Ron Seigel  
            CATHOLIC FAITH AND FAMILY  
            August 23, 1998 
            Boys in Search of a 
            True Identity  
            Recently, I saw a comic strip in which someone 
            asks two little boys, "Why are you guys always fighting?"  
            One of them promptly answers, "Be- cause we're guys!"  
            There is more troth than humor here. Too many boys today are being 
            brain- washed by what Pope John Paul D calls "the culture of death" 
            to associate masculinity with violence and to see violence as a 
            basic part of their sexual identity. Many boys take for granted that 
            "real guys" have to fight They actually feel a sense of shame if 
            they want to settle things peacefully.  
            Sociologist Elijah Anderson notes that a belief in violence as a way 
            to "prove" manhood has gone beyond blows and punches, and represents 
            a major factor in teen-age killings.  
            Such skewed views of manhood lead to violence against the self. Many 
            adolescent males get involved in such potentially suicidal 
            activities as taking drugs, driving too fast, or driving while drunk 
            because they're terrified their friends will consider them 
            un-masculine.  
            Such twisted attitudes lead to violence against their inner sense of 
            life." Many young males view emotions and sensitivities as something 
            "for girls." They're terrified of having and showing feelings, of ; 
            being touched and moved by something, i They develop a hatred of 
            their capacity to i love.  
            Such bizarre beliefs lead to violence against their inner spiritual 
            life. Many teen-age boys consider moral and spiritual feelings 
            "feminine" and cause for shame. Boys can be brainwashed into such 
            destructive attitudes about their sexual identity through their 
            friends' mockery, ridicule, psychological intimidation, and "peer 
            pressure." They can be brainwashed by media suggestions that such 
            values are sanctioned by the adult world. And they can be 
            brainwashed because all too often v men with strong, moral values 
            and ideas are afraid to talk about their beliefs. 
            Fortunately, parents have a unique power to counteract this 
            destructive brainwashing of boys.  
            First, they must show respect for their sons' 
            ideas and feelings. 
            Second, they can encourage boys to resist the 
            pressure of their peer group, ease the hurt of rejection, and help 
            them find a strength within themselves.  
            Third, they can counter media values by 
            discussing with their teens what they see on television or in the 
            movies, and getting them to examine media messages thoughtfully 
            instead of accepting them passively.  
            Parents can note, for instance, how this or that action movie 
            portrays casual attitudes toward violence and disrespect for is 
            human life as masculine strength or point out heroes who try to 
            handle conflicts without violence. They can read their sons stories 
            with positive heroes and positive standards, and encourage them to 
            read other it slopes on their own.  
            Fourth, fathers can represent positive models 
            of masculinity and openly discuss moral behavior with their sons.
             
            However, in doing so, fathers may have to deal with their own 
            brainwashing experiences. In such cases, it may be helpful for them 
            to adapt certain suggestions devised by psychiatrists for victims of 
            child abuse: 
            •Describe to yourself aloud, in writing, or to 
            an understanding person when you were made to feel ashamed, 
            humiliated, insulted, or pressured because of someone else's view of 
            manhood.  
            • Express the emotions you felt (or feel now) 
            - shame, anger, under attack personally, or under attack for your 
            values, emotions, self-worth, or sense of life. Don't minimize or 
            excuse what happened by dismissing it as common, normal, humorous, 
            or "part of growing up," or justifying it on the basis that it 
            toughened" you or "made a man out of you."  
            • Talk or write in imagination to those who 
            hurt you - a mocking classmate, a bully, coach, teacher, or even a 
            parent. Tell them what they did or how they made you feel 
             
            • Describe in imagination how you ought to 
            have been treated. As fathers realize from this last step what their 
            own needs were, they can "go and do likewise" with their sons.  
            "We have to encourage boys from the youngest age," notes writer 
            Myriam Miedzian. "Tell them - and show them - they can be nurturing 
            and masculine at the same time."  
            Ron Seigel is a 
            freelance writer who lives in Highland Park, Michigan  |