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Look at this bullshit. Facial cleansing masks. Tea and Honey Eye Cream. Wrinkle Corrector. Did your dad spend money on that kind of crap?Men have always used grooming products. Remember the powdered wigs of the 18th century? More recently, there was the craze of using pomade and later Brylcreem, for example. I don't think the article you linked really demonstrates anything new or startling compared to the way life was fifty years ago. My father went to the barber shop weekly to get his hair trimmed and he dressed meticulously for work as a sales manager. I don't see anything qualitatively different from the way men of the 1950s (which seems to be a sort of standard) behaved with respect to their personal grooming and the way things are now.
I don't have time to search for them, but I'd be willing to bet that advertisements for men's grooming products used potential appeal to women as their core message throughout the 20th century. How is what we're seeing now any different from that on a substantive and qualitative level?
Maybe the more important question is this: what do we mean by the notion of feminization? My concern is what does it look like in the behavior of men that differentiates their behavior from past generations of men?
Try E-Harmony. I heard it works pretty good.
haha!for kicks i filled out the e-harmony personality profile a few years ago, and they rejected me. they politely explained that i was among the 1 in 5 who they did not feel they could find a suitable match for, so they had no desire to even try. i was like...dang, this was just for fun, now they're insulting me by not even wanting to take my money, lol. then a year later i filled it out again...and was rejected AGAIN! i want to know the secret formula for not being rejected by e-harmony, dangit!!!
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Don't feel lonesome, osg. I filled out their application/profile about a year or so after they started operations. I don't think I've ever gotten a response from a company so fast: They didn't want me, either.haha!for kicks i filled out the e-harmony personality profile a few years ago, and they rejected me. they politely explained that i was among the 1 in 5 who they did not feel they could find a suitable match for, so they had no desire to even try. i was like...dang, this was just for fun, now they're insulting me by not even wanting to take my money, lol. then a year later i filled it out again...and was rejected AGAIN! i want to know the secret formula for not being rejected by e-harmony, dangit!!!
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I wouldn't describe this behavior as unmanly. I'd describe it as immature.OK, men, help me out here.
Yesterday, I talked to a man, a grown man, who told me he had seen a cockroach in the bungalow he’s staying at and was so freaked out and scared he couldn’t sleep all night. Dude, it’s a cockroach not a Bengal tiger. Get over it.
Has the man train left the station, never to return? Seriously, I’m seeing it more and more. What’s going on?
I wouldn't describe this behavior as unmanly. I'd describe it as immature.
That is to say, if it's "unmanly" when a guy does this, then one must also say that it's "unwomanly" when a female does it. Otherwise, are we not equating feminine behavior with failure to act like an adult?
My inner kid is strongly objecting to use of the term "boyish" in this context, but I've got him by the scruff of the neck and I'll let it pass.You know what, I think you've made an important distinction here. This behaviour is immature. "Unmanly" in this context not referring to being feminine but to being boyish.
Good clarification. Thanks.
I wouldn't describe this behavior as unmanly. I'd describe it as immature.
That is to say, if it's "unmanly" when a guy does this, then one must also say that it's "unwomanly" when a female does it. Otherwise, are we not equating feminine behavior with failure to act like an adult?
People are entitled to act however they want.i disagree with this premise, i don't think it goes both ways. no, women are not children, but we are still the fairer, more delicate sex (well most of us anywho). tho annoying, i think a woman is entitled to freak out over bugs and dirt, even in an environment where such a thing is only natural and to be expected. not that such an attitude is justified or appropriate, just that it's an understandable feminine response. it is NOT an understandable masculine response, and hence the reason why most folks would label the guy in Keroin's story a complete pussy.
only those who actually have pussies, are entitled to act like pussies, imho.
Look at this bullshit. Facial cleansing masks. Tea and Honey Eye Cream. Wrinkle Corrector. Did your dad spend money on that kind of crap?
Somebody must be buying that shit now, or they wouldn't have it on the shelves. As I've said, I consider this "feminizing" in the sense that traditionally female insecurities (wrinkles - gasp!) are now being pushed on men.
Did your dad ever get the message that he'd have to rip his chest hair out by the roots, just so he could get laid? Magnum P.I. is out, and smooth girly skin is in. You don't see that as a feminizing shift in physical preferences?
People are entitled to act however they want.
But roaches don't belong in the kitchen. And if an adult woman can't bring herself to deal with the presence of a roach when I'm not home, well - that inability is just not something I personally would respect.
I'll also venture a guess that the overwhelming majority of mothers in this world would take on a rabid dog with a broomstick, if her children were threatened and no one else around. My observation is that the physically "delicate" are not always mentally so - and particularly not when it's really, really important.
My inner kid is strongly objecting to use of the term "boyish" in this context, but I've got him by the scruff of the neck and I'll let it pass.
Seriously, though - thinking about my own childhood, I'm wondering if part of the problem here is that so many people are being raised in sterile environments. Carefully controlled daycare centers, soccer fields, basements with video games, and so on.
My childhood friends and I spent every possible moment outdoors. Unsupervised. Dirty, scraped, bitten, muddy, bumped, bruised, falling out of trees, fighting with sticks, collecting bugs, digging for gold, racing downhill on our bikes, losing huge chunks of skin when wiping out on those bikes, building forts in the woods, crawling through logs, swinging from branches, wrestling in the mud - you name it, we did it. And lived.
The message that I'm hearing is that people think that it's more manly to be less in touch with oneself and less well actualized. Is that really what we mean when we say that today's man is somehow less manly than the men of previous generations? Because if it is, I'll be first in line for the girly-man credentials.
I don't believe it's less manly to be in touch with one's feelings, not at all. I chose the giant-headed Dalai Lama as one of my examples of a "real man" for just that reason. Here's a quiet, peaceful man, who I'd say is not only in touch with his own feelings but in touch with the feelings of millions of others, and he wears a dress! But he's a man through and through. I don't know many individuals who would oppose the might of China with the persistence and passion the Dalai Lama has demonstrated.
And I have a hard time picturing him freaking out over a roach.
I would contend that your understanding of manliness is not in line with the understanding that is behind the whole less-manly-than-ever-before crowd.
I don't know what it means to be "in touch with your emotions." I'm not saying I'm not in touch; I'm saying that the phrase makes no sense to me.My take on this is still the same: men have been getting the message for centuries that they have to look a certain way in order to be in step with society. That the specifics of that message are different now from the similar messages that we received forty and thirty years ago does not seem to me to be evidence that men are any different now than they were in decades past.
So far, the only argument I've seen that seems to be held consistently is that men today are expected to be in closer touch with their emotions than in previous generations. Another way to think about this idea of being in better touch with one's emotions is to say that one has a better handle on oneself. In other words, we're talking about increasing levels of maturity and self-awareness that approach what Maslow called self-actualization.
The message that I'm hearing is that people think that it's more manly to be less in touch with oneself and less well actualized. Is that really what we mean when we say that today's man is somehow less manly than the men of previous generations? Because if it is, I'll be first in line for the girly-man credentials.
I don't know what it means to be "in touch with your emotions." I'm not saying I'm not in touch; I'm saying that the phrase makes no sense to me.
Same thing with self-actualization. What the heck is that? I've got no clue about Maslow.
Just to give one example - I know what it's like to be angry, and I know how to deal with my anger in a mature way. I learned this from my father, who learned it from his father before him.
I don't agree that there's been a change in expectations regarding my personal response to anger, but again - I don't really know what you're talking about here.
My thoughts on the matter: Who gives a shit?
Eh? Eh? Any takers?
All the bitching and monaing about the feminization of men in todays manly-fortitude-decaying day and age sounds just like that to me: bitching and moaning. And as we all know, bitching and moaning is incredibly manly.
5 points deducted for unnecessary ambivalence.
Syd, my friend, I could ask the same question for 90% of the topics discussed here. Answer: No one, really. It's just fun to debate.
Please, I have four more months here, allow me my harmless entertainment. Please?
Are you still in Yerip?
p.s. You misspelled "moaning" so I've deducted another 5 points. HA!