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A man, a woman, and a child stand before a dark cave in a snowstorm. Someone must enter first—risking wolves, bears, or worse. Who goes?
The man.
That’s it. That’s patriarchy.
But why? Why not the woman or the child? Why does this pattern repeat—in caves, on sinking ships, in coal mines?
The answer lies in a biological truth so ancient we’ve mistaken it for destiny: gametes.
The Gamete Rules
A gamete is a reproductive cell carrying half the blueprint for life. But not all gametes are equal:
Two billion years ago, life didn’t work this way. Organisms reproduced with identical gametes (isogamy). Then evolution split the strategy:
This wasn’t a conspiracy. It was math.
The Cave and the Gamete
Now return to the cave:
This isn’t oppression—it’s specialization. Just as gametes divided labor to survive, so did humans:
From Gametes to Gender to Culture
The chain is simple:
The cave isn’t about male tyranny. It’s about an unspoken pact: Men assume danger so women don’t have to. That’s the deal patriarchy enshrines—a biological handshake fossilized into culture.
The Takeaway
Patriarchy isn’t a villain. It’s a tool forged by evolution. Tools can be outgrown—but first, we must admit what they were designed to do.
Next time you see a man enter the cave first, remember: he’s following a contract written in our gametes. The question isn’t whether the contract is fair, but whether we’re still reading from it—or rewriting our own contracts.