澳门六合彩资料

Skip to main content
Share via Copy link

澳门六合彩资料 Men's Day - a time to talk

This article is intended to start a discussion on the 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day UK themes.

19 November 2021

Friday 19 November is 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day, and in the UK the themes are:

  • Making a positive difference to the wellbeing and lives of men and boys
  • Raising awareness and/or funds for charities supporting men and boys鈥 wellbeing
  • Promoting a positive conversation about men, manhood and masculinity

This article, co-written by Grace Woolford and Alistair Taylor is intended to start a discussion on these themes.

The first question many people ask, is why do we need an 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day? Why does it matter?

A conversation about men and masculinity is long overdue, but opportunities for men to open up and talk about how they feel and what it means to be a man haven't always been easily accessible. With unhealthy masculinity and its victims in the headlines, discussing masculinity can feel even more difficult. This isn鈥檛 new new and it鈥檚 not going away. 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day creates and maintains a space where everyone can start and continue these conversations.

So where does a positive conversation about men, manhood and masculinity start?

Traits traditionally viewed as masculine in Western society include strength, courage, independence, leadership, and assertiveness. These are all valued traits, but they are not exclusively male, and represent just a subset of the traits that humans can show. Being automatically attributed with these traits as a man can create unrealistic expectations, or undeserved associations. 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day is an opportunity to celebrate other male and masculine traits, such as creativity, empathy, ingenuity, vulnerability and emotional intelligence.

It is important to remember that masculinity in itself is not an exclusively male characteristic. Masculinity is a performance, and what is interesting is how society responds to it. 鈥業n the 1990s, the late Stanford neuroscientist . He was in his 40s, mid-career, and afterward, he marvelled at the stark changes in his professional life. Now that society saw him as male, his ideas were taken more seriously. He was able to complete a whole sentence without being interrupted by a man. A colleague who didn鈥檛 know he was transgender even praised his work as 鈥渕uch better than his sister鈥檚.鈥濃

Grace Woolford澳门六合彩资料
鈥淚 considered myself a 鈥榯omboy鈥 as a child, because I considered being feminine and 鈥榞irly鈥 to be 鈥榳eak鈥. I wanted to be considered an equal by the boys in my class at school, to show I was just as 鈥榞ood鈥 as they were.鈥

What action can we take?

A positive conversation about men should also consider the boundaries of 鈥榖eing a man鈥? Where should a line be drawn, if at all, between 鈥榤an鈥 and 鈥榥ot man鈥? Traditional concepts of gender imply drawing a hard line, but this is inconsistent with growing recognition of the non-binary.

For those unfamiliar with the term, non-binary is an umbrella term for people whose gender identity doesn't sit comfortably with 'man' or 'woman'. and can include people who identify with some aspects of binary identities, while others reject them entirely. 鈥楤oys鈥 may not necessarily be boys.

Maybe 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day is a good opportunity to acknowledge that being a man is a spectrum condition - in terms of biological and physiological characteristics - and the varying socially-constructed characteristics of 鈥榤en鈥 and 鈥榳omen鈥 established by society around us. Manhood is about a diversity of characteristics, not a one-size fits all. Should being assigned male or female at birth destine a person to a rigid path?

This flies in the face of how being a man is portrayed by the media and society. Adverts featuring digitally enhanced models, movie action heroes, lifestyle advice featuring unrealistic bucket lists, all add up to a template for being a man that bears little relation to the diverse, messy, vulnerable reality of menkind.

It is then perhaps no wonder that being a 鈥榤an鈥 can often feel like a square peg in a round hole.

With men being told to fulfil a role that is unrealistic and damaging, to them and others, it鈥檚 little wonder they suffer high levels of stress and mental illness. Men aged 40-49 have the highest suicide rates in the UK, and men report lower levels of life satisfaction than women according to the Government鈥檚 national wellbeing survey. Around 戮 of were for men, which follows a consistent trend back to the mid-1990s. And yet men are discouraged from expressing emotion or fear the consequences of doing so. The phrase 鈥渂e a man鈥 implies not allowing your vulnerability to show and not seeking help, and statistics show men are less likely to access psychological therapies than women: only 36% of referrals to NHS talking therapies are for men. How long can you bury your feelings before they explode and cause harm, to yourself and others?

Toxic gender roles can also lead to destructive or damaging behaviour being tolerated because, 鈥渂oys will be boys鈥. This affects all of us. UK government stats tell us that men are nearly twice as likely as women to be a victim of violent crime and among children, boys are more likely than girls to be victims of violence. For the parents of young men this is a terrifying statistic. On the flip side, men are also staggeringly more likely to be the perpetrators of violent crime. This calls for urgent, crucial change for the benefit of everybody.

Beneath these evil killings [including those of Sarah Everard and Sabina Nessa] lies a culture of normalising sexual harassment, abuse and violence. This culture doesn鈥檛 only target women, men are victims too. But 99% of the perpetrators are men. This needs to change, and it starts by changing our language. Not 鈥榲iolence against women鈥 as if there were no active perpetrators - let鈥檚 call it violence by men.

Wera Hobhouse, 23rd March 2021.

This 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day, we feel all people should be asking how we change this? How do we discard toxic gender roles, and adopt a new model of masculinity that accentuates the positive while eliminating the negative? Perhaps there is no 鈥渞ight鈥 way to be a man.

A natural response is to look for role models and say 鈥渨hy can鈥檛 you be more James Bond / David Beckham / David Brent?鈥, but that excuses us from being the change we want to see. We're all role models, and men in privileged positions - which must include the legal profession - should be able to recognise that they can be agents for change, to benefit all. Conversations about men, manhood and masculinity are about a direction of travel and knowing that you're not alone on that journey, even if we start from different places and may have different destinations in mind.

Alistair Taylor澳门六合彩资料
鈥湴拿帕喜首柿 Men鈥檚 Day is an opportunity to talk about the kind of men we want to be, and also the kind of men we want the boys and young men around us to become. Only by airing these issues in the open can we make a positive difference to the wellbeing and lives of men and boys.鈥

We must also recognise that it's not going to be a simple, short or comfortable journey. No one is prejudice-free, and acknowledging one鈥檚 privilege is a profoundly uncomfortable experience. Also, no one is born knowing this stuff and looking back at things said and done in ignorance is painful 鈥 but we all do it, have done it and will do it again. To make progress we must sit with this discomfort and learn from it. Change may not come easily, and no one can change the way their mind works overnight; perhaps a trait we could all try to emulate is being kind and supporting others on the same journey.

Below are links to online resources about 澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 day, masculinity and mental health to help with route planning.

At 澳门六合彩资料, we鈥檙e hosting an internal Courageous Conversation on #澳门六合彩资料Men鈥檚Day (19 November) to tackle some of these issues and share resources.

澳门六合彩资料 Men鈥檚 Day resources

Contact

Contact

Mark Hickson

Head of Business Development

onlineteaminbox@brownejacobson.com

+44 (0)370 270 6000

View profile
Can we help you? Contact Mark

You may be interested in...