By Steve Botkin
Voice Male Magazine, Winter 1999
“Be A Man!”
The effects of those three words continue
to echo through our lives long after
we’ve realized the lies behind
them. Listen to the inflection, the
emotional message we can hear so clearly
in this simple phrase, carrying equal
parts promise and threat.
Be A Man!
If we can achieve this goal we are
promised a sense of power, pride, confidence,
mastery, control, and invulnerability.
If we do not “make the grade,”
“step up to the plate,”
and “box our corner,” we
are threatened with isolation, shame,
abuse, and violence.
But what does it mean to “be
a man?” For years I have regularly
asked groups of people what comes to
mind when they hear that expression.
The responses, from men and women or
all ages, are frighteningly consistent.
And everyone knows what happened to
boys or men who do not fit inside this
“box.” Matthew Shepard,
beaten and left to die tied to a fence
post in Wyoming in October of 1999,
because he was gay, is the ultimate,
tragic example.
Most of us who are men know some (usually
less lethal, but still profoundly traumatic)
variation of this story quite well.
We remember schoolyards and street corners,
and often homes, with our own or our
friend’s families, where proving
that we had an “acceptable”
degree of masculinity was an ongoing
theme of our daily lives. We learned
that any non-conformity to the rules
of this masculinity risked making one
the target of brutality and ridicule.
And we learned that we could have prestige
and privilege, power and control, to
the extent that we were able to “be
the man.”
And yet, especially as children, we
knew we really did not and could not
meet this impossible and inhuman standard.
Sometimes we did get sad, scared, and
hurt. We did, at times, want to cry
and be comforted, If we had enough safety
as children we might respond to the
command “be a man” with
the truth: “ but I’m not
a man.”
But it wasn’t always safe to
tell the truth. So in subtle and not-so-subtle
ways we practiced hiding or minimizing
our gender nonconformities, because
we were told that’s not how men
are. How we dressed, walked, talked,
used our hands, expressed our emotions,
related with other males, and talked
about and behaved toward females was
all carefully scrutinized so that we
would not betray any deviance from the
prescribed rules for being a man. We
did not want to be standing alone feeling
shame about our difference. So we denied
parts of ourselves in order to feel
safe and accepted within a dominant
culture that demanded of us: “Be
a man!”
What would it mean now if we were to
create a culture in which men join together
to reclaim these parts of ourselves
that we once hid and denied? If we discovered
that, as we peek out from behind our
fear, we find the shy and smiling face
of another, reflecting our own remembered
wholeness. What would it mean if together
we found the courage to stand and face
the dominant culture, saying with determination
and pride, we do not want to “be
a man”? We refuse the rigid box
of gender conformity. What if we created
a community where we could feel safe
and accepted in the infinite variety
of our gender nonconformities?
It would mean the end of the system
of patriarchy, wherein the promise of
power is leveraged by the threat of
violence. Homophobia, violence against
women, and war – the ultimate
weapons of gender conformity –
would disappear, no longer needed to
prove and protect our “manhood.”
Men would show up in the full rainbow
of our expressions. We would inhabit
our homes and families, remembering
the delights of nurturing relationships.
And we would seek out the close, loving
companionship of other men and other
women. It would mean hope for the world
in places where we have long felt only
hopelessness.
It is time for us to assert that we
will not be boxed into masculinity by
seductive promises of power or intimidating
threats of violence. It is time for
us to break through our fear and isolation
and come out as gender nonconformists
who do not fit or accept prescribed
rules of manhood. It is time for us
now to call each other out of the shadows
of the box with a welcome of acceptance
and safety. In this way we are creating
a new culture where being a man is an
open-ended, ever-expanding, expression
of possibilities.
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