Opinion Being a good father means rethinking masculinity

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Being a good father means rethinking masculinity​

Michael Ian Black on how to raise better men.

As Father’s Day approaches, I’ve been thinking a lot about my experiences as a dad and how rewarding — and confounding — they can be. Which is why a recent book by Michael Ian Black, called A Better Man: A (Mostly Serious) Letter to My Son, captured my attention.

Black is a comedian, writer, and actor who you likely know from his roles in Wet Hot American Summer, The State, and Stella. His book — published in 2020 and now out in paperback — is a revealing piece of writing, one that walks the line between funny and serious and never strays too far from its core purpose: Black’s attempt to talk to his college-age son about what it means to be a good man in a culture that seems very confused about masculinity.

A month ago, I invited Black onto Vox Conversations to talk about his book and many other things. But then a few days before we recorded, 19 children and two teachers were gunned down in yet another mass shooting by a young man in Uvalde, Texas.

Michael’s son was a student at an elementary school right by Sandy Hook when that massacre happened in 2012. After the Parkland shooting in 2018, Black decided to write this book and explore why boys — and it’s almost entirely boys — are committing these acts of mass violence.

For obvious reasons, the tragedy in Texas loomed over the entire conversation. But we also tried to step back and reflect on a bigger question: What the hell is going on with young men in America? We discuss our own struggles to define masculinity, why so many American men have such a hard time asking for help, and how we, as fathers of boys, can be better examples for our sons.

Below is an excerpt, edited for length and clarity. As always, there’s much more in the full podcast, so listen and follow Vox Conversations on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Sean Illing​

So I had a vague idea of what this conversation would be like, and then the shooting in Texas happened. This is obviously something you’ve dealt with and, well, here we are again. What do you make of it?

Michael Ian Black​

I’m not surprised that this happened. I’m not surprised that there was another shooting at an elementary school. Just as I wasn’t surprised when there was a shooting at a grocery store the week before, and at a church a few days before that. These events no longer surprise me. They continue to outrage me. Because we’re not doing anything about it.

We’re debating doors today. I don’t feel like doors are the problem. I feel like I’m okay with doors. In fact, I’ll go even further: I’ll say the more doors, the better. I’m willing to go all-in for doors.

What I’m not willing to do is go all-in for guns and this insane weaponry that we just make available to whoever wants it. Now, I understand that there are certain restrictions on quickly acquiring weaponry in some parts of the country. Not in Texas, where the governor signed a bill saying, Hey, if you’re 18, you want to buy a weapon of war, go ahead. We’re not gonna throw up any roadblocks to impede your progress on your journey to a massacre. We’re Texas. We want you to have as many guns and ammunition as you wish.

So I’m sick of talking about guns. And I feel like I would be talking about them a lot less if fewer people were getting shot by them.

Sean Illing​

There are so many conversations happening now — about gun control, about the Second Amendment, about congressional inaction — but I want to focus on boys and fatherhood and why these kinds of shootings seem to be the exclusive work of men, often young men. You say in the book that you can see how a certain kind of masculinity “can nudge a teetering psyche toward violence.” What do you mean?

Michael Ian Black​

It is true that these acts are committed almost exclusively by boys and young men. Off the top of my head, I can think of none that have been committed by women. There may be some examples of that, but I certainly can’t think of any. Why is that? It’s obviously a complicated question.

The first thing you have to do is break it down into two categories. Is there something biological that impels boys to commit violence? And is there something sociological that compels boys to commit violence?

The answer to the first question is, I think, yes. I think there is something biological. I think we understand that testosterone does in fact lead toward more aggression. It doesn’t necessarily follow that because you have more testosterone in your body, you’re going to commit acts of violence. And in fact, so much of our culture is organized around trying to control aggression. That’s maybe what culture is in some ways.

I think it gets very nuanced when we get into the sociological question. And this is why we have to take a deep dive into what it means to be a man in the culture.

Sean Illing​

What it often means to be a man, in our culture at least, is to bury our feelings, to not admit vulnerability. We live in such a hollow society, where so many of us don’t have real community. We live in our heads, we live in the virtual world, and there’s so much resentment that just build and builds and we have all these young men exploding in slow-motion and their inner turmoil is hidden and probably inexpressible for a lot of them and we just keep paying the price for it with the blood of children.

Michael Ian Black​

So much of what it means to be a guy historically has been about never admitting weakness, never admitting fear, never admitting vulnerability. And not having the tools or the vocabulary to open up.

Generally, there are two acceptable emotional reactions for a lot of guys: anger and withdrawal. And I think we see that in so many of these shooters. You hear people say, “Oh, he was a quiet kid. He was so quiet.” Well, yeah. What do you think that is? That’s somebody retreating into themselves because they don’t know how to ask for help. They don’t know how to communicate. They don’t know how to receive or express empathy.

Yet there’s clearly something broken with these dudes. That’s why so many politicians go, “Whoa, he was crazy. This is just a lone wolf.” So we can write off all the mass shooters as crazy and just dismiss them. Fine, go ahead. But they’re not the problem. It’s the day-to-day gun violence. It is the domestic violence. It is the suicides. It is the accidental discharges. It’s the easy access to firearms. It’s the family disputes. It’s the retaliatory gunfire when somebody feels dissed — it’s all this bullshit.

So we have to look at how we’re raising boys. What you said is right, they don’t know how to express themselves. And one easy way to do it is with a gun. The lack of community is a big part of it, too, which ties into lack of purpose, which ties into lack of self-identity.

Sean Illing​

Partly because of where I grew up, there’s something deep in me that balks at some of this talk about toxic masculinity. And this question of vulnerability and toughness is such a hard one for me. I have to say, you made me think about my own father, who I love dearly and who is still a very huge part of my life.

He’s a product of that “army of one” mentality you talk about, where toughness is almost by definition the opposite of vulnerability. I’ve probably internalized a ton of that; it’s part of me. There’s something noble in the idea of self-reliance and we’ll get to it, but I do think the discomfort a lot of us have with vulnerability can be a real handicap.

Michael Ian Black​

I understand why a lot of men recoil from thinking too deeply about their own masculinity. They recoil from the term “toxic masculinity.” And it’s because toxic masculinity in some ways has become a catchall phrase that just sometimes means masculinity. And masculinity isn’t toxic. There’s so much about what men have historically done that’s great. There’s a lot that’s great about being strong and being tough and enduring tough times and keeping a stiff upper lip. There’s a lot that’s awesome about that. We need that and we should celebrate it.

However, there are times in everybody’s life when being an army of one isn’t particularly constructive. There’s a reason that armies, when they train, they don’t train you to be an army of one. They train you to work as a cohesive unit. It’s because you rely on each other to get shit done. You need to rely on each other to get shit done.

So, absolutely, be tough, but there are going to be moments where you’re going to need help. And it requires a lot of self-confidence and toughness to say, “I need help in this moment.”

There’s a flip side to this. I feel like men are romantic in lots of ways. We have romantic ideas about our solitude. We have romantic ideas about going off to fight battles. We have romantic ideas about love. I don’t think it’s hard for men to give love. I think we come up short when it comes to receiving love. To receive love, you have to let down your guard. You have to be vulnerable.

Sean Illing​

I’ll read a quote from your book if you don’t mind: “Men feel isolated, confused, and conflicted about our own natures. Many feel that the very qualities that used to define men — strength, aggression, and independence — are no longer wanted or needed. Many others never felt strong or aggressive or independent to begin with. We don’t know how to be, and we’re terrified.”

There’s a lot going on there, and I’m not entirely sure what I think about it. There are definitely dueling pressures for men today to be both assertive and confident and also sensitive and empathetic, and while I do think those are mutually compatible, I know that you think that the confusion here is harmful.

Michael Ian Black​

Fifty years ago, if you talked about a girl or a woman as being strong or independent or tough, you’d have thought of her in some ways as being less feminine because of those attributes. But we don’t think of girls that way anymore. In fact, we celebrate their strength. We celebrate their independence. We celebrate their toughness. Because we understand that in elevating those parts of their personalities, we are not diminishing the other parts of their personalities that are more traditionally feminine.

There’s no reason we can’t expand the definition of masculinity the same way we have with femininity. The conversations about what it means to be a woman have yielded tremendous results. We see women entering all facets of society. It has not meant that they can’t be wives and mothers as well, if that’s what they choose to be. We’ve seen how girls are just thriving as a result of these conversations, these generational conversations. And we applaud it, rightly.

Well, it’s time to have those same conversations with boys. And again, they’re generational conversations. This isn’t shit that’s just going to change overnight. They don’t know what their place is. And I’m saying there are ways to lift men and boys up. And to give them a renewed sense of purpose in the culture.

That purpose can involve all of the traditional attributes that men have. It can involve their strength and their toughness and their pride and their aggression and their endurance. And it can also involve their compassion, their natural empathy, their vulnerability, their creativity — all of it.

There is not one set of characteristics that make a girl, nor is there one set of characteristics that make a boy. But there are a certain set of characteristics that make a human and we all share them.

Sean Illing​

You tell your son that one of the greatest gifts he gave you was “coming to you for comfort.” That resonates so much with my experience. The act of caring for my son, who’s about to turn 3, changing his diapers, rocking him to sleep, taking baths with him — I don’t think I’ve ever felt more satisfied as a man as I feel in those moments. I mean, I feel more manly than I would wrestling a fucking alligator. And I never would have imagined that before I became a dad.

You don’t have to become a dad to have that revelation, but it was a revelation for me. I learned that I could find such joy and pride in caring for another human being. And I needed the experience of being a dad to have that — maybe other people don’t, but I needed it.

Michael Ian Black​

The thing that made you feel most paternal was performing the acts that are most traditionally maternal. The thing that made you feel most like a man are the things that are most commonly associated with being a woman. Why is that? I would argue that it’s because it allowed you to open a door into the fullness of who you are as a person.

People want to give comfort. People want to give aid. People want to give love and compassion. And as a parent, that suddenly that becomes your job. You realize, “Holy shit, this was a part of me all along and I needed this. I needed this — for lack of a better word — excuse to just be a human being.” And it feels great. It feels great when you’re finally able to do that. And to do it without apology, without self-consciousness. And don’t feel yourself diminished in any way as a man, because you’re performing your job as a father.

Well, you can apply that to the rest of your life. How good does it feel when you help somebody across the street? It feels fucking great. How good does it feel when you help somebody dig their car out of a snowbank? It’s awesome. We’re made to help other people. That’s a big part of who we all are.

To hear the rest of the conversation, click here, and be sure to subscribe to Vox Conversationson Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
 
Well there's no one I want to dictate gun control policy more than a guy whose most notable work is being a talking head on VH1's I Love the 80's.

Also if your son is college-aged and doesn't know what it is to be a man by now, you've failed as a father.
 
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Being able to react more thoughtfully than anger or withdrawal is a very good thing to be able to do. It also doesn’t preclude being a manly man in any way at all and it’s not what they’re talking about here - this wanting to emasculate men and boys is grim. Just like women are being shamed if they want to just be maternal. It’s not an honest agenda.

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,
And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise:

If you can dream—and not make dreams your master;
If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breathe a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: ‘Hold on!’

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings—nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And—which is more—you’ll be a Man, my son!
 
I may be wrong, but this is the internet and if some idiots get to talk with authority, then I can too. You know what bridged the gap between being a good man but being assertive and dominant; it's know when to use that anger/aggression. No one wants to talk about how anger can be a good thing, how it can motivate people to enact change, but how it can be hard or dangerous to wield because like fire, it can burn you if you're careless with it. These "professionals" like to cry mental health and they're not entirely wrong, but they admit that there's a whole generation of lost boys and men with nothing to do and then wonder why some of them end up lashing out (glow-in-the-darks are for another conversation); but instead of trying to help them control or focus that pent up energy elsewhere, you're told it's wrong to be mad/angry/etc. You idiots put a kettle on the stove, set the fire on high, and are getting mad that the kettle is making noise instead of keeping all the water from boiling. The fuck do you think is wrong with boys and men, there's no out, and when they try to make one, it gets subverted by people who have no place there and get chastised for being hateful.

That's something dads did apparently, they knew how to give their sons an outlet. Sports, combat sports, something to burn off that energy, instead of just being told to sit down and behave. I remember what it was like being a kid, boundless fucking energy and an inability to focus; but it's worse now, if your skin is pale you're Satan, if your skin is pale with a penis you're Satan multiplied by whatever Evil pantheon of your choice. It's not a fucking shock, and no one is there to guide or nurture them.

Not gonna wish violence on anyone... but if I was sitting on a jury, I'd understand.
 
I may be wrong, but this is the internet and if some idiots get to talk with authority, then I can too. You know what bridged the gap between being a good man but being assertive and dominant; it's know when to use that anger/aggression. No one wants to talk about how anger can be a good thing, how it can motivate people to enact change, but how it can be hard or dangerous to wield because like fire, it can burn you if you're careless with it. These "professionals" like to cry mental health and they're not entirely wrong, but they admit that there's a whole generation of lost boys and men with nothing to do and then wonder why some of them end up lashing out (glow-in-the-darks are for another conversation); but instead of trying to help them control or focus that pent up energy elsewhere, you're told it's wrong to be mad/angry/etc. You idiots put a kettle on the stove, set the fire on high, and are getting mad that the kettle is making noise instead of keeping all the water from boiling. The fuck do you think is wrong with boys and men, there's no out, and when they try to make one, it gets subverted by people who have no place there and get chastised for being hateful.

That's something dads did apparently, they knew how to give their sons an outlet. Sports, combat sports, something to burn off that energy, instead of just being told to sit down and behave. I remember what it was like being a kid, boundless fucking energy and an inability to focus; but it's worse now, if your skin is pale you're Satan, if your skin is pale with a penis you're Satan multiplied by whatever Evil pantheon of your choice. It's not a fucking shock, and no one is there to guide or nurture them.

Not gonna wish violence on anyone... but if I was sitting on a jury, I'd understand.
women raised boys like defective girls and are surprised at the problems that occur
she took a sledgehammer to the foundation of childhood and family and was shocked when it broke

It'd be hilarious if it weren't so retarded.
 
women raised boys like defective girls and are surprised at the problems that occur
she took a sledgehammer to the foundation of childhood and family and was shocked when it broke

It'd be hilarious if it weren't so retarded.
It's not just children-rearing; I grew up in a single-mother house, and while there's plenty of criticize, my mom taught me to hit back. My problem was the rest of the world; people see you as a male, and even while they cite progressive scripture, their subconscious wants you to act "like a man." But at the same time, they'll punish you for acting like a man. Someone is wrong about something, they'll argue to the point of getting up in your face and acting like they want to go to blows. You back down, and you're not only wrong, you're weak; you step up and maybe do go to blows, you're a menace and should've just let the retard have their way, despite being wrong. It's not just parents, it's society as a whole has this retarded double standard where they want men to be strong and assertive, but at the same time till take you to HR for being strong and assertive; and even tell you to take the L and allow the wrong thing because "getting along" is more important than being right... while claiming to want facts/logic/etc. The entire fucking system has become some retarded, backwards, talk out of both sides of your mouth at the same time, contradictory mess...

But people who realize it (consciously or subconsciously) and feel something isn't right... and refuse to help in a way that isn't drugging them into compliance... they're the problem.
 
Horse shit. How about we re-think femininity and denormalize single motherhood before we further encourage men to be soy-chugging numales. Even a mediocre father is better for the development of a child than none.
 
It's not just children-rearing; I grew up in a single-mother house, and while there's plenty of criticize, my mom taught me to hit back. My problem was the rest of the world; people see you as a male, and even while they cite progressive scripture, their subconscious wants you to act "like a man." But at the same time, they'll punish you for acting like a man. Someone is wrong about something, they'll argue to the point of getting up in your face and acting like they want to go to blows. You back down, and you're not only wrong, you're weak; you step up and maybe do go to blows, you're a menace and should've just let the retard have their way, despite being wrong. It's not just parents, it's society as a whole has this retarded double standard where they want men to be strong and assertive, but at the same time till take you to HR for being strong and assertive; and even tell you to take the L and allow the wrong thing because "getting along" is more important than being right... while claiming to want facts/logic/etc. The entire fucking system has become some retarded, backwards, talk out of both sides of your mouth at the same time, contradictory mess...

But people who realize it (consciously or subconsciously) and feel something isn't right... and refuse to help in a way that isn't drugging them into compliance... they're the problem.
Leave them be and watch them suffer. We're already seeing it now. Just deciding to do the bare minimum makes everyone panic. Even the idea of a bunch of disenfranchised young men is enough to make every wine aunt piss their panties. Let the society that spurned you rot in its own filth.
 
Being a good father means knowing when to tell Janice to get off of Twitter and go to bed.
 
Sean Illing
What it often means to be a man, in our culture at least, is to bury our feelings, to not admit vulnerability. We live in such a hollow society, where so many of us don’t have real community. We live in our heads, we live in the virtual world, and there’s so much resentment that just build and builds and we have all these young men exploding in slow-motion and their inner turmoil is hidden and probably inexpressible for a lot of them and we just keep paying the price for it with the blood of children.

Michael Ian Black
So much of what it means to be a guy historically has been about never admitting weakness, never admitting fear, never admitting vulnerability. And not having the tools or the vocabulary to open up.
I find the opposite to be true. Men are far too willing to become fully emotional creatures and this is a problem. There's a reason men have been raised a certain way to this point: masculinity means survival, perseverance, and stoicism. A man who has been taught to be properly masculine will know to shut the fuck up and stop entertaining such maniacal thoughts. An emotional mind is one that will run away with such ideas and formulate a plan. Teaching men not to act like men is against a man's nature, plain and simple.
In fact, in my experience, I find that boys and men who talk at length about their problems and emotions only further bury themselves in what's upset them instead of finding a way to move on.
 
Its a very perceptive take, that society is a set of rules meant to manage biological aggression. That's true. But here's the part you're leaving out: there has to be something beneficial for the men.

If men cannot reasonably expect to get married, stay married, and raise children, why should they obey the rules of society?

You shouldn't fight someone who calls you an asshole. Why? Well, because you'll go to jail. Well, what's wrong with that? You lose your freedom. My freedom to do what?

Driving is pretty fun but they're trying to kill gas cars. Eating what you want is good but they want to restrict meat production. So what's left? Slaving for a wage and jerking off to porn? I should tolerate someone disrespecting me so I can keep working every day and enjoy some porn at night?

Women are weak. They should be afraid of men, instinctively. They are not. And thus they feel empowered to bitch at and yell at men twice their size constantly. And men are expected to continuously endure this. Not out of fear of the woman. You can snap the woman's wrist like a toothpick. But out of fear of jail.

Jail needs to be worse than life for that to be a deterrent
 
Jail needs to be worse than life for that to be a deterrent
Jail looks pretty fucking nice when you're only a bad paycheck away from living on the streets.

The take they have is on the right track but it's wrong. The problem isn't men not being able to be emotional, it's that men (and everyone else, too, but especially men) have been censored on every topic they care about. We can't have discussions about race, sex, gender roles, or even where we fit in to society. It's Haram. No one wants to  listen to men anyway because TPTB have determined that men can have or do whatever they want, therefore complaining or feeling something about it does not warrant attention or action. It sucks that people have horrible maladjusted and violent worldviews but the only way to pull someone out of that is through open discussion, and allowing retards to say incredibly stupid shit so they can be told why they're wrong. Censoring and suppressing ideas is what causes men to lash out violently.
 
He is still trying to sell that fucking book?

Also no Black is not a comedian he was a comedian now he is an activist who writes shitty books no one reads.
 
I may be wrong, but this is the internet and if some idiots get to talk with authority, then I can too. You know what bridged the gap between being a good man but being assertive and dominant; it's know when to use that anger/aggression. No one wants to talk about how anger can be a good thing, how it can motivate people to enact change, but how it can be hard or dangerous to wield because like fire, it can burn you if you're careless with it. These "professionals" like to cry mental health and they're not entirely wrong, but they admit that there's a whole generation of lost boys and men with nothing to do and then wonder why some of them end up lashing out (glow-in-the-darks are for another conversation); but instead of trying to help them control or focus that pent up energy elsewhere, you're told it's wrong to be mad/angry/etc. You idiots put a kettle on the stove, set the fire on high, and are getting mad that the kettle is making noise instead of keeping all the water from boiling. The fuck do you think is wrong with boys and men, there's no out, and when they try to make one, it gets subverted by people who have no place there and get chastised for being hateful.

That's something dads did apparently, they knew how to give their sons an outlet. Sports, combat sports, something to burn off that energy, instead of just being told to sit down and behave. I remember what it was like being a kid, boundless fucking energy and an inability to focus; but it's worse now, if your skin is pale you're Satan, if your skin is pale with a penis you're Satan multiplied by whatever Evil pantheon of your choice. It's not a fucking shock, and no one is there to guide or nurture them.

Not gonna wish violence on anyone... but if I was sitting on a jury, I'd understand.
Yes, this guy means well but is deluded into thinking we can or should "stop anger and hate" because he was able to cultivate a healthy relationship with his son. It's moronic wishful thinking.
 
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