A Man's Way through Relationships. Dan Griffin

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A Man's Way through Relationships - Dan Griffin

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we are not dulling our consciousness or conscience. We are aware, are living an examined life, and are challenged to see that other people are not responsible for our behavior. And we become aware that the differences between individuals do not confer a status of one person as “better than” another. In fact, the differences enrich our lives. Ultimately, the two primary questions for men that I pose are: How are your behaviors consistent with the man the people in your life truly want you to be? More importantly, how are your behaviors and the beliefs you maintain reflective of the man you want to be?

      If you want to have loving and fulfilling relationships, I cannot stress this enough: Screw the Rules! Be who you are, and you cannot help but show up, authentically and as the best man you could ever be. As Jim said in the quote at the beginning of this chapter, recovery gives you the opportunity to redefine what a man is and what that looks like for you. Bob said it this way: “My history of male models has lots of bravado, independence, and low emotional expressiveness. Since recovery I have been more willing to allow interdependence and emotional expressivity as essential aspects of me. As a result, I am more comfortable in my own skin.”

       Into Action

       Take your own list of Rules and share them with your spouse, partner, and/or sponsor. Have a conversation with them about your Rules.

       Consciously look at the Rules you have listed. Which ones do you want to keep? Which ones would you like to get rid of? Which ones would you like to change?

       Choose three Rules you want to keep and write about how they have helped you and your relationships. Share what you have written with your partner or a trusted friend.

       Choose three Rules that you want to let go of or change and write about how they have hurt you and your relationships. Share what you have written with your partner or a trusted friend.

       What are five behaviors or interests you have that would be considered less masculine? What is it like for you to admit that? How long have you had those behaviors or interests? How were you treated when you exhibited them?

       My Story

      If someone is taking you on a journey, you probably want to have some confidence that that person knows where he or she is going. If you are going to follow that person, you may want to know a little more about him or her. Well, I am going to do my best to be a guide, so I would like to share a little more about myself and what this journey has been like for me.

      Like a lot of men, I was not given a very good map with which to chart the course of my life and my relationships. I do not blame anyone anymore for that; it is just how it worked out. My parents didn’t have very good maps, either. I have tried to map out the specific landscape of my relationships and have a better sense of where I am headed. Metaphorically, I have spent a lot of my life wanting to get to Paris, France, not realizing that my map only took me to Paris, Texas! The relationships I have craved in my life have been there, but I did not know how to find them—or appreciate them when I did. And again, this struggle starts with the Rules.

      Every man has his own relationship to the Man Rules. I was born in 1972. If there were one word that would best describe the way my generation (and subsequent generations) responds to the Rules, it would be confusion. For many of us, the Rules (though still in effect and still invisible) have been softened and have become less stringent than they were in previous generations. That is both positive and negative. It is positive because we have more room to move around as far as what is expected of us. It is negative, however, because there is less certainty. There is more flexibility, but it is less clear when a particular Rule is going to be enforced and when it is not.

      I was a rough-and-tumble kid. I was very athletic. I loved to play football with the neighborhood kids, and I was good at it. But Mom wouldn’t let me play football out of fear I would get hurt. I played soccer and excelled at that, along with street hockey, BMX, tennis, and golf. I loved playing with soldiers and matchbox cars, and doing anything outside. I was a boy’s boy. But I did not consider myself tough. As I mentioned earlier, I was also very sensitive and emotional. I seemed to have an inborn anxiety. This was all one big strike against me; it was against the Rules. I was the kid who would tackle another boy and feel bad if I hurt him. I hated violence. I didn’t like to fight. Strike two: I was a mama’s boy. She was the one I attached to and spent a lot of time protecting and trying to comfort when my father hurt her both emotionally and physically. I cried a lot. I also liked to read, write poetry, and even play with my sister and her friends. More strikes against me. More violations of the Rules. Nonetheless, on the surface I was pretty much following the same map as the rest of my friends. Though I was considered popular, and even “cool,” internally I felt confused and conflicted.

      As an adolescent I had an unusual and deeply painful experience. My body literally did not grow. To say I was a late bloomer is an understatement. I became acutely aware of this in eighth grade, but there were still a few other boys who also had yet to hit puberty. The summer between eighth and ninth grade I had hoped “it” would happen, but it didn’t. I stayed short and began to feel more and more powerless. The shame about who I was and about my body began to spread like a weed throughout my psyche. It was a secret, and I had to protect myself from being found out to save myself from the ultimate humiliation.

      I was five feet tall and about ninety pounds when I entered high school. I was intimidated by all of the bigger guys—and they were all bigger. My body had betrayed me. One incident was particularly humiliating. It was very early in our freshman year, and we had just finished our PE class. Everyone had to take showers. Everyone. I did my best to get out of it, but I simply wasn’t allowed. I had to take a shower, and ended up choosing the lesser of two humiliations. After all of the guys had finished, I stripped down to my underwear, stepped into the shower in my underwear, and turned the shower on. I stood under the water for the longest thirty seconds of my life and quickly got out of the shower. I cannot remember if the other boys were there or not. That was one of many humiliations that year that gave me a rude awakening to the new world in which I was living—high school—where the Rules went to the next level. It was very clear to me that I no longer fit in; I was no longer cool. And I definitely was still just a boy in a world where developing into a man was the most important rite of passage.

      I would stare at my naked body over and over again in the mirror, cursing myself and God. I wouldn’t shower for days. I started having night terrors. I’d sleep over at a friend’s house and have the night terrors there as well. I almost punched a friend’s grandfather when he came to check on me because I had been screaming and cursing in my sleep. I refused to stay the night at friends’ houses after that. I became genuinely afraid for my sanity, yet somehow was still able to attend school day after day. Was it any wonder I was such a huge discipline problem?

      My

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