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Thread: Men need men...
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07-21-2010, 09:59 PM #1
Well the title is a tad odd as another noted but
the point is spot on. The issue is NOT restricted
to men.
The modern world is lacking in honest, sober, hard working
and moral roll models.
The commercials that denigrate men because they do not
do the laundry properly should receive a pile of the proof
of purchase stickers from the competitor's products.
Shows like the "Real housewives of New Jersey" should be
shunned and their sponsors put on notice. Women should
not be invited to aspire to that level of TRASH.
Men likewise need mentors not just carpentry and shaving
but life. In a bygone age the brother of an abused wife
and his friends would take the abuser to task in no uncertain
terms. Women would not condone their friends being the other
women -- Tiger take note!
Churches would/ should spend a lot of effort teaching folk how to live
in contrast to how not to live.
It is true that life is not black and white. At times it is messy
but movies, books, etc worth my money should have a strong
moral compass.
To this point I should insert a thanks to the moderators of this
group. Thanks all.
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The Following User Says Thank You to niftyshaving For This Useful Post:
nun2sharp (07-22-2010)
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07-21-2010, 11:11 PM #2
+1 to everything Nifty said.
Now I was pretty into theatre when I was in high school, and still a little involved when I have time in college, so naturally I'm a little more "in touch with my feminine side" than most guys. I also tend to get along with girls better than guys and find myself spending time with platonic female friends more than my guy friends.
That said, I completely agree that men need other men to be men. Throughout life. As a child I needed (and had) my father as the man to look up to and aspire to be like. In my younger teens (since I'm still technically a teen) I needed my guy friends to socialize with and develop good healthy relationships to help my development, as well as older men like my father/grandfather/uncles/pastor/etc. And now I'm in that final stage of male development where my friends and I are now men and becoming equals to the men we grew up looking up to.
I still hang out with girls more than guys, but I absolutely need my guy friends too. Some things just have to be experienced and talked about with other men, girls simply won't do. Men need men.
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07-22-2010, 06:36 AM #3
I think that part of the problem today is that people -both men and women- take already too much influences from outside without criticism, be it arts, TV, movies, religion (in some cases), media etc.
It is sad really that adult people need to find something or someone to tell how to live properly, while they should have learned it as they grew up, by themselves or by their parents. Are we so lost?Last edited by Sailor; 07-22-2010 at 06:47 AM.
'That is what i do. I drink and i know things'
-Tyrion Lannister.
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07-23-2010, 07:31 PM #4
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Thanked: 335I haven't read all the comments, but we men all need to consider that women will only keep us around until parthenogenesis is perfected and they still need someone for heavy lifting.
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07-23-2010, 07:50 PM #5Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
07-23-2010, 09:04 PM
#6
In a moment or two we will need to gather in a classroom and hear some sociology professors lecturing to all of us...This has become a rather interesting discussion...
I don't intend to define manliness or "maleness". Nor do I wish to be compared to an elefant. Please, I may have a pound or two more that I should but that's it! And my nose is much smaller... and I tend not to use it to shovel food into my mouth.That having been said... It is a fact that elefants are herd animals. I reckon that humans are not. But the principle stands, in a way. Small humans need big humans to teach them to be humans. That is how we work. That is the core of bringing someone up - and the expression says it all: bringing up...
Now, concerning the topic that has sparked all this conversation - and all this controversy, as well...
The question here is not manliness. I'm sure that all of us will agree that there is no such thing as a standard of manliness... A manly man is a manly man. Ideally, it is not only in his genes, but also deeply carved into his culture and into the society from which he as sprouted (much like the brussels sprouts...). A western man - a european or an american - will probably be different form a man from a lost tribe from Papua New-Guinea. Their notions of manliness will differ (assuming that the so called "primitive" societies have such a notion... because it is generated by thoughts that can only be, themselves, generated by the mind that is well fed and does not have to worry about catching dinner for the tribe). Surely enough there will be rites of passage. These rites - that also exist, though not in so obvious ways, also exist in our modern western world. The Prom, the first shave, the first job... whatever.
The thing is: children cannot teach children to be responsible or teach eachother what are the core values of their culture or society. That is why, ultimately, we have schools, and boy scouts and so many other things that help us define what is our own value system, but also what it means to be what one is.
After the 1960's lots of things changed - we had hippies, the sexual revolution, feminist movements, student strikes, you name it... The result was that, for the first time young men (and I will only focus on men for obvious reasons) started to drift way from the standards of their fathers and grandfathers. Especialy because the standards of their mothers also started to change - don't forget that when men went overseas to fight in the war, the mothers had to fill in their shoes and consequently, the women that would become the wives of this new generation were no longer willing to stay in the kitchen and be simple house wives... Ultimately, everything changed.
Now, my generation is looking to the past to find new standards of manliness. We have re-invented the past, in a way. We are bringing back hats, mustaches, brill-cream, classic shaving... All in all, this is a complex process. Very much a complicated thing to explain...
But if we have all the so-called retro stuff to indulge in, we are the sons of the first generations that defied the stradards. We were brought up by women, we were touched by the divorce of our parents, etc. Lots of things enter the equation.
But the ground is clearly defined - we are men, even if we are unsure of what "real men" are. This possible uncertainty, though not incapacitating in any way - especially in my particular case - is what makes me so sure that men need men... We need friends to goof arround, have drinks, make fun of each other, share experiences and offer support when times get rough. That is my point.
Now, here in Brussels, a month after I've arived in a new city, almost completely alone, deprived of my core friends, deprived of my adorable cat and deprived of my loving wife (though she is coming to live here in less than a week), I tend to feel lonesome. You guys are, somehow, a support. I know that this is all virtual and that I might never meet most of you... but it is nice to think that, even for a brief moment I can read posts of my friends and discuss issues with them. That's basically it...
And it is not only me. Take a look at the Finest things in life and the conversation sections of this forum. You will find people saying that they have become dads, that they are going to be married, that they are experiencing the grueling effects of the credit crunch. You will find people showing of that new pipe they bought, that new knife or gun... We don't do this because we need approval - especially of people that we may never meet. We do this because here we have found other men that share our interests and are keen on posting a comment or hearing what someone has to say... This, gentlemen, is men needing men. And this is men finding the men they need.
(Did you hear the Elgar on this last bit?... I know I did!)
07-23-2010, 09:49 PM
#7
So thanks for your interesting post and for starting this thread.
A little off topic about me: I was born in sixties and my father died when i was little. My mother moved to London so i was raised by my grandparents who were elder generation. My granddad was something you might describe like 'a real man', hard working ,tough war vet and all his friend were too; either seen the worst in either Finnish or German armies when the times were sad. I've always seen them as a 'real men', but now we have to remember that they had no choice but to be as they were. They had no choice or freedom, as we have nowadays, to think about our manliness, or the lack of it. Might be a part of our (Finnish) culture, but discussing about our lifestyle, hobbies, what we feel about this and that, was something to be ashamed (at least when you are sober). Men just had to do what they had to do; no big deal.
When i was about 14 or so, my beard started to grow so the old man gave me a Gillette DE, some buck of used soap and used brush from who knows where, and told me to shave myself. Never told me how. And i remember when i was about 6 or 7, complaining to be bored of something, he gave me a sharp knife and a little saw and told me to get lost and make something with those. Still they were caring people. The times were different. They just behaved the only way they knew. Nowadays i couldn't imagine behaving the same with my kids.
Those days people didn't talk about their feelings or self-evidences nor didn't have time or possibilities to focus on themselves. That is a biggest difference between then and now, but this is true from my cultural background only of course.
For my whole adult life i've worked in a place with mostly male people. Women are still very rare exception. Most people there behave as machos, so i can say that i've been influenced with male behavior enough. I think i've been lucky to avoid that, but that is of course when compared my behavior to someone else.
I do not see myself a bit as a 'real man' or alternative or something between. I'm honestly sure i have the feminine side, but i haven't been looking for it this far. I can read poems or fix engines, cheer a crying child or woman, iron my shirts or build houses. It has nothing to do with my manliness or lack of it. What is left from my long gone grandparents is that manliness is something not to worry. Luckily we have places like SRP where we can talk about such everyday self-evidences like shaving or what we are. We are individuals and we all have our cultural and genetic backgrounds. No big deal.
Manliness, for me, is nothing to worry about. I rather like to behave, just being myself, and take care of my responsibilities for the people i live and work with: my family, my friends, and the people at my work.
Manliness isn't about your lifestyle or what you do (or with what you shave with); it is rather how you do and what you are, IMHO.
Last edited by Sailor; 07-23-2010 at 10:41 PM.
'That is what i do. I drink and i know things'
-Tyrion Lannister.
07-23-2010, 10:36 PM
#8