When I picked this book up randomly at the library, I was expecting to read something about a woman and her struggles with her body image and then her just saying the hell with it and liberating herself and getting to a point where she says: fuck you all. You know, first world problems. Boy was I so wrong. This book kicked my ass. it knocked me off of my center. it will be a book that will change me for a long time, and hopefully forever. And it's not even a bible, go figure. Well most fiction I read doesn't 'change me.' It may stick out in my memory, but it won't change me. And since the bible is quite fictional...
Anywho...
From the very first page of this book I realized my assumption and poor judging of the cover of this book was I wrong what this book was all about. This book was about the struggles of women here in the US and around the world, preconceived ideology, shallow mindsets of humanity, the poor and forgotten victims that have no real voice or say.
God, as I'm trying to conjure up a review for this book, I realize I'm having a hard time doing so. This book was so much more than just another book to add to my collection of what I've read to date. This was a book that put things that I know that are going on in our world and have always gone on since we spawned our crappy-selves onto this planet right in the palms of my hand. But due to living in a semi-comfortable, semi-asleep, very boring, middle-class suburbia life, I am almost forced to put the blinders on because of the way I live. You know, after reading this book, I wish I were able to give up the false idea of security, which is the basis of this book. Liberate my thinking, my approach of life. This is one of those books that makes you wish you can actually get up off your ass and be proactive, let go of that need to be secure aka trapped and actually make a dent in the horrors that this book uncovered. Or even just to free yourself from your own shackles that we put on ourselves. Just do something different. Make a change for the better, for humanity or yourself, or even better, both. A percent of what Eve Ensler, the author of this book has done to try and make a difference would even be a drastic change in my world. Less consuming and more helping would probably be a start. Not because I want to pat myself on the shoulders, but because I genuinely care about humanity. I cherish humanity over nationhood. Nationhood can be good in very few things, but it usually causes more harm than it does good. Like George Carlin said: "People are smart, groups are stupid."
It just comes down to educating yourself, learning to care more about each other and the things around you, regardless of class, religion, white, brown, black, purple, or whatever. I know it's not easy, hell it's definitely not for me. I get annoyed by people easily and would rather not want them around. But that doesn't mean that the women, the men who really are not all strong, the children, the poor, the real victims don't need help. They do. They truly do. Even in our elections, all you heard was the middle-class, the middle-class, and keeping the tax breaks for the filthy rich, but you didn't hear shit about the real victims of the global economy we live in. We vote people in that we think would give us the best, yet false sense of security. And like Ben Franklin said: "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." That's where we stand, folks. We are fighting over bullshit in the name of ideas and security. We are being duped by the media--the government's propaganda machine, our government, of course, our so-called leaders that feed us bullshit and not the truth, ideology, etc. And nobody really seems to care. I get it, we are a selfish species as a whole, but reading this book makes me realize it really doesn't have to be that way. It really doesn't. It's just our programming needs some adjusting.
A wonderful, heart-wrenching book to read, but a book I am very thankful to have picked up for free at my wonderful local library. A book I couldn't recommend more highly.