Posted on 05/09/2010 1:46:44 PM PDT by RogerFGay
The Male Brain. By Louann Brizendine, M.D. New York: Broadway Books, 2010. www.crownpublishing.com. 271 pp. $24.99.Psychiatrist Louann Brizendine, currently of the University of California, San Francisco and formerly of Harvard Medical School, has published the predictable followup to her bestselling book The Female Brain. This may be the most accessible book I have ever read that has slightly more than half its length taken up with appendices, notes, references, and the index. In 135 easy-to-read pages, Brizendine lays out the basic functioning of the male brain. Despite the number of books addressing these general topics, the author stands out due to her knack both for memorable formulations of information and for bringing up little-discussed aspects of the brain and tying them into everyday aspects of life to which we can relate.
Her prefatory material is fabulous in itself. We get two pages summarizing the ten principal areas of the male brain, followed by a three-page cast of neurohormone characters that sets the tone as it gives us the list of players as if we were in the theatre: TestosteroneZeus. King of the male hormones, he is dominant, aggressive, and all-powerful . Or the less familiar Mullerian Inhibiting Substance (MIS)Hercules. Hes strong, tough, and fearless. Also known as the Defeminizer, he ruthlessly strips away all that is feminine from the male . One more: AndrostenedioneRomeo. The charming seducer of women. When released by the skin as a pheromone he does more for a mans sex appeal than any aftershave or cologne. Next are two pages summarizing the phases of a mans life.
Then the book proper begins! Brizendine explains that male and female brains do differ considerably. In the female brain, the hormones estrogen, progesterone, and oxytocin predispose brain circuits toward female-typical behaviors. In the male brain, its testosterone, vasopressin, and a hormone called MIS (Mullerian inhibiting substance) that have the earliest and most enduring effects . We have learned that men use different brain circuits to process spatial information and solve emotional problems. The author aligns her chapters with the different principal phases of a male brains lifethe boy brain, the teen boy brain, the mating brain, the brain below the belt, the daddy brain, manhood, and the mature male brain.
In the chapters on the boy brain and the teen boy brain, the doctor provides tales drawn from her own experiences raising boys. By the time we get to the mating brain, things are really starting to heat up. She provides a detailed travelogue of an imaginary train trip along the brain circuits of the male brain in love. One key area of the brain involved in pair bonding is the ventral tegmental area or VTA, whose cells manufacture dopamine, the brains feel-good neurotransmitter for motivation and reward . Filled with dopamine, the train would speed along his brain circuits to the next station, the NAc, or nucleus accumbens, the area for anticipation of pleasure and reward. And later, [a]s the train sped into the final station, the caudate nucleus, or CN, the area for memorizing the look and identity of whoever is giving you pleasure, wed see al the tiniest details about the woman who started the train going in the first place.
Interestingly, to reach orgasm, both men and women must first turn off a few parts of the brainlike the amygdale, the brains danger and alert centerand the areas for self-consciousness and worryingthe anterior cingulated cortex, or ACC. Now theres a topic that I havent heard feminists talk about much. Although I had heard this before, I appreciated the authors reminder that, womens complaints that men dont care enough about them to stay awake and cuddle to the contrary, the truth is that the hormone oxytocin is to blame for a mans so-called postcoital narcolepsy.
Being a father myself, it is fascinating to read about the daddy brain and then to consider how nature has equipped males to do such different tasksfight, conquer a woman, and then nurture children. Certain brain circuits are designed to induce men to fall in love with their children. [C]lose physical contact releases oxytocin and pleasure hormones in dads, too, bonding parent to child. And of course, as the author reminds us, men are critical to a childs well-being. Active discipline from fathers plays a crucial role in a childs success in life, and a girls close relationship with her father can set the stage for getting along well with men throughout her life.
In the manhood chapter, the author explains that both men and women have both a mirror-neuron system (MNS) and a temporal-parietal junction system (TPJ) but the female brain stays in the MNS longer while the male brain quickly switches over to the problem solving, action-oriented TPJ. These different brain circuits function adaptively and helpfully, for the most part, even though in modern society we may sometimes deny certain aspects of the behaviors they produce. The TPJ induces men to, for example, aggressively stare down guys they may catch checking out their wives, and womenwhatever they may saygenerally feel flattered by such behavior. Like it or not, [r]esearch shows that angry men get noticed morenot only by other men but also by women. Not only that, but couples who argue have a better chance of staying together.
Finally, the mature male brain has grown in comfort with its established rank in whatever hierarchies apply to the mans life, and it feels less called to prove itself than it did when it was younger.
What a great book! A quick, easy, and pleasant read, yet a very enlightening and instructive one. The model of integrating small amounts of core text with large quantities of prefatory and supplementary material is one other authors should consider adopting. Dont miss this fabulous work. Three cheers!
What’s next, the LGBT brain?
I agree — a fascinating subject — that is the differences between the two brains. It is addressed by Dennis Prager on radio quite often.
I try to talk to female friends about it and they have trouble gettin’ it. So I tell them — talk to a male for 10 mninutes on a certain subject and you will probably stay on topic — talk to a female on a certain subject and you cover a myriad of subjects and feelings. Am not saying good/bad just interesting. Try that little test some time.
To quote the Great Redneck, Jeff Foxworthy:
Men are Simple .. they want a drink in their hand, and want to see something Naked..
It’s as simple as that.
It takes 135 pages to explain how the male brain works? I bet that most men could do it in less than one. Maybe three words would suffice: wine, women, football.
I’m thinking about buying this for my Kindle. There is a “Female Brain” book by her as well. I harbor no promise of understanding Mrs. Liberty (the most beautiful woman in the world) if I buy them. I consider every day I get by without being hit with a skillet a blessing from God. (Pinging Parsy because of the obscure skillet reference)
I have time these days for sedentary pursuits.
You forgot “naked.”
There was some comedian who said raising boys was like raising dogs. All you have to do is put them in the backyard and they will raise themselves. There’s a little truth to that.
>You forgot naked.
Naked wine?
One thing I remember from Dennis Prager discussions is that Women think as they talk — almost even using talking as a way to work out their positions on “things” — Men think and then talk. Really — just observe, it is true most of the time.
Women want to talk it out, men want to fix it.
No, you fool! Naked footballs. Geesh....
The ability to remain on topic is an entirely different matter...
>No, you fool! Naked footballs. Geesh....
Oh, my bad.
Great book - Men are like Waffles and Women are like Spaghetti.
Men compartmentalize. They deal with one box at a time. Like Waffles. When they are done they put that box down and move to the next box. Some boxes are empty. So when a man is sitting there and the woman asks what are you thinking about and he says “nothing” he truly means nothing. His box is empty and right now he just is.
Women are like spaghetti. Their stories all intertwine and have relations to one another. You have to follow the one thread of a womens story like a single noodle. It will touch upon many other things, people, emotions etc.
A man comes home and his wife asks him How was your day. He can quickly say “okay” and this is sufficent.
The woman comes home and her husband asks “How was your day?” The woman will proceed to tell the man that Her collegue who she does not like so much came in to her office to tell her to do this one project and she really doesnt have time as she has the other poject she has been working on and she had to pick up the dry cleaning tonight as they have that party at the Jonses tomorrow night which is really important because Mr. Jones is the headmaster at the private school their little Johnny wants to go to and they really want him to get in to that school so that they dont have to move because the houses here are less expensive than the other neighborhood they were considering which would make it easier to put money away for retirement and would mean she wouldnt have to work as long so she wouldnt have to deal with that collegue she didnt like and and and... and the husband is stuck back with the who is the woman she dosent like at work...
My mom describes it like this:
Men’s brains are waffles, everything has its own little compartment, and is unaffected by the other compartments.
Women’s brains are spaghetti, every strand touches every other strand, and if you pull on one you affect the rest.
Someday I’m going to learn to read the whole thread before responding :p
Sorry - i need a couple of more sentences re: serially and parallel. Example?
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