How many times a day would you start a sentence with “I just feel like…”?
How many times would “like” make an appearance in your vernacular? How many times would you abbreviate your words, speak with an upward inflection, and squeeze out those high decibels? (And can you even help it?)
How many times do you think you’d hear those same phrases from a bloke?
Yeah, almost never.
I live in a house of women. We make fun of ourselves by emphasising our (in a squeaky tone) “I just feel like…”, because we are aware we speak like this all the time. And we are not alone.
Women continuously use words that soften or weaken their position or opinion. Ultimately what they are doing is apologising for the content of what they’re saying. Before they’re even saying it.
We preface our thoughts with a “sorry but I…”, or a “sort of” or a “just” as if to say, “If you don’t agree with me, that’s fine, but can we still be friends?”
If you think about it, with all these language devices, you might agree that women are pretty easy to lampoon. (Cue abbreviation, upward inflection, insert like, hair flick, and high-pitched intonation. Read: cue, Ja’mie King. #amiright? )
And I mean, “like”, I guess “I just feel like” I’ve heard so many girls speaking in this way. Apologising for their thoughts, premising their ideas, (“I don’t know what you’ll think about this but…”) or ending their sentences with an upward inflection, (“Right?”). I begin to wonder: why are we all apologising for what we have to say?