questioning the western worlds rite of passage to manhood
what is a man? what makes a human male what one would define as a man?
i am currently reading a book called 'fire in the belly' by sam keen and it is the best physiological book on masculinity i have ever read. western society says that you can become a man by joining a fraternity, getting a letter in sports, having sex with multiple partners, being rugged & tough, never showing your feelings, drinking a lot, having lots of money, working hard, swearing, never crying, etc. but do these actions prove that one is a man?
i read a book called wild at heart and did not enjoy or relate to it at all. it made a list of traits that 'real men' possess and a list of what the common male can do but is somehow is categorized in a type of sub-man. the real men liked camping and auto repair, while the un masculine male knew how to install a computer program and program a DVD player. i honestly don't feel by buying a motorcycle that i am more 'manly' and i sure don't feel that it is likely to give me any more testosterone.
"the information necessary to create a male is encoded in our DNA, but it takes all the institutions of a culture to produce a man. The male body is the biologically given hardware, the myth that manhood is the software inserted by society through a series of formal and informal rites of passage."
-sandor mcnab
as boys we are taught in order to reach manhood we must repress compassion, guilt, and the sense of fear. the propaganda we are constantly bludgeoned with states that if we do not become dominant, sadistic, and cruel then we have not yet reached manhood.
but in our pursuit of manhood we have lost the sense of family and replaced it with the pursuit of power, greed, and money.
before world war I the average man would spend 4 hours with his children a day. between world war I and world war II it was reduced to 2 hours a day. post world war II it is now down to a 20 minute average a day the average working man spends with his children a day. what has been gained is the warped sense of "manhood" what has been lost is the relationships with his children. in turn the fathers silently are teaching their young boys that this is the way of the man. to much time spent at home, or investing into children's lives can be seen from the outside as lazy and in turn un-manly, since the sense of work satisfaction is the identity of the modern male.
in light of this men like rena cassin, who won the nobel peace prize in 1968, would not be 'man' at all. he was known for being a fragile man and a quiet speaker, unlike the extraverted, tough exterior expected by western culture. he set up the french ferderation for disabled war veterans and accepted the office of vice president of the hig council so he could work hands on with the childern orphaned by the war.
to me this was a man.
to me character, ethics, and social responsibility should be the point to which all men should be judged by.
"a man is measured by the expanse of the moral horizon he chooses to inhabit."
-sandor mcnab
i believe it is what we stand for and what we are willing to die for that makes us a man, not by the size of engine in his mode of transportation or ammount of alcohol he can consume before we are out of control.
i believe that it is what we do in secret that determines the character of the man, and it is character that is imperative and not the depth of his voice, or the ammount of women he can seduce.
i believe it is a males self control and self sacrifice that should be the western worlds rite of passage to manhood and not his social irresponsibility in front of peers that is the true test.
i am now questioning the western worlds rite of passage to manhood, and one day hope to instill character, ethics, social responsibility, and a sense of family in all my little boys; because those are the substance of a man.
i am currently reading a book called 'fire in the belly' by sam keen and it is the best physiological book on masculinity i have ever read. western society says that you can become a man by joining a fraternity, getting a letter in sports, having sex with multiple partners, being rugged & tough, never showing your feelings, drinking a lot, having lots of money, working hard, swearing, never crying, etc. but do these actions prove that one is a man?
i read a book called wild at heart and did not enjoy or relate to it at all. it made a list of traits that 'real men' possess and a list of what the common male can do but is somehow is categorized in a type of sub-man. the real men liked camping and auto repair, while the un masculine male knew how to install a computer program and program a DVD player. i honestly don't feel by buying a motorcycle that i am more 'manly' and i sure don't feel that it is likely to give me any more testosterone.
"the information necessary to create a male is encoded in our DNA, but it takes all the institutions of a culture to produce a man. The male body is the biologically given hardware, the myth that manhood is the software inserted by society through a series of formal and informal rites of passage."
-sandor mcnab
as boys we are taught in order to reach manhood we must repress compassion, guilt, and the sense of fear. the propaganda we are constantly bludgeoned with states that if we do not become dominant, sadistic, and cruel then we have not yet reached manhood.
but in our pursuit of manhood we have lost the sense of family and replaced it with the pursuit of power, greed, and money.
before world war I the average man would spend 4 hours with his children a day. between world war I and world war II it was reduced to 2 hours a day. post world war II it is now down to a 20 minute average a day the average working man spends with his children a day. what has been gained is the warped sense of "manhood" what has been lost is the relationships with his children. in turn the fathers silently are teaching their young boys that this is the way of the man. to much time spent at home, or investing into children's lives can be seen from the outside as lazy and in turn un-manly, since the sense of work satisfaction is the identity of the modern male.
in light of this men like rena cassin, who won the nobel peace prize in 1968, would not be 'man' at all. he was known for being a fragile man and a quiet speaker, unlike the extraverted, tough exterior expected by western culture. he set up the french ferderation for disabled war veterans and accepted the office of vice president of the hig council so he could work hands on with the childern orphaned by the war.
to me this was a man.
to me character, ethics, and social responsibility should be the point to which all men should be judged by.
"a man is measured by the expanse of the moral horizon he chooses to inhabit."
-sandor mcnab
i believe it is what we stand for and what we are willing to die for that makes us a man, not by the size of engine in his mode of transportation or ammount of alcohol he can consume before we are out of control.
i believe that it is what we do in secret that determines the character of the man, and it is character that is imperative and not the depth of his voice, or the ammount of women he can seduce.
i believe it is a males self control and self sacrifice that should be the western worlds rite of passage to manhood and not his social irresponsibility in front of peers that is the true test.
i am now questioning the western worlds rite of passage to manhood, and one day hope to instill character, ethics, social responsibility, and a sense of family in all my little boys; because those are the substance of a man.
Comments
The more boys are ncouraged to be real & sincere rather than a superficial masculinity, the more likely we will have male leaders worth following.
Everyone's heard the cliche "it takes a real man to cry" and there is a lot of truth in that.
:)
A man is a man who loves and is loved by his family. A man is someone that is not afraid to cry, especially when humbled by God. A man is a man, who spends time with his family by turning off the tv & actually spending quality time with them. A man is a man when he shows his kids how to treat others with respect, especially the parents.
I work in a nursery with kids, who's parents would rather get off of work and go home to chill, than to go pick their kids up and hang out with them. The max amount of time the parents can put their kids in the nursery is 10 hours and some parents will leave their kids in there for the max of 10 hours so they don't have to put up with them. Don't get me started, but I think parents (including dads) should take parenting classes in order to have kids.
"Man is not what is seen on the outside, but what their character reveals when they are all alone."
"a man is measured by the expanse of the moral horizon he chooses to inhabit."
-sandor mcnab
i believe it is what we stand for and what we are willing to die for that makes us a man...
i believe that it is what we do in secret that determines the character of the man, and it is character that is imperative..."
While these statements are indeed true, they are actually speaking of ideals that define the character of mankind, not of man as opposed to woman. These are universal values, not values that define a "man". Please understand that this comment is not in disagreement, but just an attempt to make clarification. There is a difference between what traits men should be judged by and what traits make a man.
Come check out my blog... I think you'd like it!
"Long time reader, first time writer" if I could use that...I have a question for you that I don't know how you would like to answer (or if you even would care to): I would kind of like to know the beginning of your (amazing) musical endevour...how you guys met Nate and thoughts around his age, how you scored with T&N after roughly a year and what not. An autobiography of sorts...if this can not be done that's understandable. I'm just curious as a cat...keep your heart, head and sanity during this time.
God bless you!
Vanze
I hate to think lack of emotion and muscles and never crying make a man. I have two little brothers and they are caring and loving and they show emotion, but sometimes I still worry that their friends will push the asthetic of what man is onto them and that will be how they think they have to be.
Gender stereotypes are hard to break. Hopefully mine and the next generation will have a mush easier time breaking free of them and just being whoever you are.
Thank you for having an affect on me, even if it is only for tonight.
i feel it imperative for individuals to be able to stand on their own. the substance of a man, i think, can only truely be recognized when he can honestly say he is able to be on his own. when he can look within and know who he is and what he's about. popular belief would say you aren't complete without a significant other, when really we shouldn't be turning to that to be whole.
i know too many people who can't go more than a couple of months without being in a realtionship and its heart wrenching to see. its hard seeing that they think they need that other person to feel "together." either that or its all about lust. either way...
this comment may be some what tangential, but its what i thought of
You are doing such a wonderful thing by reading and preparing to become a father, something which all men should do. Being a father involves more than donating your sperm and providing finances. It involves your heart and teaching and being an example. Hats off to you and other men like you who actually take the time to learn and plan on what kind of father they are going to be. Your children will benefit greatly from this, And their children as well, you are going to plant a seed in your children that will carry on from generation to generation. To me no amount of fame, money or anything can come close to the impact and influence we have on our children....that is the true success in life....to raise Godly, moral and loving children who in turn will do the same, that is our immortality and the greatest mark we can leave on this earth.
:)
Furthermore, your ideal of what it means to be a man falls in line with the same stereotypical bullshit that has troubled the modern man and placed him under a heavy amount of what is known as gender role strain. You say that men shouldn't drink heavily, but they should be willing to sacrifice their lives for an ideal? Why?
The idea that men should be superiorly ethical and willing to sacrifice their lives for an idea is just a propagation of the same gender stereotypes that have gotten us into trouble in the first place.
What you've got to realize stephen is that it takes a Y chromosome to be a man, and that's it...
What you and the rest of society think makes a man a man is a socially constructed ideal that has helped repress those who do not fulfill the stereotype. You're idea of a man may be constructed by schooling, parents, or religion, either way, you're stereotypes are likely to exclude many people who are not necessarily ready to die for a cause, or ready to gauge themselves by how much they are willing to sacrifice...
Taking a gender psychology class right now, and decided to call you out...
-Aki
By the way, see you at Toad's on saturday