Originally posted on Daily Transformations.
This isn’t about the men that hurt on
purpose, men that rape, or men that abandon their families. This is
about the average Joe, the guy that loved his mama, tries his best
and is still mystified by those of us that are female.
—-
I hear women question openly: What’s
wrong with men? Why can’t they shoot straight? Why can’t they
communicate?
We complain that men are shut down in
one breath, and complain they’re too emotional in the next.
The
truth is, our men are striving for a balance in a world where the
rules of masculinity keep changing.
I live in Boulder, Colorado, where a
man is as likely to have a yoga mat in the back of his truck as his
mountain bike. While yoga may open their hips and allow their minds
to clear, there are still many guarded and wounded hearts in those
classes. Both men and women have been wounded deeply. Men still
struggle to make sense of women, while women experience men as closed
off and shut down. The reality is, a man’s heart is as vulnerable
as a woman’s, but the rules for men are laid out differently from
the very beginning.
Here’s a great example of the
difference:
While walking my dog, I met a boy in
his young teens on a skateboard. His eyes were clear as they met mine
and we engaged in a friendly chat. He was open and unguarded until my
dog approached, then sharing with me that he once had a dog that
looked like mine and was forced to give her away. In that moment, his
face clouded, his eyes dimmed and the pain he carried was noticeable.
His body language changed and his friendliness ceased.
My mouth hung open as he walked away
without saying goodbye, and I realized I had just witnessed a clue as
to why many men seem shut down.
Like many women, men are wounded early.
The difference? Men are often forced to “buck up” and stuff their
emotions rather than express them. Think about it: peers usually
ostracize a crying boy over the age of 7.
Often juggling his ever-changing role
with mom, he naturally starts to bond with dad and old rules such as
“buck up, boys don’t cry and get over it” from prior
generations are passed on once again. As years go by, a young boy’s
heart becomes more and more protected with each new wound, no real
outlet for emotions available. On the other hand, a great many
women, regardless of their dysfunctional childhood, grow up and
find comfort through female friendships—it’s considered normal to
cry and vent, express emotion, and fall apart if necessary.
Men aren’t naturally encouraged to
release their pain and express hurt, so to survive, they add armor to
their hearts and stand guarded against further pain.
While we find comfort in our female
friendships, many men say their only source of physical comfort is
sex. I often wonder: Do men reach across the bed for sex when
sometimes they’re just seeking solace?
The women I know all agree that
witnessing an empowered man opening his heart, despite his wounding,
and putting it all out there in a vulnerable way–that is
sexy. Sexy, but not easy. Most men have been shamed in the past
for asking for what they want. They’ve been shamed for wanting sex,
shamed for feeling attraction and shamed for their
vulnerability. It’s an uneasy playing field out there,
actually a mine field, when you think about it.
Take a woman previously wounded by an
aggressive man and have her approached by a man openly asking for
what he wants and she may run. Makes you realize that the next woman
he approaches may experience him as a man that dances around what he
really wants–now afraid to ask openly. What a conundrum eh?
Women are wounded and afraid to trust. Men are wounded and afraid to
open.
So what can we do?
- We, as women, can be patient when men talk with us, give them time and space to express themselves and understand that they don’t communicate like our female friends.
- Bantering with girlfriends and talking over one another is common behavior when we gather together, but a man’s sharing is a different process. Men don’t jump from subject to subject. It’s not that they don’t want to share with us, it’s that often when they try to, we jump in and interrupt the flow.
- We can count to 10 in our heads when they stop talking and give them a chance to speak again because 9 out of 10 times, they will.
- We can have patience.
- We can understand that a closed down reaction during a fight is most likely embarrassment and pain as our men realize they’ve disappointed us. We can take a step back and not take the lack of immediate communication as anger and instead, take a time out.
- Most importantly we can remember that our man is not going to be like our female friends. Changing men is not the goal. Even if we successfully changed them, chances are we wouldn’t be attracted to them anymore.
- By learning to decipher what appears to be shut down and angry behavior as deep wounding, we can find the patience needed to speak a different language with the men we love. Treating our men as we do our female friends is like walking into a French pastry shop, ordering something in Cantonese, and getting angry when we’re not understood. It may require a different language to show our love.
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