2021-01-27 - The Will To Change by Bell Hooks ============================================= A friend recommended this author. Out of all of her books in the local library, this one stood out to me. I have often felt resistance when liberal women friends made posts about redefining masculinity. I can't help but wonder "What qualifies this person to redefine four billion people?" I hoped that i might learn new insights from this book. Prior to reading the book, i listened to the MEN series [1] from Scene On Radio. This series taught me that according to archeological evidence, male domination as we know it began about ten to twelve thousand years ago around the same time as agriculture and war. The significance is that male domination is not inevitable. We have the choice to do something differently, if we will to. I was particularly interested in episode 11: Domination. This episode includes an informative study of sports talk radio, which doesn't only discuss sports, but spends a surprising amount of time discussing and reinforcing gender roles. I personally found it a little encouraging to hear that harmful gender norms are already shifting in prominent, mainstream media. I felt challenged and a little daunted by this book. It is powerfully written and the ideas in it generally ring true for me. Bell Hooks refers to many authors and experts. I get the feeling she is eminently qualified to have a say on this subject. She makes a distinction between patriarchal masculinity (our norms) and masculinity itself. She points out that women are just as involved as men in perpetuating patriarchy. So it is only logical that it will require both women and men to resolve the problems of patriarchy. She did NOT write about imposing a new definition of masculinity on unwilling men. Rather, she wrote that women must create guides and signposts, or else risk losing even the men who are willing to change. Below are prominent excerpts and [comments] from the book. Cover Page ========== In our rapidly changing society we can count on only two things that will never change. What will never change is the will to change and the fear of change. It is the will to change that motivates us to seek help. It is the fear of change that motivates us to resist the very help we seek. --Harriet Lerner, The Dance of Intimacy Preface: About Men ================== The lack of such writing [by women about men] intensifies my sense that women cannot fully talk about men because we have been so well socialized in patriarchal culture to be silent on the subject of men. But more than silenced, we have been socialized to be the keepers of grave and serious secrets--especially those that could reveal the everyday strategies of male dominance, how male power is enacted and maintained in our private lives. This is the most painful truth of male domination, that men wield patriarchal power in daily life in ways that are awesomely life-threatening, that women and children cower in fear and various states of powerlessness, believing that the only way out of their suffering, their only hope is for men to die, for the patriarchal father not to come home. Women and female and male children, dominated by men, have wanted them dead because they believe that these men are not willing to change. They believe that men who are not dominators will not protect them. They believe that men are hopeless. The Will To Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love is about our need to live in a world where women and men can belong together. Chapter 1: Wanted: Men Who Love =============================== We live in a culture where emotionally starved, deprived females are desperately seeking male love. The place where most men refused to change--believed themselves unable to change--was in their emotional lives. [As children grow up into adults] ... they learn then to settle for whatever positive attention men are able to give. They learn to overrate it. They learn to pretend that it is love. They learn to live the lie. The truth we do not tell is that men are longing for love. The unhappiness of men in relationships... often goes unnoticed in our society precisely because patriarchal culture really does not care if men are unhappy. The reality is that men are hurting and that the whole culture responds to the men by saying, "Please do not tell us what you feel." If we cannot heal what we cannot feel, by supporting patriarchal culture that socializes men to deny feelings, we doom them to live in states of emotional numbness. In female circles men who wanted to change were often labeled narcissistic or needy. There is only one emotion that patriarchy values when expressed by men; that emotion is anger. Only a revolution of values in our nation will end male violence, and that revolution will necessarily be based on a love ethic. To create loving men, we must love males. In an anti-patriarchal culture males do not have to prove their value and worth. They know from birth that simply being gives them value, the right to be cherished and loved. Chapter 2: Understanding Patriarchy =================================== Patriarchy is the single most life-threatening social disease assaulting the male body and spirit in our nation. Yet most men do not use the word "patriarchy" in everyday life. Most men never think about patriarchy--what it means, how it is created and sustained. Nothing discounts the old antifeminist projection of men as all-powerful more than their basic ignorance of a major function of the political system that shapes and informs male identity and sense from birth until death. Patriarchy is a political-social system that insists that males are inherently dominating, superior to everything and everyone deemed weak, especially females, and endowed with the right to dominate and rule over the weak and to maintain that dominance through various forms of psychological terror and violence. We need to highlight the role women play in perpetuating and sustaining patriarchal culture so that we will recognize patriarchy as a system women and men support equally, even if men receive more rewards from that system. Dismantling and changing patriarchal culture is work that men and women must do together. Indeed, radical feminist critique of patriarchy has practically been silenced in our culture. It has become a subcultural discourse available only to well-educated elites. Even in those circles, using the word "patriarchy" is regarded as passé. Often in my lectures when I use the phrase "imperialist white-supremacist capitalist patriarchy" to describe our nation's political system, audiences laugh. No one has ever explained why accurately naming the system is funny. The laughter itself is a weapon of patriarchal terrorism. It functions as a disclaimer discounting the significance of what is being named. It suggests that the words themselves are problematic and not the system they describe. I interpret this laughter as the audiences' way of showing discomfort with being asked to ally themselves with an antipatriarchal disobedient critique. This laughter reminds me that if I dare to challenge patriarchy openly, I risk not being taken seriously. Citizens of this nation fear challenging patriarchy even as they lack overt awareness that they are fearful, so deeply embedded in our collective unconscious are the rules of patriarchy. Until we can collectively acknowledge the damage patriarchy causes and the suffering it creates, we cannot address male pain. If patriarchy were truly rewarding to men, the violence and addiction in family life that is so all-pervasive would not exist. The crisis facing men is not the crisis of masculinity, it is the crisis of patriarchal masculinity. To end male pain, to respond to male crisis, we have to name the problem. We have to both acknowledge that the problem is patriarchy and work to end patriarchy. Chapter 3: Being a Boy ====================== Boys are not seen as lovable in patriarchal culture. Contrary to sexist mythology, in the real world of male and female babies, male babies express themselves more. They cry louder and longer. They come into the world wanting to be seen and heard. ... patriarchal culture influences parents to devalue the emotional development of boys. Naturally this disregard affects boys' capacity to love and be loving. All over the world terrorist regimes use isolation to break people's spirit. This weapon of psychological terrorism is daily deployed in our nation against teenage boys. In isolation they lose the sense of their value and worth. No wonder then that when they reenter a community, they bring with them killing rage as their primary defense. Even though masses of American boys will not commit violent crimes resulting in murder, the truth that no one wants to name is that all boys are being raised to be killers even if they learn to hide the killer within and act as benevolent young patriarchs. (More and more girls who embrace patriarchal thinking also embrace the notion that they must be violent to have power.) Talking to teenage girls of all classes who are being secretly hit or beaten by boyfriends (who say that they are "disciplining" them), one hears the same Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde narratives that grown women tell when talking about their relationships with abusive men. These girls describe seemingly nice guys who have rageful outbursts. Time and time again we hear on our national news about the seemingly kind, quiet young male whose violent underpinnings are suddenly revealed. Boys are encouraged by patriarchal thinking to claim rage as the easiest path to manliness. It should come as no surprise, then, that beneath the surface there is a seething anger in boys, a rage waiting for the moment to be heard. Much of the anger boys express is itself a response to the demand that they not show any other emotions. Anger feels better than numbness because it often leads to more instrumental action. Anger can be, and usually is, the hiding place for fear and pain. Literature for children is just as fixated on furthering patriarchal attributes as TV. Shopping for books for my nephew first alerted me to the absence of progressive literature for boys. The books I have written are aimed at offering boys ways to cope with their emotional selves. The point is to stimulate in boys emotional awareness and to affirm that awareness. Chapter 4: Stopping Male Violence ================================= Every day in America men are violent. Every day in our nation there are men who turn away from violence. As women have gained the right to be patriarchal men in drag, women are engaging in acts of violence similar to their male counterparts. This serves to remind us that the will to use violence is really not linked to biology but to a set of expectations about the nature of power in a dominator culture. Much of the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde behavior women describe in men who are alternately caring, then abusive has its root in this fundamental allegiance to patriarchal thinking. Indoctrination into the mindset begun into childhood includes a psychological initiation that requires boys to accept that their willingness to do violent acts makes them patriarchal men. A distinction can and must be made between the willingness to do violent acts and actually doing them. When researchers looking at date rape interviewed a range of college men and found that many of them saw nothing wrong with forcing a woman sexually, they were astounded. Their findings seemed to challenge the previously accepted notion that raping was aberrant male behavior. While it may be unlikely that any of the men in this study were or became rapists, it was evident that given what they conceived as the appropriate circumstance, they could see themselves being sexually violent. Unconsciously they engage in patriarchal thinking, which condones rape even though they may never enact it. The perpetuation of male violence through the teaching of a dominator model of relationships comes to boy children through both women and men. In patriarchal culture women are as violent as men toward groups that they have power over and can dominate freely; usually that group is children or weaker females. Ever since I started writing about love, I have defined it in a way that blends M. Scott Peck's notion of love as the will to nurture one's own and another's spiritual and emotional growth, with Eric Fromm's insight that love is action and not solely feeling. Working with men who wanted to know love, I have advised them to think of it as a combination of care, commitment, knowledge, responsibility, respect, and trust. The first act of violence that patriarchy demands of males is not violence toward women. Instead patriarchy demands of all males that they engage in acts of psychic self-mutilation, that they kill off the emotional parts of themselves. If an individual is not successful in emotional crippling himself, he can count on patriarchal men to enact rituals of power that will assault his self-esteem. ... Women demanded of men that they give more emotionally, but most men really could not understand what was being asked of them. ... They simply could not give more emotionally or even grasp the problem without first reconnecting, reuniting the severed parts. Emotionally self-mutilated, disconnected, many men make overtures of emotional connection only to later undermine them with emotional abuse. They simply do not get that love and abuse cannot go together. ... Teaching men to understand that women and children do not feel loved when they are being abused, is one of the primary goals of groups that work to end male violence. "You should not have to tolerate any abuse to be loved." Women who stay in long-term relationships with men who are emotionally abusive or violent usually end up closing the door to their hearts. They stop working to create love. Men who win in patriarchal terms end up losing in terms of their substantive quality of life. Chapter 5: Male Sexual Being ============================ Most men and women are not having satisfying and fulfilling sex. When I first began to write books on love, to talk to lone individuals and then large audiences about the subject, I realized that it was practically impossible to have serious discussion about love--that discussions of love, especially public conversations, are taboo in our society. Yet everyone talks about sex. Most folks believe we are hardwired biologically to long for sex but they do not believe we are hardwired to long for love. Children today learn more about sex from mass media than from any other source. Yet much of what they are learning about sexuality conforms to outmoded patriarchal scripts... Adults may know better, from their own experience, but children become true believers. They think that men will go mad if they cannot act sexually. This is the logic that produces what feminists thinkers call "a rape culture." Hence the underlying message boys receive about sexual acts is that they [the boys] will be destroyed if they are not in control, exercising power. [Isn't it true that uncontrolled sexuality violates consent, which can destroy a person's social capital?] Sex, then, becomes for most men a way of self-solacing. It is not about being connected to someone else but rather about releasing their own pain. Patriarchal men have no outlet to express their pain, so they simply seek release. Patriarchal violence is a mental illness. That this illness is given its most disordered expression in the sexual lives of men is powerful because it makes it hard to document since we do not witness what men do sexually like we witness what they do at work or in civic life. Male despair, often initially expressed as anger, is a far greater threat to the patriarchal sexual order than feminist movement. Chapter 6: Work: What's Love Got To Do With It? =============================================== Before the feminist movement boys were more likely to be taught, at home and at school, that they would find fulfillment in work. Today boys hear a slightly different message. They are told that money offers fulfillment and that work is a way to acquire money... Nowadays working men of all classes experience periods of unemployment. In order to keep the faith, patriarchal culture has had to offer men different criteria for judging their worth than work. As a primary foundation of patriarchal self-esteem, work has not worked for masses of men for some time. Most male workers in our America, like their female counterparts, work in exploitative circles; the work they do and the way they are treated by their superiors more often than not undermines self-esteem. The conflict between finding time for work and finding time for love and loved ones is rarely talked about in our nation. [I thought it was often referenced as work-life balance.] Many men use work as the place where they can flee from the self, from emotional awareness, where they can lose themselves and operate from a space of emotional numbness. The success of Alcoholics Anonymous is tied to the fact that the practice of recovery takes place in the context of a community, one in which shame about failure can be expressed and male longing for healing validated. Chapter 7: Feminist Manhood =========================== ... most men have not consciously chosen patriarchy as the ideology they want to govern their lives. Truthfully, there was a serious antimale faction in contemporary feminist movement. It was difficult for women committed to feminist change to face the reality that the problem did not lie just with men. Once the "new man" that is the man changed by feminism was represented as a wimp, as overcooked broccoli dominated by powerful females who were secretly longing for his male counterpart, masses of men lost interest. Reacting to this inversion of gender roles, men who were sympathetic chose to stop trying to play a role in female-led feminist movement. Positively, the men's movement emphasizes the need for men to get in touch with their feelings, to talk with other men. Negatively, the men's movement continues to promote patriarchy by a tacit insistence that in order to be fully self-actualized, men needed to separate from women. The idea that men needed to separate from women to find their true selves just seemed like the old patriarchal message dressed up in a new package. Clearly, men need new models for self-assertion that do not require the construction of an enemy "other," be it a woman or the symbolic feminine, for them to define themselves against. Starting in early childhood, males need models of men with integrity, that is, men who are whole, who are not divided against themselves. Our work of love should be to reclaim masculinity and not allow it to be held hostage to patriarchal domination. There is a creative, life-sustaining, life-enhancing place for the masculine in a non-dominator culture. Dominator culture teaches all of us that the core of our identity is defined by the will to dominate and control others. When culture is based on a dominator model, not only will it be violent but it will frame all relationships as power struggles. To offer men a different way of being, we must first replace the dominator model with a partnership model that sees interbeing and interdependence as the organic relationship of all living beings. In a partnership model male identity, like its female counterpart, would be centered around the notion of an essential goodness that is inherently relationally oriented. Rather than assuming males are born with the will to aggress, the culture would assume that males are born with the will to connect. Rather than define strength as "power over," feminist masculinity defines strength as one's capability to be responsible for self and others. The core of feminist masculinity is a commitment to gender equality and mutuality as crucial to interbeing and partnership in the creating and sustaining of life. Such a commitment always privileges nonviolent action over violence, peace over war, life over death. A Masai wise man, when asked by Terrence Real to name the traits of a good warrior, replied, "I refuse to tell you what makes a good morani [warrior]. But I will tell you what makes a great morani. When the moment calls for fierceness, a good morani is very ferocious. And when the moment calls for kindness, a good morani is utterly tender. Now, what makes a great morani is knowing which moment is which." Men who are able to be whole undivided selves can practice the emotional discernment beautifully described by the Masai wise man precisely because they are able to relate and respond rather than simply react. Patriarchal masculinity confines men to various stages of reaction and overreaction. Feminist masculinity does not reproduce the notion that maleness has this reactionary, wild, uncontrolled component; instead it assures men and those of us who care about men that we need not fear male loss of control. This fear of maleness that they inspire estranges men from every female in their lives to greater or lesser degrees, and men feel the loss. Ultimately, one of the emotional costs of allegiance to patriarchy is to be seen as unworthy of trust. If women and girls in patriarchal culture are taught to see every male, including the males with whom we are intimate, as potential rapists and murderers, then we cannot offer them our trust, and without trust there is no love. Patriarchal masculinity insists that real men must prove their manhood by idealizing aloneness and disconnection. Feminist masculinity tells men that they become more real through the act of connecting with others, through building community. Feminism as a movement to end sexist domination and oppression offers us all the way out of patriarchal culture. Feminist theorists argued from the onset of the movement that were men to participate in parenting in a primary way, they would be changed. They would develop the relational skills often seen as innate in women. Chapter 8: Popular Culture: Media Masculinity ============================================= In the world of television, shows directed at children never stopped their sexist myth making. One of the most popular children's shows with a subtext about masculinity was The Incredible Hulk. A favorite of boys from diverse class and racial backgrounds, this show was instrumental in teaching the notion that for a male, the exertion of physical force (brutal and monstrous) was a viable response to all situations of crisis. When a sociologist asked young male viewers what they would do if they had the power of the hulk, they [many of them] said that they would smash their mommies. The Incredible Hulk linked sexism and racism. The cool, level-headed, rational white-male scientist turned into a colored beast whenever his passions were aroused. One of the ways patriarchal white males used mass media to wage the war against feminism was to consistently portray the violent woman-hating man as aberrant and abnormal. In a real world where more than ninety percent of violent crimes are committed by men, it is not surprising that popular culture offers both negative and positive models of the masculine. Woman-hating dominator men are consistently depicted as loners, who may have been abused as children, and who were not able to adjust in normal society. Ironically, these "bad" men share the same character traits as the "good" men who hunt them down and slaughter them. In both cases the men dissimulate (take on the various appearances and disguises to manipulate others' perception of their identity), and they lack the ability to connect emotionally with others. Contemporary books and movies offer clear portraits of the evils of patriarchy without offering any direction for change. Ultimately they send the message that male survival demands holding onto some vestige of patriarchy. Until we can create a popular culture that affirms and celebrates masculinity without upholding patriarchy, we will never see a change in the way that masses of men think about the nature of their identity. Chapter 9: Healing Male Spirit ============================== Men cannot speak their pain in patriarchal culture. Much of the anger men direct at mothers is a response to the maternal failure to protect the spirit of the boy from patriarchal harm. Boys feel the pain. And they have no place to lay it down; they carry it within. They take it to the place where it is converted into rage. Learning to dissimulate, men learn to cover up their rage, their sense of powerlessness. Yet when men learn to create a false self as a way to maintain male dominance, they have no sound basis on which to build healthy self-esteem. To always wear a mask as a way of asserting masculine presence is to always live the lie, to be perpetually deprived of an authentic sense of identity and well-being. This falseness causes men to experience intense emotional pain. As advocates of feminism who seek to end sexism and sexist oppression, we must be willing to hear men speak their pain. Only when we courageously face male pain without turning away will we model for men the emotional awareness healing requires. To heal, men must learn to feel again. They must learn to break the silence, to speak the pain. Often men, to speak the pain, first turn to the women in their lives and are refused a hearing. Being "vulnerable" is an emotional state many men seek to avoid. Some men spend a lifetime in a state of avoidance and therefore never experience intimacy. Before most men can be intimate with others, they have to be intimate with themselves. They have to learn to feel and be aware of their feelings. Men who mask feelings or suppress them simply do not want to feel the pain. Since emotional pain is the feeling that most males have covered up, numbed out, or closed off, the journey back to feeling is frequently through the portal of suffering. Much male rage covers up this place of suffering: this is the well-kept secret. Often when a female gets close to male pain, penetrating the male mask to see the emotional vulnerability beneath, she becomes a target for the rage. It cannot be a mere accident of fate that the visionary male teachers who are offering us messages about ways to care for the soul that will enhance life on this planet are men of color from poor countries, men who live in exile, men who have been victimized by imperialist male violence. Chapter 10: Reclaiming Male Integrity ===================================== Healing the crisis in the hearts of men requires of us all a willingness to face the fact that patriarchal culture has required of men that they be divided souls. The quest for integrity is the heroic journey that can heal the masculinity crisis and prepare the hearts of men to give and receive love. Anyone who has a false self must be dishonest. [All of us are complex, multi-layered beings. None of us are pure, true selves who are perfectly one thing or another.] Patriarchy encourages men to surrender their integrity and to live lives of denial. By learning the arts of compartmentalization, dissimulation, and disassociation, men are able to see themselves as acting with integrity in cases where they are not. One of the reasons the church has been so important in the lives of black men is that it is one of the locations where they are allowed to express emotions, where they can grieve. To grow psychically and spiritually, men need to mourn. The men who are doing the work of self-recovery testify that it is only when they are able to feel the pain that they can begin to heal. When a man's emotional capacity to mourn is arrested, he is likely to be frozen in time and unable to complete the process of growing up. Men need to mourn the old self and create space for a new self to be born if they are to change and be wholly transformed. When men practice integrity, they accept that part of the work of wholeness is learning to be flexible, learning how to negotiate, how to embrace change in thought and action. The ability to critique oneself and change and to hear critique from others is the condition of being that makes us capable of responsibility. To be able to respond to family and friends, men have to have practice assuming responsibility. When men are able to do little acts of mercy, they can be in communion with others without the need to dominate. Chapter 11: Loving Men ====================== ... if men were natural-born killers, hardwired by biology and destiny to take life, then there would be no need for patriarchal socialization to turn them into killers. The warrior's way wounds boys and men; it has been the arrow shot through the heart of their humanity. The warrior's way has led men in the direction of an impoverishment of spirit so profound that it threatens all life on planet Earth. In dominator cultures most families are not safe places. To create the culture that will enable boys to love, we must see the family as having as its primary function the giving of love (providing food and shelter are loving acts). To make this solid foundation [so that boys can grow up able to love], men must set the example by daring to heal, by daring to do the work of relational recovery. Men are on the path to love when they choose to become emotionally aware. In a world where gender inequality is for most people an accepted norm, men withhold from women their respect. The root of the word "respect" means "to look at." Women want to be recognized, seen, and cared about by the men in our lives. Patriarchy has sought to repress and tame erotic passion precisely because of its power to draw us into greater and greater communion with ourselves, and with those we know most intimately, and with the stranger. The work of male relational recovery, of reconnection, of forming intimacy and making community can never be done alone. In a world where boys and men are daily losing their way we must create guides, signposts, new paths. A culture of healing that empowers males to change is in the making. References: [1] MEN, a series of radio programs about men Book information: author: Hooks, Bell, 1952- detail: LOC: HQ1090 .H65 tags: book,gender,non-fiction,philosophy title: The Will To Change Tags ==== book gender non-fiction philosophy