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Random Blather

~ Feverish ravings of a middle-aged mind

Random Blather

Monthly Archives: July 2024

Weird Male Things

13 Saturday Jul 2024

Posted by dougom in Uncategorized

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Tags

family, life, men, mental health, toxic masculinity


Why?

During the last year or so of his life, my dad—who was dealing with Stage IV colon cancer—lost his balance in the shower and had a heavy fall. When I heard of this I asked him why he didn’t have grab rails or a shower seat or some such. At 35, I felt incumbent on me as the Eldest Child to try to talk some sense into him. You’re dying of cancer, dad; you’re taking morphine, doing chemotherapy, you’re not the same as you were in the 70s. Be smart.

I was thinking about all this while in the shower the other day. I am now the age my dad was when diagnosed at Stage IV—61. I have had multiple health issues, and have had to run to the hospital a few times for various issues. (One time in an ambulance, which seemed overkill given I had driven myself to the urgent care clinic just fine.) I am definitely not the physical specimen I was at 25. Or even 45. And I had an epiphany as to why my dad refused to get a shower chair:

“Fuck that.”

Yes, just that; “Fuck that” I have plenty of maladies that should require me to be careful. And I am careful: I go to all my doctors’ appointments; I take so many medications my youngest is constantly amazed I can keep mine and hers straight; I avoid red meat, caffeine, processed sugar, and alcohol; I exercise regularly. Even so, there is plenty of reason for me to be cautious, to present a slightly more delicate facade to the world, so why don’t I?

Because fuck that, that’s why.

There are several parts to this, some of which heigh back to toxic masculinity. Some of which are because of the way folks my age were raised—”Go play outside, and don’t come back until dinner!”. Some are to avoid getting ostracized by society (and at work!) as “that old guy”. And some are just plain, in-bred stubbornness that I inherited from my dad; “The two most stubborn men I’ve ever met in my life,” my step-mother insisted. (I like to think of it as being resilient, but your mileage may vary.)

Anyone who has paid attention during the last 20 years knows that toxic masculinity has nearly as many negative impacts on men as it does women. Women are marginalized and suppressed; this is obvious. Men, on the other hand, tend to be repressed, especially emotionally. (There are other reasons for this, such as weaponization of men’s feelings against them, but that’s a tale for another time.) We are taught from a young age to not show pain or emotion, that we’re “wimps” or “pussies” or “faggots” (a huge insult when I was a kid) if we do. Not to share our thoughts. To just do what we’re told or required, and shut the fuck up about it if we don’t like it.

When I say, “taught”, I obviously don’t mean in the traditional sense, where a teacher got up and chalked “Don’t complain!” on a blackboard. No, I’m talking about hundreds of influences from media and the adults around us that added up to it. “Rub some dirt in it”; “don’t be a crybaby”; “no pain no gain”; “walk it off”; and on and on.

The latter, baffled me from the first time I heard it at age 8, when I was hit in the ‘nads with a practice ground ball that hopped up on one of the multitudinous rocks peppering our crappy little league infield. I buckled over in pain. The coach strolled over and said, “Just walk it off.” And even at 8 that made zero sense. “Walk it off?” I thought. “I got hit in the balls, not in the legs! What good is that going to do?” And of course, it didn’t do any. Other than to teach me to “not be a wimp.”


Just walk it off, dude!

This is how toxic masculinity creeps like poison gas into your brain while you’re not watching, taught to you by all the adults around you.

And of course my generation is now famous for playing outside and getting our water from garden hoses. And this isn’t an exaggeration; that’s what we actually did, especially during the summer. “Go outside and play,” was probably one of the most-common parental commands in my day. Right behind, “Stop crying or I’ll give you a reason to cry,” and “Don’t make me pull this car over”, and (one of my dad’s favorites) “I don’t care who started it, I’m stopping it!” (Are you seeing a pattern here?)

I’m not blaming my parents; they were really good parents, they didn’t spank, they weren’t neglectful, they clearly loved us, and they did their level best. Frankly, they were better than most. It was the social construct at the time.

So now my body is falling apart, and when something goes wrong, my instinct is not to ask for help, or complain about it, but to deal with it myself so I don’t “look like a wimp.” Which has caused me to do some fairly insane things such as driving myself to urgent care while literally screaming in pain from kidney stones; taking my youngest to his therapy session even though I could barely get out bed; drive into work when I had the stomach flu; and more. And I’m positive many men of my generation have done similar nutty things. (Heck, my boss the other day was just talking about walking around while in excruciating pain from a nasty foot injury.)

As a result, I finally understand my dad. He was on chemo; he was taking tons of meds; he had Stage IV cancer and was literally staring death in the face; and when it came to making things a little easier on himself in ways that made him look at all weak (and adding in the fact he was born in the middle of the Great Depression), I can easily imagine his mental state:

“Fuck that.”

If you’re wondering why your boyfriend, brother, dad, or whatever other male you know seems to be acting irrationally, just keep it in mind. That’s all I’m saying.

And I still miss him. To this day.

Marching Backwards on July 4th

04 Thursday Jul 2024

Posted by dougom in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

donald-trump, News, politics, supreme-court, Trump

One of the foundational myths of the United States is that a group of brilliant men gathered together in Independence Hall in Philadelphia and signed a Declaration of their Independence over the absentee landlords and ruling monarchy of George III of England. 

Like many myths, there’s a lot left out of this one. That the signers were all white men; that the nation they were “founding” had been occupied for thousands of years by the First Nations people; that many of these men declaring that “all men are created equal” owned other human beings; and on and on. And that’s all true. But we shouldn’t allow all that to ignore what a profoundly revolutionary act that Declaration was.

Up until then, countries, city-states, empires, and so on were almost exclusively ruled by one supreme monarch. A king, emperor, shōgun, khan, chieftain, potentate, kaiser, Caesar, pharaoh, tsar, or what have you. Almost always male, and usually with what today we would call “unchecked executive power”. The power to control all citizens, the armies, the navies, the land, the income, of whatever they ruled over. Sure, there were ways people could claw back some of that power, but in the main, for thousands of years, we had Kings. (They didn’t call Jesus “President of Presidents”, after all.)

Yes, yes, there were exceptions: The Roman Republic period, the Greek “democracies”, and so on. But they were exceptions. Humanity had Kings. 

To say having the idea to throw that all over and create a democratic republic and run a country “by consent of the governed” was a revolutionary concept is understating it. Yes, I am well aware that the founders drew on many historical precedents. But look at how countries were governed in (say) 1760, and how they’re governed now. Our experiment influenced the world. Heck, why do you think France sent us the Statue of Liberty?

I’m not going to go into all the ways we have failed of our promise over the last ~2.5 centuries, as most of us are all too grimly aware of slavery, segregation, the near-annihilation of the First Nations people, the antisemitism that closed our doors to Jews fleeing genocide in WWII, Japanese internment camps, imperial ambitions in places like The Philippines, and on and on. We are not even remotely close to perfect. But it’s important to remember, especially today, just how genuinely revolutionary our declaration was.

This is especially poignant now, with one of our major political parties clearly determined to turn back the clock on all the good things we’ve accomplished.

Starting in the Reagan era, I became convinced that the Republican Party was dead set on taking us back to the 1950s. When women didn’t work (or rarely), heterosexual marriage was the norm, non-straight people were forcibly closeted, Christian supremacy was unquestioned, Blacks were segregated, and the country had a huge majority of European descent. When straight white cis Christian men held sway.

Starting with the Bush II era, it seemed more like 1919, just before the 19th Amendment was passed, giving women the right to vote. They also weren’t much enamored of the 17th Amendment and direct election of Senators either, though, so maybe 1910 was a better target date.

Unfortunately, by stripping the most important provision of the voting rights act, overturning Roe v. Wade, making corporations equivalent to living human beings and money equal to speech, and almost too many other Supreme Court decisions to mention, it became clear in the last two decades that the GOP really wanted us to go back to the 1850s rather than the 1950s. Before Black people got “uppity”, when rich folks could do pretty much what they wanted, when women were oppressed, beaten, raped, and killed with impunity, and when the government was constrained from helping anyone but a straight white cis Christian man.

Boy, was I wrong.

With their ruling in Trump v. United States (and just take a moment to ponder the title of that ruling; Trump verses the entire United States!), the Supreme Court has embraced what Dick Cheney and his cronies from the Nixon Administration called “the Unitary Executive”, also sometimes known as the “Imperial Presidency”. They have given literally unchecked power to one person. (They would obviously prefer it was on straight white cis Christian man): The President. The President can do anything so long as “in their official capacity as President”. And given they very carefully didn’t say what that covers, they’ve basically turned the President into a monarch. And no, I am not exaggerating.

The Supreme Court, in their right-wing zeal to attain permanent and unlimited power for themselves, have take us back to 1750. I can barely contain my rage.

When I was 12, this country celebrated its Bicentennial; two hundred years of contiguous government. It was something to be proud of, and I was hoping at the time I would make it to the Tricentennial. 

Now, I don’t think the country will make it that far. I hope I’m wrong; I fear I’m not.

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