I recently read a Fox News article about how men don’t want
to get married to the women who are available because, since Feminism came in
and crazy ladies burnt their bras, “women aren’t women” any more. And that all
this rah-rah pro-lady bias in the media has made men feel sad and broken and
unloved.
In college I wrote a paper on what the privatization of land
among the pastoral Maasai and Samburu tribes was doing to the masculine
identity in those cultures. Both cultures have had very divided gender roles,
with the women dealing entirely within the domestic sphere—they build their own
houses, raise their children, farm and tend the small livestock—and the men
heading out to cattle camps with the herds and men of their extended family
groups. Now that grazing lands have been “protected” or privatized, there is a
loss of identity among the men. They are lonely, without their fathers and
brothers in the cattle camps, and the world has changed within their lifetime.
The steps that are often taken to combat the loneliness result in men going to
cities and contracting diseases, drinking problems, drug abuse, and other
domestic ills. According to Fox News, this loss of identity is similar to what American
men are feeling, and instead of Colonialism and Capitalism to be blamed, it’s
all on us ladies. Not that we’re even women any more.
The entire Fox argument is just weird on so many levels.
Worst, I worry that there is a niggling grain of truth buried in the deep,
deep, deep layers of total bullshit. Not that women aren’t women or that ladies
are responsible for men’s loss of identity, but that while girls were being
raised on the idea that we can be anything, that we CAN do math and science and
be nerds and artists and mechanics and mommies and carpenters and princesses,
not shave our legs or armpits, sleep with and/or marry men and/or women, be
strong and powerful, have or not have babies, own sexy lingerie and Carhartts,
play sports, run for political offices, and on and on and THANK THE LORD AND
ALL THOSE BRA BURNERS AND BRAVE LADIES AND MEN OF THE EARLY FEMINIST MOVEMENT,
very little was done to adjust the dudes to this new, and more awesome
paradigm.
My father, god bless him, has lived in a very female-centric
world for the last forty years. His mother, his sister, his wife and his three
daughters all have few issues with expressing our opinions, and we tend to bristle at
the idea that there are limits to what ladies can do. Not that this topic comes
up a whole lot—he did raise his daughters to be like this and can’t be too surprised at the results—but
sometimes I think that the capability of myself, my mother, and my sisters
takes him by surprise. At a reading by the wonderful Terry Tempest Williams
this spring, my father stood up to ask about, in TTW’s newest book about her
mother, is there a place for her father?
And suddenly I understood that he just doesn’t want become
obsolete amid all the women. I don’t imagine that he is alone among men of his
generation, who have no model for how to age gracefully with capable women. I
don’t imagine he is so very different from men of my own generation who were
raised with more rigid expectations of gender roles.
There has been so much necessary focus on women and girls in
so many fields. I applaud the results, and while the glass ceiling isn’t an
open sky yet, we’re getting there. What worries me is that boys are not getting
similar lessons in role models in how to go beyond traditional gender roles. To
wit, in a grad school class, a women presented on impact of girl only outdoor
programs on the confidence of those girls as they become women. The student
presenting mentioned the possibility of less sexual violence against these
women, as they would have gained the confidence to avoid abusive relationships,
and to stand up for themselves physically. Wise (lady) professor pipes up:
“this is great for the girls, but why don’t we have more programs developed for
little boys explaining that rape is bad?” A good question, as I doubt anyone
dreams of growing up to become a rapist. In fact, the thought of looking at a
class of elementary school aged kids and knowing that some of them will grow
into heinous criminals incapable of expressing healthy sexual emotions is both
terrifying and sad.
Which is why I am so thankful for the men and women I am
friends with. I’m not saying everyone is perfect, or escaped unscathed into
adulthood without emotional and identity baggage that comes out in weird ways.
But, by and large, I think the people of my generation I know have a good grip
on the duality (forgive my heteronormity) of what makes men and women great and
different and awesomely, commonly human. We’re perhaps the first generation to
possibly have it all ways. I don’t know any men who can’t cook, I don’t know
any women who refuse to cook or sew because it’s too “traditional and
repressive.” I know both men and women who are largely, the stay at home
parent. Perhaps I just know a lot of mama’s boys and penis-envying women, but I
really don’t think so. That said,
there are things that I can’t do, or can’t do as well by the same metric as men
can because I have lady biology. That goes for the dudes as well, and I think
that’s great. I have friends who are better at foreign languages than I am, no
reason that I shouldn’t have friends who are stronger than me, or who look better
in pretty dresses than others of my friends. I know heaps of strong, capable,
brilliant, creative, athletic women who like to curl up with Adele, a rom-com,
and have a good cry. And I know a lot of strong, capable, brilliant, creative, athletic
men who have a need to do “dude stuff” which I don’t understand the point of,
but wish them well. Not all paths need to cross all the time—we have biology
and it plays out differently. We’re not, nor should we strive to be, asexual robots.
Or GI Joe figures. Or Stepford Wives.
It’s actually pretty awesome, this everyone being better
able to do EVERYTHING. When I am doing traditionally masculine things like
building trails or belching like a long-haul truck, I like to say that I can do
these things because I am a lady. A friend sent out an apology email recently,
saying he couldn’t come out for a beer because he had a cold and was sitting
home in his slippers and tea because he is a man. It’s all true, and there’s no
war on each other from where I sit.
Now, if we could just get equal pay, equal health care,
maternity and paternity leave, more women in government, and a few other small
items, it’d be great. No one gets obsolete, everyone gets to hang out with each other and marry or not marry as we all, equally, see fit. Go us!
No comments:
Post a Comment