I am so busy living, there is only time to read blogs and no time to write my own :-)
But for me: writing in English is ...a good exercise. (That's why it takes long to produce short texts)
Recently friends took us to a theater -event of a highschool, where their daughter of 17 was one of the actresses.
The beautiful performance of "A Midsummer Night’s Dream" of Shakespeare left me in deep thinkabouts about the young people who were playing.
The main impression was: the girls ruled the scene (as you assumed).
I'd say even dmoninated the play....
In the play of Shakespeare and in the play of the young people it was obvious: The Female is to be adored, worshiped and the male is there to adore, to worship the female.
What a wonderful piece! Wonderful female energy in the mystic sacred grove with the male's -if not a king or something - a little stupid and dependend.
I was thinking , this maybe was only my humble view of a halfway "fauxsubmissive" 50sth voyeur.
But my wife had a similar impression. She liked the girls and the play. She loved it.
(And thats rare, because she is not into "culture"), but she loves truth to be shown.
This was sensually presented masterpiece in which the young women without any doubt were the more active, more beautiful and the most convincing elements on stage.
There was another aspect which made me think about.
In this play people are -part time- victims of a plant sap which turned the scene upside down. The ones who loved each other before now had to be in love with others and vice versa (to make it short).
So it was obvious, that people love because of certain chemistries in plants, given by Oberon, the king of the fairies.
What else is happening when a female pushes the buttons of a man the right way.
She only has to know how.
And that there are not only simple "Love Me" -buttons but also "Love and Worship Me" -butons or even "Love and Serve Me" - buttons, I'm sure Shakespeare knew very well.
All those elements where there.
They are there for thousands of years. But people forgot in the last 300 Years, didn't they?
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