Woman’s place in the kitchen??
I listened to Freeing the Wild Women podcast and was really appalled by an episode of two young women who grew up in the 90s and early 2000s and are ignorant in their going back to the “ancestral times” of tradition, how women’s place is in the kitchen and that’s how it’s always been and the idea of women working in the 1980s was wrong, so women should depend on men and be provided for by men because that’s their job and that’s how it’s always been (well we’ve *always* had slavery so why get rid of it now?). I was additionally offended because one of the women visited the Navajo once for a night and decided that since in her experience the Navajo man chopped the wood and the Navajo women cooked, that women are housewives. As someone who only visited the Navajo Nation a couple times and for less than a month, I would never have the gall to say I am an expert, but as far as my education went from Tuba City, I understand that the Dine are a matriarchal society where the women own all the land and livestock, and if a man is thrown out on the street he is basically exiled from the entire community and must leave the reservation since he has nowhere to live, so that girl’s one night is an incomplete picture, as is mine, or anyone who doesn’t come from that society. Coming myself from a Filipino heritage which is also a matriarchal society, I come from long lines of land baronesses and women who were business owners; sure there were women in the kitchen but it was their servants. So maybe the young women in this podcast are talking about their own personal heritage where their mom and grandmother were been housewives, and have forgotten about our own country where women have been doctors since the 1800s, or Europe where women have been queens and scientists for centuries, or Africa where women have been queens since biblical times.
KNpsabre via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 01/20/22
More reviews of Magick Woman
I’m grateful I found the Freeing The Wild Women podcast. Autumn is an authentic and inspiring host. I love listening to her interviews with other creative, magical, wild women.
HLightly via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 12/20/19
I’ve been listening to Freeing the Wild Women on and off since 2019, and it is one I’ll always return to! Autumn has a way of teaching, inquiring and inviting her audience to new and magical ways of being and self-loving in a way that captivates me each time. I also love her episodes when...Read full review »
oliviamorrissey via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 02/03/23
My favorite podcast I’ve ever listened to, good enough to listen to each episode at least twice. Inspiring, uplifting and thought provoking.
BriLeFave via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 04/11/20
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