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Title: | Topics Pertaining to Men |
Notice: | Archived V1 - Current file is QUARK::MENNOTES |
Moderator: | QUARK::LIONEL |
|
Created: | Fri Nov 07 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jan 26 1993 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 867 |
Total number of notes: | 32923 |
714.0. "The Men's Movement. I don't get it!" by MILKWY::ZARLENGA (back by popular demand) Sat Jan 04 1992 12:41
Hooves Above the Ground
One man's attempt to warm up to the men's movement, by Gregory Jaynes
[source: American Health, Jan/Feb92, pp26-28]
For some time now, on assignment, I have been tracking the men's
movement, searching under the hood for a possible connection to my
own dark soul. By now almost everyone has at least a glancing famil-
iarity with the territory: the painted faces, the wild-man weekends,
the hairy haunches in sweaty lodges, the tears.
I began by reading the enormously successful _Iron_Man_ by
Robert Bly and _Fire_In_The_Belly_ by Sam Keen, fine starting blocks
for a run at the maleness circuit. On paper there is reason to raise
a fist in recognition of the sorry lot men have to live with: alien-
ation, dislocation, feelings of inadequacy. It's pretty easy to
start thinking you've spent your whole life chafing under some sort
of onerous authority. Go home at night, and that too is a fairly
dicey world. Any tombstone survey will tell you your wife will
probably outlive you, even if she is on a more stressful business
track than yours. After all, middle-aged males addicted to alcohol,
drugs, sex, gambling, whatever, far outnumber females. And did your
father ever really talk to you, teach you anything? Well, did he?
So join the quest. Reclaim the depths of your masculinity. Pull
away from that woman who raised you (your father didn't take much of
a hand in it; admit it, he was off working, brooding, womanizing)
and find a male mentor (a dead poet will do). Get in with some men
and get strong. Access that "hard wiring."
I went to see my father, a sweetly retired, untroubled man. His
most horrible childhood memory is the death of a mule. Made to dig
the grave by his father, he miscalculated the depth and wound up
with four hooves above the ground. A thing like that will stick with
you. Lately he's had a problem with a neighbor who feeds her dogs
some sort of loose, dry cereal that the blackbirds peck out of the
dish, swoop down to my father's garden and drop into his birdbath
for softening, preparatory to lunch. Makes a mess of the birdbath.
As I moved about the country listening to men's groups, I felt
almost guilty that I didn't have more against my father. These men
seem to want to hear that your father never said he loved you. Mine
may have, once when I was in some jeopardy on the far side of the
world, but maybe not. He does love me though. He may not be very
articulate but he was always there, him and his bourbon and his
guitar, and I love all three of them.
I have an articulate uncle, and I went off to see him too.
During a two-day blow down on the Gulf of Mexico I tried to tell him
what I was up to. I may have misstated the case or he may have
missed the point, but I like what he said all the same: "I gave it
about 30 minutes of thought," he said, "which may make my thinking
on the subject about as shallow as your men's movement. But these are
complicated times, and though it's nothing personal they do bang on
you if you're sensitive enough to let them. It's probably natural to
look for the verities. A man, a job, the elements. Easy to draw an
image: a rangy, weather-beaten figure. A single-tree plow. An Owen
Wister-penned world: 'Smile when you say that, pardner.'" He snarled
that line again then laughed. "Only the pardner didn't possess
nuclear capabilities." My uncle also said a cure for baldness might
do more good for men than the men's movement.
It struck me in San Francisco a few days later that nearly every
man in an audience of 750 had been in therapy. I mean nothing per-
jorative here; it may be a flaw in my nature that I haven't been. We
could all stand to live a little more consciously, though there is a
difference between awareness and being stuck inside your own head.
In any event, the 750 men paid $75 apiece for eight hours of talk by
Bly, a therapist named Robert Moore and a drummer and storyteller
named Michael Meade. The men lined up long before the doors opened,
and once inside they beat the hell out of a slew of drums (endorsed
by Bly and Meade) for sale in the lobby. Inside the hall itself
they danced around to a 20-drum band on stage, an occasional cowbell
coming in contraptually. In such a din there is the feeling you have
stumbled into something big, like the collapse of a small
government.
Then Meade, accompanying himself on a drum, commenced a story
that would last all afternoon. A tailor and a shoemaker set out on a
journey that would take either two days or seven. Not knowing the
length, and with risk of starvation, for which does a man pack? The
audience split into two-day men and seven-day men. "I used to be
a two-day man, but now I'm ashamed to say I'm a seven-day man," one
said, adding "I can't take the risk." "My father said 'Plan your
work and work your plan,'" explained another seven-day man. "That's
exactly what we're talking about," said Bly, "these little things
left inside of us." Debate got hot there for a bit, with the careful
seven-day men arguing that the light-footed two-day men traveled on
faith, expecting help. I was taking notes and my one ballpoint ran
out of ink: I was obviously a two-day man.
Well, the day wore on. In the story, the seven-day tailor gave
the starving two-day shoemaker some bread but put out his eyes for
his trouble. Bly told us the anger of our seven-day companions was a
little deeper than they thought: "They've been carrying a lot of
burden for a long time."
I hitched a ride back to my hotel with a 50-year old jazz
drummer named George Marsh, who lives on a cattle ranch south of
town near Half Moon Bay. He said, "You heal there even if you don't
want to." He handed me two steel balls saying, "The Chinese have
been using these for 500 years. They massage all the acupuncture
points in your hand." He said the day had made him feel good. he
also said jazz is dead as an art form, "I'm a healing, alpha drummer
now."
I talked to Moore later. "This is a road show," he said. "I have
no problem with that. I'm a Willie Nelson fan. It's entertainment.
Its virtue, he said, is that it draws people in, directs them to some
resources that may be helpful. Moore believes there is something
vital missing in our inner lives. I went home thinking too much
introspection will destroy you. Rousseau said "Man is born free, and
everywhere he is in chains." Henry Adams said "Chaos is the law of
nature; order is the dream of man." Frank Sinatra said "Whatever
gets you through the night."
Off in one of those dreamily lighted states of the Southwest I
joined a band of 20 men who took very seriously this need for ritual
process, this initiation into manhood they had missed as boys. I was
astonished at how they could break down and bawl at the drop of a
drumbeat and afterward sigh a cathartic, world-class sigh, like
something you'd hear from a blind man whose sight had been restored
in a revival tent. Three days later we were told that we were
leaving sacred space, that we might find it difficult to drive, and
that we should sit the next day out rather than return to work in
our enlightened, magical, distracted states of mind. My own mind
felt like something that drops out of your shoe after a day in the
stable. I had my face painted. I had drummed. I had tried. I had not
cried. I had found the thing sorry, sad, excruciating.
Never have I felt so outside my subject, so supernumerary, as at
these assemblies. It is just not the crying, the hurt, the hugs; it
is the ritual I cannot get the knack of. I come away feeling silly
and a little off in the stomach, as if I had lost my mind and joined
the John Calvin Mystic Order of Comanches or something. And having
joined, _I_just_don't_get_it_. I feel like the only member of the
audience the hypnotist can't reach. I am sorry, gentlemen, but I
have to pull off the road.
I make no charge of sham. If it helps you, I support it. Go off
and be little boys, go on. Come back and be the stronger for it, and
be gentler. I hope your search ends in treasure, fulfillment and
peace. As for me, it takes more than war paint, drums and a hug from
a stranger to drive away the furies. But that's an accounting best
left for another day.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
714.1 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Sat Jan 04 1992 13:12 | 6 |
| Good article. I think I would feel the same way if I ever attended one
of these things, which is why I will never bother. I can cry in the
privacy of my own home, or in the public seclusion of a dark movie
theater. I don't feel the need for an audience.
- Vick
|
714.2 | Welcome back, Mr. "Z" !!! | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Sat Jan 04 1992 22:35 | 20 |
|
All I keep thinking about is the $56,250.00 that was taken from the
flock, nevermind the sale of the drums.
I think Bly and people like him, feed on weak, mixed up souls, for
pure profit. Most of these men need a good slapping to wake them up,
and they need to get a good dose of self-control that comes from
within. What a show this must be! Setting around, banging on a stupid
drum, cooing at the moon...
I'd almost pay money to watch the show over a brew... and laugh my *ss
off! It's amazing how much money can't be taken from 'loonies.' Look
at the type of folks that give to TV preachers.... hey.... same
difference.
Of course, this is my opinion, (for the dear souls who are about to
tell me that this is my opinion because although I entered this note
and it has my address on it... they might not can figure out that I
must have written it... but there's hope for them as Robert Bly is
still touring his road show).
|
714.3 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Mon Jan 06 1992 09:13 | 6 |
| >I think I would feel the same way if I ever attended one
> of these things, which is why I will never bother.
It's so funny how notes can give you impressions. If we had to take
a guess as to which mennoters would be most likely to go to such an event,
I'd have put you at the top of the list. Strange...
|
714.4 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Jan 06 1992 09:28 | 7 |
| Never beat a drum in my life and don't intend to start now. But just
because I don't think I'd get much out of such an event, I'm not
bad-mouthing what, for others, might be something to turn their lives
around for the better. And I have a lot of respect for Robert Bly,
particularly Robert Bly the poet.
- Vick
|
714.5 | | TORREY::BROWN_RO | work, curse of the noting class | Mon Jan 06 1992 16:54 | 19 |
| Welcome back, Z-man!
The Doctah will probably be surprised to know that I'm not willing to
shell out the beans to see Bly, either, though I did spend 20 bucks
on "Iron John", and considered it well spent. I also like Bly's poetry.
I get more out of the written word, than the experiential stuff. I
would like drumming, probably, because I like music, particularly
percussive music, but I can buy my own drum, if it ever gets to that.
An African talking drum would be the ticket.
To me, all that Bly and Meade are doing are looking at alternatives to
the way men have been brought up, not necessarily that they have found
the answer or answers. What they do is fairly original and entertaining,
if nothing else, and appears to have meaning to those that participate
in it.
-roger
|
714.6 | One minute please | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | sinning ain't no fun since she bought a gun | Mon Jan 06 1992 18:16 | 9 |
| I mean no offense to the base noter, but I would ask the men here not
to fall into the trap of defining men involved in the mens' movement as
burpers and farters who howl at the moon. It is deeper and essential for
our survival as a respected gender.
HAND
Wayne
|
714.7 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | hey! let go o'my ears! | Mon Jan 06 1992 18:38 | 8 |
|
re:.5
Same here. I attended a lunchtime video with Bly and the storyteller
and was disappointed. SO much so that I left after 30 minutes. It
wasn't anything like I expected.
re:.6
While I may agree with parts of .0, I did not author it. Understood?
|
714.8 | My kind of man... | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Name of the noter: Broadway Noter | Mon Jan 06 1992 19:14 | 3 |
| Nice to see Henry Adams get quoted.
Ray
|
714.9 | understood | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | sinning ain't no fun since she bought a gun | Mon Jan 06 1992 20:53 | 8 |
| re.7
Understood Mike. I wanted to criticize the text and yet let
you know I was not criticizing you. OK?
HAND
Wayne
|
714.10 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Build a bridge and get over it. | Tue Jan 14 1992 10:48 | 12 |
| I agree with those who say "if it works for you, go for it!"
I couldn't imagine myself participating in a Bly seminar or
"wild man" weekend, but I won't criticise those who do participate
and benefit from it.
As with anything that strikes a strong emotional cord in large
numbers of people, the men's movement is ripe with opportunities
for con-artists. But that doesn't mean every seminar/book/event
is simply a scam to make money.
/Greg
|
714.11 | easy money | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Wed Jan 15 1992 07:54 | 9 |
| RE: Note 714.10 CRONIC::SCHULER
> for con-artists. But that doesn't mean every seminar/book/event
> is simply a scam to make money.
They don't do them for free. Somebody is making money. This isn't to say that
none are worthy causes... just that money is certainly involved. Everything is
sold today... up to and including God.
|
714.12 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Build a bridge and get over it. | Wed Jan 15 1992 08:56 | 7 |
| RE: .11
I guess "scam" is the key word. Unless the group/event is non-profit,
making money is an integral part of what goes on. Nothing wrong
with that in my book.
/Greg
|
714.13 | Bang those drums | USCTR1::LRYDBERG | | Thu Jan 16 1992 16:48 | 21 |
| Wayne, I loved your comment about not referring to the men's movement
as a bunch of "burpers and farters howling at the moon". I'm laughing
even as I type this. This is exactly what the media would like us to
believe, or at least those who have a negative viewpoint of the whole
affair. After all, wasn't the women's liberation movement deemed a
bunch of crazy "bra-burners"? But movement is what it is and it is
time for the men to have their own movement. From identifying the need
for a new consciousness, hopefully there will be a lot of learning that
will fall out in less public ways and places and we will be on the road
to a true "meeting of the minds" between men and women.
I read Robert Bly's book and have heard him recite his poetry in
Worcester, MA at Assumption College and Worcester State. I think he's
pretty good and credit him for starting the ball rolling. My lesbian
niece would say he's a reactionary force but I don't believe this is
his intent - to put man back on top. I think he just wants men to
define a space for themselves and stand up for themselves. And maybe
to create some new rituals and myths. I believe in the notion of
father hunger. The mother's role has been too dominant in our society
Linda
|