious. Personally I have no problem with being referred to as anything, Just doesn't bother me.

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 18:37:27

If a man in the queue was addressed as "Sir" and I was addressed as "lovey", I might not have been polite enough to call her "little girl".

Good for you faringdon59.

Aveline Tue 01-Jun-21 18:39:47

Just not bothered!

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 18:42:46

Not bothered about people being disrespectful? That's what it is. Call me madam! ?

Summerlove Tue 01-Jun-21 19:47:43

Alegrias1

Not bothered about people being disrespectful? That's what it is. Call me madam! ?

Only uppity people like us care about that.

We really should just relax and let the misogyny reign. ???

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 19:50:55

I don't think it is misogyny.

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 19:51:14

Or sexism.

Or ageism.

Aveline Tue 01-Jun-21 19:52:11

Amazed you're so worked up about this. I'm not so insecure of my identity and worth that it bothers me.

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 19:52:45

If a man is "Sir"

and a woman is "lovey"

what is it then?

I have a few words we can use.

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 19:53:10

Aveline

Amazed you're so worked up about this. I'm not so insecure of my identity and worth that it bothers me.

Oh, not this again.

Aveline Tue 01-Jun-21 19:55:47

Why not Alegrias it's what I really think? Basically don't sweat the small stuff.

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 19:55:50

^If a man is "Sir"

and a woman is "lovey"

what is it then?^

But this isn't what was complained about in the OP. At least, the OP-er did not say she was calling the man sir. She could have answered, for example, "Yes, Your Reverence" to get her point across.

Or she could simply have asked him not to call her young lady. A bit of assertiveness works wonders. Far better than getting all huffy anyway.

FarNorth Tue 01-Jun-21 19:56:34

There's really no need for checkout operators to call customers anything. Hullo / Good Morning etc should be all that's needed.
That golf guy was rude.

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 19:57:08

As someone on GN used to say: I don't mind what you call me as long as you don't call me late for dinner.

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 20:00:42

FarNorth

There's really no need for checkout operators to call customers anything. Hullo / Good Morning etc should be all that's needed.
That golf guy was rude.

Rude? Perhaps. But I doubt it.

I reall don't mind m'dears or loves (love is common to all ages and from all ages where I grew up), but the lately common "Stay safe" or "You take care now" do set my teeth on edge. Because, well, one does in any case. It doesn't need a pandemic.

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 20:00:42

But this isn't what was complained about in the OP.

erm... yes it was confused

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 20:02:43

Alegrias1

^But this isn't what was complained about in the OP.^

erm... yes it was confused

I do not see any reference in the OP to what she called the golf instructor. I very much doubt anyone called him sir.

Baggs Tue 01-Jun-21 20:03:50

Or if they did it was through gritted teeth. Perhaps you should have tried that, Faringdon? it might have done the trick.

Elegran Tue 01-Jun-21 20:07:51

It may not be misogyny or sexism or ageism, but it is some kind of -ism that differentiates between one person and another.

Should we label it Powerism? Men are powerful, so get "sir", which from one man to another indicates deference to an older man or one in a senior position, and from a checkout assistant indicates deference to a valued customer.

If women are powerful (in the forces a superior officer) they get madam or ma'am. When they are merely doing female chores like food shopping or taking the car to get an MOT, they are no more powerful than equal (if that) to the female checkout assistant, and definitely inferior to the alpha male mechanic who will service the car and tell her how many arms and legs it is going to cost.

Alegrias1 Tue 01-Jun-21 20:08:27

Aveline

Why not Alegrias it's what I really think? Basically don't sweat the small stuff.

That's fine for you "Aveline" and if it doesn't bother you, no worries. But your comment about how you're not so insecure of your identity and worth that it bothers you implies that those who do care are insecure in their identity and have self worth issues.

I can assure you very strongly that "insecurity" is not something I have ever been bothered with. Experience of being underestimated and talked down to, now those are things I can talk to you about. A different form of address for someone who looks like a nice old dear says that the speaker thinks of you only that way.

So don't put the blame on the people who don't want to be patronised.