• NathanielThomas@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Interesting perspective. It would be really mind-blowing to see the other side of the gender, even though I have no interest in being trans.

    One thing I will add to this article is that men are also viewed as little more than bank machines after divorce. People always have the utmost sympathy for any mother who is separated from her children, even if only for a few days. Movie plots can revolve around mothers finding their lost children and being reunited. But for men? We’re only the providers, the ones who pay the child support.

    I lost my kids (not legally, just boring old classic parental alienation) six years ago following the divorce. Nobody cares, because I’m just a man. Not even my own father cares. He happily continues to see his grandkids because he doesn’t want to “take sides.” None of my cousins or other parts of my family care either. So long as I’m paying my “support.” And I can’t complain about it on social media because I’m a man. I’m a stoic. Boys don’t cry, remember?

    The lack of emotional support for men mentioned in the article is another thing that really exacerbates divorces and leads to suicides. I do feel like if I were the type of person to contemplate suicide (I’m not), I would have definitely done it when my ex took my kids from me. And there would have been no male friends to pull me back from the edge. Those friendships are, to quote the author, superficial to a large degree, or even the ones that aren’t are men who are now focused heavily on their own families and wives.

    I mean, it’s also true all the other stuff about the male privilege and feeling safe and the good things that come with being a man. But it’s nice to see the perspective of how we lack emotional support and we’re expected to grit our teeth and “walk it off.”

    • FatalValentine@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      I hope I’m not intruding on men’s spaces here as a transwoman,

      But after my transition that was one of the biggest, most drastic contrasts between the two binary gender’s social dynamics. Men just don’t get to talk about their feelings- whether it stems from homophobia or misogyny, men are generally seen as an island to themselves and if you display otherwise, it is seen as a weakness worthy of admonition and disrespect. There is still a societal expectation that men are supposed to be stoic, stable providers while women are increasingly allowed liberation. Hard fought, and rightly so but what’s the point of “equality” if we don’t lift everyone up to the same standards?

      I have never felt more emotional support in my entire life than when I stepped into women’s spaces, seen as a woman. This just isn’t fair or right, regardless of the other privelages men may have. Justice is for everyone, not just minorities.

      Yet, it is up to men to decide this. Yes, women can and should support you, but remember who has the most power to change these standards. Women didn’t have to demand other women for suffrage, they had to demand it from men. It is the same here for emotional liberation.

      *An edit for an addendum: I hope nobody reads this feeling that I’m blaming men, or being accusational. I want to clarify that I believe men do have the power to change this culture of emotional isolationism but it will require self-reflection, effort and a strong demand from oneself and other men to be willing to seek liberation- at the risk of what comes with shaking up the status quo.

      • bouh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s not only a question of men. If you want a romantic relationship, you need to fit the society’s standards for the sex you are looking for. If women are looking for toxic virility, the sad truth is that men who embrace it will have an easier time finding a relationship.

        This is not something you take from anyone. And this is the biggest problem many men have with the #metoo era: we acknowledge toxic masculinity is toxic and can even be deadly, but what is the alternative? There is none currently.

        There is no model for modern men that is worthy of both modern men and women. This is why we have incels and other hardcore conservative going hard on hating women or even more toxic masculinity.

        But I digress. The solution is not in a fight, it’s in acceptance from both men and women.

      • noughtnaut@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Rather than intruding, transitioned individuals ought to be seen as the strongest allies - on both sides of the fence. The lived experience you being to the table is tremendously valuable because it is so indisputably valid.

      • MrSqueezles@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Thank you for sharing. I haven’t figured out the magic words to communicate this well. I worked at a company that proudly announced longer maternity care for newborns, an astounding (for the US) 6 months. Fathers got 2. I’m a dad and wasn’t going to have any more kids, but some of us spoke up and suggested that dads deserve time with their children as well. It was explained that mothers have special connections with children (nursing) and are genetically (yuck) more loving caretakers. Their brains are wired for empathy, so they deserve more time. Remember when we all agreed it was awful to say men are better at logic and reasoning? Me neither because it was so long ago. How is this okay? And we wonder why far more women drop out of the workforce to become full time parents.

        There’s a theory that women quit to care for kids because they don’t have enough support, so let’s give them extra time off, extra health care benefits, recovery support, reinforcing stereotypes and gender roles. It’s the most ass backward approach to what should be the goal to encourage husbands to take larger roles in families. When a man speaks up, he’s part of the patriarchy, suppressing women’s voices. Women need to be heard and supported, not mansplained. If anyone can suggest how to change the conversation without being labeled a bully while simultaneously being bullied, I would love to learn.

    • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      A story all too common. Someone I know mine got divorced a number of years ago. He’s a fun, charming, kind, decent looking fellow in good shape for his age, and I can’t imagine he did anything to deserve what happened. I don’t know all the details of their divorce, but I know all but one of his children was poisoned against him by his (now ex) wife, and it’s only because the one happened to be away long term at the time.

      His ex has several advanced degrees and is more than capable of earning six figures. And yet, he was still ordered to pay her spousal support and a sizable chunk of his pension. The divorce and family court system is absolutely fucked for men and it’s a small wonder so many of them contemplate drastic measures when their lives are ripped away from them.

      Feminism gave women all of the same rights and privileges as men and then conveniently “forgot” to balance out all of the exclusive rights women get just for being women.

      • verbalbotanics@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Feminism gave women all of the same rights and privileges as men

        Feminism hasn’t done that yet, we’re nowhere near equal rights and opportunities for women and if you don’t believe me, look at the gender balance in US government roles and who has the money and power.

        Let’s focus on dismantling patriarchy and the harm it creates for men as well.

        • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Gender balance in government and business is not a proxy for equality.

          Woman are not institutionally prevented from campaigning for office. If they’re not voted in, that’s just democracy.

          Women are not institutionally prevented from climbing the corporate ladder. They largely prefer to have a more comfortable work/life balance.

          But they are accepted into college 2:1 compared to men.

          They do receive scholarships, educational, and career opportunities just for being women.

          They do receive an egregiously unfair advantage in family and divorce courts.

          Those are institutional.

            • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              I literally pointed out several factors that are objectively institutionally unequal. Pithy quotes won’t change that.

              • verbalbotanics@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                Hey, you can argue with me all day, but the people taking men’s slice of the pie ain’t the feminists.

                Let’s focus on the people shooting themselves into space on dick rockets and suits on the hill, and we’ll all benefit from it.

                • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  They can both be problems simultaneously, and it’s disingenuous to argue that there aren’t militant feminists pushing to keep all of the advantages from earlier eras.

        • partizan@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          This is BS, currently feminism looks to only strive after the cozy office places and various places of power. I didnt seen feminism once to call for equal numbers of female rig workers, construction workers, Alaska fishing jobs and similar… Feminists are mysteriously somehow always just after the lucrative office jobs…

  • Eochaid@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As a married cis man moving towards his 40s, I can only confirm from my perspective that the male-to-male friendship experience seems broken.

    First of all, in college I learned about the performative nature of gender and that gave me the tools I needed to push back against social pressure. I wear what’s comfortable, I try to be considate towards others, I talk about emotions, and I do what sounds fun without a care about whether it makes me “feminine” or “gay”. I feel that pushing against gender performance expectations has made me a better and fulfilled person.

    But male-male friendships are still really hard, and I don’t get it. I’ve lost all of mine, for various reasons. Some of us got busy with careers, families, or whatever other reason. I’ve reached out now, multiple times, over the last few years, to old male friends and coworkers that I worked with for 5+ years.

    The conversation starts with a list of accomplishments. I congratulate them, so glad they’re doing well. We’re both pretty happy in careers too.

    I ask how they’re doing, what do they do for fun, you still with that same girl? Fine. Same old. Uh huh.

    I suggest that maybe we should do something sometime. Play disc golf. Play some games. Hang out. Meet somewhere. Bring your kids if you want, I’d love to meet them…and at this point they get distant and eventually ghost me.

    After a few instances of this, I started to wonder if there’s something wrong with me. Maybe they didn’t like me. Maybe I said something wrong. But there was one other instance. A woman I worked with for like 9 months. I called her once to ask for a job reference. And we ended up talking for an hour about our lives, our SOs, life goals etc. Before I could ask, she ended up suggesting that hang out and bring our SOs.

    The only male friends I have right now are the male SOs of female friends or my wife’s girl friends.

    Some of the most fulfilling friend groups we’ve had since were groups with LGBT and NB folks. And I think that’s because, even though gender performance is absolutely an important thing in these groups, there’s less pressure for us, a cis couple, to “perform” in a certain way. Our conversations are more real and liberated. It’s less anxious and competitive. But at the same time, those friendships eventually end because I don’t they can really connect with us - like, we’re still outsiders and so there’s a bit of a block. I understand, but it sucks.

    Because we try to connect with cis men, or even couples, in our area, we either get standoffishness or competitions. Like, we’re getting evaluated for our performance of gender / society / life expectations. My wife and I have careers, no kids, and we’re fine, but we’re also trying to explore who we are outside that. And new cis friendships at our age seems to be less about connecting and doing fun things and more about bragging about accomplishments or complaining about the lack of them over coffee.

    And its so hard to find any cis men that are just fucking chill and maybe tired of all the anxiety and social pressure around masculinity and just willing to be a person rather than a “man”.

  • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I believe that’s why the suicide rate in men is so much higher. I recently saw that men are four times more likely to commit suicide than women.

    That’s accurate, but doesn’t convey they entire picture accurately.

    Women attempt suicide at a significantly higher rate than men. The ways women tend to attempt suicide are the ways that are least likely to leave a significant mess; overdosing, hanging, drowning, cutting wrists in a bathtub, etc. Men that attempt suicide are more likely to use methods with a high probability of success, like jumping or firearms. At one time, women’s incomplete attempts were deemed to be a “cry for help” rather sincere suicide attempts, but this is not correct.

  • Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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    1 year ago

    I still get sad at the surprise women have when I move before they do

    Is this actually a thing? I’ve always moved away from everyone’s path and never noticed anyone feeling surprised by that. And from every man I’ve ever walked with, I can only remember one who I noticed didn’t make room for other people.

    • threadloose@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      Oh, it’s totally a thing. I’m a woman and short, so I’m below the eye line of most men, and I’ve had men plow right over me on crowded sidewalks or at events. Most men expect the woman to yield in that situation and they’ll get annoyed if you don’t. It actually is surprising when a man moves out of the way, though I don’t know if it shows on my face.

      • Plagiatus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Weird. Imo everyone should yield - that way both parties only have to do a little sidestep and they both feel seen. But I guess caring about others seems to be a dying thing anyways…

          • Apex_Fail@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Possibly, but could also just be a regional/being an ass thing.

            I’m in the Southern US and if you don’t sidestep or flat out get out of the way of someone (not just a woman) with a “pardon me” you’re seen as a jackass.

            However, I’ve traveled the world and as a 6 foot tall, 200lb man I got a wide berth when walking down the sidewalks in a lot of countries, have to get out of the way in others, seen people cross the street when they saw me, but then have some 5’ nothing dude with a chip on his shoulder try to start a fight with me for existing in Boston (note this is just a very Boston thing)

      • whats_a_refoogee@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Your two reasons, being below the eye line and being a woman are incongruent. If you’re below the eye line and they don’t notice you, then how are they expecting you to yield?

  • Deca@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I wonder if this is one of the reasons why MTF vastly outnumber FTM transitions

    • spaduf@slrpnk.netOPM
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      1 year ago

      Actually they don’t. Source

      There’s a fascinating history for why there may have been significant differences in reported numbers but they seem to have far more to do with the state of the medical establishment and their willingness to marginalize certain people than anything else.

  • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Am I only the only one who thinks comes off like “men arent like women, and therefore broken”?

    Not having to spend an hour discussing my feelings is actually one of the things I like about my friendships. I don’t want long deep hugs, they make me uncomfortable. And I definitely don’t want someone opening up to me about their life struggles. That’s not the kind of friendship I like or want.

    I guess that makes me broken!

    • Alto@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      And it’s all perfectly fine to not want that.

      The issue is there is a heavy expectation for all men to be like that. Many of us, me included, are not at all, and are often ridiculed for it.

    • magnetosphere @beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Not quite. To me, it’s more like “men don’t even have the option of building relationships like women do, and that’s not healthy. Society is broken.”

      • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        But they didn’t say that. They flat out said “men are broken”.

        • Sharkwellington@lemmy.one
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          1 year ago

          You seem to have stopped reading once you got through the headline and missed the entire article written afterwards.

          • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Surely you have something more constructive to say than a sneering quip?

    • ThatWeirdGuy1001@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I mean it does because those things only make you uncomfortable because you’ve been conditioned your entire life to feel that way just because you’re a man.

      Those things are basic human companionship.

      • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        So not only am I somehow fundamentallly broken, I’ve also been duped by society and I’m too stupid to even realize it?

        You couldn’t be any more insulting if you tried.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      100% mate.

      All my best friendships have been 99% ripping into each other and telling funny stories. Like I don’t tell shitty stories about work because I lived it once and I don’t want to live it again. No one else does either. Unless it’s to vent about someone because I’m angry. But I do tell funny stories about work.

      Having said that even in the most masculine environments when anyone has had an issue or been pushed too fair the guys always rally and pick them back up.

      Day to day shit is your own problem. The once in a month or few months is our problem and I’m here for you.

      You boss was mean to you. You want to bounce other careers around or see if I can find someone to hire you? No, well grow up everyone’s boss is shit. Either leave or deal with it.

      Your misses just cheated on you. Right come on I’ll get the guys and we’ll go to the pub, she’s a cunt you’re better off without her.

      Also hand shakes are fucking great. I usually go for a shake and a quick hug. But the handshake is better.

        • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Then we’ll all be happier if you dump your emotions on someone else.

          I find complaining to be toxic. Which is why this thread sucks so much. We’re all just whining about each other.

          • T. T. Perry@mastodon.social
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            1 year ago

            @Rodeo interestingly, I’m learning a lot from this interaction. Like about how men normalize day to day misery and disconnection. So I’m very glad that this thread exists; thank you for being honest.

        • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I find it toxic when people go on and on about minor problems that are in no way relevant to the people in the conversation and there is no way they can help.

          All it is doing is bringing unneeded negativity into an environment. That’s toxic.

          You want help? Yine I can help how? You want to ruin my free time when I’m trying to de-stress by going on about people and things that have nothing to do with me and I can’t help? Go away.

  • Nelots@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    The comments at the bottom of the article though… I really hate people sometimes.

    • agissilver@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Oof they are awful, and indicative of the issues raised in the article. So many of the men commenting are defending the “man” stereotype as “natural”, and ignoring that men have issues existing in society probably because of the pressures of that stereotype. Nobody wants men to feel isolated and lonely and kill themselves 4x as much. I don’t think that’s a “natural” part of being a man. At least it doesn’t have to be.

        • new_acct_who_dis@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          This is why it’s hard for me to take these types seriously.

          They complain about not getting compliments, but refuse to compliment each other for fear of sounding “gay”. It’s like they only count compliments if it’s from a sexually interested woman they happen to find attractive.

          But women, especially the attractive ones, know better than to compliment men randomly for fear of “leading them on”.

  • guyrocket@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I am glad this perspective is being presented. I think ftm people have a unique view of how difficult it can be to be a man that throws light on a lot of men’s issues.

    I hope this person can present more along these lines. I think I could come up with hundreds of questions.

    • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      I’m a trans guy who transitioned in the 2000s. I’d be happy to answer any questions you have on the unique perspective of men’s issues from someone who spent 20 ish years as a woman.

      • guyrocket@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Thank you, Kit.
        Here are some questions:

        1. I don’t know if women really understand how powerful testosterone is. What was/is your experience with it?
        2. What other biological differences did you notice? Were they temporary or permanent?
        3. How do you think men and women can better understand each other?
        4. What are some things you would change about women? And about men?
        5. What did you think about strip clubs when you were a woman? Did that opinion change as a man? Why and how?
        6. What did you think about women before transitioning and how did that change after you transitioned? And also about men.

        I don’t want to wear out my welcome so I’ll stop there. No rush to answer, I’d prefer more complete answers to quick ones.

        • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago
          1. For me, testosterone primarily feels like the ability to focus and critically think - like my head was foggy before and is now clear. Everything seems to be logical, and my ability to troubleshoot complex issues is dramatically stronger when my T levels are good. Without T, everything feels extremely emotional and even minor things feel like they’re high-stakes. That’s not to say that I don’t feel emotion with T, rather the emotions are more appropriate for the situation. I do find that I care less about people in general when on T - For example, when I see a stranger with a problem I don’t feel like I have an obligation to help them whereas before I had an intristic need to help everyone around me.
          2. I had many biological changes, such as a change in body fat and muscle, significant facial/body hair, hair thinning - which is a miserable conversion in and of itself, period loss, and changes in my genitals that I would prefer not to discuss. All of these were euphoric to me, meaning they made me feel good and more like myself.
          3. I think that the best way for a man to understand a woman and vice-versa is to roleplay online as the opposite gender. For example, you may have noticed that people are more willing to help and harass you as a female character. Male characters mostly get ignored.
          4. I thought on this one for a while and couldn’t come up with a strong response that doesn’t just parrot the talking points of this community.
          5. I felt indifferent and uninterested in strip clubs before transitioning. I still feel the same way. They just seem like a bad time to me.
          6. Before transitioning I didn’t understand gender dynamics at all. I thought it was a level playing field and had no grasp on the many courtesies and dangers that women face that men do not, and vice-versa. It’s often frustrating to see people rag on men’s or women’s behavior/privilege/issues, because people rarely hit the mark on reality.

          I did also want to mention that one thing blew my mind - The way that the dynamics of a room change when it’s all men, versus when there’s a single woman in the room. With all men, it seems like guys relax and suddenly don’t feel the need to walk on eggshells. Social courtesies become significantly less important and men tend to communicate more directly. Next time you’re in a room of all men and a woman walks in, keep an eye out for the subtle differences in how men behave.

          • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            On your last point. Guys only get to be guys when around other guys, exclusively.

            Lots of women act like men aren’t right or they aren’t good enough when they actual normal and do normal guy shit.

            Guys wants to call each other a cunt and rip into each other and tell funny stories, it’s how they bond and trust each other. Girls don’t like that and think guys should stop it. Either the guys act normal to them and it goes to HR or they act normal to each other and the girl is pissed off she is treated differently and goes to HR. The only thing to do is to act completely professionally.

            Boys are just built different and I don’t think it’s fair that women always tell us and actual children how they should and shouldn’t act in a way that is against their nature.

            Guys are in dire need of male only spaces where they can shoot the shit. I only really had it in sports clubs or as a child, or luckily in some work environments. But work isn’t the same as outside so that’s sucks. Wish my knee wasn’t fucked.

            • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              1 year ago

              If you yearn for a male only space, check out the Freemasons. There’s something there for everyone, and it’s a great way to make friends later in life.

      • MakingWork@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Would you be able to answer some more questions please? I’m interested to hear more of your opinion and experience!

        1. Did you find as a man you are taken more seriously by employers and coworkers? Do you find your opinion became more valuable?
        2. What do you find are disadvantages of being a male?

        Thank you!

        • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago
          1. I did not find that people take me more seriously at work as a man. However, I work in tech and all companies I have worked are focused on ensuring that women have an equal place at the table. I imagine that other fields yield different results. – I did want to note that I had the opposite experience with healthcare. As a woman, doctors were less likely to take me seriously. As a man, they take anything I say to be the truth and trust me to make decisions.

          2. Disadvantages of being male are:

          • People are more reluctant to help you with anything and everything, as if he’s a man, so he’s got it.
          • Harder to date and socialize. It’s downright isolating at times.
          • Strangers are less likely to trust you.
          • There are fewer social programs to help men in need. I was homeless for a spell and there were no shelters for men, for example.
          • It’s much harder to get a job in tech as a man, because companies try to meet a gender quota despite most applicants being men.
          • Strangers are more likely to be violent towards men.
          • Must be careful around women so they don’t think I am a danger. For example, if walking at night and a woman is coming from the opposite direction I feel obligated to cross the street so they don’t think I’m going to attack or harass them.
          • Chunk@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago
            • It’s much harder to get a job in tech as a man, because companies try to meet a gender quota despite most applicants being men.

            I’ve worked at woke companies who fought tooth and nail to say that they didn’t give women special preference in interviews. You can’t deny statistics, though. If you have 40% women engineers but only 10% of applicants are women then of course it’s easier.

  • magnetosphere @beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’m a white, cis, heterosexual American male. I’m supposed to be privileged in every way, feel endlessly guilty over things I cannot control and try not to perpetuate, and never, ever dare suggest any kind of dissatisfaction with my situation.

    I wouldn’t know how to express my feelings the way the author has. I’d feel like a misogynistic neckbeard, callous racist, or ungrateful whiner. If, somehow, I didn’t feel these things, someone would quickly, loudly, and condescendingly remind me that I should. They’d then be applauded for putting me in my place.

    I can’t thank the author enough for writing this article.

    • homoludens@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I’m supposed to be privileged in every way, feel endlessly guilty over things I cannot control and try not to perpetuate, and never, ever dare suggest any kind of dissatisfaction with my situation.

      Why are you supposed to e.g. “feel endlessly guilty over things you cannot control”?

      • magnetosphere @beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        People who share some of my characteristics have historically done, and are currently doing, absolutely horrible things. Empathy with the victims isn’t enough for some. I’m part of the problem simply by being born, until I prove otherwise.

        I can’t blame people who feel some suspicion and resentment, either. It’s justified.

        • homoludens@feddit.de
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          I’m part of the problem simply by being born, until I prove otherwise.

          Again: who is saying that? I’m sure there are some people who do, but in my experience that’s a really tiny minority. And the majority of texts I read about e.g. (male) privilege explicitly state that being privileged does not mean you’re guilty or a bad person.

          I can’t blame people who feel some suspicion and resentment, either. It’s justified.

          I mean yeah, I can understand why a women might prefer to walk on the other side of the street from me at night. It hurts of course, but I understand it. That doesn’t mean I need to feel guilty about it though.

          • cnnrduncan@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            I’m not American but the minister for Family/Sexual Violence in my country publicly said that “it is white, cis men” who “cause[s] violence in the world”. Was pretty gutted to find out that my ex (cis woman) treating me like shit is entirely my own fault according to the MP who is supposed to represent all victims of family, sexual, and relationship violence.

  • simplecyphers@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    TIL my friendships with my bros are about 5x healthier than average.

    I read this thought it sounded super melodramatic and exaggerated. I guess it’s just more rare to have deep friendships with the boys. Looking back it got me thinking that I might be the weird one with friends that have deep conversations and know/worry about the others mental health.

    So i guess, to any guys that read this and felt like it could have been written about them: go out on a limb and talk to your friends. Chances are they want/need a more meaningful friendship too. They are also probably similarly apprehensive about opening up.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I’m with you. Guys are much easier to talk to about a lot of things.

      Though girls are easier in some ways.

      Talk to a girl about an insecurity and she will beat you with it. Worried about being small oh just join a gym even if you go all the time. Worried about being short, oh I wouldn’t ever dream of dating someone shorter than me but there are girls out there who are shorter than you so try with them. Worried about low pay, oh you will get paid more in the future and then you will have worth. Anything like that girls are awful.

      Missing something like a dead relative or ex. Girls tend to be better with that.

      If you feel sad or talk to girls if you feel vulnerable or want help solving a problem talk to boys.

  • Smk@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    It’s very interesting to have the view of a women that has transitioned to a men on the feeling side of things. I wonder how the transition is actually affecting his current relationship.

    My experience as a man does look like what he talks about however, it’s not as crazy as he is saying. His depiction of manhood feels almost satire to me. Almost all of my interaction with men, I feel safe enough to talk about my problems, my feelings and my opinions on things, both personal or not.

    Although, I am me and I do not represent all other men, It’s not untrue that men are lead to believe that they must be the one to shut up and provide for their community/family. Shut up and die for your family, you country. Shut up and do what you have to do. If you really do that, I think you just end up lonely, sad and probably really suicidal.

    • GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee
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      it’s not as crazy as he is saying. His depiction of manhood feels almost satire to me. Almost all of my interaction with men, I feel safe enough to talk about my problems, my feelings and my opinions on things, both personal or not.

      It’s spot on for me. 9/10 times I open up to other men, it’s either diminished, insulted, or ignored. I count 4 friends who’ve actually listened to me. 1 ghosted me some time later. 1 listened rarely, only after I listened to him for hours. The other 2 are true chads and I wish life hadn’t separated us.

      When I open up to women, it’s either insulted or saved and later used against me as manipulation.

      I just don’t anymore. Only people I talk to are therapists.

  • Ironfist@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    well, women also get more attention therefor they are less lonely. Just look at dating apps: women get flooded with likes and messages, but men… good luck getting a like and if you get one, good luck getting a conversation where you are not the only one putting some effort.

    • Crimsonknee@lemmy.world
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      Homie, this is quite a bad take particularly in the face of the article in question. One of the biggest things the author was talking about wasn’t quantity of relationships, but quality of relationships. Having first conversations with 50 odd men is not going to produce a quality relationship in which you can talk about significant worries in life, or work through feelings that are causing distress.

      • Ironfist@sh.itjust.works
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        but they dont get messages from only 50 year old men, do they? they get messages from a full spectrum of men. The only thing left to do is to choose. When you get to choose and if you know what to look for, you end up finding quality. When you dont get to choose, you either settle down or end up alone. Its offer and demand.

        • Crimsonknee@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          This article isn’t talking about romantic relationships. It’s talking about intimate platonic friendships and how as a man the author found those platonic relationships to be shallower than before he transitioned. This has nothing to do with online dating.

        • gapbetweenus@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          If you have a close female friend, just ask her to show you some highlight of dating app messages. Seriously a good way to start doubting the intelligence of human specie as a whole.

  • Tb0n3@sh.itjust.works
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    Men are also different from women. Not just physically but mentally. Part of the problem the writer had was not understanding how male friendships work and expecting a mirror of female friendships. Certainly it can be lonelier as a man but in some ways it’s just the way we are.

    You ain’t never had a friend.

    • spaduf@slrpnk.netOPM
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      I think the important thing here is that there’s absolutely no reason it HAS to be this way. These aren’t intrinsic properties of male and female friendships. They are driven primarily by cultural factors and have changed significantly even over recent history.

        • migo@lemmy.world
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          Where do you? Do you think that all societies in the world have the same culture as you?

          • Tb0n3@sh.itjust.works
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            I’m just saying the cultures arise from the people. There’s a reason things are the way they are and it’s not some evil corporation or government trying to oppress us. At least in the west. Can’t quite say that about China or other Communist regimes.

            • ThatWeirdGuy1001@sh.itjust.works
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              Things are the way they are because people are forced into the culture they were born into and are pressured at every angle to stay that way or face social backlash.

              I got called gay cause I got too excited while talking to one of my friends. Because it’s a common culture trait in America that any overly positive emotion towards another guy means your a sissy boy

              • Tb0n3@sh.itjust.works
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                They called you gay not because they thought you were homosexual but as an offhanded insult. The two definitions have been disconnected for quite a while.

                • darq@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  I mean, no, the definitions are not disconnected at all. Gay was used as an insult because it meant homosexual.

    • PeepinGoodArgs@reddthat.com
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      in some ways it’s just the way we are.

      Is it? What makes you think that our loneliness is inherent to us? How is it inherent to us?

      • Tb0n3@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I’m just saying that men in general have a much easier time being alone. I don’t think we should always be alone, but more men than women have the ability to be solitary and happy at the same time.

        • girlfreddy@sh.itjust.works
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          What if being solitary and happy has zero foundation in being a “man” but comes about from being rejected by society as the man one is?

    • bouh@lemmy.world
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      The problem is not about you. It’s about your ability to accept another man who wants a “female” friendship. And apparently you don’t want any of that, which makes you part of the problem.

      • Tb0n3@sh.itjust.works
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        I’m talking about a woman who wanted to physically be a man but is still mentally programmed as a woman could not understand male friendships. It’s not that men don’t have friends or deep friendships. It’s just that they’re usually different from the opposite gender.

    • fckreddit@lemmy.ml
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      Bro, I would do anything for long, deep hugs. I am unlucky enough to never have been hugged by anyone.

        • Default_Defect@midwest.social
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          Easily possible. Grow up somewhere with a lot of macho man mentality with a toxic masculine father figure that wants nothing more than for you to grow up to be their clone that only like MAN stuff. Took me over 30 years to be hugged the way I didn’t know i needed to be hugged because I fell into a friendship with a woman that knew a few broken men.