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- <text id=90TT2974>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: What Do Men Really Want?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE CHANGING FAMILY, Page 80
- ESSAY
- What Do Men Really Want?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Stoic and sensitive have been cast aside, leaving postfeminist
- males confused, angry and desperately seeking manhood
- </p>
- <p>By Sam Allis
- </p>
- <p> Freud, like everyone else, forgot to ask the second
- question: What do men really want? His omission may reflect the
- male fascination with the enigma of woman over the mystery of
- man. She owns the center of his imagination, while the fate of
- man works the margins. Perhaps this is why so many men have
- taken the Mafia oath of silence about their hopes and fears.
- Strong and silent remain de rigueur.
- </p>
- <p> But in the wake of the feminist movement, some men are
- beginning to pipe up. In the intimacy of locker rooms and the
- glare of large men's groups, they are spilling their bile at the
- incessant criticism, much of it justified, from women about
- their inadequacies as husbands, lovers, fathers. They are airing
- their frustration with the limited roles they face today,
- compared with the multiple options that women seem to have won.
- Above all, they are groping to redefine themselves on their own
- terms instead of on the performance standards set by their wives
- or bosses or family ghosts. "We've heard all the criticism,"
- says New York City-based television producer Tom Seligson. "Now
- we'll make our own decisions."
- </p>
- <p> In many quarters there is anger. "The American man wants his
- manhood back. Period," snaps John Wheeler, a Washington
- environmentalist and former chairman of the Vietnam Veterans
- Memorial Fund. "New York feminists [a generic term in his
- lexicon] have been busy castrating American males. They poured
- this country's testosterone out the window in the 1960s. The men
- in this country have lost their boldness. To raise your voice
- these days is a worse offense than urinating in the subway."
- </p>
- <p> Even more prevalent is exhaustion. "The American man wants
- to stop running; he wants a few moments of peace," says poet
- Robert Bly, one of the gurus of the nascent men's movement in
- the U.S. "He has a tremendous longing to get down to his own
- depths. Beneath the turbulence of his daily life is a beautiful
- crystalline infrastructure"--a kind of male bedrock.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, there is profound confusion over what it means to
- be a man today. Men have faced warping changes in role models
- since the women's movement drove the strong, stoic John
- Wayne-type into the sunset. Replacing him was a new hero: the
- hollow-chested, sensitive, New Age man who bawls at Kodak
- commercials and handles a diaper the way Magic Johnson does a
- basketball. Enter Alan Alda.
- </p>
- <p> But he, too, is quickly becoming outdated. As we begin the
- '90s, the zeitgeist has changed again. Now the sensitive male
- is a wimp and an object of derision to boot. In her song
- Sensitive New Age Guys, singer Christine Lavin lampoons, "Who
- carries the baby on his back? Who thinks Shirley MacLaine is on
- the inside track?" Now it's goodbye, Alan Alda; hello, Mel
- Gibson, with your sensitive eyes and your lethal weapon. Hi
- there, Arnold Schwarzenegger, the devoted family man with
- terrific triceps. The new surge of tempered macho is everywhere.
- Even the male dummies in store windows are getting tougher.
- Pucci Manikins is producing a more muscular model for the new
- decade that stands 6 ft. 2 in. instead of 6 ft. and has a
- 42-in. chest instead of its previous 40.
- </p>
- <p> What's going on here? Are we looking at a backlash against
- the pounding men have taken? To some degree, yes. But it's more
- complicated than that. "The sensitive man was overplayed,"
- explains Seattle-based lecturer Michael Meade, a colleague of
- Bly's in the men's movement. "There is no one quality intriguing
- enough to make a person interesting for a long time." More
- important, argues Warren Farrell, author of the 1986 best seller
- Why Men Are the Way They Are, women liked Alan Alda not because
- he epitomized the sensitive man but because he was a
- multimillionaire superstar success who also happened to be
- sensitive. In short, he met all their performance needs before
- sensitivity ever entered the picture. "We have never worshiped
- the soft man," says Farrell. "If Mel Gibson were a nursery
- school teacher, women wouldn't want him. Can you imagine a cover
- of TIME featuring a sensitive musician who drives a cab on the
- side?"
- </p>
- <p> The women's movement sensitized many men to the problems
- women face in society and made them examine their own feelings
- in new ways. But it did not substantially alter what society
- expects of men. "Nothing fundamental has changed," says Farrell.
- Except that both John Wayne and Alan Alda have been discarded
- on the same cultural garbage heap. "First I learned that an
- erect cock was politically incorrect," complains producer
- Seligson. "Now it's wrong not to have one."
- </p>
- <p> As always, men are defined by their performance in the
- workplace. If women don't like their jobs, they can, at least
- in theory, maintain legitimacy by going home and raising
- children. Men have no such alternative. "The options are
- dismal," says Meade. "You can drop out, which is an abdication
- of power, or take the whole cloth and lose your soul." If women
- have suffered from being sex objects, men have suffered as
- success objects, judged by the amount of money they bring home.
- As one young career woman in Boston puts it, "I don't want a
- Type A. I want an A-plus." Chilling words that make Farrell
- wonder, "Why do we need to earn more than you to be considered
- worthy of you?"
- </p>
- <p> This imbalance can be brutal for a man whose wife tries life
- in the corporate world, discovers as men did decades ago that
- it is no day at the beach, and heads for home, leaving him the
- sole breadwinner. "We're seeing more of this `You guys can have
- it back. It's been real,'" observes Kyle Pruett, a psychiatrist
- at the Yale Child Studies Center. "I have never seen a case
- where it has not increased anxiety for the man."
- </p>
- <p> There has been a lot of cocktail-party talk about the need
- for a brave, sensitive man who will stand up to the corporate
- barons and take time off to watch his son play Peter Pan in his
- school play, the fast track be damned. This sentiment showed up
- in a 1989 poll, conducted by Robert Half International, in which
- about 45% of men surveyed said they would refuse a promotion
- rather than miss time at home. But when it comes to trading
- income for "quality time," how many fathers will actually be
- there at the grade-school curtain call?
- </p>
- <p> "Is there a Daddy Track? No," says Edward Zigler, a Yale
- psychologist. "The message is that if a man takes paternity
- leave, he's a very strange person who is not committed to the
- corporation. It's very bleak." Says Felice Schwartz, who
- explored the notion of a Mommy Track in a 1989 article in the
- Harvard Business Review: "There isn't any forgiveness yet of a
- man who doesn't really give his all." So today's working stiff
- really enjoys no more meaningful options than did his father,
- the pathetic guy in the gray flannel suit who was pilloried as
- a professional hamster and an emotional cripple. You're still
- either a master of the universe or a wimp. It is the cognitive
- dissonance between the desire for change and the absence of
- ways to achieve it that has reduced most men who even think
- about the subject to tapioca.
- </p>
- <p> Robert Rackleff, 47, is one of the rare men who have stepped
- off the corporate treadmill. Five years ago, after the birth of
- their third child, Rackleff and his wife Jo Ellen fled New York
- City, where he was a well-paid corporate speechwriter and she
- a radio-show producer. They moved to his native Florida, where
- Rackleff earns a less lavish living as a free-lance writer and
- helps his wife raise the kids. The drop in income, he
- acknowledges, "was scary. It put more pressure on me, but I
- wanted to spend more time with my children." Rackleff feels
- happy with his choice, but isolated. "I know only one other guy
- who left the fast track to be with his kids," he says. "Men just
- aren't doing it. I can still call up most of them at 8 p.m. and
- know they will be in the office."
- </p>
- <p> Men have been bombarded with recipes to ripen their personal
- lives, if not their professional ones. They are now Lamaze-class
- regulars and can be found in the delivery room for the cosmic
- event instead of pacing the waiting-room floor. They have been
- instructed to bond with children, wives, colleagues and anyone
- else they can find. Exactly how remains unclear. Self-help
- books, like Twinkies, give brief highs and do not begin to
- address the uneven changes in their lives over the past 20
- years. "Men aren't any happier in the '90s than they were in the
- '50s," observes Yale psychiatrist Pruett, "but their inner lives
- tend to be more complex. They are interested in feeling less
- isolated. They are stunned to find out how rich human
- relationships are."
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the men who attempt to explore those riches
- with the women in their lives often discover that their efforts
- are not entirely welcome. The same women who complain about male
- reticence can grow uncomfortable when male secrets and
- insecurities spill out. Says Rackleff: "I think a lot of women
- who want a husband to be a typical hardworking breadwinner are
- scared when he talks about being a sensitive father. I get
- cynical about that."
- </p>
- <p> One might be equally cynical about men opening up to other
- men. Atlanta psychologist Augustus Napier tells of two doctors
- whose lockers were next to each other in the surgical dressing
- room of a hospital. For years they talked about sports, money
- and other safe "male" subjects. Then one of them learned that
- the other had tried to commit suicide--and had never so much
- as mentioned the attempt to him. So much for male bonding.
- </p>
- <p> How can men break out of the gender stereotypes? Clearly,
- there is a need for some male conciousness raising, yet men have
- nothing to rival the giant grass-roots movement that began
- razing female stereotypes 25 years ago. There is no male
- equivalent for the National Organization for Women or Ms.
- magazine. No role models, other than the usual megabillionaire
- success objects.
- </p>
- <p> A minute percentage of American males are involved in the
- handful of organizations whose membership ranges from men who
- support the feminist movement to angry divorces meeting to swap
- gripes about alimony and child-custody battles. There is also
- a group of mostly well-educated, middle-class men who
- sporadically participate in a kind of male spiritual quest.
- Anywhere from Maine to Minnesota, at male-only weekend retreats,
- they earnestly search for some shard of ancient masculinity
- culled from their souls by the Industrial Revolution. At these
- so-called warrior weekends, participants wrestle, beat drums and
- hold workshops on everything from ecology to divorce and incest.
- They embrace, and yes, they do cry and confide things they would
- never dream of saying to their wives and girlfriends. They act
- out emotions in a safe haven where no one will laugh at them.
- </p>
- <p> At one drumming session in the municipal-arts center of a
- Boston suburb, about 50 men sit in a huge circle beating on
- everything from tom-toms to cowbells and sticks. Their ages
- range from the 20s to the 60s. A participant has brought his
- young son with him. Drummers nod as newcomers appear, sit down
- and start pounding away. Before long, a strong primal beat
- emerges that somehow transcends the weirdness of it all. Some
- men close their eyes and play in a trance. Others rise and dance
- around the middle of the group, chanting as they move.
- </p>
- <p> One shudders to think what Saturday Night Live would do with
- these scenes. But there is no smirking among the participants.
- "When is the last time you danced with another man?" asks Paul,
- a family man who drove two hours from Connecticut to be there.
- "It tells you how many walls there are still out there for us."
- Los Angeles writer Michael Ventura, who has written extensively
- about men's issues, acknowledges the obvious: much of this seems
- pretty bizarre. "Some of it may look silly," he says. "But if
- you're afraid of looking silly, everything stops right there.
- In our society, men have to be contained and sure of themselves.
- Well, f--- that. That's not the way we feel." The goal,
- continues Ventura, is to rediscover the mystery of man, a
- creature capable of strength, spontaneity and adventure. "The
- male mystery is the part of us that wants to explore, that
- isn't afraid of the dark, that lights a fire and dances around
- it."
- </p>
- <p> One thing is clear: men need the support of other men to
- change, which is why activities like drumming aren't as dumb as
- they may look. Even though no words are exchanged, the men at
- these sessions get something from other men that they earnestly
- need: understanding and acceptance. "The solitude of men is the
- most difficult single thing to change," says Napier. These
- retreats provide cover for some spiritual reconnaissance too
- risky to attempt in the company of women. "It's like crying,"
- says Michael Meade. "Men are afraid that if they start, they'll
- cry forever."
- </p>
- <p> Does the search for a lineal sense of masculinity have any
- relevance to such thorny modern dilemmas as how to balance work
- and family or how to talk to women? Perhaps. Men have to feel
- comfortable with themselves before they can successfully
- confront such issues. This grounding is also critical for riding
- out the changes in pop culture and ideals. John Wayne and Alan
- Alda, like violence and passivity, reflect holes in a core that
- needs fixing. But men can get grounded in many ways, and male
- retreats provide just one stylized option, though not one
- necessarily destined to attract most American men.
- </p>
- <p> What do men really want? To define themselves on their own
- terms, just as women began to do a couple of decades ago. "Would
- a women's group ask men if it was O.K. to feel a certain way?"
- asks Jerry Johnson, host of the San Francisco-based KCBS radio
- talk show Man to Man. "No way. We're still looking for approval
- from women for changes, and we need to get it from the male
- camp."
- </p>
- <p> That's the point. And it does not have to come at women's
- expense. "It is stupid to conclude that the empowerment of women
- means the disempowerment of men," says Robert Moore, a
- psychoanalyst at the C.G. Jung Institute in Chicago. "Men must
- also feel good about being male." Men would do well, in fact,
- to invite women into their lives to participate in these
- changes. It's no fun to face them alone. But if women can't or
- won't, men must act on their own and damn the torpedoes. No
- pain, no gain.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-