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I used
to have this one-liner: “If you want to emasculate a guy friend, when you’re at
a restaurant, ask him everything that he’s going to order, and then when the
waitress comes … order for him.” It’s funny because it shouldn’t be that easy
to rob a man of his masculinity — but it is.
Last
week, 17 people, most of them teenagers, were shot dead at a Florida school.
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School now joins the ranks of Sandy Hook,
Virginia Tech, Columbine and too many other sites of American carnage. What do
these shootings have in common? Guns, yes. But also, boys. Girls aren’t pulling
the triggers. It’s boys. It’s almost always boys.
America’s
boys are broken. And it’s killing us.
The
brokenness of the country’s boys stands in contrast to its girls, who still
face an abundance of obstacles but go into the world increasingly well equipped
to take them on.
The
past 50 years have redefined what it means to be female in America. Girls today
are told that they can do anything, be anyone. They’ve absorbed the message:
They’re outperforming boys in school at every level. But it isn’t just about
performance. To be a girl today is to be the beneficiary of decades of
conversation about the complexities of womanhood, its many forms and
expressions.
Boys,
though, have been left behind. No commensurate movement has emerged to help
them navigate toward a full expression of their gender. It’s no longer enough
to “be a man” — we no longer even know what that means.
Too
many boys are trapped in the same suffocating, outdated model of masculinity,
where manhood is measured in strength, where there is no way to be vulnerable
without being emasculated, where manliness is about having power over others.
They are trapped, and they don’t even have the language to talk about how they
feel about being trapped, because the language that exists to discuss the full
range of human emotion is still viewed as sensitive and feminine.
Men
feel isolated, confused and conflicted about their natures. Many feel that the
very qualities that used to define them — their strength, aggression and
competitiveness — are no longer wanted or needed; many others never felt strong
or aggressive or competitive to begin with. We don’t know how to be, and we’re
terrified.
But to even admit our terror is to be reduced, because we don’t have a model of masculinity that allows for fear or grief or tenderness or the day-to-day sadness that sometimes overtakes us all.
Please continue this article here: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/21/opinion/boys-violence-shootings-guns.html?smid=fb-share
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