The Guardian (USA)

Where’s the advice for men on how to propose?

- Daisy Buchanan • Daisy Buchanan is a columnist and features writer

The greatest curse of womanhood is also its biggest blessing. If you’re a woman, it’s easy to find strong opinions and instructio­ns that will inform you exactly how you are expected to conduct yourself during any given occasion. Plenty of the advice is useless, contradict­ory and mad, but if you want to live a peaceful, uneventful and rather dull life as a woman in the 21st century, you can get by if you use the following terms as broad instructio­ns: “Don’t make a scene” and “midi dresses”.

Men, on the other hand – hoo boy. My heart breaks for you all. We’re furious with you for failing to constantly acknowledg­e that you’re benefiting from centuries of systematic privilege. We’ve convinced ourselves that you’re all happy-go-lucky pay-gap profiteers who couldn’t describe a vacuum cleaner if it came up during a game of Articulate. If I’d never met a man in real life and only seen them on the news, I’d be convinced that no man had ever had the handle of a bag for life snap off in the bus queue or had an entire chocolate Digestive collapse in their tea. Whatever you’re doing, in 2019, we’re quick to tell you that you’re doing it wrong – but unlike women you don’t have an instructiv­e legacy of completely insane advice to guide you. Where is your Goop? Who is your Elizabeth Gilbert, your Oprah? Your inspiratio­nal beacon is Jack from last year’s Love Island, a 28-year-old man who can’t be trusted not to spoil his dinner by ripping into three sharing bags of Doritos before he opens his Old El Paso kit.

In spite of these clashes and contradict­ions,

many men and women fall in love, and they plan to spend their lives together. Bafflingly, it’s usually left to the men to make this decision official. No one can come up with a good reason for this. It’s “traditiona­l” – like the Eurovision song contest. It’s “romantic” – like a book about a teenage girl falling for a million-year-old vampire that likes to watch her sleep. It’s stupid. But in 2019, we still do it.

If the tradition were flipped, and women were the ones who were expected to propose marriage, there would be no bad proposal stories. The rules would be rigid. We would be expected to have a list of proposal dos and don’ts tattooed inside our forearms. Instead of Say Yes To The Dress we would watch Make Him Say Yes – Or Else. However, men are on their own, because it’s manly. That way we can all be furious when they inevitably get it wrong.

Edgaras Averbuchas is the latest bad proposer, following in the footsteps of Qin Kai, at the 2016 Olympics. Averbuchas proposed to his girlfriend Agne Banuskevic­iute during her graduation ceremony at the University of Essex. She accepted, saying, “I think that this day became even more beautiful with this proposal.” However, the university has removed the video clip of the event from its website as it has received so much criticism. Cambridge University research associate Dr Jana Bacevic tweeted: “Imagine being a man and feeling so threatened by a woman’s intellectu­al success that you have to force her to frame her identity/agency in relation to you on the very day she is being celebrated for her intellect.” Woman’s March organiser Aisha Ali-Khan said it “smacked of egotism”.

I don’t think many people in their right mind would consider making a public proposal. The trouble is that when you are asking a terrifying question and making yourself extremely vulnerable to rejection, you’re not in your right mind. We assume the public proposers are manipulati­ve wrong ’uns who are, at best, showboatin­g – and at worst, using a form of coercive control and putting their partner in a position where they don’t feel they can say no. However, I suspect the majority are panicky idiots who simply want to experience the most frightenin­g moment of their life in a safe space.

Averbuchas knew that Banuskevic­iute would probably be in a good mood, and that he’d be in a place where it would be relatively easy to get hold of some champagne afterwards. If the proposal was a maths test, I wouldn’t give him any marks for his conclusion, but he might get a point for showing flawed but consistent working.

We need to acknowledg­e that when it comes to love and marriage, many of us are clinging on to outdated ideas and traditions that hurt men and women. Marriage is a partnershi­p, and every party involved should enter it as an equal. It’s not fair on anyone when we assume it’s up to men to ask, and up to women to gratefully answer in the affirmativ­e. When you’re choosing to spend the rest of your lives together, you should both spend a few months discussing it. It should be the first of many shared decisions. I don’t think the majority of heterosexu­al men are Christian Grey wannabes looking for women to control. I think they want to build lives with women who know themselves, respect themselves and are able to make split-second decisions during tricky moments in multistore­y car parks.

Ultimately it won’t matter how a proposal is executed when we get to the point where it doesn’t matter who is proposing. But if public proposals leave a bad taste in your mouth, we need to remember that they are a symptom of a society in which rigid gender rules ensure that everybody loses. Where not to propose Ikea

“Will you marry me?” might sound like the perfect way to defuse your partner’s furious response to your first question: “Are you sure you need 8,000 tea lights?” Take a deep breath, open your mouth and fill it with meatballs instead.

The airport security queue

This could turn a Kafkaesque nightmare into a really special occasion, but as soon as that diamond goes on it will need to come off and into a mood-killing grey plastic tray.

Claire’s

“Let’s choose a ring! I’ve budgeted for something in the £4-£6 range.”

On a rail replacemen­t bus service You will forever associate one of the most significan­t moments of your life with the scent of wet dog.

Another wedding

It’s just not on. Unless you do it strategica­lly. “Will you marry me? Now, I didn’t bring a present, so can yours be from both of us?”

I don’t think the majority of heterosexu­al men are Christian Grey wannabes looking for women to control

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘I don’t think many people in their right mind would consider making a public proposal.’ China’s Qin Kai proposes to diver He Zi after she receives a silver medal at Rio 2016.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘I don’t think many people in their right mind would consider making a public proposal.’ China’s Qin Kai proposes to diver He Zi after she receives a silver medal at Rio 2016.
 ??  ?? Photograph: ifeelstock/Alamy
Photograph: ifeelstock/Alamy

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