This book is great as a way of understanding how our culture
tr5ains boys and girls to be different. We teach girls that they can cry when
they are sad, talk about their feelings, and share experiences with each other.
We teach boys that they need to ‘buck up’ and be manly, to hide the tears, to
face it like a man, to be the rock on which the females can rely. It is no
surprise that these lessons affect adults, and affect how male and females
relate (or fail to relate) to each other. In essence, a few core themes run
through the book, being supported by various examples, and different wording
that help make the points clear.
First, men are goal-oriented and when they are stressed,
“retreat to a cave” to consider what to do. They want to come to a solution on
their own. To try to help them while they are in the “cave” is counter
productive.
Men want to be trusted and admired. They want to feel that
the woman believes in them. To question a man is to show your doubt. The book
recommends if a man is lost while driving, or forgets something while
travelling, to just be quite and accept it. It will show your trust in him to
get there eventually ar to solve the problem. I’m personally not sure if this
is always wise advice.
Women, on the other hand, are nurturing, expressive, feeling
individuals who tend to use poetic license such as saying “you ALWAYS forget to
do that chore” or “you NEVER listen to me”. The advice given to men is not to
react to any of what women say literally. Most of what woman want, according to
the book, is just to be heard. Women don’t want solutions or answers. They want
to feel that their feelings are being heard and understood … they want to be
held and be told “Yes, yes, I understand”. The book explains that men make the
mistake of thinking women tell them things in order for the men to fix those
things. Instead, the women tell them things in order to share their feelings,
but aren’t seeking actual resolutions.
While I agree that women are trained to share feelings and to
sometimes be overly emotional, to tell a man that women never want resolutions,
and always exaggerate, is not treating a woman as a logical human being
perfectly capable of wanting answers.
There is definitely a lot of helpful information in the book.
It is good to understand that society trains men to “retreat” to consider problems,
and that they consider interference during this time as “harassment” instead of
“helpful”. It’s good to realize that women have emotional cycles and can
sometimes be happy, and sometimes sad, and that nobody is always happy. This
book definitely has interesting hints and tips, and interesting stories to
share. It also has many generalizations that, for many individuals, simply do
not apply.
Adapted from: http://www.romanceclass.com/miscr/books/menmars.asp
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