Once upon a
time I joined a stand-up comedy competition and finished third. I could say that I beat couple dozen other
aspiring comics to finish third. I could
even make a case for that achievement by pointing out that the top two
finishers went on to become full-fledged world-touring performers.
Not
me. For a reason, I chose to see the
experience as an ordeal where I lost to two other people that I (on that night)
believed I was better than. I was second
runner-up. The second biggest loser.
The reason
I felt like a loser was because I was in a competition where the winner was determined
subjectively. There was no finish line
to cross ahead of the others. There was
no score tracking the number of points we made.
On that
night, the winner was determined by judges.
In other words, a combination of opinions from a tiny sample of the
entire comedic population – “a jury of my peers” – decided that I wasn’t going
to win. They said I lost, and there was
nothing I could do to prove that I did not.
That was
too long ago, so I’m not recalling this to be bitter. I am actually going somewhere with this.
It sucks to
be judged.
Our country
has recently been done proud by two beautiful women who were sent off to
foreign lands to capture the hearts of a panel of judges and bring home a
crown.
"winners" |
Megan Young was crowned Miss World 2013, and yet I only heard about it
because some strangers on the bus were questioning her heritage and whether she
deserved to represent our country at all.
Mutya Datul was crowned Miss Supranatural 2013, and I learned about that
because I overheard some men discussing that she was “in fact” a Tranny.
Later in
the week I heard rumors that both would soon be dethroned because they couldn’t
possibly be virgins. A stipulation that
says they can’t be married or pregnant was stretched all the way back to the
state of their hymens. I found it
amusing.
The judging
never stops.
My guess is
that beauty queens are the easiest targets because they seem to be defined by
judgement. Just the idea that they willingly
joined a pageant seemed to insinuate that their lives revolved around seeking
affirmation. If pageant judges could put
a crown on her, surely public judges were entitled to take a shot at ripping it
off.
In 2012, Joy Castillo-Pasidis was crowned Mrs.
Universe Philippines, and I had a front-row seat to the proceedings.
Ah, the
judging. I remember the criteria because
I remember being floored by my utter disbelief.
40% Face, 40% Body, 20% Personality and Intelligence. I am NOT making this up!
Was this
how we were supposed to judge a Woman? I
kept going over it in my head. 80% of
her value was her appearance: of which half was vaguely referred to as her “Body”
– how do they measure this? Was there a
further sub-breakdown for “Body”...?
Maybe 10
points for round breasts, and 10 points for a shiny areola. Then 15 points for her ass, and another 5 for
whether or not the bitch could shake it.
It was a
gift that kept on giving. Hey, as long
as we are setting the women’s movement back a few generations, how about 20
points TOTAL for both personality AND intelligence?
The Super
Secret Law of The Headhunter and the Job Interviews: “Smart girl, that one, and charming, but
let’s hire the skank with the big knockers.”
Way to reinvent the woman, good job
Morley. Well done, Trump.
Back at the
Mrs. Universe pageant, I sat pondering the mental state of whoever came up with
an award to be given to the “Best in Sexy Wear” when my ears
zoned in on the cacophony of random comments from the onlookers in the peanut
gallery.
As the
women on stage moved forward towards the panel of judges, I moved back to stand
within earshot of the “unofficial judges” in the crowd. Notepad in hand, I jotted down their comments
(and my unspoken reactions).
You could say I sorted through the cacophony,
because a friend dared me to use that word two times within thirty seconds.
"Ay walang suso." (“Yikes,
she has no boobs!” - I was surprised they didn’t say “dede.”)
"Walang bra, nakakahiya!" (“She has
no bra, shameful!” - I immediately went to verify this, in the name of
journalism, of course.)
"Maganda to, ma-chubby lang." (“Pretty,
if only she weren’t so chubby” - made me think of Jolina Magdangal for some
reason.)
"Ang sikip ng damit, halatang
pinilit" (“The dress is so tight, you can tell it took
her all night to put it on” - Ah, the poetry! I had to see if that comment came from Gloc-9 himself!)
I finally had
to stop my note-taking after this next one raised the roof and tore it down:
“Dalawa lang ang maganda, pinaligiran na ng
mga aso.” (“Only two of them are pretty, they are surrounded
by dogs.”)
Gems. Absolute gems were being thrown. I felt wealthy beyond my wildest
imaginings. Was all this real?
Apparently
there were considerations beyond “Best in Sexy Wear,” because the emcee
proceeded to rattle off a list of consolation prizes. The term “Door Prizes” came to mind, but all I ended up thinking of was that these were
the “Dog
Prizes.”
Again, I am not making these up.
Mrs. Friendship (for the type who always ended up in the
friend zone).
Mrs. Personality (for that intelligent lady who scored only
20 points TOTAL).
Body beautiful (or as men called it, “The Hipon Award.”)
Mrs. Photogenic (for the lady who needed professional lighting
to be appreciated.)
Mrs. Cosmopolitan (for, um, wtf, I have no idea what this
means.)
Most Inspired (as opposed to Most Expired...?!?)
Golden Girl (meh, This was Mrs. Universe, after all.)
Best Smile (for the lady who was least aware of what was really going on.)
Darling of the Crowd (for the lady with the most relatives in the
audience.)
Mrs. Tourism (I found out later that “Tourism” was being
used as some kind of euphemism for “Exotic” – which was funny because “Exotic”
was already a euphemism for “Ugly But Strangely Preferred By Foreigners Who Frequent
Burgos.”)
Mrs. Intelligence (for the most frightening woman in the room.)
Fashion Icon (for the tallest contestant with the
smallest breasts.)
Finally,
there was a consolation prize for the “Woman of The Night” – which I was
guessing was given to the woman most likely to agree to a one night stand.
(It puzzled me that they could award someone
as “Woman of the Night” and still go
on with the rest of the evening to crown a winner.)
Mirth and
musing aside, listening to the list of awards gave me a slow realization. It was the kind where the camera jump-stopped,
then slowly zoomed in on my slowly widening eyes as the music swept in. It was that moment when I was supposed to
turn around and behold the truth.
It absolutely
sucks to be judged.
I suddenly understood what this pageant REALLY
celebrated – whether they intended to or not.
Stay with me on this.
You ever
watch a hopelessly outclassed boxer take a beating from The Champ for 12 rounds but never get knocked down? With both eyes swollen shut and his nose
broken in three places, this patsy would crack a smile so wide you would think
his jaw would fall off. After the final
bell, he would face the crowd with both arms raised like he was the champion –
all because he stood there and took everything The Champ had, and then walked off the ring.
This is what separated a Woman from a Man: a heroism I could never hope to match.
bitch can take a beating |
A Woman
lives a life under constant scrutiny.
She is jabbed, hooked, and beaten down by judgement. She cannot walk across a room without being
measured. She cannot offer an opinion without
being doubted. She cannot skip a shower,
or order extra rice unnoticed. She
cannot be in a position of importance without being asked who she slept with to
get there.
She cannot
eat a banana, lick an ice cream cone, or drop a pen on the floor and bend over
to pick it up without...well, you know what I’m saying by now.
Meanwhile, Men
walk across the room all the time. We are anonymous. While Woman struggles daily with the weight
of a thousand eyes on her, Man gets his business done without anyone getting in
the way to ask for his phone number.
The Super
Secret Law of God’s Gift To Women: It isn’t
a Man, and it isn’t Beauty: it is Courage:
The kind that can stand under a
spotlight and say “Here I am, judge away
assholes.”
This is what beauty pageants celebrate – not Beauty,
but incredible Courage.
I was under
a spotlight for one night and judged “third best.” Then I drove off to a mountain booing and
hooing. Meanwhile, Women have to deal
with being judged every minute of every goddamned day.
Women walk into the ring and take that
beating, then walk off with a smile.
Courage is
what gets a Woman across a room of Laiteras. She wears her confidence – not as clothing,
but as part of her skin. She learns to
love who she is – never losing grace, or the smile on her face – despite being
ranked and treated like a horse in a race.
I am a man and I know I cannot endure that
kind of violence.
My slow
turn is complete, and I am at the Mrs. Universe pageant again - suddenly and
completely amazed. I am blown away with
admiration for these women who I previously dared to judge for my own
amusement.
It was now
time for the dreaded question and answer portion – where the contestants got a
chance to earn their whopping 20 points.
A man
asked: “Who do you think should decide
how many children you can have - The couple or the state?”
Then a
woman: “As a married woman, what advice can
you give to all would be wives and mothers?”
Another
man: “How can a candidate in this
pageant weave positive change?”
“Maybe she can weave baskets,” I shook my head at the questions.
I wanted to
jump on the stage. I knew the question they
wanted to ask – the one that no one dared to phrase. In my mind I slipped on my chauvinist gloves,
grabbed the microphone, and threw down the clincher:
Convince
me that you're not just another person with a vagina. That where you are in your life is out of your
own merits and not from standing behind a man. That you are more than a source of entertainment
and a receptacle for birthing children. That
when people credit you for something, the sentence does not end with
"...for a woman."
I would
follow that up with a math question.
12 rounds
of boxing. Every round a loss. Bullied.
Hopelessly overpowered, and yet both arms raised at the end. And a big smile, oh what a big beautiful
smile.
100 points for “Taking it Like a Man.”
What Beautiful
Courage these Women have.
2 comments:
published in The Philippine Star October 16, 2013
http://www.philstar.com/men/2013/10/16/1245609/beautiful-courage
possibly one of the most shared and commented pieces to date:
Anna Pansacola, Vancouver, B.C
"Ronald Regis' SuperSecret Laws articles should be compiled in a book. They are funny and full of profound insights. Always a fun read."
Rhett Pansacola
"dang good article with deep truth in this, bravo Philstar for having the guts publishing it!"
Charlie Bosley Cloud
"I don't know why Ronald Regis is always in the back page of M and RJ Ledesma is always in front. Regis speaks the deeper truths! :)"
TheFrank Aldana
"An article that changed the way I see beauty pageants. Good on you, Ron Regis."
Jam Kotenko
"A blunt and insightful piece on women and beautiful courage..."
Roselle Miranda
"A fantastic read with incredible insight that I didn't get until I read it. *hug Ron*"
Caya Ishbel
"Good read: Beautiful courage. A daring piece by Ron Regis."
TheFrank Aldana
"Slow clap. Tear falls. I bow before thee, Ron Regis."
Daniel Abbey
"Classic Ron. Delivers."
Rizzo Regis-Tangan
"This was pretty extreme language alright, bro.... but it brought home your message more powerfully in the end....on behalf of all women, thank you for this!"
Keshia Fule
"BEST ARTICLE I've read so far! Thank you Ron Regis.. *clap clap clap*"
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