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| # 2023-06-07 - Man Enough: Undefining My Masculinity by Justin Baldoni | |
| I checked out this book from the local library after listening to a | |
| podcast about maculinity. I was basically seeking another viewpoint, | |
| and the book delivered one. It was an interesting mix: part | |
| self-congratulatory and part self-effacing. Out of the whole book, | |
| what stood out as the most useful to me were the life-hacks, | |
| particularly the one about how to listen better. In order to | |
| emphasize it, i will quote that first, followed by my notes from the | |
| book. | |
| > And if you want the easiest life hack/shortcut to becoming a better | |
| > listener, here it is: When someone is speaking, look at them, try | |
| > to make eye contact, and do your best to let them know with your | |
| > whole body language that you are listening. Then, when the person | |
| > is DONE speaking, take a breath and speak. Oh, and if you ever | |
| > find yourself in an intense conversation about you, and your | |
| > behavior, please, please resist the urge to defend yourself, and | |
| > once you have listened, acknowledge that you heard them. Sometimes | |
| > all that someone you love needs to hear is "I hear you." And there | |
| > you have it. | |
| # Preface | |
| This is not a memoire, but it is a personal exploration that attempts | |
| to frame my perspective using oftentimes uncomfortable (at least for | |
| me) personal stories on what it's meant to be a man and also what it | |
| has the potential to mean if we approach manhood a little differently. | |
| I've learned through therapy that I question my worth because | |
| underneath the question is a statement, a belief that for some reason | |
| has been held, formed, brainwashed, projected onto me and socially | |
| reinforced in me every day of my life as long as I can remember. | |
| That belief is that somewhere, deep down, who I am, as a man, a | |
| friend, a son, a father, a brother, a husband, an entrepreneur, an | |
| athlete, an X, is simply... not enough. | |
| Sometimes I wish we could--just for one day--be real with each other. | |
| Just one day. To say what we mean and mean what we say. Where for | |
| once we realize that not only do we have no idea what... we're doing | |
| here, but that more than anything, if we are ever going to figure it | |
| out, we need to lean on each other to do so. | |
| # Introduction | |
| If you are here to learn about the history of masculinity and how we | |
| got here, how to fix your life, or how to be a certain way to impress | |
| someone, then you picked the wrong book. This isn't an academic | |
| treatise or a motivational self-help book. ... instead of writing a | |
| motivational book, i am writing an invitational one. I am sharing my | |
| story in hopes that it invites you into yours. I am asking questions | |
| of myself in hopes that together the collective "we" can ask those | |
| same questions. To this day, asking questions is the tool I use the | |
| most to dig deeper, to learn, to discover, and to navigate roadblocks | |
| on the path from my head to my heart. | |
| I found that men, when confronted and lovingly challenged in private, | |
| were not only more than willing to listen but, even more inspiring, | |
| were open to doing the necessary self-work to become the most honest, | |
| virtuous version of themselves. | |
| ... every single man I know has had countless experiences of feeling | |
| like we don't fit in. ... you are not alone in your struggles, | |
| emotions, or fears. | |
| # Chapter 1, Brave Enough | |
| Nope, i jumped because more than being scared for my physical safety, | |
| I was scared of being seen as a "pussy." Let me translate that into | |
| the not-so secret language of masculinity, the rules that govern our | |
| very existence. To a young boy, being called a "pussy" means being | |
| seen as weak. And I was more scared of being seen as... inferior, | |
| than I was of missing the three-foot opening of rock-less water and | |
| paralyzing myself. Yep, it's that intense, simply because in the | |
| language we young boys and men speak to each other, being a "pussy" | |
| means being a girl, which means not being a man, or, at best, it | |
| means you're a very weak man, which is absolutely rooted in sexism. | |
| We don't even take the time to pause and think about how the | |
| normalization of using these words as teasing or harmless fun | |
| unconsciously affects the way we see and treat the girls and women in | |
| our lives. | |
| Little did I know at the time, this would be just one moment in a | |
| string of thousands that reinforced a dangerous and confusing message | |
| about bravery and masculinity: acts of bravery aren't judged by | |
| ourselves internally, but are completely dependent on external | |
| factors... | |
| So what was the main lesson I learned on that fateful day on the | |
| bridge? That my sense of myself as a man didn't come from within, | |
| didn't bubble up from some inner core of manliness or innate | |
| worthiness. Nope, manhood was something that was going to be | |
| conferred--or withheld--by other guys. This meant that my "man card" | |
| relied on my ability to perform, and they were the audience and also | |
| the critics. It meant pretending that I didn't have the feelings I | |
| had, and also pretending that the feelings I didn't have were | |
| actually the ones I did. It's called acting. | |
| But, the truth was, that I didn't even know what I felt... I wasn't | |
| even sure if I knew how to feel, much less honor the feelings that | |
| bubbled up. | |
| It is this not knowing, this emotional paralysis, that author and | |
| scholar bell hooks considers a real blight on men's sense of self, | |
| and I couldn't agree more. | |
| To be accepted as a man, I first had to learn to suppress parts of | |
| myself that other men would think were "unmanly." And if I didn't do | |
| it on my own, you better believe there would be another man--who was | |
| also wanting to be accepted--to do it for me. | |
| I don't believe women need another man jumping on the "woke" | |
| bandwagon, wearing a feminist T-shirt, and tweeting and speaking out | |
| about social issues, who isn't willing to start by doing the hard | |
| work of introspection and self-reflection. I believe the world needs | |
| men to show up, not in big ways, but in hundreds and thousands of | |
| little ways... That work doesn't begin with an audience; it starts in | |
| the mirror, with an audience of one. | |
| ... the schoolyard ... quickly became a classroom, albeit an | |
| anxiety-inducing one, where I would learn what it took for me to be | |
| accepted by the other boys--what it took for me to be deemed good | |
| enough, tough enough, strong enough, brave enough, man enough. And | |
| it all starts with one simple rule: don't show your emotions. | |
| Now from the outside, it may not have seemed like I, as a city kid, | |
| had a lot in common with the country boys in [southern] Oregon, but | |
| there was one undeniable thing everyone of us could relate to: no one | |
| wanted to be labeled a "pussy," and the way to avoid that was to | |
| follow rule number one. | |
| One of the ways that I have begun reconstructing the path from my | |
| head to my heart is by creating experiences that force me to be | |
| vulnerable. If there's something I am experiencing shame around in | |
| my life, I practice diving straight into it, no matter how scary it | |
| is. If shame thrives in silence and isolation, then the opposite | |
| must be true: shame dies in speaking up and in community. | |
| # Chapter 2, Big Enough | |
| In the West, there has been a growing movement among men focused on | |
| stopping what they call the "feminization" of men. The basic belief | |
| is that every strong civilization that has ever existed has needed | |
| strong masculine men to survive and flourish and that the patriarchy | |
| isn't a socially constructed thing--it's just the way God made us. | |
| The belief is that our system is part of the natural hierarchical | |
| organizational process of humans and animals and that men have been | |
| benevolently extending and granting rights to women and protecting | |
| them for thousands of years. There are countless offshoots, | |
| subgroups, and beliefs held by many of these men, but essentially one | |
| of the core beliefs is that men are divided into two categories: | |
| alphas and betas. | |
| The problem that [L. David] Mech discovered was that wolves behave | |
| differently in captivity than they do in the wild, and the "alpha | |
| wolf" actually doesn't exist. This bothered Mech so much that he has | |
| spent the better part of the last forty years publishing articles and | |
| debunking the confusion around the myth of the alpha wolf... | |
| This whole notion of our muscularity being the barometer for our | |
| masculinity is often referred to as the "Adonis complex." | |
| We men do this thing where we assess our perceived place on the | |
| man-enough ladder, ... and then we attempt to climb up the ladder by | |
| stepping on the man we perceive to be on the run below us. | |
| What if our physical strength is simply a band-aid on the bigger | |
| problem? A problem that exists within our culture, and with | |
| masculinity as a whole. If we are trying to get bigger and stronger, | |
| if we are trying to learn self-defense and survival skills, if we are | |
| buying guns to protect our families from intruders, or buying pepper | |
| spray for the women and girls in our lives, or offering to walk them | |
| to their cars at night then there's a... good chance that we are | |
| really late. The work to protect the women we love must begin with | |
| ourselves first, and then with the men in our lives. | |
| One of the tools I utilize the most to help check myself is the | |
| concept of the why ladder. It's about taking a brief pause and | |
| asking myself why, and then why again, and then maybe why again. | |
| It's about climbing the why ladder as a way to check, and challenge, | |
| my intention. | |
| # Chapter 3, Smart Enough | |
| The boy who knows the answers to every question the teacher asks is | |
| often teased for being a "know-it-all" or a "try-hard." | |
| At the societal level, men are just "supposed" to be smart, simply by | |
| virtue of being men. And if we're dumb, that's okay too because | |
| we've created a culture where forward progress is still possible | |
| simply by virtue of being a man, hence the term "failing up." Women | |
| are the emotional ones, but men, due to our capacity to cut ourselves | |
| off from emotion, are the "rational" ones, the smart ones, the | |
| problem solvers. And believing is seeing: the world around me has | |
| always reinforced [this idea]... | |
| While the message about being smart is often conflicting, there is | |
| one message that has remained consistent across personal experience | |
| and societal pressure: we have the answers. ... if you want to be a | |
| man of value, you have to be a man of resourcefulness. But not just | |
| any resourcefulness, your OWN resourcefulness--your own smarts, | |
| competence, and intelligence. | |
| For me, part of accepting and embracing the fact that I don't have | |
| all the answers also means having to look at my fear of being wrong | |
| and my knee-jerk reaction of defensiveness when I am corrected. | |
| But what I've learned is that being willing to be wrong, to ask for | |
| help, for directions, to admit sincerely when you've made a mistake | |
| and also admit that you don't know the answer, makes it that much | |
| harder to "cancel" you because you are effectively canceling | |
| yourself. By humbling yourself and sitting in the discomfort of your | |
| humanity, I believe something almost spiritual happens, and | |
| regardless of who you are, you become real and relatable. | |
| # Chapter 4, Confident Enough | |
| If you had met me in high school, chances are you might have described | |
| me using adjectives like "cocky," "arrogant," or "overconfident." | |
| I was well-aware of my deep-seated insecurities and lack of | |
| confidence. So much of my personality was put on and performative. | |
| I can look back now and almost see this play out and feel so much | |
| compassion for my [younger] self. | |
| My facade of overconfidence was me overcompensating for my | |
| insecurities, for parts of me I felt ashamed of. | |
| For example, as naive and ignorant as it may sound, I had no idea | |
| that it was a well-known thing among women that men often sit in a | |
| way that has us taking up more than our share of a seat or space, | |
| also known as "manspreading." | |
| [I have been criticized more than once by both men and women for | |
| having too much tension in my posture, folding my body in on itself, | |
| as though i were trying to hide myself or be invisible. Seems like a | |
| double-bind to me. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.] | |
| In the summer of 2017, when I sat down with my friend Dr. Michael | |
| Kimmel, a sociologist who specializes in gender studies, for one of | |
| our Man Enough episodes, he stated the importance of creating the | |
| kinds of spaces where men feel safe enough and confident enough to | |
| speak up and share. A space they can trust that what they share | |
| won't be used against them. | |
| I've found that the most difficult part of connecting is sending that | |
| initial text or making that first phone call to try to set up a time | |
| to connect. | |
| But I've paid enough attention to know that if I can just make that | |
| effort to reach out, it almost always pays off. | |
| Men are taught to be, or to appear to be, self-confident, but we are | |
| not taught ow to develop or know our own self. Hot take: you can't | |
| be self-confident if you don't have a sense of self. Self-confidence | |
| without self-awareness is false and performative. | |
| So I began the work of cultivating a sense of self, of asking myself | |
| what I was really like, what I really liked... [This was] a | |
| continuous practice that invites awareness into my thoughts and | |
| actions, what makes me tick, what fuels me. It's deep, internal, and | |
| extremely personal, and the growth is slow to see. | |
| Researchers have studied facial muscles on men and women to measure | |
| emotional reactivity because facial muscles are controlled by the | |
| brain's emotion circuits. In one study, they placed electrodes on | |
| the smiling muscle, the zygomaticus, and on the anger/scowling | |
| muscle, the corrugator, and measured the muscles electrical activity | |
| when the participants were shown emotionally provocative pictures. | |
| This study found that men were more emotionally reactive than women in | |
| the first fifth of a second; in other words, when it was still | |
| unconscious. [Well, men are reputed to be more visual than women.] | |
| But then as time went on into the range of conscious processing, the | |
| men became less emotionally responsive as the women became more so. | |
| This blew my mind! Their findings may suggest that men may be | |
| equally as sensitive, if not even more so than women, but that we | |
| have trained ourselves to disguise, disengage, or deflate those | |
| muscles. And if these muscles are controlled by our brain's | |
| emotional system, then it further demonstrates that we have been | |
| trained to numb or disengage from our emotions. | |
| # Chapter 5, Privileged Enough | |
| Like male privilege, white privilege is uncomfortable for me to talk | |
| about. In addition, if you are feeling triggered by me saying "male | |
| privilege" and "white privilege," then that means one thing: we need | |
| to talk about it. | |
| [So much for consent.] | |
| Oversimplified, white privilege means that the color of my skin will | |
| never be a hurdle for me, just like male privilege means that my | |
| gender will never be a barrier for me. | |
| # Chapter 6, Successful Enough | |
| In my mind, the messages of success and the pressures of providing | |
| are tied so intricately with the messages of masculinity that when I | |
| start to bump against them, it feels impossible to try to dissect and | |
| separate them. The more successful a man becomes, the more of a man | |
| he becomes. | |
| It turns out that what makes us happiest is not having what we want, | |
| but wanting what we have. | |
| When I made decisions from a place of wanting to impress or to fill a | |
| void, I always lost. Being reactive for me always comes from a place | |
| of fear, and fear is often an indicator of scarcity. | |
| So now, instead of appearing like I know it all, I surround myself | |
| with people who know far more than I do, and I humbly ask their | |
| opinions an advice. | |
| At the time [that the author hit rock bottom], I had what I perceived | |
| to be nothing to offer. I was jobless, heartbroken, crashing on | |
| their couch, not able to contribute financially to anything, and was | |
| experiencing a season of depression as a result. I mean, I didn't | |
| want to be around me, so why would anyone else want to--especially | |
| other men? And yet those guys, who are two of my best friends to | |
| this day, genuinely, sincerely valued me. They saw value in me. | |
| They encouraged me to stay active, to get off my ass. They loved me | |
| and were there for me in such a profound way that it brought me back | |
| to life. They affirmed my desire to create and pushed mt to take | |
| practical steps to hone my skills and bring my ideas to life. They | |
| prayed for me and with me, reminding me of a purpose for my life that | |
| goes far beyond people's perceptions of my life--far beyond my own | |
| perception of my life. The things I had been seeking in the | |
| perception of success, I began finding in the reality of | |
| relationships, connection, and community--something that I believe is | |
| far more important for men to realize. | |
| This is exactly the hallucination that forms the foundation for the | |
| ideology of masculinity: it's never enough. | |
| The only way for whatever we have to be enough is to change the | |
| story, change the criteria, change the definitions. As I began to | |
| look at my relationship with masculinity, I crashed headfirst into my | |
| relationship with success. If I wanted to be a man who was strong, | |
| confident, and secure, I needed to be successful by society's | |
| definition. | |
| For me, living a truly successful life will mean that I have acquired | |
| far more moments and memories with those I love and have given far | |
| more than I have taken. | |
| Here's a little hack that helps me the most when I am stuck or | |
| feeling lost. Imagine you are at the end of your life. You're | |
| ninety-five years old, and the doctors have told you that you have | |
| days left to live. Who do you want to be surrounded by? When you | |
| think back in the season, or the moment of your life you are | |
| currently in, will you regret the choice you made or be grateful you | |
| made it? Did it serve you and the people you love? Did it lead to | |
| true happiness, or was it a decision made out of fear or out of | |
| pressure? | |
| # Chapter 7, Sexy Enough | |
| Sex is something men are told we must be the most confident about. | |
| Yet for many men, this is not true. | |
| For me--and a lot of guys--pornography was "sex education." There | |
| was literally no where else to turn where it was safe to ask | |
| questions, and often it wasn't even about fantasies; it was about | |
| understanding what sex looked like and how to have it. | |
| As a man, I have been socialized to not give myself permission to | |
| feel any feelings or have emotions around sex. | |
| [This chapter mostly focuses on the author's struggles with porn.] | |
| # Chapter 8, Loved Enough | |
| When you have a concept as massive and universal as love, it really | |
| helps me to break it down and think of it in smaller ways. | |
| While I believe there are infinite ways and kinds of love, this | |
| chapter is about love as it relates to romantic relationships and, | |
| even more specifically, in a marriage. | |
| As it stands now, it's ever easier and more widely accepted to be | |
| emotionally and physically intimate with multiple people at the same | |
| time. But my personal belief is that we only have so much energy and | |
| time in a given day... Ever hired a contractor who is building four | |
| or five different houses? I have. It sucks because their attention | |
| to yours slowly starts to diminish with every other house that they | |
| are building. | |
| [Now there's a Western analogy, with each atomic family having their | |
| own separate house, and the resources to hire their own dedicated | |
| contractor. In the old days people would gather together for barn | |
| raising, and it took a village to raise the bairns (children).] | |
| ... there's one relationship that's impossible to escape, one | |
| relationship every one of us has the opportunity to choose without | |
| regret or remorse, one we don't swipe way out of: the one you have | |
| with yourself. That's the starting point... that supports the | |
| relationship you will have with your partner. | |
| But now I realize that all a spiritual awakening or enlightening | |
| moment does is give you a glimpse into the realization that you are | |
| more than you thought you were. That you are a part of something | |
| beautiful and bigger than yourself. That you are enough. | |
| # Chapter 9, Dad Enough | |
| Unfortunately, the method by which we measure fatherhood readiness is | |
| the exact method by which we measure masculinity. As men we've been | |
| socialized to believe that if we can't provide for our families, then | |
| are we even men? Just the possibility of financial hardship and not | |
| being able to provide for our partners and children is enough to put | |
| most men into a state of paralysis and choose not to have kids. | |
| [At least they are making a conscious choice.] | |
| That moment we found out Emily was pregnant, what had previously been | |
| an invitation for me to take the journey from my head to my heart | |
| quickly became a demand to take the journey. | |
| My aunt Susie told me that my grandpa wanted to be in the delivery | |
| room when she was born in the 1940s, but the hospital refused to | |
| allow him in--even though he was a senator. In the 1940s and '50s, | |
| virtually no men were in the delivery room when their wives gave | |
| birth--that was the law and what was considered to be the norm. | |
| # Chapter 10, Enough | |
| A foundational part of this book, and my journey, has been taking the | |
| messages that society has given us and trying to reframe them in a | |
| way that actually benefits me. Are you brave enough to be | |
| vulnerable? Are you confident enough to listen? Are you strong | |
| enough to be sensitive? Are you adventurous enough to dive into the | |
| deep waters of your shame, into your behaviors, your thought | |
| patterns, and the stories you carry that hurt like hell? Are you | |
| hard working and courageous enough to take the journey from your head | |
| to your heart? | |
| [Great, yet another way to torture myself and fall short.] | |
| I discovered that what I had mistaken for a desire to be man enough | |
| was actually a fundamental need to belong. | |
| One of my best friends, Ahmed, once told me that one of the original | |
| meanings of the word "human" in Arabic is insan, which translates | |
| into English to "insane." Now, while it has many meanings and | |
| translations, one of the more accurate translations is "they who | |
| forget." So to be human quite simply means to forget. For me that | |
| means that the real journey is the remembering: remembering who we | |
| are, who created us, our purpose, and our worth. | |
| author: Baldoni, Justin, 1984- | |
| detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Justin_Baldoni | |
| LOC: BF692.5 .B36 | |
| tags: book,gender,non-fiction | |
| title: Man Enough | |
| # Tags | |
| book | |
| gender | |
| non-fiction |