Posted on 10/24/2017 1:21:56 PM PDT by nickcarraway
For some time, Stephen Hicks had felt like something was off. My relationship ended, then a lot of things started collapsing in front of me, Hicks says. He began attending therapy, which made him realize that he needed to make a bigger change: I wasnt doing really terrible things, but I also wasnt being the most ideal Stephen I could be, he says. The bar is really lowered for cisgender guys.
So earlier this year, Hicks signed up for the pilot Rethink Masculinity class, a partnership between the Washington, D.C., Rape Crisis Center, Collective Action for Safe Spaces, and ReThink, an organization that works to prevent sexual assault.
The program bills itself as a class where men learn how social constructs of masculinity harm them and the people around them, and work to construct healthier masculinities. Or, as Hicks puts it, It was eight weeks of guys discussing how they can address their actions with better self-awareness and less toxicity.
We spoke of emotional labor, consent, violence, communication, empathy, and vulnerability, he adds, noting that the last subject, in particular, was a struggle for him: [I was] trained and conditioned to be tough growing up.
The Rethink program is the latest in a growing number of courses targeted toward people who identify as men, including the Mens Project at the University of Wisconsin, Masculinity 101 at Brown, and the Duke Mens Project at Duke. The goal, proponents say, is to help men examine their own biases and behaviors in order to cut down on misogyny and gender-based violence.
Theres no doubt that the problems these classes aim to tackle are pervasive ones a reality thats been made especially, painfully clear in recent days and weeks, as the Harvey Weinstein revelations have pushed discussions of sexual assault and harassment to the forefront. But can a class really be enough to chip away at something so deeply entrenched?
Its a promising approach, says Eric Mankowski, associate chair of the psychology department at Portland State University and head of the schools Gender and Violence Intervention Research Team, but we dont know whether they prevent sexual violence. Some studies show promising effects on attitudes and behavior intentions, but a single class is unlikely to undo years of socialization in toxic masculinity.
For the past 25 years, Mankowski has taught a course titled Psychology of Men and Masculinities, which, he says, deconstruct[s] how masculinity is socialized as a performative mask rather than a biological imperative. He argues that the concept of toxic masculinity has four main components: suppression of anything stereotypically feminine; suppression of emotions related to vulnerability, like fear, sadness, or helplessness; male domination over women and other men; and aggression.
From those four distal expectations come the proximal attitudes and behaviors, like I deserve to have access to womens bodies, he explains. What we dont know is if its more effective to address the distal or proximal ideas and behaviors. Mankowski says alcohol abuse is a perfect example. It numbs feelings and allows men to act aggressive. We can effectively address it, but were not addressing the underlying issue. Its functioning to help them display their manhood, so why would they stop?
Weve spent many years addressing survivors and victim behavior, but ethically, and in terms of efficacy, thats incomplete, he adds. We have to address the roots. And while course evaluations show that his students typically absorb what he teaches, Mankowski notes, that doesnt necessarily mean that the class is making a real-world difference: It may change beliefs about gender, he says, but does it change behavior?
Its not a given, but its not impossible, either. Research consistently shows that holding sexist attitudes is associated with gender violence, for example, so its not unreasonable to hope that better beliefs can lead to better behavior. Studies have also demonstrated that bystander intervention training a subject covered in Rethink classes can be effective at reducing the incidence of sexual assault.
On the other hand, though, these classes are taking on a lot. Trying to undo a lifetimes worth of lessons about how to act at home, in the workplace, and in public its a lofty goal, especially when so much of what participants encounter outside the classroom contradicts what they learn within it. And some of the desired outcomes increased vulnerability, more emotional openness are difficult to measure.
But Hicks argues that these problems dont negate what the classes can accomplish; the program, he says, isnt designed as a fix for anything. Its a step. Granted, its a step with limited reach theres probably a self-selection bias at work but its a step nonetheless.
Since the class ended, Hicks says, he feels he has been more deliberate about expressing emotions and making space for people. (Over the summer, the class facilitators asked Hicks to become a co-director of the program, noting that he had been one of the most vocal participants.)
You wont be transformed by a ten-week class, but youve got to start somewhere. And ten weeks is better than no weeks, Mankowski says. Those who are really committed to making a change, though, shouldnt expect a one-and-done scenario: The key is continued examination. You will have a difficult time maintaining anything unless you continue working on it.
Good grief.
I guess they use a burdizzo for that.
They should just chop their balls off and be done with it.
I love it when a woman says those three magic words...
...please pull my hair.
I’d rather be toxic than politically correct.
At least toxic knows which bathroom to use.
Helpful diagnostic hint: if you fret about “being the most ideal Stephen I could be, and think of yourself as a “cisgender guy, you probably aren’t suffering from toxic levels of masculinity.
Ping.
Open enrollment for whiny Democrat”males”.....
Hey, I’m cisgender! Ain’t that great? That word can be pronounced only in an alternate universe, which this one is rapidly becoming.
1: Facial hair.
2: Military bearing (Army).
3: I'd wear a 2nd amendment shirt to class.
4: Buzz cut hair with male pattern baldness.
5: I'm not fat or wimpy looking.
6: I have a hard time listening to females in authority, or in general for that matter.
7: I quote the bible a lot.
No no no. These are not men taking the classes. These are males who shave their vajayjay.
Not real men
No no no. These are not men taking the classes. These are males who shave their vajayjay.
Not real men. Tranny training classes
With a cuck cuck here, and a cuck cuck there, here a cuck, there a cuck, everywhere a cuck cuck...
I am an unapolgetic man . . . the world can f’n get over it. There is nothing wrong with me.
It’s easier and quicker to just chop off their offending member and be done with it.
And he wonders why he can't attract a woman.
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