The Good Men Project

"The Good Men Project aims to bring men together. There are stories about love and death, trauma and recover, and, ulitmaely, understanding."

The Providence Journal

February 8, 2010

Man-to-Man and More with Poet and Author NICK FLYNN

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , , — tmatlack @ 7:00 am

Nick Flynn is a poet and the author of Another Bullshit Night in Suck City, a memoir about his relationship with his estranged, alcoholic and homeless father. His latest book, The Ticking is the Bomb, is a memoir that interweaves reflections on his childhood, his relationship with his father, his mother’s suicide, the impending birth of his daughter, and his outrage and obsession with the torture depicted in the photos from Abu Ghraib.

Good Men Project cofounder Tom Matlack spoke with Flynn last week about The Ticking is the Bomb and about fatherhood. Matlack also invited Flynn to take The Good Men Project’s Manhood Quiz.

Tom Matlack: One of the things I really love The Ticking is the Bomb is the way you write about the way we all get lost. I think many of us men are at a crossroads. You realize this the morning you get up and look in the mirror and don’t recognize who you are.

Nick Flynn: I think it’s hard to tell when you are actually lost. It’s hard to remember that it’s actually a common experience—and maybe just a human experience, and almost a necessary experience—to get lost, and not to assume that one’s life’s going to go in some sort of clear trajectory where everything’s recognizable. I just don’t think that’s realistic. 

But it also can be very dark and very troubling. Some people don’t get out of it either. For some people that’s the end of the road. I’ve had a few of these experiences in my life. It’s the nature of life. There’s some element of suffering in life. It comes to all of us. And it’s almost impossible to know how to navigate it until you’re in it. 

It does feel a lot like the things I did in Boy Scouts. They drop you in the woods, and you have to survive for the weekend, with a knife and a match and a tarp or something.   There’s a reason that the Boy Scouts do that. It’s a metaphor for what’s going to happen at other points in your life—how are you going to figure your way out of this thing? And hopefully you figure out somewhat healthy ways out of these things. The thing that led you into there might not have been that healthy. Or it might just have been necessary. It could just be circumstantial. Certainly life blindsides you.

TM: You write about the impact of realizing that you were going to be a father. How do you view fatherhood as potentially transformational?

NF: It wasn’t that I suddenly realized I was going to be a father. It was a choice. It was actually a very active choice. But the choice was something that had to be navigated. I had to step up to make that choice. The pregnancy was no surprise. And yet even within this sort of conscious decision, there was a lot of uncertainty. There was a lot of wondering if I was actually up for this moment, that I would be able to show up for it, that I’d be able to be a father. That was really abstract. 

My wife [actress Lili Taylor] didn’t put any pressure on me any way. She was very clear. She was like, “This is what I want to do, this is the time for me to do it, and I’d like to do it with you. If you’re not ready to do, we’ll move on.” And it became very clear that it was really my choice. It was remarkably clear and simple that whatever I have to struggle with is what I have to struggle with. And it was not about making her happy or saving her. It was really very clear that she would prefer that we did it together.

I realized I hadn’t really approached our relationship in that way before. It always felt like there was some sort of burden of responsibility on me to take care of women or to save them, that there could be some crisis if I wasn’t there, some very serious consequences. And this didn’t seem that way at all. It seemed clear that I just had to wrestle with whatever was inside me and it gave it room to be dragged out into the open.

TM: So in terms of your impending fatherhood and your relationship with your own father and then your awareness of torture, how did all of that get stirred up in your mind? 

NF: The book started as a meditation on the Abu Ghraib photographs. I sort of had done all the research and written a draft of a book. But I sensed that I hadn’t quite followed it deep enough. Since this isn’t journalism, it’s not just about what happened; it’s really about why this thing that happened is affecting me. That’s what a memoir is: an individual’s interpretation of events, rather than just what happened.

When I started looking into why these images snagged so deeply in my subconscious, I followed those threads back, and they led back to stuff I had touched on in the first memoir—my father’s time in prison, my mother’s suicide—but they went more deeply into them. In my father’s case, he had been tortured in federal prison; he’d been experimented on. And he would tell this story quite often. He was sleep-deprived, had been put in isolation and sexually humiliated. And as I was writing the book, I started realizing that these were the things that also were talked about at Abu Ghraib.

One of the books I read was by the historian Alfred McCoy. It details the CIA’s involvement in developing the torture techniques we saw at Abu Ghraib. They had a 50-year program to develop those techniques. McCoy talks about how the federal prisons had been the site of early experimentation of these torture techniques. And some of those prisons were prisons that my father was in. So his stories suddenly took on this other resonance.

TM: If it’s OK with you, I’d like to ask you 10 questions that we call the Manhood Quiz. The first question is who taught you about manhood?

NF: It would be a series of my mother’s boyfriends when I was growing up. There were about 10 different boyfriends, and each sort of taught me a little piece of it. So it’s very much a mosaic of 10 different guys—and I actually feel fondly about nearly all of them.  They all have contributed some piece to the puzzle.

TM: The second question is how has romantic love shaped you as a man?

NF: I think that whole idea of romantic love was probably almost too strong an influence early on—getting caught up in the lyrics of pop songs or something and trying to figure out what that meant. I think that can separate one from having actual genuine interactions. And that also brought some sort of a competition with other men over women, which seems very unhealthy in retrospect.

TM: What two words would you use to describe your dad?

NF: Vodka and charm.

TM: How are you most unlike your father?

NF: Well, he’s pure id. And he doesn’t have any sort of container for that. I’m probably the exact same. I’m no different from him. It’s just that I’ve figured out how to keep it in a container a little bit more.

TM: From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?

NF: I think attempting to maintain more than one relationship at a time. The energy it takes is really not worth it. And the energy and the attention it takes away from any one relationship.

TM: This is a two-part question. What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and do you believe it’s accurate?

NF: I’m always reluctant to put words in anyone else’s mouth, but it’s something I really do often ask, like what people feel about how they’ve been portrayed in my book. 

TM: How about your wife? What does your wife say about you?

NF: Oh, she’s very supportive. I get good feedback from her. We’re doing well. So whatever the word would be—I hate to give her a word—but it’d be on the positive end of the spectrum.

TM: My wife’s word is narcissistic, and it’s accurate.

NF: There are darker moments when I feel like I’m not quite living up to my potential, but for the most part I do take in what she says, so I’ll say it’s accurate.

TM: What dad in your life do you really admire for his parenting skills?

NF: For years before I became a father I would try to spend as much time as I could with my friends who were parents and their kids. And I was really impressed. They all sort of managed to do it, and do it gracefully. I felt like there was something about this generation, that they had learned something from the previous generation about showing up and being really present as fathers. And it also made me imagine that I could maybe do it. And it felt like it was really just about showing up and being present for it. I don’t mean to disparage my father in any sense, but those were things that he was not able to do.

TM: I have three kids. My experience is that showing up is 90 percent of the battle.

NF: So far that’s working. That simple formula seems to be working.

TM: How old is your daughter now?

NF: She’s 2.

TM: The next question is have you been more successful in public or in your private life?

NF: I feel comfortable with both at the moment. I have a book out right now, so suddenly I’m in public life, or back into public life. That’s the thing about a book: You’re in the public life for a little bit, and then you sort of go away for a little while—several years in my case—and then you come out again, hopefully. It went well. The public thing went well this time, so I feel comfortable with both.

TM: When was the last time you cried?

NF: I can weep pretty easily. I can get tears in my eyes from a beautiful work of art. I get pretty emotional around the time of my mother’s death, so I probably cried around then, just a month or so ago. [Flynn’s mother committed suicide when he was 22; he’s now 49.]

TM: In December, right?

NF: Yeah, so there was a cry around that.

TM: How long has it been since your mom passed away?

NF: It’s a long time—over 20 years.

TM: The next question is what advice would you give teenage boys who are trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?

NF: There’s this sort of male energy that we have that can seem very destructive. But it doesn’t have to be. It actually can be a very positive force. A lot of the ways the male energy’s channeled in the society is in very negative ways: the violence or pornography, there’s all sorts of sexism, and there are all sorts of ways that energy is manipulated. But it’s actually a very beautiful thing, and to honor it for what it is and to try to use it in some positive way is the best we can do.

TM: And last but not least, what’s your most cherished guy ritual?

NF: Well, it’s really about the baby right now. In the last two years I’ve seen basically every sunrise, which has been sort of amazing. At a certain point you’re not sure how many more sunrises you’re going to see. And then I’ve seen every one since she’s been born. We get up together, and we have this sort of meditation thing in the morning for two or three hours—until her mom gets up—where we’re just together, just in this really quiet time that I really cherish.

Click here to listen to the entire conversation between Tom Matlack and Nick Flynn.

 [Photo of Nick Flynn by Geordie Wood.]

http://www.goodmenproject.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/NickFlynnInterview.mp3

 

February 7, 2010

Second to Mom

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmatlack @ 7:00 am

By BOBBY BASKSHI

The TRU 2009 Global Teen Edition survey questioned nearly 16,000 teens ages 12 to 19 all over the world, and more than 80 percent of them said Mom is the most influential advice-giver when it comes to decisions about the future.

Dad was number two. He did receive much higher scores from teen guys than from teen girls.

I’ve been thinking about these survey results since reading about them last year.

First, I think it’s great and no surprise that the primary nurturer (by nature) is reported as the primary influencer on our youth. My wife and I, the parents of three little ones, have a pretty traditional setup of roles and responsibilities: She is fully with the children, and I earn a living so we can have the life we desire. It works really well. I do my part in the evenings and on weekends, which mostly involves playing with them. She is always with them–with the exception of a few hours of preschool and other activities.

I have sensed for some time that even if I do the best job I can to be the best father to my kids, she will always have more time with them. And I love that they have at least one of us giving them such dedicated time.

Next, I look at this survey and am thrilled that boys give higher scores to their dads. A part of me wishes dads scored higher than moms as influencers, and I am humbled by the importance teens put in looking up to Mom. But it’s is affirming that both parents are the top-two influencers of our teens.

I’m sure that if the survey asked about the impact on a teen guy’s masculine identity, Dad would rise to the top. Clearly the presence of a male role model, ideally a dad, is critical to the positive development from boyhood to manhood.

Finally, I wish the data measured the impact or discussed the impact of both Mom and Dad being present during those critical teen years. By present I mean emotionally as well as physically. I believe it is ideal, especially for boys, to have both the feminine and masculine modeled throughout those developmental years.

One of the first books I read on my search for my masculine identity was Absent Fathers, Lost Sons by Guy Corneau. The author does a great job of describing the many levels of a father’s absence and the impact each can have on a boy’s development.

It took me until I was 40 years old to wake up to my father’s absence, because it was very subtle. He was always physically there; my parents were happily married until he passed away, and he was regarded as a saintly man by all who knew him. I knew and still believe he was a great man. But I didn’t realize until after his death that I desperately needed an emotional and physical bond with him. He didn’t know how to give it, and I didn’t know how to ask for it.

I will stop here, except to say that it’s tempting to theorize about the different responses from different countries, but in the absence of deeper questions that might get at what’s behind those differences, I will let this sit for now. In the meantime, I continue to seek ways to better understand the depths of the masculine journey one man at a time, starting with myself.

*****

Bobby Bakshi, is a marketing professional in the technology industry. He has specialized in segmentation research and has been at Microsoft for the past eight years. He is a certified facilitator of several training and leadership programs and is a Co-Active Coach from the Co-Active Training Institute. He has coached and trained executives in the United States and India, particularly men. He is currently working on his first book, Getting to Your 101%, which will be released by June 2010. Bakshi lives in the Seattle, Washington, area with Judy, his wife of 20 years, and their three children. He is an active member of the ManKind Project community in the Northwest. Read more of Bakshi’s writing at The Resonant Man.

 

February 6, 2010

Man-to-Man with dating, sex and relationship expert Dr. DENNIS NEDER

Filed under: Man-to-Man — tmatlack @ 7:00 am

1.) Who taught you about manhood?
I learned manhood from both my fathers (my mother remarried)–particularly excellent men!

One was a very successful doctor and politician from whom I learned critical thinking skills, a man’s role in the family, and community and belief in myself–and others.

The other was a salt-of-the-earth kind of guy. He taught me many important lessons, but the most significant was this: Your word is all you have–and all you need. He was absolutely right.

2.) Has romantic love shaped you as a man?
Absolutely! Both for good and bad! Romantic love can be a very powerful source of inspiration, and it can also be just as much a negative thing. It’s not the love itself; it’s learning how to manage it–including the changes it inflicts on us men–that’s important. I strive to teach this to my viewers/readers every day.

3.) What two words describe your dad?
Dad number one: goal-oriented. Dad number two: clear vision.

4.) How are you most unlike him?
Interesting question! Frankly, I hope I’m not much different from them at all! They were rare examples in a sea of bad ones. Perhaps if anything, I see myself striving to be like them every day, whereas these great men were naturally this way–effortlessly.

5.) From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?
No doubt: my relationships. Women are incredibly flexible creatures, and even when I wasn’t a willing student, they taught me. While I made tons of mistakes, I also began getting many things right. The perspective of the difference is the key.

6.) What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and is it accurate?
Masculine. Yes, it’s very much so. I have certainly learned what it is to be a man–and how to express that to women in their languages as well as my own.

7.) Who is the best dad you know, and how does he earn that distinction?
Perhaps I’ve already answered that: my own. They rarely lectured me, choosing instead to set the example. When they screwed up (as we all do), they set about to make things right. Being a man isn’t about being perfect; it’s about doing as much as you can well and fixing what you don’t. I call that character.

8.) Have you been more successful in public or private life?
I have been equally successful in both public and private life–and equally diverse. While being successful in my businesses, I’m also a Los Angeles county commissioner (chairing my commission). And I have sat on numerous other boards, commissions and organizations in leadership rolls, but always with an eye toward service to my fellow man. In relationships, I’ve learned to both give and to accept the things my partners need and have to give. While that can be very difficult, it’s also a very high level at which to live. I hope all men strive for it.

9.) When was the last time you cried?
When I was a child. Crying doesn’t fix the problems; action does, and I haven’t found a need to cry when I’m “doing.”

10.) What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?
First, don’t rely on the media to provide good role models of what it is to be a man. We have a highly feminized world today, and the media is quick to promote a female perspective rather than a male one. Second, there are great role models out there, if you look. They aren’t the ones making the loudest noise, however. Kanye West is just one example to avoid, for instance.

These are the men who are doing rather than talking. They are often not as easy to find because of this, but if you look hard enough they are there. When you find one, grab hold and become a sponge for examples to live by. If you temper that with good judgment, you will become a great man–and good example–yourself.

*****

Dr. Dennis Neder is the producer and host of BAM! (Being A Man) TV and the author of Being a Man in a Woman’s World, Volumes I & II and 1001 Places and Techniques to Meet Great Women. Dr. Neder notes that he has had more than 30 years of success in the worlds of business, dating, sex and relationships, sales and marketing, psychology, sociology and human interactions, giving him a unique perspective on men’s relationships with women. And, he points out, he has proven his dating and relationship techniques in the toughest market: Southern California.

In addition to starting and building a number of successful businesses, he also has held positions on numerous boards, commissions and committees, and is a commissioner for the County of Los Angeles.

Dr. Neder recently joined the faculty of Loveology University in Hollywood, California.

 

February 5, 2010

Moral Compass

Filed under: Moral Compass — Tags: , — tmatlack @ 7:00 am


(polls)

 

February 4, 2010

Moral Compass Results: Nannies over Mannies

Filed under: Moral Compass — tmatlack @ 7:00 am

Although it has becoming more common for a father to be a family’s primary provider of childcare–by his choice or because of a job loss or divorce or any number of other circumstances–most of the respondents to our previous Moral Compass poll would hire a foreign-born woman who is not a U.S. citizen to look after their kids instead of an equally qualified male U.S. citizen. Sixty-five percent of the respondents said they would choose a foreign-born woman.

Is this because, as one respondent suggested, men are stigmatized as sexual predators?

When it comes to childcare, do we have a greater prejudice against men than against foreigners; does sexism prevail over chauvinism?

Maybe it’s nothing so sinister. Maybe the fact that the woman in question was born in a foreign country makes her more appealing: She can expose a child to multiculturism during his or her most formative years.

Or maybe we just naturally view women as nurturers and therefore prefer that they care for our children.

It’s worth nothing that while we may be reluctant to leave our young children in the care of qualified American men, we trust our sons and daughters to powerful and influential male figures only a few short years later, when they go away to college, or even sooner, when they begin playing organized sports and participating in other activities dominated by male mentors.

 

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