Corporate media has a new interest in MILFs.
of new york times (New York Times), washington postand the new yorker They all took the MILF archetype and flipped it into a feminist heroic story. It is no longer the story of a promiscuous young man pursuing an older woman in order to sever the bonds of marriage and family. In 2024, mature women will bemain character” The three outlets offer a glowing profile of one elderly married mother and her sexual journey to “self-discovery,” as the kids would say.
In her new memoir, “More,” Molly Roden Winter describes the often tumultuous experience of an open marriage and juggling her duties as a wife and mother with the pursuit of sexual and romantic fulfillment. He talked about the challenges. https://t.co/APHbyN8h5r pic.twitter.com/zfMbVhckjH
— New York Times (@nytimes) January 17, 2024
If you want to know more about the sex lives of women in their 50s, Molly Rhoden Winter We have the perfect book for you. She doesn't really have a name for herself, as she is married and the mother of her two children lives in Brooklyn. At one point, she was an 8th grade English teacher, the NYT reported.She is sparsely written for some lefties mom magazine and amateurish literary criticism.She has only 145 followers twitter. But both our publishing industry and our corporate media are apparently obsessed with pushing the boundaries of sexual transgression, and neither could resist telling the story of her “big sexual adventure.” It was.
As the Times describes it, “More: A Memoir of an Open Marriage” details Ms. Winter's “painful and breathtakingly candid” experience with polyamory. Her journey began unexpectedly in 2008, 10 years after her marriage. [her husband] “I was working late,” and she fell into “awkward conversations with men.” Feeling guilty, she confessed her sin to her husband, who encouraged her to “sleep with her new acquaintance.” Afterwards, both of them began dating other people while ostensibly happily married. (Related: Luke: A year in the life of Aela reveals the future the left wants for women)
What started as a “sexual thrill-seeking” trip for Wintour, filled with “butt plugs, fisting, and anal sex,” turned into so much more. A “brief encounter in a seedy hotel room” turned into “a romantic partnership that lasted for years.” She chronicles her experiences with a “generous German lover,” a French-Argentine with an illegal fetish, and a 29-year-old with a “surprisingly large penis.” Although she felt “sexually and romantically fulfilled,” she stresses that her pleasure did not come without pain.
Review by Kimberly Harrington: Molly Roden Winter's memoir “More” is a very candid and very passionate look at her non-monogamous marriage. https://t.co/y2g5P1EgHJ
— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 15, 2024
It was hard to start. Winter struggled to find love in a society that “doesn't cater to the needs of polyamorous people.” Often she resorted to cheating men without the consent of her spouse. Her sons are not as supportive of her lifestyle choices as they could be. Additionally, she was “driven by jealousy” towards her husband's girlfriend and suffered “flushes of guilt and shame” while “juggling her duties as a wife and a mother.” He admitted that he was. Given this amount of female play and the resulting anxiety, it's worth asking who actually raised the children. (Related: Luke: If conservatives want to win, they need a change in parent PR)
But neither Wintour nor the Times ultimately seem to care much about the issue. In this story, Winter herself is the victim, left wanting more in her by her marriage, children, and society. Her breaking away from the role assigned to her is portrayed as undeniably admirable. Her home life and social anxieties are just obstacles to overcome on her path to self-actualization.
Those “obstacles” themselves can never be considered a source of fulfillment. Improving her marriage in the traditional sense or resubmitting to the broken norms that fuel her anxiety is seen as essentially doubling down on her oppression.The very fact that her shame exists proves that she I know she is doing something wrong. But the idea that infidelity, and broader transgression, is a natural source, the only source, of fulfillment is taken for granted.
Winter says this himself to explain why he wrote this book. “It felt like there was no talk from the mainstream about it.” [polyamory]And I felt very closed off,” Winter said, the Times reported. She says, “I often feel like mothers aren't supposed to be sexual beings.”
However, it is unlikely that she is actually happy with her life choices. What actually happened was probably something like this:
A disciplined middle-aged mother juggling a career and raising children finds that the pressure to have it all is making her life miserable. But her brain was so confused by the feminist lies imposed on her from birth that she couldn't even consider a different lifestyle, such as being a stay-at-home mom. So she turned instead to another frontier that feminism promised to bring meaning: sexual liberation. Her husband is too boned to care, and she has been used like a disposable fleshlight by a bunch of men for over a decade. But now it's just her third thing that causes her stress and anxiety.
Unable to admit that she had failed feminism a second time, she instead wrote a book detailing her experience breaking one of the last taboos of the supposedly conservative social consensus. , portraying herself as a modern-day pioneer of feminism. Her search for new sources of fulfillment is again defined by liberal feminism, and she becomes a noble victim against oppression. But she doesn't seem to find much meaning here. Like “having it all” and sexual liberation, this too is built on a mountain of lies.
Congratulations, Ms. Winter, you have shattered the glass ceiling for slutty mothers all over the world. how do you feel? I'm going to guess “not that good”.