T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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172.1 | True. | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Wed May 03 1995 07:32 | 7 |
|
Good comment DougO!! How true it is!
Maybe thats why we only get a handfull of men involved in the political
process fighting to become more than ***visitors *** to our children
after a divorce. It's pretty sad.
Bill
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172.2 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Wed May 03 1995 08:58 | 11 |
| Great Doug...
"Most men lead lives of quiet desparation..."
From Death of a Salesman
It took me years to understand this after I read it in High School.
Steve
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172.3 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed May 03 1995 10:26 | 2 |
| Quiet lives in quit desparation, is Emerson or Therio(sp).
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172.4 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Wed May 03 1995 11:23 | 8 |
| re: .3 - I believe that's Thoreau, Henry David, of Walden Pond fame
re: .0 - ouch. That one was way too close for comfort...
Do men, in general, even build a strong, deep, intimate friendship
with their spouses? Just wondering...
- Tom
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172.5 | No. to previous. | PCBUOA::ANGELONE | Failure: line of least persistence. | Wed May 03 1995 12:36 | 10 |
|
As a "two times up, times down" at the marriage batters box....
No.
Why ? Good question. I could give an answer from my two experiences
but I believe that would be extrmemly unfair for the "gernerally"
speaking.
Rick A
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172.6 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed May 03 1995 13:12 | 25 |
|
1) There is a fear of being thought of as "gay" if you are too close
to another guy.
2) There is the double message of being told to "get in touch with
your feelings', then being scorned when you do. It doesn't take
too many times to learn where societies values really lay. Eg.,
those "whiners" who complain about how men and fathers are
treated in the court system and in society.
3) The "mobile" society. Disposable marriages. Disposable fathers.
Disposable men. I've seen many studies that men are actually
more emotional than women. At least the emotions (although
suppressed and hidden) are much more intense. It doesn't take the
loss of too many "loved" ones to become hardened and learn the the
best way to avoid endings is to avoid beginnings.
4) Friendships require a certain amount of work to maintain. Many
men have such a load that the effort to maintain a friendship
becomes just one more hasstle. Also a decline in morality, the
inability to grasp the ideal that "there are some things you
just don't do, especially to a friend", makes friendships much
harder to maintain.
fred();
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172.7 | men and friendship | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed May 03 1995 13:30 | 38 |
| From my personal experience, I think .0 is mostly right. Two years ago, I
noticed that all of my close friends were women. I set out to change that.
Today it is still true.
Stuart (?) Miller wrote a book on this subject, with the title _Men and
Friendship_.
At some point in his midlife, he recognized that he had no male friends. He set
out to change this, devoting a large part of his energy to this goal for several
years. He eventually reached a kind of success, with one male friend.
The book is a fascinating mix of his own thoughts, feelings and experiences,
discussions with other men, and comments on other writers. Most of this
supports the ideas in .0, with two exceptions.
Miller identified a range of obstacles to friendship between men. In addition
to those mentioned in .0, there are two I can remember. One is the fear of
homosexuality, which not only makes men afraid of getting close, but also makes
them expect that offers of friendship will be misunderstood by other men.
Another is that our ideal of a close and sharing marriage removes both the
energy and the need traditionally associated with friendship among men.
Miller also spent a year (six months?) of his quest in Europe, looking for
friendship and talking to Europeans about friendship. His report was that
Europeans were quite similar to Americans with respect to friendship. He
reports at length a lecture he got from an Italian, on why he had no male
friends and needed no male friends. The Italian was more articulate than the
Americans Miller quotes, but he was saying the same thing.
Daniel Levinson, in _Seasons of a Man's Life_, comments on the fact that none of
the men he studied had male friends. Other books by and about men say much the
same thing.
One clarification of terms: when these guys talk about friendship, they mean
more than the guys you go to the bar or the ballgame with. Miller offers some
questions to test friendship, among them "If you were getting a divorce, who is
the first man you would tell?"
|
172.9 | | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Wed May 03 1995 16:23 | 27 |
| Over the years (I'm 54) I've had just a few really close friends. I guess
I've been secure in my (hetero) sexuality, because it never bothered me
to throw an arm over a shoulder or drink from the same bottle. I cried
with one buddy when his baby died, and (later) with another one when his
wife zorched him (surprised him by having the sheriffs evict him from his
house after working a midwatch, whilst she was being diddled by her
"therapist").
My close friends were men whose professions _and_ leisure interests matched
mine very closely.
I changed jobs eleven years ago, and while I welcomed the challenge of
the new job, and have enjoyed its environs, I have not found the same
kind of friend here. Possibly as a result of this, and as a result of our
sons growing up and moving out, my wife (31 years) and I have become
closer. There's no doubt that she's my best friend. Not a buddy -- no arm
punching and whatnot, because she's my favorite lady -- but just a deeper
move into an already close relationship. We have twin-like experiences
which no longer surprise us. We could simply be on the same frequency
because we've been married to each other longer than we lived single.
So, I'm not particularly close to a male friend now, but I don't believe
it's because of a culture shift of any kind, and it's not because I'm
afraid of what someone might think. I never cared much about that at all,
come to think of it.
Art
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172.12 | ah-men. | MAL009::RAGUCCI | | Wed May 03 1995 17:33 | 16 |
|
i couldn't agree with you guys more, even though I have 5 brothers
my male friends are real important to me.
Married or not men need to seek friends with the same sex, it relieves
so much b.s with their wives. there was a big study on that years ago,
but I forgot who wrote it.
Men fear intamacy, and are too homophobic in our culture; we need to
redefine friendships & couples.
Also some of my best friends in school were women, lasted a while too.
But my close friends are guys and always will be.
Bob
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172.10 | read 173 | MAL009::RAGUCCI | | Wed May 03 1995 17:34 | 9 |
|
Guys I messed up my reply is a new note 173. sorry. Bob
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172.11 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Subvert the dominant pair of dimes | Wed May 03 1995 20:10 | 7 |
| re: .9
Art,
Very well said.
tim
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172.13 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Thu May 04 1995 12:31 | 24 |
| .4> Do men, in general, even build a strong, deep, intimate friendship
.4> with their spouses? Just wondering...
After 20 years, I would sure like to say that I do, BUT, the
"construction process" is continuous... It HAS to be this way else
you may find that the upper plateau you reached was nothing more than
the next step on the down-escalator. I seem to remember something
Steve Lionel posted a while back on rebuilding every day...
I think a better question might be "of the men who have built a strong,
deep, intimate friendship with their spouses", what "attributes" do these
men have in common?
.9> We have twin-like experiences which no longer surprise us. We could
.9> simply be on the same frequency because we've been married to each
.9> other longer than we lived single.
I've noticed this as well... You reach for the phone to call your wife,
it rings, it's her! (this very thing just happened as I was writing
this!) Is there anything to this "psychic resonance"? I think so...
You Love someone for so long that the inherent "shielding" between
yourselves seems to dissipate with a state of interdependence being
the result. Isn't this what we all want?
|
172.14 | friendship with spouse | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri May 05 1995 12:55 | 14 |
| .4> Do men, in general, even build a strong, deep, intimate friendship
> with their spouses? Just wondering...
I have, and so have other men I know of. Seems to me this is a common goal,
among both men and women. It does seem to be a recent goal. I haven't seen it
much in fiction or biography before this century, and not much in the early
decades of this.
.13> I think a better question might be "of the men who have built a
> strong,
> deep, intimate friendship with their spouses", what "attributes" do these
> men have in common?
Good question. I have no idea what the answers are.
|
172.15 | I dont agree | POLAR::WILSONC | | Sun May 07 1995 02:22 | 21 |
| I have read on a number of occasions that men have difficulty building
strong emotional bonds with each other but as of yet have not
experienced the problem myself. All of my male friends are able to
discuss intimate details of their lives with little reservation. I
would suggest that the problem is more of a generational rather than
societal one. My brother who is 44 tells me about the difficulty he has
getting his male friends to open up where as at 27 I have little
trouble opening up to my friends or they to me. So perhaps some of the
fears discussed here about men still being taught to be islands should
be abandonned. I think that there has been some positive advancements
in this area since the end of the 1960's and it has been the children
born after the 60's who have benifitted from the enlightenment of that
time. I remember in high school that those guys who could be honest
about their feelings had an easier time with the girls. Perhaps even
feminine movement could be responsible for a shift that I think is
happening. I also think that the decline of Western Civilization is
forcing those who wish to survive to depend on each other emotionally
and otherwise. Poor old Ayn Rand is probably rolling in her grave and
if she isn't she should be.
chris
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172.16 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Mon May 08 1995 11:23 | 29 |
| re: .15 Chris,
> I have read on a number of occasions that men have difficulty building
> strong emotional bonds with each other but as of yet have not
> experienced the problem myself. ...
>
> ... My brother who is 44 tells me about the difficulty he has
> getting his male friends to open up where as at 27 I have little
> trouble opening up to my friends or they to me.
Without knowing anything about the folks involved, I am led to a
different sort of question.... is it possible that its you, and not
your age? Is it easier for you to open up about stuff than your
brother? If you have an easier time of opening up than your brother,
than perhaps your friends are more able to open up because of it?
My reason for asking is this... I am 33 yrs old, and I personally have
a great deal of trouble opening up with folks about the intimate
details of my life. But then again, I acknowledge that I am carrying
around a great deal of baggage internally that I am working through.
This fact alone, for me, outweighs anything that my age may or may not
influence.
Anyway, I guess my point is that there may be a lot more to this than
just the age difference...
Just looking at it from a different angle,
- Tom
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172.17 | Men's Weekend | GLRMAI::MOLLIN | | Mon May 08 1995 11:52 | 29 |
| A couple of months ago I entered a note looking for a men's
discussion/support group. I realized that the only men in my life,
outside of work, were the husbands of my wife's friends. I happened to
look at my wedding album and noticed that the only man in my wedding
party that I still have contact with, is my brother-in-law.
With the help of another reader of this notesfile I learned about and
attended a men's weekend and now meet on a weekly basis with other
men who attended the same weekend. This is helping me meet my goal of
establishing and maintaining meaningful relationships with other men
and I'm having fun at the same time.
The weekend had additional benefits for me in helping me realize what's
important to me and what it means to live on my terms. The weekly
meetings help me stay in touch with what I learned and not fall back
into well established habits.
The purpose of the weekend is to engage in a process to:
locate the source of your power,
and discover and dissolve the barriers between you and manifesting
that power.
If you are interested in learning more about this weekend and how
it might help you become the man you always wanted to be, please
contact me: DTN 227-3594 or 508-952-3594
GLRMAI::MOLLIN or Dick Mollin @TAY
Home phone: 508-393-7438, if busy 508-393-7419
Dick
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172.18 | age and men's friendship | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon May 08 1995 13:23 | 28 |
| Re .15.
Interesting. The books I have read were by and about men born between about
1935 and 1955, like me. I have not heard anything about studies on men born
later.
Anyway, you and your friends have something great here.
Thinking about this gets complicated because there are at least three
possibilities. Is it just you and your friends? Is it men your age? Is it
your cohort, the men born at about the same time as you?
If it is just you and your friends, you might notice a difference talking to
other men your age, like co-workers or inlaws. How do they talk about their
friendships?
If it is your age, then older men might say they were like that at your age.
For what it is worth, men usually report strong and intimate friendships in
their early 20s (college, military, first job and so forth). Then career,
marriage and moving gradually break up the friendships.
If it is your cohort, then maybe feminism, the men's movement and other changes
are really making a difference for men born after 1965 or whenever.
My guess, unsupported by any data, is that all three possibilities are partially
true.
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