The Masculine Lament–Hang in There, Guys

The poor American Male. The poor, misunderstood American Male. The poor, misunderstood, misguided American Male. Newsweek‘s article made me laugh out loud, not because of our wretched American Male populace, but because I recognized my own experience in their lament.

Return with me if you will to the late 70s, early 80s, when women in business wore a feminized version of a male business suit. We also wore what my friend Priscilla called "floppy discs" around our necks, those dreadful paisley things that were a cross between a bow tie and a scarflette. I was one of those women in the sneakers, sailing up sixth Avenue on my lunch hour, desperately trying to keep my floppy disc from flapping in my lipstick.

Perhaps I’m being unkind but the mythology of human development has it that boys definitively lag behind girls and always have. Forgive me, but … duh.

So, Newsweek, my friends, let me tell you what’s really happening to the American Male. The credential I claim is having been through it myself.

In those sneaker/business suit years, women had just about had enough of being second class everythings — from voters to parents to coworkers. So what did we do? We got real. And we have spent the succeeding decades noticing, acknowledging and working with what Carl Jung would have called our animi. Code: the inner masculine in all women.

We found out where and when we wanted to be soft and emotional and where and when we wanted our own set of brass … knuckles. It was experimentation, discovered, uncharted territory and we who pioneered it were brave, truculent and loud a lot of the time.

Regardless, women found their inner strength and began to use it everywhere in our lives.
So, American Male, take it from someone who’s been there in reverse. The same thing is happening to you, only Jung would call your journey a connection to the anima, or the feminine energy within each man. Think of it as a journey of connection to connection, connection to your softer, more yielding, gentle and loving aspects.

Think of the relief you’ll feel when you put down the burden of machismo that our civilization seems to have ordered up for real men, and the even greater relief you’ll feel when you give yourself permission to be a whole, emotional, connected, caring human.

Just so you’ll be motivated to keep going, I want to make you a promise. The day I got it that I didn’t have to be sweet, pretty, helpless, bad at math and a host of other things that I was told being a real woman meant, I was set free. And it felt great.

Hang in there, guys. You’ll get there, and once you do, you’ll understand that you’re worth it.

 

For spiritual nourishment, visit Dr. Susan Corso’s website and blog, Seeds for Sanctuary. Follow her on Twitter @PeaceCorso and Friend her on Facebook.

PHOTO (cc): Flickr / pensiero

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About peacecorso

Find me on Facebook & Follow me on Twitter @PeaceCorso!


Dr. Susan Corso is a spiritual author, speaker, and counselor. An omnifaith minister and the author of God’s Dictionary (Tarcher/Putnam 2002) and The Peace Diet, she has had a spiritual counseling practice for more than 25 years. She has been an intuitive since childhood. 
 
Susan’s blogosphere writing may be found at Seeds for Sanctuary, Ode Magazine and The Huffington Post, and Beliefnet. Her website is SusanCorso.com 
 

One of her favorite occupations is writing spiritual fiction. She is the author of The Healing Mysteries of Mex Stone under the pseudonym Shulamith Burton. The audiobook of the first in the series, Oklahoma! Hex, came out in September 2008.
 
Susan is the founder of Sanctuary and ten-year author/publisher of a free e-newsletter, Seeds. As a professor at the accredited College of Divine Metaphysics, she teaches and ordains ministers.
 
Susan has been published in magazines, online magazines and newsletters including Business Ethics, Beliefnet.com, Ode Magazine, Science of Mind, Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich, New York House, Q-Spirit, Self, and Winning Ways. She is the author of several tape series. Susan also writes for the theatre: The God Show, I Would Never, Fight or Flight, and PeaceWomen. 
 
For many years, Susan was an organizational consultant and motivational speaker guiding nuclear scientists as well as entrepreneurs into their life purposes. Some of her former clients include Westinghouse Hanford Company, Mary Kay Cosmetics, Gila River Casinos, and the American Nuclear Society, among many others.

Today she functions as Chief Spiritual Officer for corporations. She lives in one-sixth of a Victorian house outside of Boston, with her beloved spouse, director/actress/teacher Sheriden Thomas, and the spirit of her familiar cat, Charles of the Ritz. 
 
Her mission in life is peace. 

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One Response to The Masculine Lament–Hang in There, Guys

  1. eugene October 21, 2010 at 12:00 pm #

    right on the money. the danger in today's radicalized environment, in which extremes are separated and pitted against one another in an artificial dynamic of conflict, is the loss of balance. women in search of their inner masculinity and men in search of their inner femininity can easily fall prey to the XTREME! that prefixes just about every message in popular culture today. balance and right thought and action are the keys to keeping it, i would say. and i would say that because i almost fell prey to the XTREME! provocation and nearly lost that balance and therefore, the completeness of my being. when you take a straight line, with two extreme opposites on either end, and bring the two opposite ends together to form a circle, you get both balance and harmony … and completeness.