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Why’s it so difficult to celebrate being a man?

May 29, 2015 by Inside MAN 11 Comments

I pulled the handbrake and leaped out of the car.  Grabbing a plastic bag, I desperately started to scoop 160 miles worth of Costa cups and terribly naughty, sugar-based snack wrappers out of sight before InsideMAN’s Dan Bell found me at our meeting point in Portsmouth.  I had travelled on only a few hours sleep and by the end of the journey had accumulated a bag full of insomniac fuel wrappers.

“Hey Chris, good journey?”  Busted.

“Hi Dan, yep, thanks, yourself?” I asked, throwing another coffee cup out of sight. I offered him a leftover doughnut.

We were meeting in Portsmouth to film a short clip for InsideMan’s promotional video, seeking funding support for their new book, to which I am a contributor amongst other writers such as Martin Daubney, of Telegraph Men and former editor of Loaded; Guardian regular Ally Fogg and so many more.   Our plan was to find a nice spot where I could endure a small interview on camera.  Dan would take any usable clips, all I had to do was answer some questions honestly…while casually tensing every possible muscle for maximum “casual buffness”.

Despite retakes around the horrendously loud and invasive coffee machine in our chosen restaurant spot, it was going okay.  Occasionally I would blurt out a sentence that caused Dan to silently “double thumbs up” from behind the camera.  Who doesn’t like that?  Then, he veered from questions I had quietly expected such as why I write on men’s issues and gender equality or what my experiences of being a male victim of domestic violence were like.

“What’s great about being a man?”

I didn’t actually see the bucket of ice water that I felt he had just thrown over me…but I was left silent and shocked.  Why didn’t I have a ready and articulate answer for this one?  I like being a man!  Why do I like being a man?  I mumbled some completely unusable footage -something about fatherhood, camaraderie…being able to be silly in a pub…I don’t know.

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Everything that came into my mind had an immediate, opposing argument stand against it.  I love being a parent, but what I know of male parenting is to stand aside while everyone smiles at the pregnant partner while telling me they hope I’m doing my bit around the house while she’s making a baby.  What I know of fatherhood is to be ignored at medical or educational meetings, considered a secondary carer by law and culture, having diminished rights but equal financial pressure upon divorce.

If we’re going to divide parenthood into gender roles, my personal experience and research evidences fatherhood as a secondary parental position, from pregnancy to post-divorce Christmas Day arrangements.  Sure, I am more likely to morph into a growling, tickle-monster and throw my children about as they giggle and tumble until they’re nauseous, but is that a particularly ‘male’ way to be a parent?  Dads are known for rough and tumble, but is that a fatherhood perk?  Or are men and women simply different enough that men are more likely to do it? I questioned myself and hesitated as I spoke. I know what’s great about being a parent, but as for being a male parent, I could only identify drawbacks and many frustrations.  So, I couldn’t say fatherhood.

Dan’s silent, inanimate, digital camera seemed to roar like a vintage reel to reel, capturing every desperate second as my mind scrabbled to find a suitable answer to the question. Dating?  I’ll be honest, I have a healthy, full and interesting sex life but, these days, I’m not one for relationships.  Surely, dating is where I could identify the “grrrr”, the victorious and powerful roar of that male, king of the jungle beast, prowling the clubs and establishing the dominance of penis power I keep hearing about.  Whether in packs or as lone wolves, we style our manes and strut into the bar, the ladies turn, they dance around us like in the music videos and movies; we’re all rap stars and buff, action movie protagonists just enjoying another female populated visit to the dance floor…and soon we’ll be having slow-motion, breath-halting, lip-biting sex…because that’s how a man finishes a night out.  That’s what’s great about being a man!  Isn’t it?  Guaranteed.

Beards, tattoos and muscles…

Or not.  Actually, men have to amp each other up before they walk over and try to speak to the pretty woman, because it’s a nerve-wracking task to go and show interest and risk rejection in front of your mates and whoever else is watching.  And we know the fine line we have to tread: interested but not desperate, complimentary but without cliche and typical compliments that you’d use on any girl; funny and witty but not offensive….oh, and relax!   OH, and bring your wallet.  You’re buying the drinks if you get that far.  In fact, even if you buy a drink, she may thank you and leave.  If rejection at the bar and in public becomes too tough or expensive that men retreat to dating websites, we can be greeted with such open statements as

“I like a man to be a man and also to be chivalrous and open doors for me and the like.  I like beards and tattoos and muscles.  Must be taller than me and not a shorty.  I won’t message first, if you like me then you know what to do, but put some effort in, if you just say “hi”, I’ll simply delete.  First date?  Surprise me. I like to be wined and dined.”

And most dating profiles just quote Marilyn Monroe and get it over with: “I’ll be morally reprehensible to you, but if you want the good of me, then you have to take the bad because I’m not changing”, (I paraphrased).

So, what’s great about being a man in dating?  We make the nervous approach, we buy the drinks, we fund the date, we open the doors, we shake our tail feathers and display our colours and, even worse, women are comfortable enough to actually demand it?  Even if we do get to the slow-motion, lip-biting sex…it’s on us to prove consent afterwards, just in case she has a change of heart.  I couldn’t say dating.

‘Women can do that too!’

The truth is, I was struggling because I did not want to seem like a typical writer on gender issues who would only see the negatives for myself and the positives for the opposing side.  I desperately wanted to show some maturity and demonstrate to Dan and to all my readers that we can take, acknowledge and appreciate the good…and work to improve the bad.  That’s why Dan asked the question!  InsideMAN, with Dan Bell  and Glen Poole at the helm, is approaching the subject and position of ‘the male’ in a comprehensive, objective and positive manner.  To celebrate the positives, to talk about and improve upon the negatives.

However, any positive that I considered was met with my internal dialogue reminding me of the prominent message in our media that “woman can do that too!”

I considered physical strength, but we’re told just how strong and capable women are….physical strength is not something that men can own and identify with, these days.  It’s not exclusively male…unless there’s a moving van that needs emptying, or a burglar to be tackled.  And our strength counts for nothing as the equal, but silenced, victims of domestic violence.  What about sexual objectification and harassment?  Okay, tough one with many layers, as on one side of this coin is the fact that men are sexually objectified by women in an overt manner, more than the feminist movement would concede to and in a way it would never deem appropriate for women to be treated.

However, on the flip side,  as the gender that has to shake our tail feathers and prove ourselves against our competitors, do women really think men aren’t pressured into getting to the gym, dressing with trend and sophistication in mind, styling with the latest “metrosexual” or “lumbersexual” style, simply to be noticed?  Or does everyone think that evolution recently increased beard growth in the human species to the point where we simply can’t shave enough and keep on top of it?  And from personal experience, try being a male musician without being wolf-whistled, groped, danced upon or even kissed while performing.  Perhaps, as a male, our biggest handicap with sexual objectification and harassment isn’t the frequency with which it occurs, although it occurs more than people will acknowledge, but it’s our powerlessness to do anything about it when it does happen, as we’re regarded as lucky, up for it…and, anyway, it’s just a joke.  Right?

So, what’s great about being a man?

I could go on, but the truth is that we live in a culture that celebrates the female adoption and dominance of the positives associated with the typical male, but denies men the positives of the female world: equal parental rights and acknowledgement, equality in dating, sexual objectification and harassment awareness and so on.

But, I like being a man…more because I like being myself and not because I have privilege dangling between my legs.  Being a man is not such a positive experience, when all is weighed and measured.

So, what’s great about being a man? As an advocate for equality for men and women, my personal opinion is that this question should be one that both sexes can answer, just as we should be able to acknowledge the positives of being a woman.   Men and women in our society should be able to answer the question in celebration of diversity but, as it stands, we’re involved in a battle between the sexes where everyone is proving the privilege of the other.

Unfortunately, we need books and articles that address men’s issues and put our position into context.  Unfortunately, it becomes a question that needs answering in order to highlight the need for equality where men and boys are lacking.  Unfortunately, acknowledgement of men’s diminished rights and the position of the ‘male’ in today’s society is lacking…and sorely needed.  Fortunately, a collaboration of top writers on gender issues has come together, with insideMAN’s latest collaborative project; the goal being to increase awareness of the issues faced by men and boys in our society today and to highlight ways in which men suffer and face inequality.

As for myself, I bid Dan farewell and drove home from the meeting, battling with that question for every mile of the journey, until my desperation and Costa coffee intake got the better of me.  I found myself hastily pulling over to run into a field.  I stood there, in the sun, up against the tree…and I realised…

“I can pee standing up”.

Win.

This article first appeared in Thought Catalog. Photo: tom_bullock

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Filed Under: Men’s Insights Tagged With: healthy masculinity, masculinity

  • karenwoodall

    and peeing standing up is something that men are coming under attack for, it being a sign of the patriarchy and all. What’s great about BEING a man I cannot say because I am a woman but I observe how difficult it is for so many men to say it too because women have drilled the capacity for pride out of them. In today’s world, showing off one’s achievements, drawing on the years of brilliance, tenacity and sheer muscle power that have brought us to the technological age we live in today, is a no go for men and for me that is one of the greatest damages we have done to men and boys, we have robbed them of their lineage and removed their ability to draw on their historical roots.

    For me the world turns as it does because of men and what they have done. As I drive my car, fly in an aeroplane, wait to enter the blackwall tunnel, read about life saving technology, watch the fire engine fly by to rescue people in danger, look at the power and the grace of footballers (I am sorry but no matter how good a woman is at football she will never match the sheer beauty and flow of men playing football – perhaps because football requires all those things about football were designed to draw on those inherent physical abilities of men – not women ). Without men there would be none of the strides forward in drainage, sewerage, buildings that tower into the sky, technology that enters the body and mends it in carefully designed attacks on cancer and other life threatening diseases. When I watch men with their children I see them encouraging them, pushing them, making development possible, I watch them standing back and giving space and instruction and guidance and assurance ‘you can do it, go on, try again’…I watch men educating, advising, explaining, fixing, mending, playing and being in the moment. All of which are continuously ridiculed or negated by women who say repeatedly ‘yes well women can do that too.’ a tired refrain which to my mind is designed these days to stop men being able to draw upon their collective achievements and experience pride in being a man.

    We are allowed to be proud of just about everyone on the planet but we are not allowed to be proud of men and boys. And we wonder why men cannot easily say what is great about being a man. For me, I am utterly proud of men and boys, proud of my husband, my son and my grandson, they are wonderful, mysterious beings who live a different life to mine but one which complements it, supports it and graces it with their difference. They are half of the human race and without men and boys we would not be here, now, sharing these thoughts on a computer. I thank all of you and committ to helping to create a future world in which being a man is something that each and every boy dreams of becoming because of the wonderful things that men are and can be.

    • Paul Mills

      Hi karen,

      Thanks so much for your response.

      After reading Chris’ article I was left feeling despondent about us as Men and how we perceive our contribution to the world and the quality of our lives. I think we need as a matter of urgency, to learn to focus more on the positive and notice Men around us and their contribution to peoples lives; otherwise what is the point of even existing?

    • insideMAN

      Hi Karen,

      What a beautiful and powerful comment. You really have a clarity of thought and language that’s a joy to read. I’d love to post it as an article next week, if you’re OK with that?

      Both Chris’ article and your comment remind me strongly of a point made by the authors of Spreading Misandry — that in a healthy society, each gender must be allowed to have a clear, distinct and inherent value, beyond any other element of a person’s identity. In many ways men are currently being denied the right to that corner stone of a healthy and confident sense of self.

      Dan

      • karenwoodall

        Feel free Dan, I will write a longer one for you if think it will be of interest. I asked the same question of a boy I worked with in therapy today, his answer told me everything, he couldn’t think of anything really that was great about being a boy because ‘there is nothing that boys can do that girls cannot’….I showed him a history book I use with kids and asked him to look at inventors, creators, bridge builders, aviators, medicine men and more and asked him whether the people who did those things were boys or girls when they were his age…’yes he said, but that’s only because men stopped women doing those things…’ ‘don’t you believe’ it I told him, women couldn’t have done those things then and most couldn’t do them now..those things are done by men and the world we live in now is because of men just as much as women…it was as if a light went on in his soul..we talked about spatial awareness, balance, brain difference, muscular strength, rescuing people, why super heroes are so amazing and more…he went out with a bounce in his step. We have to help our boys, they are suffering badly and they all deserve all the chances to be everything and anything. not just dress wearing, not just gender bending, not just being like girls.

        • insideMAN

          Yes please, a longer piece would be fantastic — brilliant to lead off that anecdote as well. It stings to read it, not least because it has such a ring of familiarity.

          I’m sure you’re snowed under, but is there any chance you’d be able to send us something to run on Monday? Would be great to follow Chris’ piece. Thanks Karen!

          Dan

  • daniel mirante

    Men don’t have life on easy mode as some people seem to suggest (due to apex fallacy). They have the problems of being a human being, and some specific male problems, just as women have the human problems and then problems to do with their gender. But all this is over simplistic as we are more than our genders, we are complex intersections of class, race, education, emotional family health, physical and mental capacity etc

    Feeling good about myself because I am looking to something about my gender that I may vicariously draw self-esteem from may be a poor approach – for women as well as men. There is the capacity for pleasure in this body, and pain. Able-bodied men and women are able to enjoy many physical experiences through virtue of having a body.

    What do I enjoy, uniquely, about being a man? I think the question is problematic. Because to explore this I need to compare myself to another. And I do not know how life is for the woman walking the street, or the grandmother, or the schoolgirl. I would be comparing my ‘male experience’ to a conceptualisation of female experience, but there really are only specific, unique, complex, messy lives.

  • RoyK

    Peeing without removing half my clothes is the answer I came up with too (BTW that’s one good use for a long skirt for a woman, which is why they were so common). I’m a lorry driver doing multi-drops. Every day the convenience of peeing discretely behind my lorry is a huge advantage to getting my job done. I hardly see any female multi-drop drivers. It’s a hectic and physically demanding job that would be harder and more demanding in a female body.

  • Groan

    I look forward to Karen’s piece. I do not disagree with the many draw backs you describe. However I don’t ever feel these are the only story. In a sense the very fact that such extravagant claims are made for women’s successes,and have been for so long now, illustrates what is great about being a man. the simple fact that men generally just get on with stuff without bally hoo. Thus despite all the loading of the deck men still get on and out and keep the world turning,now joined by a few women.it isn’t that women can’t be adventurous determined and creative its that relatively few want to outside their comfort zones. Having just been on holiday (being an old fart myself) I clocked the number of more mature blokes donning wetsuits to enjoy the sea often with their kids. What I like about being a man is that getting on with stuff in work play and life without bothering about “what it looks like” “what will people think?” to such an extent it gets in the way. Of course women could do this,and some do, but experience is that few do. From Gay marriage ,to househusband, logger, baker, social worker,fun runner etc. etc. males turn up in a bewildering variety of roles and places having a go. Following Butler many feminists struggle with this creativity and inventiveness in males .One of the unsung things of the present is the way in which men still are present in so much of the new ,having a go. One of the curious effects of the “feminisation” of the Scandinavian countries has been a steadily increasing gender segregation of their work. This is often noted as worrying in the literature. What isn’t often noted is that this means Scandinavian men have much more variety of roles than their women.Women it seems crowd into quite narrow areas where choices are given. What I like about being am man? I don,t believe I can literally die of embarrassment.

  • Luan Garcia

    Great text. It seems a little pessimistic about the reality of men at first, but the conclusion is that being a male is a good thing, after all. For me, the great about being a man is take the example of many men who have done good things for the world and feel inspired to make difference too. Every man, even unconsciously, needs to fight for a cause and feel important for people. This is something positive for us.

  • A Nonymouse

    It is not just the ability to pee standing up, but having a large bladder also, as any fighter pilot who’s done multiple air-air refuellings will tell you. I just have.

  • Michael Rogers

    Of course, women COULD so anything I do BUT, 99.99999% don’t choose to, I’m skilled in the PHYSICAL world! I can fix it even if I’ve never seen it before. It may take 5 years to learn how IT is constructed but I CAN! I don’t have to rely on having good, big tits to get me through, If I needed to, I could grow food, figure out how to eat whatever is growing and kill things to eat if necessary.etcetc
    To me that’s what a MAN is!

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