Hi,

“Does the female form make you uncomfortable, Mr Lebowski?” The question comes from Maude Lebowski, an avant-garde artist and feminist played by Julianne Moore in one of my all-time favourite movies. “The word itself makes some men uncomfortable: vagina.”

YouTube
Check out the vagina dialogue between The Dude and Maude in The Big Lebowski.

When I first watched The Big Lebowski some 20 years ago, I was a university student trying to survive in English – a language I still had to master. There were many scenes in the film that required a better level of English than what I had at the time. But the brief and surreal vagina dialogue between Maude and The Dude was loud and clear.

I don’t think I had ever said vagina out loud in Italian, my native language. Growing up, I was taught a euphemism to refer to my private parts: farfallina, which in Italian means little butterfly.

However poetic the euphemism may be (I love “sparkly bits” in the point is that it is important to know how to call our anatomical parts and to refer to them directly.

I know, I know: vagina is not a great word. I totally second what Jen Gunter says in her book The Vagina Bible: “Vagina means ‘sheath’ in Latin, and I hate having female anatomy defined in terms of how it fits with a penis.”

But if that is the name, let’s use it. Because what happens if we don’t name things correctly?

found that 65% of young women in the UK say they have a problem using the words vagina or vulva, and just half of women aged 26-35 could identify the vagina accurately on a diagram. 

At the same time, believe that naming genitals with their correct anatomical names will help children naturalise them and be more forthcoming in case there are any issues they want to raise. This will help, especially in the case of abuse.

When it comes to female genitalia, I think naming vaginas and vulvas by their real names will help us become body-aware women.

"It shouldn’t be an act of feminism to know how your body works,” says Gunter in her Ted Talk about periods.

TED

Gunter argues that if we use the right words, and know where our vaginas are, and how they work, we may stop feeling ashamed of our bodies, and stop thinking we are impure when we bleed. 

Not knowing our body means not having power over it.

Let’s start with the language then, and let’s start using the word vagina (and vulva and penis and scrotum) with our children and our peers alike.

Until next week,

Irene

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