And hell: — BigThoughtDropper
do you think that this version of masculinity has a place in the modern world? — BigThoughtDropper
(If I am wrong please let me know!) — BigThoughtDropper
I don't think it ever occupied a place in the modern world except as a fashionable – and yes "toxic" – archetype. Raised 'urban working-class' mostly in the 1970s by a supremely able and loving mother but without a father, "being a man" has come to mean this to me:My question is this: do you think that this version of masculinity has a place in the modern world? — BigThoughtDropper
I imagine "being a woman" is very similar. It's a standard to strive to live up to, I think, rather than a stereotype with which to disguise / straitjacket our socialized neuroses, inadequacies and anxieties; unfortunately, the latter is more often the case than not, mostly as occupational hazards (re: e.g. cops, prisoners, firemen, soldiers, construction workers, surgeons, bankers-financiers, athletes, coaches, politicians, gangsters, cowboys, farmers, etc).To be a person who conscientiously respects and cares for himself, and those whom he loves, while living as self-sufficiently as circumstances allow and always with courage & humor ...
If we are to use actors who played cowboys, or cowboy characters, as examples of masculinity, I'd choose Richard Boone as Paladin in the old TV show Have Gun. Will Travel. A hired gun or mercenary, and therefore dangerous when necessary, but urbane, well-read, sophisticated, and with a sense of justice. — Ciceronianus the White
do you think that this version of masculinity has a place in the modern world? — BigThoughtDropper
Is there something it is like to be a man? — bert1
As a man you should not complain too loudly about difficulty or pain, you should expect hardship and bear the burden, you should never use your physical strength to harm those weaker than you, you should use your strength to help those weaker than you, you should be the first to volunteer, et al. — BigThoughtDropper
Right on, man! :lol: :up:... a friend who was farmer on a small acreage, a rough-and-ready man of few words. We were talking about the book Real Men Don't Eat Quiche - so this conversation was forty yers ago. My friend's only comment was "Real men eat what they fuckin' like". — Banno
As a man you should not complain too loudly about difficulty or pain, you should expect hardship and bear the burden, you should never use your physical strength to harm those weaker than you, you should use your strength to help those weaker than you, you should be the first to volunteer, et al. — BigThoughtDropper
As a human you should not complain too loudly about difficulty or pain, you should expect hardship and bear the burden, you should never use your physical strength to harm those weaker than you, you should use your strength to help those weaker than you, you should be the first to volunteer, et al. — BigThoughtDropper
A human should not complain too loudly about potentially difficult or painful situations. You should bear the burden of emotional or circumstantial hardship. You should never use your capacity to make anyone feel less capable, and should instead use their capacity to build on the strength and ability of others. You should always be prepared to help without needing to be asked or acknowledged. — Possibility
The difference is the presumption that physical strength is a male characteristic, emotional strength, feminine.
Was that your intent? — Banno
As a human you should not complain too loudly about difficulty or pain, you should expect hardship and bear the burden, you should never use yourphysicalstrengths to harm those weaker than you, you should use yourphysicalstrengths to help those weaker than you, you should be the first to volunteer, et al. — BigThoughtDropper
...do you think that this version of masculinity has a place in the modern world? — BigThoughtDropper
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