The female thus acquires, in addition to whatever natural biological advantages she starts with, a competence in social understanding that is usually more responsive to human need than the male's. The tender relationships that exist between mother and child belong to a unique order of humanity, an order in which the male may participate as a child, but from which he is increasingly caused to depart as he leaves childhood behind. Not so the female, whose practice in the art of human relations continues throughout life; and this is one of the additional reasons that enable women to perceive the nuances and pick up the subliminal signals in human behavior that men usually fail to perceive. The very words sensitive and tender are seldom parts of the male's vocabulary, or applied to his behavior.
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Because women are unselfish, forbearing, self-sacrificing, and maternal, they possess a deeper understanding than men of what it means to be human. Women live the whole spectrum of life; they do not think in terms of achromatic black and white, "yes" and "no," or in terms of the all-or-none principle, as men are inclined to do. Women don't settle matters of life and death by saying, "Put him up against a wall and shoot him.'' They are inclined to say, rather, "Give him another chance." Women are more ready to make adjustments, to consider the alternative possibilities, and to see the colors and gradations in the range between black and white. By comparison with the deep involvement of women in living, men appear to be only superficially engaged. Compare the love of a male for a female with the love of the female for the male. It is the difference between a rivulet and a great deep ocean. In Byron's words:
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| | Man's love is of man's life a thing apart 'Tis woman's whole existence .
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Men, the world over, lack the depths of feeling which seem natural to women, most of all of what it is like to be pregnant, to give birth and love the child. Anyone who has ever observed the joyful expression on a mother's face when she sees her baby, no matter how painful or prolonged the labor and the birth may have been, can never forget or find Words adequate to describe it, the jubilance and the triumph together with the, powerful need to nourish the newborn's dependent needs are all there in her face. In a male dominated world obstetricians have not
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