Men are defying the stereotype of the clumsy, uncommunicative father and husband in droves, finds a new book, VoiceMale: What Husbands Really Think About Their Marriages, Their Wives, Sex, Housework, and Commitment by Neil Chethik. The author spoke to 70 straight men ages 22 to 95 face-to-face (and polled 288 on the phone) about their feelings toward their significant others and families. They affirmed some of the old tropes “men are less verbal” and defied others, “men don’t do housework.” From the sound of it this goes well beyond John Gray-style stereotyping––Chethik talked to real men in formal, anonymous interviews––and comes out with a more nuanced view of relationships. An article in yesterday’s Salon explored these issues with the author.
Interests: Living life as an intiatic experience, uniting with like minds and hearts to build a better, cleaner, more peaceful world, listening to the wisdom of the inner voice, communing with the elemental forces of Nature, the arts, media and communications, personal growth and development, the natural healing arts, interesting cuisines, cinema, all that expands the consciousness, betters the Self, and links me with THAT from Which I come.
Inspiration: Whitman, Thoreau, the Tao, deep meditation, spiritually anointed words carried on the human voice and the Cosmic Winds, being with those of like mind and calling.