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What went wrong? Feminism and freedom from the prison of gender roles.


In his novel The Town Beyond the Wall, Elie Wiesel tells the story of a time when God and humans changed places and the human, now God, refused to revert to the original order. But after infinite amounts of time, "The past for one, and the present for the other, were too heavy to be borne." He continues, "As the liberation of the one was bound to the liberation of the other, they renewed the dialogue whose echoes come to us in the night, charged with hatred, with remorse, and most of all with infinite yearning. (1)

After thirty years of feminism, I look at the society in which I live. What has gone wrong? I ask myself. Though I wouldn't want to return to the situation women were placed in before this current feminist movement, it is also clear to me that many conditions of our lives have gotten worse, not better, since the onset of feminism. After thirty years of feminism, the culture is much speedier, much more materialistic, competitive, and aggressive. More people work longer hours in more isolating and alienating al·ien·ate  
tr.v. al·ien·at·ed, al·ien·at·ing, al·ien·ates
1. To cause to become unfriendly or hostile; estrange: alienate a friend; alienate potential supporters by taking extreme positions.
 conditions and friendship has become a major casualty of our lifestyle; no one has time for it. Women participate in this mad materialistic dash completely, fully. Women can do anything men can do. We can earn high salaries, work sixty or eighty hours a week, fly military airplanes, fight in the army with men. Sometimes it seems that all feminism has gotten us is that now women can be "men" too, can do just about everything that was once defined as the male gender role. But what about the virtues that go wi th what was once defined as the female gender role? Who takes care of them? Instead of freedom from the prison of gender roles, we have gained freedom from both the virtues and the defects of the female gender role while we-- both women and men as well as the entire culture--have become ever more enamored en·am·or  
tr.v. en·am·ored, en·am·or·ing, en·am·ors
To inspire with love; captivate: was enamored of the beautiful dancer; were enamored with the charming island.
 of the male gender role--and a fairly unsatisfying version of that role.

One day some years ago, as I contemplated my frustration with this situation, the phrase "the liberation of the one is bound to the liberation of the other" seared sear 1  
v. seared, sear·ing, sears

v.tr.
1. To char, scorch, or burn the surface of with or as if with a hot instrument. See Synonyms at burn1.

2.
 itself into my consciousness. It expresses very beautifully a Mahayana understanding of emptiness and interdependence. The whole Bodhisattva bodhisattva (bō'dĭsät`wə) [Sanskrit,=enlightenment-being], in early Buddhism the term used to refer to the Buddha before he attained supreme enlightenment; more generally, any being destined for enlightenment or intent on  path is built on the insight that if any one person is not free, then no one is free, that individual liberation is impossible. Either women and men are both free of the prison of gender roles or neither is free. That realization is followed by the recognition that dialogue, however painful it maybe, is the only way out.

I now use the word "feminism" less and less, not because I have given up on its ideals but because at present it seems better skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 means to use other words to convey its message. Nevertheless, my definition of feminism has remained the same for many years--"freedom from the prison of gender roles." I contend that most of the unnecessary suffering in human life, the suffering due to clinging, aggression, and bewilderment be·wil·der·ment  
n.
1. The condition of being confused or disoriented.

2. A situation of perplexity or confusion; a tangle: a bewilderment of lies and half-truths.

Noun 1.
 rather to birth, aging, sickness, and death, is due to the prison of gender roles, which is why freedom from that prison, not new reformed gender roles, is what we need. Clearly, my proposed definition of feminism is gender neutral and pertains to men as much as it does to women, but that vision has not been pursued in the same way by men as it has by women. Therefore, since liberation for all has not been achieved, liberation is quite limited. It is time to renew, or perhaps to start, a real dialogue about the prison of gender roles in which we discuss the reality that both the male and f emale gender roles are imprisoning and ask what we can do to free ourselves as a culture from an obsolete and dysfunctional definition of the male gender role that has become dangerous to human survival even as it has become more entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

v.tr.
1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

2.
 as a cultural ideal for both men and women.

However, I most adamantly am not advocating that the human variety which expresses itself in varying and multiple concepts of masculine and feminine gender be replaced by a monolithic unisexual human norm. That would also be a prison. By themselves, images of masculinity and femininity are not imprisoning: they are useful cultural constructs with which to discuss human options and possibilities. For example, in Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism Vajrayana Buddhism: see Tibetan Buddhism. , compassion is said to be "masculine" while wisdom is "feminine." These are culturally arbitrary associations: many in our culture would expect the opposite assignment. Their purpose is to talk about equally important, yet significantly different human ideals, not to talk about women and men. These associations do not lead to the ludicrous claim that only men can be compassionate and only women can be wise; in fact the ideal person would manifest both wisdom and compassion, the goal of much Vajrayana practice. What imprisons is the insistence that men must and should be only masculine while women must and should be only feminine, not the existence of gender symbolism. Especially imprisoning is a situation in which both sexes are confined by gender norms that are a caricature of human wholeness and prohibit mental-spiritual health and well-being, gender roles that promote mutual incompetence between women and men, as is the case with the traditional gender roles of our culture.

While extended discussion of conventional gender roles is impossible here, some generalizations help frame the discussion. Most introductory anthropology texts, especially older ones which more unconsciously reveal conventional gender expectations, would see the core of the female gender role as nurturing and the core of the male gender role as protection or defense. The task of providing should not be limited to one sex because familiar patterns of the male "breadwinner bread·win·ner  
n.
One whose earnings are the primary source of support for one's dependents.



bread·winning n.
" only hold in wage labor situations in which home and workplace are distinct and separate. However, for many North Americans North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
, "providing" was seen as a male task. Another valid generalization is that women often operate in a more limited private realm whereas public affairs Those public information, command information, and community relations activities directed toward both the external and internal publics with interest in the Department of Defense. Also called PA. See also command information; community relations; public information. , especially politics and public dimensions of religion, are in the hands of men. Going along with these tasks are stereotypical psychological traits which can be described positively or negatively, depending on the whims of those making the comments. The female gender rol e promotes competence in relationship skills, but cultural incompetence was also a norm for women. The male gender role promotes physical prowess and cultural competence cultural competence Social medicine The ability to understand, appreciate, and interact with persons from cultures and/or belief systems other than one's own  but male achievement usually has more to do with bravado bra·va·do  
n. pl. bra·va·dos or bra·va·does
1.
a. Defiant or swaggering behavior: strove to prevent our courage from turning into bravado.

b.
 than with sensitivity.

Part of the blame for what has happened regarding gender, despite thirty years of feminism, lies with some of the rhetoric employed by the women's movement women's movement: see feminism; woman suffrage.
women's movement

Diverse social movement, largely based in the U.S., seeking equal rights and opportunities for women in their economic activities, personal lives, and politics.
. A common way of stating what that movement is about is the call for women to be able to do whatever men can do or the claim that women are equally competent with men at most or all tasks or the push for women to have the same rights that men enjoy. But notice-that kind of rhetoric assumes that what men do and the way they are is the ideal and the norm toward which women should strive or which they should be allowed to attain.

It is easy to understand why this style of analysis dominated early feminist writing if one has had personal experience of being socialized so·cial·ize  
v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To place under government or group ownership or control.

2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable.
 to the conventional female gender role in the fifties and early sixties. Given the current tendency to dismiss feminism, those of us who are old enough to remember why feminism developed in the first place should write about our experiences of the mind-numbing cultural irrelevance ir·rel·e·vance  
n.
1. The quality or state of being unrelated to a matter being considered.

2. Something unrelated to a matter being considered.

Noun 1.
 which girls were expected to embrace in the fifties, a time when it was a tragedy if a girl needed to wear glasses because that marked her as too bookish book·ish  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or resembling a book.

2. Fond of books; studious.

3. Relying chiefly on book learning:
, and possibly too independent in mind and spirit, to be attractive to men, when it was assumed that women's main reason for going to college was to obtain that all-important "Mrs." degree. We need to remember how many of the "happy homemakers" of the fifties were so unhappy that they were maintained on valium; no one realized they had good and ample reasons to be unhappy. These are degraded circumstances in which to grow up and to live. In tha t environment, it is completely understandable that early feminist thought developed as it did. Nevertheless, this style of feminist rhetoric is just as androcentric an·dro·cen·tric  
adj.
Centered or focused on men, often to the neglect or exclusion of women: an androcentric view of history; an androcentric health-care system.
 as the male dominant laws and norms against which it is rebelling, with the result that women are freed from the female gender role to tale up the male gender role. But no one talks about the virtues of the female gender role or the down side, the destructive aspects, of male gender role.

When I ask my students about the negative side of the traditional female gender role, they come up with a long list. Feminism has thoroughly critiqued the traditional female gender role, and, as someone who avoided that role at all costs, I share that critique. However, the problems with the traditional female gender role are not the tasks assigned to it, which must be done, or the psychological traits associated with it, which are emotionally healthy, but the rigid way in which these tasks and traits were assigned to women alone, at the same time as women were confined only to those tasks and traits. Especially destructive of women's well-being was the demand that women should carry out their tasks and exhibit feminine traits in the private sphere The private sphere is the complement or opposite of the public sphere. Heidegger argues that it is only in the private sphere that one can be one's authentic self.

See also privacy.
 alone, thus condemning us to cultural irrelevance and incompetence. Part of that package included the demand that women would expend ex·pend  
tr.v. ex·pend·ed, ex·pend·ing, ex·pends
1. To lay out; spend: expending tax revenues on government operations. See Synonyms at spend.

2.
 their nurturing skills and energies in a nuclear family which they cared for emotionally and physically almost without male help, w hich isolated us and trivialized our competence.

Often my students can articulate much of this critique, but when I ask them about the downside of the male gender role, they draw a complete blank-silence. This silence masks three deeply rooted problems in our cultural psyche. One is lack of awareness that gender is a human phenomenon, not something that pertains to women alone. The second is a deeply rooted cultural preference for maleness over femaleness, probably due in part to religious symbol systems that contain deeply misogynist mi·sog·y·nist  
n.
One who hates women.

adj.
Of or characterized by a hatred of women.

Noun 1. misogynist - a misanthrope who dislikes women in particular
woman hater
 elements and personify per·son·i·fy  
tr.v. per·son·i·fied, per·son·i·fy·ing, per·son·i·fies
1. To think of or represent (an inanimate object or abstraction) as having personality or the qualities, thoughts, or movements of a living being:
 the most valued and ultimate symbols as masculine. The third is that, in the absence of discussions of gender as something that pertains to men, not just women, a dangerous and destructive version of the male gender role is emulated not only by men but also by women, even as it damages those who accept its hegemony.

One of the reasons I have become increasingly reluctant to give talks on women, feminism, or gender is men's long-standing refusal to recognize that these topics concern them and are relevant to them. As a result, the audience for such talks is usually about half the size it should be and consists mainly of women. But women really don't need to talk and think a lot about gender at this point in time. Many women have already done their homework on gender issues; it is men who need to catch up. I remember information relayed to me about one man at a dharma center who responded to the question about whether he would attend my upcoming program on women and Buddhism, "Now why would I be interested in that?" This from a man who has a wife and daughters! Even replacing the terms "women" or "feminism with the term "gender" does little to influence who attends these programs. With individual exceptions, men as a group have refused to take up their end of the issue of human genderedness, leaving it entirely up to wome n and continuing to foster the illusion that women are gendered but men are not. "Gender? Oh, you must be talking about someone else; I'm just a normal human being," seems to be the most common reaction by men to the topic of gender. I think it unlikely that we will get any further in finding freedom from the prison of gender roles until men begin to acknowledge and take seriously their own genderedness.

When this begins to happen, issues of gender oppression and gender justice can take their rightful place among other major social issues, such as the need to stem consumption and growth, to promote economic and racial justice, and to promote concern for the environment. Now, usually gender issues are placed somewhere else in the program, not regarded as significant enough to be billed alongside other major social issues. For example, recent books on various engaged Buddhist movements do not include chapters on Buddhist women's movements, though virtually every other topic in which Buddhist activists are engaged is covered. The books and chapters on gender and Buddhism are put into another category--a major conceptual mistake in my view. But it perpetuates the tendency of men not to want to talk about gender, to regard themselves as unencumbered Unencumbered

Property that is not subject to any creditor claims or liens.

Notes:
For example, if a house is owned free and clear (meaning the owner owes no mortgage to anyone), it is unencumbered.
 by gender, unlike women.

I would argue as strongly as I can that these presuppositions and reactions about human genderedness are rooted in a deep cultural preference for the cultural construct of maleness over the cultural construct of femaleness, which is why women want to act like men, but men don't want to act like women. It is so much more acceptable for a woman to take on "masculine" traits and tasks than for a man to take on "feminine" tasks and traits. Surely that prejudice exposes deep cultural misogyny misogyny /mi·sog·y·ny/ (mi-soj´i-ne) hatred of women.

mi·sog·y·ny
n.
Hatred of women.



mi·sog
. Nothing more cogently co·gent  
adj.
Appealing to the intellect or powers of reasoning; convincing: a cogent argument. See Synonyms at valid.



[Latin c
 demonstrates the pervasiveness of these patterns than the fact that women now wear trousers everywhere with impunity IMPUNITY. Not being punished for a crime or misdemeanor committed. The impunity of crimes is one of the most prolific sources whence they arise. lmpunitas continuum affectum tribuit delinquenti. 4 Co. 45, a; 5 Co. 109, a.  while men never even think about the convenience and comfort of wearing skirts in certain situations. Forget about the fact that men have worn skirts in many cultures historically, or that famous male religious leaders still wear skirts. Skirts (assuming that they are long and full) simply are more comfortable for some activities including most seated activities, than are pants, and they are infinitely cooler. Think of the energy wasted on extra air-conditioning that could be saved! But, when I point out how this fear of and distaste for things female inhibits and limits men, the response is usually that I'm crazy "I'm Crazy" is a short story written by J. D. Salinger in 1945 for Collier's magazine. From all his short stories involving Holden Caulfield, this one is most similar to Catcher In The Rye, as it simply recounts well-known scenes with Mr.  to suggest that men might take up the practice of wearing skirts.

In my own classes, once in a great while, an unconventional, and usually a gay man might wear a skirt to my class on women and religion for one evening. In North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , the only situation in which I have seen men regularly wearing skirts was at Tassajara Zen Monastery during the summer tourist season Tourist Season is a novel written in 1986 by Carl Hiaasen. It is set in and around Miami, Florida. Bookjacket tagline
The only trace of the first victim was his Shriner's fez washed up on the Miami beach.
. There students work in torrid conditions without air conditioning air conditioning, mechanical process for controlling the humidity, temperature, cleanliness, and circulation of air in buildings and rooms. Indoor air is conditioned and regulated to maintain the temperature-humidity ratio that is most comfortable and healthful. , taking care of tourists who flock to the mountain retreat to partake of its sulfur hot springs. In return, they earn credits to participate in the practice periods that occur during the winter season. These young men frequently wore skirts. They were proud that they were so sensible, proud of their deviance from conventional cultural norms, proud that they had already thought to engage in this gender bending practice before I mentioned my usual proof that men are much more stuck in the prison of gender roles than are women, and that maleness is far more acceptable culturally than is femaleness. (Paradoxically, these two seemingly opposite real ities go together.) Imagine my surprise and delight when, while watching coverage of the Samoan color guard engaging in the last lowering of the colors for the last millennium, I witnessed an army in skirts. At first glance, I saw only dark legs below light skirts and immediately thought that there must be women in this color party. Close up footage made it quite clear that these skirt-wearing, gun-toting soldiers were men.

The issue of who gets to wear skirts, by itself, is somewhat facetious. The larger point is that we have no dearth of women taking on male traits in our time. But there has been no corresponding eagerness on the part of men to escape the prison of the male gender role and take on some of healthier and more sane human traits that have stereotypically been associated with women. Not only do men not usually wear skirts; they also rarely take paternity leave paternity leave
n.
A leave of absence from work granted to a father to care for an infant.

paternity leave ncongé m de paternité

paternity leave 
 or work professionally with young children, and they often are not as comfortable with or competent in the vital human tasks of relating and nurturing. Herein, I would suggest, lies much of the malaise malaise /mal·aise/ (mal-az´) a vague feeling of discomfort.

mal·aise
n.
A vague feeling of bodily discomfort, as at the beginning of an illness.
 of our times. But when I suggest that the greatest need vis-a-vis gender issues is for men to become more feminine, most men look radically uncomfortable. I see their eyes shifting about, looking above my head and behind my back, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 an "exit" sign. Failing to find it, they look as if they may become sick in the very near future. What is it that makes men so uncomfortable with their own unacknowledged and unsought femininity? Why is it such an insult to a man to be labeled "feminine" while the reverse is rarely true? Can the cause be anything other than a deeply entrenched cultural prejudice for masculinity and against femininity? For women to gain their human rights will not, by itself, undo this deep and destructive prejudice. Instead, as women have freed themselves from the prison of the female gender role and taken up many tasks and traits traditionally associated with men, so men need to free themselves from the prison of the male gender role and take up tasks and traits traditionally associated with women. In fact, it could be claimed that women have successfully integrated masculinity into their personas and lifestyles; it is men who are trailing behind in their self-inflicted prison of fear and avoidance of anything feminine in themselves.

When we come finally to examine this masculinity that men so jealously guard from the taint taint

an unpleasant odor and flavor in a human foodstuff of animal origin. Caused by the ingestion of the substance, commonly a plant such as Hexham scent, or while in storage, e.g. milk stored with pineapples, or as a result of animal metabolism, e.g. boar taint.
 of femininity and the male gender role that women so eagerly seek and imitate, what do we find? Granted, they confer independence and privilege, qualities that women want as much as men. But the rest of it? The violence and competitiveness that are so prevalent in many contemporary images of masculinity, especially in media and popular culture, are decidedly unattractive and destructive, both for individuals and for society. Even if we look past the Rambo images so popular in movies and comic books comic book

Bound collection of comic strips, usually in chronological sequence, typically telling a single story or a series of different stories. The first true comic books were marketed in 1933 as giveaway advertising premiums.
 as merely psychological release rather than role models for men, we mainly see images of successful businessmen and politicians--and that success demands extreme competitiveness and hyper-activity (an extremely long work week with little attention to friends and family). As Allen Ginsberg Noun 1. Allen Ginsberg - United States poet of the beat generation (1926-1997)
Ginsberg
 once said to me, "Being a man in this culture means needing to have it up all the time." What men, and those who aspire to aspire to
verb aim for, desire, pursue, hope for, long for, crave, seek out, wish for, dream about, yearn for, hunger for, hanker after, be eager for, set your heart on, set your sights on, be ambitious for
 the male gende r role, take on is astounding a·stound  
tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds
To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise.



[From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen,
; what we, as a culture do to men and to surrogate men, is inhumane in·hu·mane  
adj.
Lacking pity or compassion.



inhu·manely adv.
, though no more inhumane than what was done to women under the gender conventions that held before feminism. Men have relatively few role models of men who are both gentle and competent, not because such men do not exist but because they are not idealized i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 in our speedy, competitive, hyper-masculine culture--a culture that focuses upon and instead idealizes the most problematic aspects of the male gender role. Why not have men like the Dalai Lama Dalai Lama (dä`lī lä`mə) [Tibetan,=oceanic teacher], title of the leader of Tibetan Buddhism. Believed like his predecessors to be the incarnation of the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, 1935–, , Martin Luther King, or Gandhi as male culture heroes and icons of highly accomplished masculinity, rather than athletes, lawyers, businessmen and generals?

Lest I be accused of simply overdrawing this stark portrait of the male gender role, I have gathered items not intended to discuss gender, but which reveal gender stereotypes quite well, from popular media. A Newsweek article about a successful investment banker Investment Banker

A person representing a financial institution that is in the business of raising capital for corporations and municipalities.

Notes:
An investment banker may not accept deposits or make commercial loans.
 who suddenly left his position spells out the competitiveness and lack of concern for relationship skills that are the norm for men.

In the macho arena where Lee thrived, he knew that talking about family values family values
pl.n.
The moral and social values traditionally maintained and affirmed within a family.
 could brand him at best a wimp and at worst a liar. "In the power alleys of Wall Street and the East Coast, it's not manly to admit that work/family is an issue," Lee shrugs.

"In fact, the manly thing to say is 'I don't have a life and I'm proud of it.'" (2)

The local newspaper runs frequent columns in which high school students review movies. Comments about the movie "Gladiator gladiator

(Latin; swordsman)

Professional combatant in ancient Rome who engaged in fights to the death as sport. Gladiators originally performed at Etruscan funerals, the intent being to give the dead man armed attendants in the next world.
" by a young man and a young woman spell out the male love affair with violence. The young woman wrote that the movie did not appeal to her because it was about three things: "Violence, violence, and more violence." She goes on: "Perhaps I didn't like 'Gladiator' because I'm a girl. I suppose that is why my male colleague could not find anything wrong with 'Gladiator' and was astonished a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 that I thought otherwise." She points out that the movie's elaborate killings generated the most audience approval, expressed in the form of "excited bellows." "This was especially true with the men seated behind me exclaiming with laughter every time a gladiator was sliced in two or dismembered." (3)

When I ask my students to think about the disadvantages of the traditional male gender role, a few people sometimes mention their typical inability to be involved with young children and their frequent difficulty with feelings and emotions. Almost no one mentions the expectation for men to be soldiers, probably the stereotypical male work throughout much of recent history, as a negative aspect of the male gender role. Yet most defenders of rigid and stricfly segregated gender roles posit both the necessity of military activity and the need for men to take charge of this activity. Men need to be aggressive and territorial because defense (offense) is assigned to men for biological reasons. And that is the end of the story, many claim. Yet the logic defies me. "From what am I, a woman, being defended that requires such destructive traits to be socialized into men?" I must ask. Ninety-nine percent of the time, the answer comes down to "Other men!" whatever other verbal slights of hand may attempt to disguise thi s reality. What a waste of human ability! Channeling the toughness required for military success into economic or legal competitiveness and victory does litfle to alleviate the damage done, both to individuals and to society, when toughness and winning are all that matters.

We should also note that this version of male gender role, focusing on military prowess, physical superiority, and beating everyone else is actually neither very Christian nor very Buddhist, (nor, for that matter, in accord with the values of most other great religions). The spiritually mature practitioner of any tradition would rarely, if ever, be described in such terms. (This is not to suggest that the traditional female gender role is any closer to the traditions' ideals, as is sometimes argued by those who explain women's exclusion from many religious practices by saying that women in their traditional submissive sub·mis·sive  
adj.
Inclined or willing to submit.



sub·missive·ly adv.

sub·mis
 and passive roles already embody religious ideals.)

One of the greatest problems in proceeding further in dealing with these issues is that critiquing cultural ideals of masculinity or the stereotypical male gender role is culturally unacceptable. The excesses of gender feminists, with their notions of female superiority, have contributed to this situation, but men have also become quite defensive about feminism's legitimate complaints concerning male gender privilege. In such an environment, discussions about what's wrong ethically and psychologically with the stereotypical behaviors In animals, a stereotypical behavior or stereotypy is a repetitive motor behavior without obvious purpose or function. It is considered an abnormal behavior and is sometimes seen in captive animals, particularly those held in small enclosures with little opportunity to  of those who take on the male gender role, whether they are men or women, are likely to be evaluated as "men-bashing" or as blaming men for everything that's wrong with human civilization. But, to understand my arguments, it is critical to distinguish between men and masculitnity or the male gender role. I am talking about cultural definitions of masculinity and about what men do with their maleness, not men, per se. It is quite possible to be horrified hor·ri·fy  
tr.v. hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing, hor·ri·fies
1. To cause to feel horror. See Synonyms at dismay.

2. To cause unpleasant surprise to; shock.
 about cultural constructs of the male gender role without being anti-men, hating men, or blaming them for all human woes. Men in general, though not every individual, could perhaps be criticized for being too addicted ad·dict·ed
adj.
1. Physiologically or psychologically dependent on a habit-forming substance.

2. Compulsively or habitually involved in a practice or behavior, such as gambling.
 to cultural definitions of masculinity and for lacking a critical perspective about those definitions. That is vastly different from criticizing men for being men, from men-bashing.

Whether or not individual men manifest these traits, many of the traits associated with men or socialized into men, are just plain stupid, as are many of the traits of the conventional female gender role, of course. It is stupid not to ask for directions when lost and it is stupid to be reluctant to go to a doctor. It is stupid and self-destructive to thrive on violence and it is stupid and self destructive to work such long hours that one does not know one's children. It is stupid and self-destructive to refuse to become relationally competent. Yet criticizing these tendencies is culturally taboo because criticizing the expectations placed on men or others who fill the conventional male gender role is confused with being anti-men. But such stances are actually radically pro-men. Such expectations should not be placed on people because they happen to be men. Nor does requiring those qualities in women who want to be free of the liabilities of the traditional female gender role address the fundamental problem s surrounding gender in our time and place.

Another way of talking about the cultural malaise in a situation in which everyone tries to emulate the conventional male gender role is to point to a dearth of "feminine" energy and skills, especially those having to do with care-taking. No one wants to take the time to nurture and befriend be·friend  
tr.v. be·friend·ed, be·friend·ing, be·friends
To behave as a friend to.


befriend
Verb

to become a friend to

Verb 1.
 anyone--children, other adults, community life, civic projects. The arts and humanities, which nurture an interesting and meaningful human life, go unsupported while fields that enhance 'technology," economics, or militarism Militarism
See also Soldiering.

Adrastus

leader of the Seven against Thebes. [Gk. Myth.: Iliad]

Siegfried

killed many enemies; led many troops to victory. [Ger. Lit. Nibelungenlied]
 flourish.

If the problem is too much "masculine" energy and not enough "feminine" energy, the solution is not to pull women out of the classrooms, courtrooms, boardrooms and other places where "public" work is done to send them back to the private world of nurseries and kitchens, as many who decry de·cry  
tr.v. de·cried, de·cry·ing, de·cries
1. To condemn openly.

2. To depreciate (currency, for example) by official proclamation or by rumor.
 what feminism has done to the culture suggest. That would only put us deeper into the prison of gender roles, not free us from excessive pursuit of the male gender role. If anything, rather than confining the nurturing and relationship skills associated with the female gender role to the private sphere, we need to infuse in·fuse
v.
1. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles.

2. To introduce a solution into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes.
 the public arena with these skills and see both men and women exhibiting these skills.

What would it take for that to happen? I suggest that only a massive defection from the conventional male gender role by men, parallel to women's defection from the conventional female gender role over the last thirty years, will bring us a more humane society A humane society is a group that aims to stop animal suffering due to cruelty or other reasons. Examples
Examples of humane societies include: The Humane Society of the United States, Peninsula Humane Society, American Humane which was founded in 1877 as a network of
. I do not believe that women can do much more to solve the cultural malaise surrounding gender. Many women have become much more androgynous an·drog·y·nous  
adj.
1. Biology Having both female and male characteristics; hermaphroditic.

2. Being neither distinguishably masculine nor feminine, as in dress, appearance, or behavior.
, in the sense of combining positive elements of both the male and the female gender roles, than have most men. I suggest that much of our continuing discontent over gender stems from the fact that most men have not taken their own genderedness seriously, have not taken seriously the project of attaining freedom from the prison of gender roles, and have not become more feminine in the same way as women have become more masculine. "The liberation of the one is bound to the liberation of the other."

As I have already indicated, most men look for an escape route or look as if they will become ill when I make the suggestions that men need to own their genderedness, look into the negativities of the conventional male gender role, and take on certain "feminine" traits and tasks. Rather quickly an appeal is made to "hard-wiring" and the Y chromosome Y chromosome,
n a sex chromosome that in humans and many other species is present only in the male, appearing singly in the normal male. It is carried as a sex determinant by one half of the male gametes. None of the female gametes contain a Y chromosome.
. Competitiveness, aggression, and lack of relationship skills are all built into they chromosome, I am told. We know that higher levels of testosterone testosterone (tĕstŏs`tərōn), principal androgen, or male sex hormone. One of the group of compounds known as anabolic steroids, testosterone is secreted by the testes (see testis) but is also synthesized in small quantities in the  do make people, not just men, more prone to aggression. But the words "more prone" indicate a high level of cultural complicity. The Buddhist distinction between innate and acquired afflictive af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 emotions (kleshas) would be useful here. Men, on average, probably do have more innate aggressiveness than do most women. But both men and women will be more tolerant of aggression and competitiveness in a culture that values these traits over gentleness and friendliness and both women and men will pursue them. The "hard-wir ing" argument is often a handy excuse for not doing the psychological and spiritual hard work that genuine growth and change require, especially if that growth contradicts socialization socialization /so·cial·iza·tion/ (so?shal-i-za´shun) the process by which society integrates the individual and the individual learns to behave in socially acceptable ways.

so·cial·i·za·tion
n.
 and cultural values. But it should not take too much thought to realize that "Gladiator"-type violence is not conducive to a peaceful, non-violent society. I find it difficult to believe that young men are condemned to relish such violence by virtue of their Y chromosome rather than by virtue of a culture that tolerates violence and rewards competitiveness. Nor do I think it is too much to expect of men that they would turn their backs on such violence, as well as on the lifestyle of "not having a life and being proud of it." The more stereotypically "feminine" reactions to both these examples are simply more humane and more sane. There is no good reason for men to shun Shun

In Chinese mythology, one of the three legendary emperors, along with Yao and Da Yu, of the golden age of antiquity (c. 23rd century BC), singled out by Confucius as models of integrity and virtue.
 them because they are culturally associated with "femininity."

I have a friend, who happens to be a man, with whom I regularly walk. We have spent many walks talking about gender. We also talk about emotional maturity. One day, he said to me, "You know, Rita, most men eventually do make it to emotional maturity, but, damn it DAMN IT

acronym for a clinical investigation plan, based on probable pathophysiologic causes of the disease present. It consists of Degenerative, developmental; Allergic, autoimmune; Metabolic, mechanical; Nutritional, neoplastic; I
, it takes most of us twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 longer than it takes most women. Why is that?" The only reply that makes sense to me is "Because men can get away with delayed emotional maturity." Having employment and girlfriends does not seem to be connected with emotional maturity for men and so men have little incentive to develop themselves emotionally until their own pain brings them to a breaking point. This is one of the many disadvantages of the conventional male gender role.

In suggesting that men need to defect from the conventional male gender role and become more "feminine," I realize that I am suggesting a cultural tectonic tectonic /tec·ton·ic/ (tek-ton´ik) pertaining to construction.  plate shift. But I am not suggesting something impossible. We know that because of the way in which women have defected from the traditional female gender role in the last thirty years. It is often said that our culture does not support men making the kinds of changes for which I am calling, but our culture did not support the changes women were making in the early days of the current feminist movement either. We made those changes anyway. Women's lives have changed radically in the last thirty years. Even religiously conservative women now espouse beliefs that were once considered radical: that women should work outside the home if they want to, that women should be able to have any job for which they are qualified, including supervising men, that women should have equal pay for equal work, that there is no problem with women making more money than their husbands. I certainly would be the last person to contend that men are incapable of doing what women have done. Certainly men can do everything that women can in the realms of culture, psychology, and spirituality. Women have critiqued and transcended conventional gender expectations. Surely men can do the same!

As always, vision is easier than practicality. It is easy to imagine what could happen if society were to defect from its current version of the male gender role; it is more difficult to figure out what practices would encourage that defection. Furthermore, I believe that men are the only ones who can do much of that work. For women to try to coach men too much in this undertaking would be arrogant and inappropriate. All they should need from us is some cultural analysis, a challenge, and encouragement as well as emotional support. As with every significant cultural revolution, this tectonic cultural plate shift would happen only because of deep internal psychological, moral, and spiritual changes, individual by individual.

But one suggestion may be appropriate. Just as women studies and women's groups worked so well for women, men studies and men's groups, both of which are already somewhat developed, should work for men. Just as women often complained, when the generic masculine was the norm, that we couldn't tell when we were included as humans and when we were excluded as women, I believe confusion between maleness and the human norm has limited men from understanding their experiences specifically as men. Rather than being suspicious of men studies and men's groups, I would suggest that women should encourage them, so long as it is clear that such activities do not replace or substitute for women studies and women's groups and their purpose is not to blame women, especially mothers, for whatever problems men encounter. We have reached a stage where three closely interrelated in·ter·re·late  
tr. & intr.v. in·ter·re·lat·ed, in·ter·re·lat·ing, in·ter·re·lates
To place in or come into mutual relationship.



in
 but distinctive disciplines are needed-men studies, women studies and gender studies. That development would help us find something closer to true "fr eedom from the prison of gender roles." That is only one suggestion. Many others are needed. But given that "the liberation of the one is bound to the liberation of the other," I call for us to "renew the dialogue whose echoes come to us in the night, charged with hatred, with remorse, and most of all with infinite yearning."

This essay was first delivered at the International Buddhist-Christian Studies Conference in Tacoma, Washington in August 2000.

Notes

(1.) Elie Wiesel, The Town Beyond the Wall trans. Stephen Becker (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Avon Books, 1969). p. 190. See also Carol P. Christ's feminist quotation and retelling re·tell·ing  
n.
A new account or an adaptation of a story: a retelling of a Roman myth. 
 of this story in her book Laughter of Aphrodite Aphrodite (ăfrədī`tē), in Greek religion and mythology, goddess of fertility, love, and beauty. Homer designated her the child of Zeus and Dione. : Reflections on a Journey to the Goddess, (San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden : Harper and Row, 1987), pp. 20-1.

(2.) Newsweek, June 12, 2000, p. 56.

(3.) Eau Claire Eau Claire (ō klâr), city (1990 pop. 56,856), seat of Eau Claire co., W central Wis., on the Chippewa at the mouth of the Eau Claire River, in a hilly lake region; inc. 1872.  Leader-Telegram, Thursday May 18, 2000, Section C,

Rita M. Gross is a scholar-practitioner who teaches Shambhala Buddhism The term Shambhala Buddhism has come into use as an umbrella term referring to the teachings of Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lineages of Tibetan Buddhism, mixed with the various Shambhalian teachings and practices revealed by the Vidyadhara Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche (the 11th Trungpa  and writes about many topics pertaining per·tain  
intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains
1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident.

2.
 to Buddhism, gender and religion, and interfaith relations. She is the author of many books and articles including Religions Feminism and the Future of the Planet: A Buddhist Christian Conversation and the forthcoming Christians Talk about Buddhist Meditation Buddhist meditation encompasses a variety of meditation techniques that develop mindfulness, concentration, tranquility and insight. Core meditation techniques are preserved in ancient Buddhist texts and have proliferated and diversified through the millennia of teacher-student : Buddhists Talk about Christian Prayer.
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Date:Mar 22, 2003
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