If a woman were alone and unarmed in the woods, would she prefer to encounter a bear and a strange man? This question set the internet abuzz, and some interesting and worrying facts were revealed.
In a recent trend sweeping the internet, women are answering this question through Instagram Reels, TikTok videos, and posts on X (formerly Twitter). Overwhelmingly, the majority of women preferred encountering bears over men. This discussion and discourse provides a broader picture of why women continue to fear men in 2024.
We dug deeper into this hypothesis to find out why most women prefer encountering bears over men. We analyzed their underlying fear of encountering unknown men and why this tendency has important social relevance.
Why women like bears
This trend started on TikTok but has spread to other social media platforms. Here are some of the reactions posted by users on various social media platforms:
“The bear sees me as a human.”
“The worst thing a bear could want is to kill me.”
“I understand what the bear meant. You can’t say that about a man.”
“If I was attacked and killed by a bear, I would have fed the bear’s survival instincts, but if I was attacked and killed by a human, I probably fed his fantasies. That’s it.”
“Kuma-san, everyone will believe you.”
This hypothetical question and its answer sparked widespread discussion online. Some men pointed out how women underestimate the dangers posed by bears and other wildlife, but the point of this trend is not to improve what data and numbers make worse. The vast majority of women who choose bears demonstrate the harsh realities of their lived experience and how they perceive danger in general.
Another user pointed out, “If you make it out alive, people will believe you were attacked by a bear and no one will ask what you were wearing.”
Men also contribute to this discourse, as seen in this video. There, the girl is asking her father, who has hunted bears all her life, what he wants for his daughters.
Trends aren’t about bears
Men at the talk sometimes suggested that women may not realize how dangerous bears are. Some men also claimed that this trend was just a means to spread hatred against men.
But that misses the entire discussion and the heart of the argument.
The focus here should be on risk awareness. It is widely accepted that encountering wild animals while roaming is dangerous. As evidenced by this trend, awareness of the potential consequences of encountering an unknown man in an unknown situation instills a greater perception of fear among women compared to encountering a bear. Their fears reflect the nuances of the society we live in and the ensuing aftermath of surveillance and victim-blaming during male assault and harassment.
The man credited with starting the trend on TikTok has explained how the viral results reveal that the world looks very different for women and men.
Another user of “We wanted to provide material assistance,” he said.
Violence against women is rampant around the world
At the heart of this debate is the high level of assault, harassment, and violence that women frequently experience at the hands of men.
According to UN Women, one in three women around the world has experienced physical or sexual violence, most at the hands of an intimate partner. In 2022, approximately 89,000 women and girls were intentionally killed around the world, according to UN data.
These cover some, but not all, situations in which a woman feels in danger for her life.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are available in the public domain and are not those of the author.