Ladies, Let’s Start Speaking Well of Men
By Cadence McManimon
We need to actively remember all the amazing things men bring to the world. Many of the world’s most impressive feats have been performed by great men.
There’s ample conversation about toxic masculinity in our culture today. In some circles, the consensus seems to be that all men want nothing but to wield power and subjugate women.
Of course, many of us know that this isn’t true of all, or even most, men—we need the gifts of both genders to build a truly healthy society.
Unfortunately, it’s very trendy to speak as if we don’t. Even those of us who appreciate men can find ourselves complaining about “all men.” All men are trash. Men are only after one thing. Toxic masculinity. The phrasing goes on and on, and each variant seems to offer a niche opportunity to complain about men in one way or another. How is all this negative talk affecting men? How is it affecting us women? Is this how we really want women to view men?
First, one weed doesn’t destroy the entire garden. Of course there are some bad men out there; we shouldn’t blanket half the human race as “trash” because of them. Their existence doesn’t in the least erase the massive number of good men in the world.
We need to actively remember all the amazing things men bring to the world. Many of the world’s most impressive feats have been performed by great men. Wars have been won, countries established, religions saved, and science progressed by men of all sorts.
Perhaps even more impressive are the silent heroes of our everyday lives, the men we rely on as strong fathers, brothers, husbands, and sons. In our modern world, it is more important than ever to draw attention to the masculine champions of our times. We need them, and they deserve to know it. No number of angry, violent criminals can erase the impact of even just one good man.
Men face an unacceptable “guilty until proven innocent” public attitude. Women are usually given the benefit of the doubt in court cases, media representation, Hollywood gossip, and group debates. The same cannot be said for men. Perhaps the most famous example in recent times is the Amber Heard and Johnny Depp case.
Remember the term believe all women? What started as a “#MeToo” movement for sexual assault survivors morphed into sociopolitical attacks against any man in the public eye. Many of the ensuing scandals were later shown to be women simply seeking a moment of fame or someone paid to publicly humiliate a man for a different reason, co-opting real victims’ credibility along the way. This attitude has deeply pervaded our social awareness. It is now commonplace to thoughtlessly assume a man is wrong, guilty, or inherently bad, regardless of whether there is evidence or not.
My husband shares stories of men in his life who now refuse to strike up a conversation with or even open the door for women they don’t know, for fear of being falsely accused of harassment or assault. And we ladies wonder why we can’t seem to meet good men! Men are facing a “guilty until proven innocent” attitude from the public. This is not acceptable, fair, or normal. We as women ought to be aware of this pervasive mindset and not be afraid to call attention to the damage it is doing.
Degrading others pervades all of our relationships over time. We’re not just talking about romantic relationships between girlfriends and boyfriends, or even husbands and wives. Verbally trashing the male gender affects our relationships with other women, with parents, with our children, and everyone else too.
Whether or not we actually hate men, speaking as if we do has a strong ripple effect, for it encourages others to speak in the same way. Unchecked over years, we can stray into the territory of emotional and verbal abuse. I personally have heard multiple women verbally abuse their husbands in public, often for no reason other than to show dominance or “be a realistic example.” (Yes, that was a verbatim excuse.) Women can unwittingly become abusers to our husbands and sons if we blatantly follow the trend of trashing men. Do we want our sons to grow up thinking “mama is smart and daddy is dumb”? Or teach our daughters that every man is either useless or out to hurt her? This will do nothing but hurt our marriages, crush our sons and fathers, and enable other angry women to do further damage.
The golden rule still applies. Modern women are incredibly quick to rush to the defense of women when a man says or posts something misogynistic. We take deep offence when someone harasses us or belittles us. There are even specifically anti-male terms like mansplaining or the male gaze.
The lesson is clear: We hate being treated as an inferior group—who would want such poor treatment? And yet, most of us think nothing of discussing men as if they were an inferior group. I’ve recently witnessed quite a few women in their 20s stating how their boyfriends and husbands are more like their children, because they’re helpless without us women to do everything for them. We might say or claim, “Oh it’s only joking!” or “I don’t really believe it, it’s just stereotypes.” But flip the script. We don’t want men talking about us this way. Why do we allow ourselves to indulge in this double standard?
Finally, I want to remind all of us ladies this: Men rarely call us out on our verbal degradation. Why? In this age of rampant fourth-wave feminism, they know there’s not much point in trying to change a made-up mind. They are more likely to get yelled at, belittled, or angrily dismissed than have a valid opinion heard.
So, my final challenge is to listen when a good man calls us out. If a trusted man kindly points out our language, our attitude, or our complaints regarding him or others, we should hear him out. I’m not saying be a slave to anyone else’s feelings. I am merely saying that we must be grown women and consider the other perspective. We are not always right, and men have been taught not to speak up with their side of the story. Remember, good men will endure a relationship through many things, even years of trendy complaints from a wife, sister, or daughter. Is that really how we want to treat good, loyal men?
Let’s instead focus on men as our champions and protectors, for that is either what they are or can rise to be. We have the choice either to honour good men and uphold them as the heroes they are or insult them all based on the lowest actions of the few.
It starts with our words.
___
Republished with thanks to Intellectual Takeout. Image courtesy of Unsplash.
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Great article.
Equality is never gained from stepping out of the gutter and shoving someone else into it.
Fantatic article from the team at Intellectual takeout!!!!!
Such a wonderful article!
For a more in-depth examination I strongly recommend a book in the same positive spirit, also written by a woman, “The Toxic War on Masculinity: How Christianity Reconciles the Sexes” by Nancy Pearcey, where she distinguishes between the positive characteristics of the “Good” Man, and the expectations which over time have been forced onto men to be the “Real” Man.
https://www.nancypearcey.com/the-toxic-war-on-masculinity.html
There is also a conversation between her and our own John Anderson.
https://johnanderson.net.au/conversations-nancy-pearcey-author/