Category:

Mental Health

        In my recent article, “The Evolution of Manhood and the Emergence of Compassionate Warriors,” I introduced you to the work of Dr. Sarah Hrdy, an anthropologist and primatologist and one of the world’s leading experts on the evolutionary basis of female behavior in both nonhuman and human primates. Dr. Hrdy has recently turned her attention to men.

                In her book, Father Time: A Natural History of Men and Babies, Dr. Hrdy destroys the myths that have kept men disconnected from our evolutionary, God-given–(Kudos to Michael Dowd for his transformative book, Thank God for Evolution)–rights to care, nurture, and hold our sons and daughters from the moment of their birth until…forever.

                I have read thousands of great books in my life and tried to write a few of my own. To say that Father Time can change the world for good would be an understatement. To say the book is timely would also be an understatement. The news is full of stories about boys and men, most of them negative. We might wonder if there is anything good about men. Father Time is not only a book about what is good about men but also offers clear science that proves that men may hold the key that unlocks secrets to our very survival as a species.

                We don’t need scientists to prove that humans are in trouble. We only need to listen to the news (or even just the weather report) to see that we are destroying our life support system and we don’t seem to be able to listen to those who are calling on us to change our ways before it’s too late.

                Thomas Berry was a priest, a “geologian,” and a historian of religions. He spoke eloquently about our connection to the Earth and the consequences of our failure to remember that we are one member in the community of life.

“We never knew enough. Nor were we sufficiently intimate with all our cousins in the great family of the earth. Nor could we listen to the various creatures of the earth, each telling its own story. The time has now come, however, when we will listen or we will die.”

                Father Time offers surprising wisdom of what we might do differently. Yet, the book almost didn’t make it into print.

“It took science far longer than it should have to recognize and zero in on the nurturing potential of men,” Dr. Hrdy reminds us. “It also took me longer than I expected to complete what, as the years dragged on, I began referring to as ‘this albatross of a book.’ Father Time was begun in 2014 as I eagerly contemplated and then luxuriated in the birth of my first grandchild.”

She goes on to say,

“I watched with awe as my son-in-law tended him right from birth. At the time my spirits were buoyed by social trends favoring women’s increased reproductive autonomy and professional opportunities along with broader definitions of what it means to be a man. The Introduction was drafted during that optimistic period, before I had to put the book on hold when my husband was diagnosed with cancer and faced surgery and bouts of radiation to cure it.

“By the time I returned to the book, backlashes aimed at re-imposing constraints on both sexes and all genders were gaining traction. It was hard for me to feel as hopeful as when I began. Yet recognizing men’s nurturing potentials and promoting their expression seems more urgent than ever.”

Old Beliefs About Men Have Harmed Us All

                Dr. Hrdy freely admits that she has held beliefs about men that are no longer valid. Good scientists are able to change their perspective when faced with new evidence, but not all scientists are able to admit they missed some critical information about men. We all have biases, but we don’t all recognize them.

“I have written whole books about maternal love and ambivalence,” says Dr. Hrdy, “with emphasis on the former. Few people could be more aware than I that we humans are mammals whose females invest heavily in their young, gestating, birthing, and then suckling them.”

                Yet, she like many scientists and the public, have known a lot about what is natural for women, but have missed important truths about what is natural for men.

“According to the standard Darwinian script,” says Dr. Hrdy, “while females were nurturing babies, males were otherwise occupied, mostly competing for status and mates, often violently or coercively.” [emphasis mine].

                She concludes,

“While a mother’s top priority is likely to be the well-being of her children, a male’s will be siring more of them. In line with such Darwinian preconceptions, across cultures and through historical time there are few, if any, records of men turning their lives over to babies the way women do. Instead, what we find is a near-universal expectation that baby care is women’s work.” [emphasis mine].

                I shared my own early experiences with my two children in the article I mentioned above. Being a hands on and heart connected father with my infant children changed my life forever. Dr. Hrdy’s book Father Time reads like a mystery novel revealing deeper and deeper layers of the truth of men’s inherent ability to nurture small children.

                She says,

“It is a story covering millions of years of vertebrate, mammalian, and particularly primate evolution, followed by thousands of years of human evolution and history, punctuated by numerous social transitions, cultural shifts and innovations.”

                What she finally discovers is simple and profound:

“My unexpected finding is that inside every man there lurk ancient caretaking tendencies that render a man every bit as protective and nurturing as the most committed mother. It is a journey that has forced me to rethink long held assumptions about man’s innately selfish, competitive, and violent nature, what Darwin described as his ‘natural and unfortunate birthright.” [emphasis mine].

Father Time and Father Earth: Healing Ourselves, Healing Our Relationship With The Planet

                Another wise grandmother who offers an inspiring novel understanding of men is Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés, a Mestiza Latina psychoanalyst and post-trauma specialist who was raised in now nearly vanished oral and ethnic traditions. She is best known for her book, Women Who Run With the Wolves: Myths and Stories of The Wild Woman Archetype was on the New York Times Best Seller list for 144 weeks.

                I still remember sitting with 200 men and women at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco in 1993. My wife, Carlin, and I were attending a special workshop for women and men, appropriately titled “Ovarios y Cojones: Labyrinths of Memory and Danger Within Women and Men,” with Dr. Estés and mythologist and storyteller, Michael Meade.

                Towards the end of the day, Clarissa shared a few poems, including, “Father Earth.” As soon as she shared the title, the hairs on the back of my neck began to tingle. I knew I was going to hear something special. Here’s what she shared:

Father Earth!
There is a two-million-year-old men, no one knows.
They cut into his rivers.
They peeled side pieces of hide from his legs.
They left scorch marks on his buttocks.
He did not cry out.
No matter what they did to him. He did not cry out.
He held firm.
Now he raises his stabbed hands and whispers that we can heal him yet.
We begin the bandages, the rolls of gauze, the cut, the needle, the grafts.
Slowly, carefully, we turn his body face up.
And under him, his lifelong lover, the old woman is perfect and unmarked.
He has laid upon his two-million-year-old lover all this time
Protecting her with his old back, with his old, scarred back.
And the soil beneath her was fertile and black with her tears.

                Like many in the audience I was moved to tears. Even as I’ve recounted the experience over the years in men’s gatherings, people are touched. A number of men commented,

“Finally, a woman finally understands what being a male is really about.”

                And many men get a glimpse into the deeper truth about men, women, creation, and the future of humankind.

                Thank you Clarissa and Sarah for sharing the wisdom of the grandmothers for all of us, men, women, and children. I also wish to thank another elder in our community, Holly Near, and her song 1,000 Grandmothers. Our local, Emandal Chorale, came together with our children and grandchildren to sing the song in a recent 4th of July parade. I’m still moved to tears seeing my friends, our children, and grandchildren, and being part of a new kind of Independence Day. You can share in the joy of our gathering here.

                Feel free to share this article and visit me at www.MenAlive.com to read more. If you’d like to read more articles like these, please consider subscribing to our FREE weekly newsletter. https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/. As always, I enjoy hearing from you. I read every email you send and will reply as I can.

The post Father Time: How Dads Are Being Called to Change the World for Good appeared first on MenAlive.

                My friend and colleague Margaret Wheatley says,

“Warriors appear at certain historic moments, when something valuable is being threatened and needs protection. It could be clans, communities, kings, lands—something is being imperiled by outside forces. This situation of extreme threat demands exceptional protectors. This is when the Warriors arise.”

                In my book, The Warrior’s Journey Home: Healing Men, Healing the Planet, I said that we must separate the life of the warrior from the destruction of war and quoted meditation master Chögyam Trungpa.

“Warriorship here does not refer to making war on others,” says Trungpa. “Aggression is the source of our problems not the solution. Here the word ‘warrior’ is taken from the Tibetan pawo which literally means ‘one who is brave.’  Warriorship in this context is the tradition of human bravery, or the tradition of fearlessness.” Trungpa concludes by saying, “Warriorship is not being afraid of who you are.”

                I experienced my first warrior calling on November 21, 1969. My wife was pregnant with our first child and I had spent the last nine hours coaching her through the Lamaze breathing techniques we had been taught in the child-birth classes with other expectant parents to be. When we began the classes, I wasn’t sure I wanted to be part of the birth process, even if I was allowed, afraid I might pass out at the sight of blood or become overly concerned with my wife’s pain and be more of a hindrance than a help.

                When the time had arrived for her to go to the delivery room, the nurse said,

“Well, your job is done here Mr. Diamond. You can go to the waiting room now.”

                I felt a mixture of sadness and relief. We had been given the rules of Kaiser hospital at the outset. Whichever doctor was there when the baby was ready to be born would decide if the father would be allowed in the delivery room. So I kissed my wife goodbye and wished her well. She was wheeled through the doors toward the delivery room and I walked down the long hallway toward the exit sign leading to the waiting room to sit with the other expectant fathers.

                Yet, in the eternity of those few moments it took to make the short walk, something shifted in me. I felt a call from my unborn child that could not be denied telling me I don’t want a waiting-room father. Your place is here with us.

                I turned around and walked back into the delivery room and took my place at the head of the table. There was no question of asking permission, no chance I would leave if directed. I was simply there. I felt a wonderful sense of calm come over me and quite soon, amid tears of joy, my son, Jemal, arrived in the world. He was handed to me and as I looked into his eyes, I made a vow that I would be a different kind of father than my father was able to be for me and to do everything I could to create a world where fathers were fully involved with their children throughout their lives.

                When my wife and I were in college after we had met and fallen in love, we agreed we both wanted children. But we also felt that there were children already born who needed loving parents. We decided we would have a child then adopt a child. After Jemal was born, we began the adoption process for a little girl. Two years later we adopted a two-and-a-half-month old African-American little girl who we named Angela.

                As I write this our son Jemal, is 54 and has a child of his own. Angela is 52 and has four children. My wife, Carlin, and I now have six grown children, seventeen grandchildren, three great grandchildren, and one on the way. Before I had children, I thought my purpose as a man was centered outside the home, with the work I did in the world. I still do work outside the home, but over the years I have come to see my most important role has been as a hands-on caregiver.

Father Time: A Natural History of Men and Babies

                Dr. Sarah Hrdy is an anthropologist and primatologist and one of the world’s leading experts on the evolutionary basis of female behavior in both nonhuman and human primates. She has recently turned her attention to men.

“It has long seemed self-evident that women care for babies and men do other things,” says Hrdy. “When evolutionary science came along, it rubber-stamped this venerable division of labor: mammalian males evolved to compete for status and mates, while females were purpose-built to gestate, suckle, and otherwise nurture the victors’ offspring.”

                In her recent book, Father Time: A Natural History of Men and Babies, Hrdy set out to trace the deep history of male nurturing and explain a surprising departure from everything she had assumed to be “normal.” She offers a sweeping account of male nurturing, explaining how and why men are biologically transformed when they care for babies.

                “Under the right circumstances,” she says, “males of our species are as well-equipped as women to tenderly nurture babies and develop caring priorities. Gestation, giving birth, and breast-feeding are not nature’s sole pathways to parental involvement and intense devotion.”

                This was certainly my experience when Jemal and Angela were babies. Once I brought my wife and new-born son home from the hospital, I took three weeks off from work to help with the immediate caregiving. I assumed that mothers were born with some genetically driven knowledge of how to care for babies but soon learned that was not the case. She had breasts for the baby, but breastfeeding was an art she and the baby had to learn together.

                I knew that changing diapers was not a sex-specific skill and I soon learned to get as good at it as was my wife. After three weeks I went back to work and my wife soon moved into the role of full-time caregiver, with me as the support team. That lasted a year until my wife announced one day that she needed a break and was doing to take a three-week trip with a girlfriend and that I would assume full-time care duties while she was away.

                The idea sounded reasonable. I could tell she was exhausted even with the help I supplied when I came home from work. But the truth was I was scared as hell. All my fears came to the surface. What will I do when I don’t know what to do? What if he starts crying and I can’t make him stop? We didn’t have any other family who lived close to us and most of our friends were either single or were overwhelmed with their own family challenges.

                My wife was reassuring and said I could call her if I needed advice. She kissed me goodbye and off she went. I’m a long way from those fearful days, but the truth was it was one of the greatest gifts of my life. Jemal and I worked things out together. Each hour of each day we were together, I gained confidence. My wife had left enough breast milk (using one of those handpumps popular at the time) and I learned how to heat and serve. We played together and I carried him around on my back.

                My wife got worried when I hadn’t called and when she phoned me she was relieved to learn that we were going well. My confidence as a man has grown through the years as I learned new skills in caring for our daughter.

                Dr. Hrdy discovered some of the reasons that men can become as good at nurturing infants as women.

“Early in my career, back in the 1970s while still focused on infanticide, the antithesis of nurturing,” says Hrdy, “I learned about a phenomenon called ‘sensitization.’ Even in species of animals whose males ordinarily ignore, attack, or cannibalize pups they encounter, males might, given the right circumstances, switch to gently tending them instead. What it took was repeated exposure. Time in intimate proximity somehow ‘flipped a switch’ in the deepest recesses of the male brain, whether a rodent’s or a monkey’s.”

                Dr. Hrdy went on to say,

“Time in intimate proximity to babies could have surprising effects on males including surges in oxytocin (known as a ‘bonding’ hormone).”  

                I didn’t know it at the time, but being in intimate contact with my children triggered the brain chemicals that are present in both males and females and can be stimulated if given enough time together. Dr. Hrdy concludes,

“For men, it turns out, have a different birthright from the one that I and many of my evolutionary colleagues have so long assigned them.”

                In standing up to a system that would deny fathers in the delivery room, I learned that it takes strength with heart, as my colleague Dr. Daniel Ellenberg describes it or being a compassionate warrior as another friend, Sean Harvey discusses in his book, Warrior Compassion: Unleashing the Healing Power of Men. It’s time for more men to stand up and embrace our birthright. We are needed now more than ever.

                I look forward to hearing from you. What are you own experiences nurturing young children? What support have your received? What resistance have you found from others or from your own early conditioning about what is “natural” for men?

                If you would like to read more articles like these, please visit me at www.MenAlive.com. You can subscribe to my free weekly newsletter here: https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/.

The post The Evolution of Manhood and the Emergence of Compassionate Warriors appeared first on MenAlive.

                Since I turned eighty-one years old in December 2024, I have been reflecting on what I’ve learned about being a man. As a sensitive and introverted child raised by a single mom I had no idea what it meant to be a man. I was clear about what a man should do–Get educated so I could catch an attractive woman, marry her, have kids, and become rich and famous.

                By the time I was thirty-five, I had graduated from U.C. Berkeley with a master’s degree in social work, had met and married my college sweetheart, was the proud father of a son and daughter, was earning good money, and was imagining the next steps to fame and fortune. I was also stressed, depressed, angry, and on the verge of divorce. I felt confused, lost, and discouraged.

                When I was at my lowest point, having intermittent thoughts of ending my life, I chanced to see a poster on a bulletin board that offered a tiny glimpse of hope.

“Men, come and share a day with other men and hear psychologist Herb Goldberg, author of The Hazards of Being Male.”

                Fifteen guys met on April 21, 1979 and heard Dr. Goldberg tell us that,

“The male has paid a heavy price for his masculine ‘privilege’ and power. He is out of touch with his emotions and his body. He is playing by the rules of the male game plan and with lemming-like purpose is destroying himself—emotionally, psychologically, and physically.”

                For the first time in my life I felt I was hearing the truth about the path I was on. By the end of the day one of the organizers, a tall handsome, teddy-bear of a man named Tom Sipes, invited those interested in continuing the group to meet at his house the following Wednesday. Ten guys came and agreed to begin meeting weekly. The group soon was reduced to seven and those seven guys have continued to meet for the last forty-six years.

                There were three guys younger than me and three guys older. We came from different backgrounds and experiences, but the thing we all had in common was this: We longed to be men, not the boymen we were pretending to be. We wanted a different direction than the one we were following and we knew that having a band of brothers could help us find our way.

                We met weekly, talked deeply, took risks to be vulnerable and real with our feelings and having the courage to share them with each other. I was encouraged to write my first book, Inside Out: Becoming My Own Man, which was published in 1983 right up to my seventeenth, Long Live Men! The Moonshot Mission to Heal Men, Close the Lifespan Gap, and Offer Hope to Humanity.

                We attended men’s gatherings with Robert Bly and others and read books including King, Warrior, Magician, Love: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine, by Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette in which they contrast archetypes of “Boy Psychology” from “Man Psychology.”

                In their book King, Warrior, Magician, Love: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine, they offer these examples of boy psychology: 

  • The ducking and diving political leader.
  • The wife beater.
  • The company “yes man.”
  • The “holier than thou” minister.
  • The gang member.
  • The father who can never find the time to attend his daughter’s school program.
  • The therapist who unconsciously attacks a clients’ “shining” and seeks a kind of gray normalcy for them.

“All these men have something in common,” say Moore and Gillette. “They are all boys pretending to be men. They got that way honestly, because nobody showed them what a mature man is like. Their kind of ‘manhood’ is a pretense to manhood that goes largely undetected as such by most of us. We are continually mistaking this man’s controlling, threatening, and hostile behavior for strength. In reality, he is showing an underlying extreme vulnerability and weakness, the vulnerability of the wounded boy.”

                I have recently written a series of articles, In Search of Mature Masculinity in a World of Wounded BoyMen that describes the world of “boys pretending to be men” and the kind of mature masculinity we all need in our lives.

The Two Archetypes of  Wounded Boys Pretending to Be Men

                Reflecting on my experiences in my own life, what I see with the thousands of boys and men I have counseled over the years, and what is reflected in our current government in the U.S., I see two dominant archetypes that underlie the behavior of Wounded Boys Pretending to Be Men:

                First is what Moore and Gillette describe as The Highchair Tyrant.

“The Highchair Tyrant,” say Moore and Gillette, “is epitomized by the image of Little Lord Fauntleroy sitting in his highchair, banging on the tray, and screaming for his mother to feed him, kiss him, and attend to him.”

                As an only child being raised by a single mom, I developed a lot of these tendencies in my own childhood. They also extended into my adult life in  my relationships with women and contributed to my two failed marriages. I was fortunate to get support to heal and grow up and have now been joyfully married to my wife, Carlin, for forty-five years.

“The Highchair Tyrant,” says Moore and Gillette, “hurts himself with his grandiosity—the limitlessness of his demands—because he rejects the very things that he needs for life: food and love.”

                Moore and Gillette summarize the following characteristics of The Highchair Tyrant:

  • Arrogance (what the Greeks called hubris, or overwhelming pride).
  • Childishness (in the negative sense).
  • Irresponsibility, even to himself as a mortal being who has to meet his biological and psychological needs.
  • The Highchair tyrant needs to learn that he is not the center of the universe and that the universe does not exist to fulfill his every need, or better put, his limitless needs, his pretentions to godhood.

                I suspect we can all recognize many of these characteristics in boys and men we know–from the centers of power in government to business leaders and males in our own families and communities.

                The second archetype of boy psychology described by Moore and Gillette is The Weakling Prince.

“The boy (and later the man) who is possessed by the Weakling Prince needs to be coddled, who dictates to those around him by his silent or his whining and complaining helplessness.”

                As adults, those possessed by the Weakling Prince archetype often become “Mr. Nice Guys.” Dr. Robert Glover, author of the book No More Mr. Nice Guy says,

“A Nice Guy is a man who believes he is not okay, just as he is. Due to both societal and familial conditioning, the Nice Guy is convinced he must become what he thinks others want him to be in order to be liked, loved, and get his needs met. He also believes that he must hide anything about himself that might trigger a negative response in others.”

He goes on to say, “This inauthentic and chameleon-like approach to life causes Nice Guys to feel frustrated, confused, and resentful. Subsequently, these men are often anything but nice. In fact, Nice Guys are generally dishonest, secretive, manipulative, controlling, self-centered, and passive-aggressive.”

                The historian, Ruth Ben-Ghiat, describes political leaders driven by boy psychology in her book, Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present.

“For ours is the age of authoritarian rulers: self-proclaimed saviors of the nation who evade accountability while robing their people of truth, treasure, and the protections of democracy. They use masculinity as a symbol of strength and a political weapon. Taking what you want, and getting away with it, becomes proof of male authority. They use propaganda, corruption, and violence to stay in power.”

The Compassionate Warrior: The Power of Mature Man Psychology

                I first heard the words  “compassionate” and “warrior” combined from Sean Harvey, author of the book Warrior Compassion: Unleashing the Healing Power of Men.

“When we combine the concepts of warrior and compassion, an energetic shift happens,”

says Harvey. He goes on to say,

“Compassion is most easily defined as the feeling or emotion when a person is moved by suffering or distress of another, and by the desire to relieve the suffering. Taking a step further, to be compassionate to others, we must begin by learning to become compassionate to ourselves.”

                Harvey describes the strength of the warrior spirit this way:

“The warrior archetype represents strength, courage, and the relentless pursuit of justice and honor. It embodies discipline, resilience, and unwavering determination to protect and defend what is most valued.”

                I shared a similar perspective in my book, The Warrior’s Journey Home: Healing Men, Healing the Planet, that was published in 1994. I drew on my experiences practicing Aikido and from books including Aikido and the New Warrior by one of my Aikido instructors, Richard Strozzi-Heckler.

                Chögyam Trungpa was a Tibetan Buddhist master and scholar. I quote his understanding of compassionate warriorship in my book, The Warrior’s Journey Home.

“Warriorship here,” said Trungpa, “does not refer to making war on others. Aggression is the source of our problems, not the solution.” He goes on to say, “Here the word ‘warrior’ is taken from the Tibetan pawo which literally means ‘one who is brave.’ Warriorship in this context is the tradition of human bravery, or the tradition of fearlessness. Warriorship is not being afraid of who you are.”

                For me, this captures the essence of The Compassionate Warrior and learning to become that kind of man is what we need to find in ourselves, in those we choose to lead us, and in a world dominated by angry, wounded boys, pretending to be men. If given a choice boys and men will choose this more powerful, caring, and compassionate way of being.

                Our organization, Moonshot for Mankind, brings together organizations that are dedicated to teaching, training, and guiding boys and men to achieve the qualities of mature masculinity, including how to become compassionate warriors.

                If you would like to learn more about my own work, please visit me at MenAlive.com. 

The post The Three Masculinity Types Competing for the Minds of Boys and Men Today appeared first on MenAlive.

In my seventeenth book, 12 Rules For Good Men, I detailed twelve specific things I felt were important for men in order to become their healthiest, most mature, selves:

  • Join a Men’s Group.
  • Break free from the Man Box.
  • Accept the Gift of Maleness.
  • Embrace Your Billion Year History of Maleness.
  • Recognize Your Anger and Fear Toward Women.
  • Learn the Secrets of Real Lasting Love.
  • Undergo Meaningful Rites of Passage from Youth to Adulthood and from Adulthood to Elderhood or Super-adulthood.
  • Celebrate Your True Warrior Spirit and Learn Why Males Duel and Females Duet.
  • Understand and Heal Your Adverse Childhood Experiences and Male Attachment Disorders.
  • Heal Your Father Wound and Become the Father You Were Meant to Be.
  • Treat the Irritable Male Syndrome and Male-Type Depression.
  • Find Your Mission in Life and Do Your Part to Save Humanity.

After working in the field of Gender-Specific Healing and Men’s Health for more than fifty years, these twelve “rules” were my response to the many questions I was hearing from thousands of men who were asking,

  • What are the most important things I need to do to save my marriage?
  • What work is most meaningful and how can I make a living doing what I feel called to do?
  • What does it really mean heal my own wounds and be a good man in today’s world?
  • How do I help my children, grandchildren and future generations to survive and thrive in a world turned upside down?

Meet Andrew Cohn: A Man a Mission With an Invitation for You

Today I would like to introduce you to a kindred spirit, Andrew Cohn. Andrew is a trusted leadership counselor, coach, facilitator, consultant, and speaker. He began his career as an attorney in Los Angeles before changing his focus to leadership and organization development in 1997. I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Andrew, discussing his background, and his current work with men. You can watch the full interview here.

Andrew is offering a unique opportunity for men April 25-27, 2025 that I highly recommend.

“In this powerful and nurturing retreat for men in beautiful Santa Fe, we will take a deep dive into the challenges and delights of being a man in 2025 and beyond,” says Andrew, “what we fear and what makes us uncomfortable, and how to be more purposeful and authentic. We’ll build a community of men committed to making the world a better place by identifying and demonstrating the sacred masculine. We will feel, think, and grow together, drawing upon the beauty of Northern New Mexico, including learning with/from our equine partners.”

If you read my recent article, “Why Humanity’s Future May Depend on Our Connection to Our 56-Million-Year-Old Elders,” you know about the work of Kelly Wendorf and her work at Equus. Kelly and Andrew are partners and the men’s retreat will take place at the Buffalo Spirit Ranch, EQUUS’s exquisite 11-acre Experiential Discovery and Learning Campus.

Andrew says,

“If you or a man you know may be interested in attending, please contact me ASAP to discuss. The group will be limited to 15 men and is expected to fill up quickly. For more information, email me: andrew@lighthouseteams.com.”

These are challenging times for everyone and men are no exception. In a recent article, “In Search of Mature Masculinity in a World of Wounded BoyMen,” I described three current views of masculinity and manhood that we see represented in our government, boardrooms, and bedrooms.

1. The Highchair Tyrant

    As described by Jungian psychoanalyst and psychologist Robert Moore and mythologist and counselor Douglas Gillette, in their book, King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine,

    “The Highchair Tyrant is an archetype of ‘Boy Psychology.’ He is epitomized by the image of Little Lord Fauntleroy sitting in his highchair, banging on the tray, and screaming for his mother to feed him, kiss him, and attend to him.”

    They go on to say,

    “The Highchair Tyrant needs to learn that he is not the center of the universe and that the universe does not exist to fulfill his every need, or better put, his limitless needs, his pretentions to godhood.”

    Do you recognize this character in anyone you know or any males you hear about?

    2. The Weakling Prince.

    The second archetype of boy psychology described by Moore and Gillette is The Weakling Prince.

    “The boy (and later the man) who is possessed by the Weakling Prince, needs to be coddled, who dictates to those around him by his silent or his whining and complaining helplessness,” say Moore and Gillette.

    As adults, those possessed by the Weakling Prince archetype often become “Mr. Nice Guys.” Dr. Robert Glover, author of the book No More Mr. Nice Guy says,

    “A Nice Guy is a man who believes he is not okay, just as he is. Due to both societal and familial conditioning, the Nice Guy is convinced he must become what he thinks others want him to be in order to be liked, loved, and get his needs met. He also believes that he must hide anything about himself that might trigger a negative response in others.”

    Glover goes on to say,

    “This inauthentic and chameleon-like approach to life causes Nice Guys to feel frustrated, confused, and resentful. Subsequently, these men are often anything but nice. In fact, Nice Guys are generally, dishonest, secretive, manipulative, controlling, self-centered, and passive-aggressive.”

    Do you recognize this character in anyone you know or any males you hear about?

    Neither of these kinds of boys masquerading as men are likely to be helpful in our personal, professional or community lives. We need men who are strong and caring, who have been well mentored and undergone healthy Rites of Passage.

    The historian, Ruth Ben-Giat, describes political leaders driven by boy psychology in her book, Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present.

    “For ours is the age of authoritarian rulers: self-proclaimed saviors of the nation who evade accountability while robing their people of truth, treasure, and the protections of democracy. They use masculinity as a symbol of strength and a political weapon. Taking what you want, and getting away with it, becomes proof of male authority. They use propaganda, corruption, and violence to stay in power.”

    3. The Mature Whole Man.

    I turned 81 years old in December 2024. I described my own journey in search of mature masculinity in the seventeen books I have written including one called The Whole Man Program: Reinvigorating Your Body, Mind, and Spirit After 40.

    I began the book with a quote from the philosopher Paul Tillich who I met when I was in college at U.C. Santa Barbara between 1964. He said,

    “Every serious thinker must ask and answer these three fundamental questions:

    • What is wrong with us? With men? Women? Society? What is the nature of our alienation? Our dis-ease?
    • What would we be like if we were whole? Healed? Actualized? If our potentiality was fulfilled?
    • How do we move from our condition of brokenness to wholeness? What are the means of healing?”

    In the book, I described the program that I found helpful in my own life and that I recommend to my family, friends, and clients. I believe what the world needs now, more than ever, is Mature Whole Men and Mature Whole Women.

    Moore and Gillette describe four archetypes of mature masculinity—The King, The Warrior, The Magician, and The Lover. The mature man embodies all four of these primal energies.

    “The King energy is primal in all men,” say Moore and Gillette. “Two functions of King energy make the transition from Boy psychology to Man psychology possible. The first of these is ordering; the second is providing fertility and blessing.”

    They go on to say, “The King is the central archetype. The good King is at the Center of the World. He sits on his throne on the central mountain, or on the Primeval Hill, as the ancient Egyptians called it.”

    (Remember—Don’t confuse the archetype of the King with the worldly kings who have often been High Chair tyrants, rather than mature male leaders. Also, remember that there are female counterparts to these archetype.)

    Moore and Gillette offer the example of the Sioux medicine man Black Elk who John Neihardt describes in his book, Black Elk Speaks. Black Elk speaks of the world as a great “hoop” divided by two paths, a “red path” and a “black path,” which intersect. Where they intersect is the central mountain of the world. It is on that mountain that the great Father God—the King energy—speaks and gives Black Elk a series of revelations for his people.

    The mature male leader tunes in and receive the guidance from the “great Father God” and gives his people rules and laws to follow for the good of the people and the communities of life that all humans depend upon.

    “The King energy brings abundance and blessings to his people,” say Moore and Gillette. “In conjunction with his ordering function, the second vital good that the King energy manifests is fertility and blessing.”

    The mature male leader sees the good in all creation and supports the creation of new life both for humans, as well as the animal and plant kingdoms and recognizes that all life is connected.

    The mature male leader accomplishes this by being an exemplar in his own life of what he gives to others. Like all humans, he makes mistakes, but he can acknowledge them when they occur and does not blame others.  He is not a God separate from his people, but a human being drawing on the gifts of the Gods and the archetypal legacies from millions of years of human history.

    Do you recognize this character of the Mature Whole Man in anyone you know or any males you hear about?

    Our organization, The Moonshot For Mankind and Humanity, brings together organizations that are dedicated to teaching, training, and guiding boys and men to achieve the qualities of mature masculinity.

    If you would like to get more information about Andrew Cohn and his work you can reach him here: https://www.lighthouseteams.com/

    If you would like to learn more about my own work, please visit me at MenAlive.com.  

    The post Why Joining a Men’s Group Now May Be the Most Important Decision of Your Life, Part 2: Expanding the Vision: Genuine Masculinity Retreat appeared first on MenAlive.

                    I have been in a men’s group that has been meeting for 46 years. I was thirty-five years old when it began and I’m eighty-one now. I want to start a new group and am looking for ten mid-life men who would like to be in the group with me.

                    Midlife is a time for change and transformation. Success is enhanced by surrounding oneself with other men who are learning, evolving, and supporting each other on this journey with an experienced guide to light the way. We will focus on the following four pillars:

    • Becoming your authentic self and being the best you that you can be.
    • Deepening your love for your intimate partner, children, family, and friends.
    • Embracing your calling and bringing your unique work to the world.
    • Being a champion for good in a world where so much bad is happening.

    Why I’m Looking for a Few Good Men to Join Me Now

                    When I turned 80 in December 2024, I began thinking of starting a new men’s group. I had just interviewed my friend and colleague Chip Conley, CEO, and founder of Modern Elder Academy about his new book, Learning to Love Midlife. Chip offered a new and expanded understanding of midlife change and described three midlife age stages: (1) 35 to 50, (2) 50 to 60, (3) 60 to 75.

                    I had the unique privilege of joining a men’s group in 1979 when I was 35 years old. It forever changed my personal and professional life. The group is coming to an end after forty-six years. Four of our members have died and we have come to a natural ending point. I feel called now to mentor and learn with others. I am looking for a few good men to join me in an adventure of a lifetime.

                    The Czech stateman and dissident, Václav Havel, spoke to our times when he said,

    “Today, many things indicate that we are going through a transitional period when it seems that something is on the way out and something else is painfully being born. It is as if something were crumbling, decaying, and exhausting itself, while something else, still indistinct, were arising from the rubble.”

                    This is our time to do our part to help create a better world for everyone. The world needs you. Your family needs you. You need you! And we need each other.

    Who Should Consider Applying to Join the Group?

    • You are a midlife man who has been in a men’s group or has considered being in one.
    • You recognize the value of being with caring and supportive men to share your journey.
    • You are successful in life and a natural leader but are ready to do more and be more.
    • You hunger for a wise community of colleagues in your corner who support your growth, hold you accountable, and celebrate your victories. 
    • You may be a counselor, coach, or healer, but whatever your profession you want to help people thrive and succeed in life.
    • You are ready to be mentored by an experienced elder and want to share what you have learned with other men.

    I Invite You to Join the Diamond Men’s Circle: Here Are Answers to Some Important Questions

                    What is The Diamond Men’s Circle?

                    The Diamond Men’s Circle is an online group coaching program for personal and professional development. The group meets specifically for the purpose of supporting conscious and intentional self-discovery, growth, and transformative change. The Men’s Circle is a cost-effective way to engage in powerful coaching without the private 1:1 coaching price tag. The spirit of the meeting is to cultivate a strong and trustworthy fellowship of support by allowing the ancient wisdom of men the men’s circle to guide our journey together.

                    How many members are in the circle?

                    The circle will be limited to ten men, plus Jed as your mentor, coach, and facilitator.

                    How frequently do we meet and for how long?

                    The Men’s Circle meets twice a month for 90 minutes each session. The minimum commitment is three months, or you may choose a 12-month membership. The Men’s Circle runs perpetually so enrollments may roll into another three- or 12-month membership. Some members continue indefinitely and consider The Men’s group an important part of remaining healthy, grounded, and successful through the years.

                    When will the group begin?

                    Those interested can apply now. The group will begin in June (Men’s Health month).

                    How are the groups facilitated?

                    Through a custom-created curriculum, structure, and Jed’s facilitation, members explore topics and practices together, as well as deeply engage in their own learning edges just outside their comfort zones. While Jed designs and facilitates the exercises, practical applications and practices, some of the content is also driven by the members themselves – on the topics they wish to explore.

                    Homework and assignments take place in between calls to keep the learning momentum and engagement going, as well as practical actions steps to implement in your life. Networking with other members of the group is encouraged during and between sessions.

                    Are other experts involved?

                    I have numerous colleagues who share their own expertise in recorded discussions with Jed and may also be available to answer participants questions live. Here are some of  those involved:

    • Dr. Gary Barker, International voice for healthy manhood, gender equality and violence prevention. CEO of Equimundo.  
    • Chip Conley, Co-founder and CEO of the Modern Elder Academy and author of Learning to Love Midlife.                                
    • Michael Gurian, Journalist and bestselling author of 32 books including The Wonder of Boys and Boys: A Rescue Plan (with Shaun Kullman).
    • Kelly Wendorf, Founder/CEO of Equus, author of Flying Lead Change: 56 Million Years of Wisdom for Leading and Living.
    • Richard V. Reeves, Founding President of the American Institute for Boys and Men, author of Of Boys and Men.
    • Mo Gawdat, Former Chief Business Officer at Google X, bestselling author of Solve For Happy.
    • Marianne J. Legato, M.D., Founder Foundation for Gender-Specific Medicine, author of Why Men Die First: How to Lengthen Your Lifespan        
    • Drs. Harville Hendrix & Helen LaKelly Hunt, Relationship experts, authors of Getting The Love You Want.
    • Dr. Jill Bolte-Taylor, Harvard-trained neuroscientist, author of My Stroke of Insight and Whole Brain Living.                  
    • Dr. Warren Farrell, Author of The Boy Crisis and Role Mate to Soul Mate. 

                    What is the investment?

    • Three-month program $900  ($300/month).
    • Twelve-month program $3000 (Save $600).
    • There is potential for the group to continue beyond a year if the members are interested.

                    Is individual counseling available if desired?

                    Private, individual sessions with Jed are at the regular rate of $450 per hour. Members of the Men’s Circle who desire individual counseling will have priority when an opening is available.

                    Who are Men’s Circles for?

                    Men’s Circle is perfect for you if:

    • You are ready to jumpstart your personal and professional growth.
    • You seek a community of like-minded individuals who share your goals and values for transformative change.
    • You know you need to improve your love life.
    • You are considering shifting or upgrading your work life and want to work smarter with less stress, more purpose, increased income, and greater satisfaction.
    • You want deeper and more satisfying friendships with men.
    • Your life is changing and you need to get clarity about your priorities and how to remain true to yourself.
    • You know humanity is in trouble and you want to ensure a better future for your children, grandchildren, and future generations.

                    Who is Dr. Jed Diamond?

                    You may know me from one of the seventeen books I have written since me first book, Inside Out: Becoming My Own Man, was published in 1983 or from one of my international bestsellers, Looking for Love in All the Wrong Places, Male Menopause, or The Irritable Male Syndrome. You may not know that I am one of the world’s leading experts on Gender-Specific Healing and Men’s Health, have run a successful million-dollar-one-person business for many years, and have been married to my third wife, Carlin, for 45 years. We have six grown children, seventeen grandchildren, and four great grandchildren.

                     What’s next? I think this might be what I’ve been looking for.

                    If you feel moved to act, I would like to meet you. Drop me a note to Jed@MenAlive.com and put “Men’s Circle” in the subject line. I will get right back to you so we can meet, discuss your needs, answer your questions, and see if this is right fit for you. There are only ten spots available. So, if you are interested, I suggest you contact me right away.

                    I will share more about the group and the importance of men’s work in future articles. If you haven’t already, feel free to subscribe to my free weekly newsletter here: https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/

    The post Why Joining a Men’s Group Now May Be the Most Important Decision of Your Life: Part 1: An Invitation to Midlife Men appeared first on MenAlive.

    Long Live Men: Emerging Communities Supporting Mature Masculinity

    In Part 1, I discussed the origin of my own search for masculinity growing up with an absent father. I also introduced you to Michael Gurian and Sean Kullman and their book, Boys, A Rescue Plan: Moving Beyond the Politics of Masculinity to Health Male Development. In Part 2, I expanded the discussion to draw on the work of other colleagues who are recognizing that healthy masculinity, like healthy femininity, are opposite sides of the same coin and must be supported together for the good of all. In Part 3, I described the work of Jungian psychologist Robert Moore and mythologist Douglas Gillette and their exploration of the four archetypes of mature masculinity they wrote about in their book, King, Warrior, Magician, and Lover: Rediscovering The Archetypes of the Mature Masculine.

    In this final part of the series I want to talk about three archetypes of masculinity currently being expressed in the world today and why only one of them offers real hope for the future of men, women, children, humanity, and the community of life on planet Earth.

    Since I turned 81 years old in December 2024, I have been reflecting on what I’ve learned in my life as a man. I try to describe my own evolution from a life based on what Moore and Gillette call “boy psychology” to one based on a healthy, balanced, mature male psychology. We see examples of boy psychology all around us. Here are a few examples from Moore and Gillette’s book:

    • The ducking and diving political leader.
    • The wife beater.
    • The company “yes man.”
    • The “holier than thou” minister.
    • The gang member.
    • The father who can never find the time to attend his daughter’s school program.
    • The therapist who unconsciously attacks a clients’ “shining” and seeks a kind of gray normalcy for them.

    “All these men have something in common,” say Moore and Gillette. “They are all boys pretending to be men. They got that way honestly, because nobody showed them what a mature man is like. Their kind of ‘manhood’ is a pretense to manhood that goes largely undetected as such by most of us. We are continually mistaking this man’s controlling, threatening, and hostile behavior for strength. In reality, he is showing an underlying extreme vulnerability and weakness, the vulnerability of the wounded boy.”

    The Two Archetypes of Wounded Boys Pretending to Be Men

                    Reflecting on my experiences in my own life, what I see with the thousands of boys and men I have counseled over the years, and what is reflected in our current government in the U.S., I see two dominant archetypes that underlie the behavior of Wounded Boys Pretending to Me Men:

    First is what Moore and Gillette describe as The Highchair Tyrant.

    “The Highchair Tyrant,” say Moore and Gillette, “is epitomized by the image of Little Lord Fauntleroy sitting in his highchair, banging on the tray, and screaming for his mother to feed him, kiss him, and attend to him.”

    As an only child being raised by a single mom, I developed a lot of these tendencies in my own childhood. They also extended into my adult life in my relationships with women and contributed to my two failed marriages. I was fortunate to get support to heal and grow up and have now been joyfully married to my wife, Carlin, for forty-five years.

    “The Highchair Tyrant,” says Moore and Gillette, “hurts himself with his grandiosity—the limitlessness of his demands—because he rejects the very things that he needs for life: food and love.”

    Moore and Gillette summarize the following characteristics of The Highchair Tyrant:

    • Arrogance (what the Greeks called hubris, or overwhelming pride).
    • Childishness (in the negative sense).
    • Irresponsibility, even to himself as a mortal being who has to meet his biological and psychological needs.
    • The Highchair Tyrant needs to learn that he is not the center of the universe and that the universe does not exist to fulfill his every need, or better put, his limitless needs, his pretentions to godhood.

    I suspect we can all recognize many of these characteristics in boys and men we know–from the centers of power in government to business leaders and males in our own families and communities.

    The second archetype of boy psychology described by Moore and Gillette is The Weakling Prince.

    “The boy (and later the man) who is possessed by the Weakling Prince, needs to be coddled, who dictates to those around him by his silent or his whining and complaining helplessness.”

    As adults, those possessed by the Weakling Prince archetype often become “Mr. Nice Guys.” Dr. Robert Glover, author of the book No More Mr. Nice Guy says,

    “A Nice Guy is a man who believes he is not okay, just as he is. Due to both societal and familial conditioning, the Nice Guy is convinced he must become what he thinks others want him to be in order to be liked, loved, and get his needs met. He also believes that he must hide anything about himself that might trigger a negative response in others.”

    He goes on to say, “This inauthentic and chameleon-like approach to life causes Nice Guys to feel frustrated, confused, and resentful. Subsequently, these men are often anything but nice. In fact, Nice Guys are generally, dishonest, secretive, manipulative, controlling, self-centered, and passive-aggressive.”

    The historian, Ruth Ben-Giat, describes political leaders driven by boy psychology in her book, Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present.

    “For ours is the age of authoritarian rulers: self-proclaimed saviors of the nation who evade accountability while robing their people of truth, treasure, and the protections of democracy. They use masculinity as a symbol of strength and a political weapon. Taking what you want, and getting away with it, becomes proof of male authority. They use propaganda, corruption, and violence to stay in power.”

    The Rise of Communities of Mature Masculinity

                    In my book, 12 Rules for Good Men, I describe my own journey leading to mature masculinity, MenAlive, the organization I founded, and other organizations I collaborate with. I describe our work in an article, “MenAlive Now: Taking Action in Support of Our Children.”

                    In introducing the archetypes of mature masculinity Moore and Gillette say,

    “Those of us who have been influenced by the thinking of the great Swiss psychologist Carl Jung have great reason to hope that the external deficiencies we have encountered in the world as would-be men (the absent father, the immature father, the lack of meaningful ritual process, the scarcity of ritual elders) can be corrected.”

                    They go on to say, “It is our experience that deep within every man are blueprints, what we can also call ‘hard wiring’ for the calm and positive mature masculine. Jungians refer to these masculine potentials as archetypes or ‘primordial images.’ Jung and his successors have found that on the level of the deep unconscious the psyche of every person is grounded in what Jung called the ‘collective unconscious,’ made up of instinctual patterns and energy configurations probably inherited genetically throughout the generations of our species.”

    Moore and Gillette describe four archetypes of mature masculinity—The King, The Warrior, The Magician, and The Lover. The mature man embodies all four of these primal energies.

    “The King energy is primal in all men,” say Moore and Gillette. “Two functions of King energy make the transition from Boy psychology to Man psychology possible. The first of these is ordering; the second is providing fertility and blessing.”

    The King Energy Brings Order to His People

                    “The King is the central archetype,” say Moore and Gillette. “The good King is at the Center of the World. He sits on his throne on the central mountain, or on the Primeval Hill, as the ancient Egyptians called it.”

    (Remember—Don’t confuse the archetype of the King with the worldly kings who have been High Chair tyrants, rather than mature male leaders. Also, remember that there are female counterparts to these archetypes).

                    Moore and Gillette offers the example of the Sioux medicine man Black Elk who John Neihardt describes in his book, Black Elk Speaks. Black Elk speaks of the world as a great “hoop” divided by two paths, a “red path” and a “black path,” which intersect. Where they intersect is the central mountain of the world. It is on that mountain that the great Father God—the King energy—speaks and gives Black Elk a series of revelations for his people.

                    The mature male leader tunes in and receive the guidance from the “great Father God” and gives his people rules and laws to follow for the good of the people and the communities of life that all humans depend upon.

    The King Energy Brings Abundance and Blessings to His People

                    “In conjunction with his ordering function, the second vital good that the King energy manifests is fertility and blessing.”

    The mature male leader sees the good in all creation and supports the creation of new life both for humans, as well as the animal and plant kingdoms and recognizes that all life is connected.

                    The mature male leader accomplishes this by being an exemplar in his own life of what he gives to others. Like all humans, he makes mistakes, but he is able to acknowledge them when they occur and does not blame others.  He is not a God separate from his people, but a human being drawing on the gifts of the Gods and the archetypal legacies from millions of years of human history.

    Do Not Lose Hope. We Were Made for These Times

                    These are challenging times. We are living in a country where Boy Psychology seems to be running rampant and the human species is living in ways that are not sustainable. There are times I feel like giving up and just want to give in and let go. But, I have had the good fortune of connecting with more and more men who aspire to lives of mature masculinity and see mature masculinity as not only possible but is the hope for our collective future.

                    As Czech statesman, Václav Havel, observed,

    “Today, many things indicate that we are going through a transitional period when it seems that something is on the way out and something else is painfully being born. It is as if something were crumbling, decaying, and exhausting itself, while something else, still indistinct, were arising from the rubble.”

                    I wrote about this in a recent article, “Free At Last: Overcoming Our Addiction to the Sinking Ship of Civilization.”

                    As my friend and colleague Clarissa Pinkola Estes says,

    Do not lose heart. We were made for these times… For years we have been learning, practicing, been in training for… and just waiting to meet on this exact plain of engagement.”

                    If you would like to learn more drop me a note to: Jed@MenAlive.com and put “Mature Masculinity” in the subject line.

    The post In Search of Mature Masculinity in a World of Wounded BoyMen: Part 4 appeared first on MenAlive.

                    I first became acquainted with Dr. Pamela Wible when I read her book Physician Suicide Letters Answeredin which she exposed the pervasive and largely hidden medical culture that has claimed the lives of too many doctors and medical students. It felt very familiar and personal for  me because I was once a medical student. I still remember the excitement I felt when I was accepted into three medical schools. I chose U.C. San Francisco where I was awarded a four-year, full-tuition fellowship. But I soon began to feel the demands, pressures, anxieties, and doubts that assail medical students and doctors alike. Here are some of the specifics that Dr. Wible reported in her book:

    • Today a physician told me she lost 3 colleagues to suicide in the last 2 months. 
    • Loma Linda Hospital just lost 3 young doctors to suicide in 6 months. 
    • Mount Sinai had 3 docs jump in less than 2 years—from the same building.
    • An anesthesiologist recently told me he lost 8 of his colleagues to suicide.

    I had the good fortune of interviewing Dr. Wible recently delving more deeply into her experiences with doctors, medical students and other healthcare providers and learning about the Ideal Health Clinics she has helped create and support. You can watch our interview and discussion here.

    Dr. Wible goes on to say,

    “Each suicide should be fully investigated, yet few receive root cause analysis of the specific circumstances leading to their deaths.”

    In a TEDMED talk Dr. Wible gave in 2016 she shared the moment she realized how big a problem physician suicide is.

    “I was sitting at the memorial service for the third physician that we lost in our small town in just over a year,” said Dr. Wible. “And I sat there in the second row of his memorial service, and I just started counting the suspicious deaths of doctors and I realized I had quite a number of them, including both men that I dated in medical school.”

    Her comments took me back to my own medical school experience at U.C. San Francisco Medical Center. Prior to the beginning of classes the six students who, like me, had received fellowships to attend medical school were wined and dined across the bay in Marin County at home of one of our professors. The message was clear:

    “You are the elite and have been accepted into an exclusive club. Follow our lead, accept the demands of membership, and you do will have the riches that accrue to those who follow the rules and work like crazy.”

    Once classes began I soon began to see the dark side of being a member of this kind of club. I felt the pressures, demands, cruelty, and bullying, that are baked into the medical school experience and later, if you survive, into the kind of medicine we were being trained to administer.

    I was one of the lucky ones who left medical school before things got worse. I transferred to U.C. Berkeley’s School of Social Welfare, earned a master’s degree, and later went back to school and earned a PhD in International Health. I was fortunate to create a healthcare practice that avoids many of the pitfalls that cause so much harm to both healthcare practitioners and patients.

    In talking to Dr. Wible I learned that she has been helping physicians leave what she has coined “assembly-line medicine” since 2004. Her model is now taught in medical schools and is featured in the Harvard School of Public Health’s newest edition of Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration.

    In a recent interview with Rectangle Health, Dr. Wible was asked about the pressures so many doctors feel these days that can cause them to feel stressed, depressed, and overwhelmed.

    “Well, medical careers have always been challenging with immense pressure coming from all angles,” said Dr. Wible. “Physicians witness ongoing trauma and death without getting mental health support. Over the last 10-20 years we have been forced to treat more and more patients due to high-overhead practices. In a giant practice with 90% overhead, physicians have to see 30 patients a day just to pay the bills. It’s production-line medicine that takes all the joy out of the profession.”

    Dr. Wible went on to say that the problems physicians face can be traced back to the training and experiences they have as medical students.

    “Patients are very confused about why they aren’t getting good healthcare. To understand why, you need to go all the way back to day one of medical school to find that your doctor was bullied, overworked, and sleep-deprived. Medical students who are abused become physicians who are abused, and who may even abuse their own patients. This is the cycle of healthcare abuse.”

    I still shutter when I remember my own medical school experience and how much it parallels what Dr. Wible has seen in the years she has been hearing the stories from doctors and medical students.

    “If you treat a student like a robot that’s supposed to memorize all sorts of minutiae,” says Dr. Wible, “you’re going to have a doctor who can repeat all these interesting factoids, but who can’t connect with you.”

    Although I avoided the detrimental effects of medical school, I have witnessed the impact on the doctors I have seen for my own healthcare. I just never realized how widespread the effects were. As Dr. Wible points out,

    “Physicians are taught to over give, and be workaholics to their own detriment. Our current economic model is certainly willing to take advantage of people who will work excessive hours–let’s keep the factory workers moving as many days as possible so that we can make a lot of money. Let’s face it, the primary revenue generators in health care are basically doctors. There are many layers of people embedded on top that want them to keep working at faster and faster speeds so that they can make more money off of them.”

    She calls for a different way to treat our healthcare professionals.

    “We are humans, not machines here to do some kind of assembly-line work,” says Dr. Wible. “We are spiritual beings having a finite human experience and that’s how we need to start relating to each other. We are telling the doctor to be like a machine, and if you’re broken, leave the hospital; you can’t be a doctor anymore.”

    Launch Your Ideal Clinic and Learn About a New Medical School

                    When I spoke with Dr. Wible I asked her about what she had been doing over the years to help doctors develop their ideal clinic. It began with her own willingness to ask patients what kind of healthcare they wanted and needed. She listened to what her patients were saying and found a way to create, and fund, her own ideal clinic, which she later taught to others. She offers a course that addresses some of the most important things she has learned and is teaching to others:

    • Patient Success Secrets. Claim your vision, define your ideal client and learn the top 10 tips & tricks to attract a ton of loyal patients for life to your ideal clinic, coaching, or consulting practice.
    • The Joy Of Doctoring. Overcome fatigue with enthusiasm by turning work into play—and GET PAID more to do what you LOVE for your ideal clients.
    • Mentorship & Networking. Pair up with a mastermind partner & discover the benefits of asking for help. (Hint: mentoring is the best CME!)
    • Creative (& Cost-Saving) Business Strategies. Ultra-low overhead secrets revealed. Discover unique office locations, innovative staffing solutions, even make a Do-It-Yourself EMR. Save 86% on malpractice insurance (& get your office liability policy for FREE).
    • Boost Your Self-Confidence Now! Break free from fear-driven medicine. Recover from perfectionism. Reclaim your power. Learn 7 simple strategies to lead with confidence & courage.
    • Build Your Community. Engage your town to help you design, create & fund your clinic. It’s easier than you think! 
    • Financial Freedom For Physicians. Discover the top 12 medical business models and find the right one(s) for you.
    • Media & Marketing. Never waste money on advertising. Be media savvy and publicize your unique message for free. Learn 3 tips for online marketing mastery that work well for any health professional seeking ideal clients.

    I am on Dr. Wible’s mailing list and was pleased to receive the following announcement:

    I’ve just launched a med school. After helping 1,000+ docs launch ideal practices, people have been begging me to start a school for years. Traditional med schools provide technical skills, not emotional, spiritual, or business mastery. In fact, suicide rates increase during med school.”

    She went on to say,

    “We’re a happily unaccredited virtual school free to teach in the most honest, uncensored, and transformative ways with stellar faculty & guest speakers. We’re not replicating what med schools do well. Not teaching neurosurgery, though we dive into neuroscience and soul surgery. Did I mention tuition is just $500?”

    That is definitely the type of medical school I wish I had attended. Dr. Wible also told me that the school is open to other healthcare professionals, not just medical students and doctors. I know the skills she teaches are very helpful for psychologists, social workers, and others working in the healthcare field.

    If you’d like more information about Dr. Wible and her work, you can visit her at https://www.idealmedicalcare.org/.

    If you would like to read more articles about how to improve your mental, emotional, relational, and spiritual health, you can subscribe to my free newsletter here: https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/

    The post The Healthcare Revolution Is Here: Meet the Maverick Doctor Who is Leading the Way appeared first on MenAlive.

                    Whatever your political beliefs or where you live in the world, if you’re willing to open your eyes, heart and mind, you know that humanity is not doing well. We are in serious danger unless we change our way of being on planet Earth and need all the help we can get. Kelly Wendorf may be just the person who can give it to us. I first learned about Kelly’s work from my friend and colleague Chip Conley who is the founder of The Modern Elder Academy, the world’s first midlife wisdom school.

                    Chip and his team were offering a program at their Santa Fe Center titled Applying Ancient Wisdom for Personal Transformation, with guest faculty Kelly Wendorf. The description was intriguing.

    “In this Owning Wisdom workshop co-facilitated with EQUUS founder, coach, author, and ‘CEO whisperer’ Kelly Wendorf, you will be invited to enter through Nature’s doorway into a deeper, more profound relationship with yourself and the world around you.”

                    I immediately purchased Kelly’s book with the mysterious title, Flying Lead Change: 56 Million Years of Wisdom for Leading and Living. I recently had the great pleasure of having a free-ranging discussion with Kelly about her fascinating life, what she has learned from indigenous elders she has met in her travels around the world, and her love and connection with the wisdom of horses. You can engage with our fascinating discussion here.

                    As the founder of EQUUS, her mission is to liberate the leadership capacities of the conscientious, empathetic, accountable, and kind individuals who are most qualified to guide humanity into a future where we live in greater communion and connection to nature and to ourselves. 

                    When I read her book, I was impressed by the range of experiences and wisdom she has acquired over the years, including expertise in the field of neuropsychology. She quotes one of the leaders in the field, Dr. Mario Martinez, author of The MindBody Code. Dr. Martinez says,

    “All cultures, East and West, have their own unique ways of punishing those whose ideas and behaviors run contrary to established beliefs. These forms of punishment cause emotional damage that surfaces in the form of three archetypal wounds: abandonment, shame, and betrayal.”

                    Dr. Martinez goes on to say,

    “I discovered something profound. There is a healing field for each of the three wounds. Commitment heals abandonment, honor heals shame, and loyalty heals betrayal.”

                    When I interviewed Kelly she described an experience she had with the group of Native American healthcare practitioners and community leaders from the Four Corners region of Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. Kelly said,

    “When they all entered the arena to meet the horses, the horses responded in a bizarre fashion. Normally when people enter the herd, our horses are curious, or may show off, be agitated, or take turns meeting each person. In this case, not one horse acknowledged any person in the entire group. It was as if the people weren’t there.”

                    From long experience Kelly knows that the wisdom tunes into deep truths about the humans who visit.

    “What were the horses reflecting?” she asked the participants. “If we assume that the horses have a gift of teaching, what might that be?”

                    It took a while working with the group but she discovered that every member of the group held shame for simply being alive, brought about by their collective historical trauma as displaced indigenous people. Drawing on the wisdom from Dr. Martinez, she and her horses were able to help the group reclaim their honor, loyalty, and commitment to life.

                    In many ways we are all wounded by our collective historical trauma that goes back more than 6,000 years and we all have much to learn from elders who have been successful here on Earth for 56 million years. Interviewing Kelly and reading her book gave me a profound insight into what all humanity could learn. Imagine being in the presence of wise elders who recognize our individual woundedness and disconnection, who can see through our defensive shields, give us honest feedback about the state of our dis-ease, and guide our healing.

                    Kelly asks in her book,

    “What if you had a source of wisdom, a teacher, a mentor, who had been around for a really long time and who had mastered the big challenges that we are trying to figure out about how to live here on Earth?”

    The answer is that we do and we all have access to it if we are willing to live and learn.

    The Five Pillars and Two Superpowers That Kelly Wendorf Offers the World

                    Kelly says,

    “Based on my observation of multiple herds, wild and domestic, and a lifetime of working with horses, it is my experience that equine culture is organized around five pillars: Safety, Connection, Peace, Freedom, and Joy.”

                    Take a moment to breathe and imagine a world where humanity was organized around these five pillars. What kind of leadership would it take to support our safety, connection, peace, freedom, and joy? Clearly, not the kind of leaders that dominate the headlines in the news today. Kelly observes.

    “The leader is the one who is not the mightiest or the most domineering but who cares the most—a true definition of a servant leader.”

                    She goes on to say,

    “The leader, or the head of the family, is chosen based on their ability to maintain these pillars within the herd system. How exactly does a lead horse govern and keep those five pillars intact? Through two superpowers: care and presence.

                    Kelly concludes saying,

    Care is that genuine desire to attend to the needs of others. Synonymous with love, care is unconditional love with responsibility. Presence is the ability to be wholly here in this present moment, in this limitless sense of totality here and how. Presence enables care to be acutely responsive to the moment, in each moment. Without presence, care can be inaccurate or ill-timed. Without care, presence can remain aloof.”

    What Equus Offers

                    I invite you to check out Kelly’s work at Equusinspired.com if you answer “yes” to any of these questions:

    • Do you sense something more is possible for your life?
    • Are you called to something deeper?
    • Do you long to be challenged and inspired?
    • Are you ready to really move the needle in your life?

    “Welcome to a powerful approach to self-discovery and personal and professional development,” says Kelly. “Our evidence-based experiential processes leave you changed, meaningfully impacted, and clear about your next steps forward. Our work sits at the nexus of science, ancient wisdom and social innovation, and is designed to create measurable results through the following:”

    • Coaching

    “Coaching is one of our most popular offerings and sessions are both in-person and remotely by phone or zoom.”

    • Courses

    “We offer online courses throughout the year on varied topics based on the mission and values of ancient nature-based wisdom, neuroscience, contemplative wisdom, innovative leadership, and life-long learning.”

    • The EQUUS Experience

    “The Equus Experience is our award-winning personal and leadership development process that changes organizations, and transforms individuals, families, leaders, and teams.”

    • The Wisdom Circle

    “A mastermind and group coaching platform and innovative approach for navigating transition, developing leadership, and developing self-mastery developed by Kelly Wendorf, Founder and CEO, and ICF Master Certified Coach.”

    “If you feel inspired, come visit EQUUS in beautiful Santa Fe, New Mexico, we welcome you,” says Kelly. “O’ghe P’oghe (White Shell Water Place), the original Tewa name for Santa Fe, is located on unceded territorial lands of the Tewa and Tanos people. We acknowledge the Traditional and Ancestral Carers, past, present, and future, of this land.”

    To connect on-line, you may do so here: https://www.equusinspired.com/

    If this article was helpful, please share it with others. If you would like to read more articles and connect with me and my work, you can visit me at https://menalive.com/. You can subscribe to my free weekly newsletter here: https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/

    The post Why Humanity’s Future May Depend on Our Connection to Our 56-Million-Year-Old Elders appeared first on MenAlive.

    In Part 1, I discussed the origin of my own search for masculinity growing up with an absent father. I also introduced you to Michael Gurian and Sean Kullman and their book, Boys, A Rescue Plan: Moving Beyond the Politics of Masculinity to Health Male Development. In Part 2, I expanded the discussion to draw on the work of other colleagues who are recognizing that healthy masculinity, like healthy femininity, are opposite sides of the same coin and must be created supported together for the good of all.

    Jungian psychologist Robert Moore and mythologist Douglas Gillette wrote a powerful and mind-expanding book, King, Warrior, Magician, and Lover: Rediscovering The Archetypes of the Mature Masculine. They also understand the importance of Rites of Passage to assist males in developing into healthy mature adult men.

    “In the present crisis in masculinity we do not need, as some feminists are saying less masculine power,” say Moore and Gillette. “We need more. But we need more of the mature masculine.”

    They go on to say,

    “There is too much slandering and wounding of both the masculine and feminine in patriarchy, as well as the feminist reaction against patriarchy. The feminist critique, when it is not wise enough, actually further wounds an already besieged authentic masculinity.”

    I met Robert Moore and Doug Gillette shortly after the publication of their book. We three had a connection with Robert Bly. I had met Bly several years previously and shared a cabin with him at a men’s gathering in California. He gifted me a copy of his book, The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart, co-written with James Hillman and Michael Meade. Robert wrote:

    “To Jed with love and in the mood of brothers.”

    In the introduction to King, Warrior, Magician, and Lover, Moore and Gillette say,

    “During Bill Moyers’s recent interview with the poet Robert Bly, ‘A Gathering of Men,’ a young man asked the question, ‘Where are the initiated men of power today?’ We have written this book in order to answer this question, which is on the minds of both men and women.”

    Decoding the Male Psyche–The Four Archetypes of Mature Masculinity

                    “The four major forms of mature masculine energies that we have identified are the King, the Warrior, the Magician, and the Lover,” say Moore and Gillette. “They all overlap and, ideally, enrich one another. A good King is always also a Warrior, a Magician, and a Lover. And the same holds true for the other three.”

                    In my book, Long Live Men! The Moonshot Mission to Heal Men, Close the Lifespan Gap, and Offer Hope to Humanity, I detail what I’ve learned from Robert Moore and Doug Gillette. Here is a short description of the four archetypes:

    • King—The energy of just and creative ordering.
    • Warrior—The energy of aggressive but nonviolent action.
    • Magician—The energy of initiation and transformation.
    • Lover—The energy that connects one to others and the world.

    Moore and Gillette believe that the problems we see with men today—violence, shiftlessness, aloofness—are a result of modern men not adequately exploring or being in touch with the primal, masculine archetypes that reside within them. Like the great psychoanalyst Carl Jung, they believe that men and women possess both feminine and masculine archetypal patterns—this is the anima (feminine) and animus (masculine).

    Each of the archetypal energy potentials in the male psyche has a three-part structure. Think of a triangle. At the top of the triangle is the archetype in its fullness. At the bottom of the triangle are twin dysfunctional aspects, either having too much (+) or too little (-) of the quality.

    The King in his fullness at the top is powerful and nurturing.

    At the bottom, the dysfunctional

    Tyrant (+)           and            Weakling (-)

                    The Warrior in his fullness is forceful and peaceful. The dysfunctional pairs are the

                                                    Sadist (+) and the Masochist (-).

                    The Magician in his fullness initiates and transforms.  His dysfunctional pairs are the   

                          Detached Manipulator (+) and the Denying “Innocent” One (-).

                    The Lover in his fullness is connects and protects.  The dysfunctional lover are the

                                                 Addicted Lover (+) or Impotent Lover (-).

                    I believe we all recognize many of the dysfunctional aspects in men, including male leaders. 

    Healing the Father Wound

                    In order to move from a world of where we have men who express their mature and healthy King, Warrior, Magician, and Lover energies, we must heal our father wounds and experiencing healthy Rites of Passage. In my book, 12 Rules for Good Men, I have a chapter titled, Heal Your Father Wound and Become the Father You Were Meant to Be.

                    I work with many men whose father wound has interfered with their success in love and marriage, limited their career success, and kept them from being the man they most want to be. I have also developed an on-line course for healing: “Healing the Family Father Wound.”

                    Do you suffer from a family father wound? According to Roland Warren, former head of the National Fatherhood Initiative,

    “Kids have a hole in their soul in the shape of their dad. And if a father is unwilling or unable to fill that hole, it can leave a wound that is not easily healed.”

    For millions of men and women, the father wound influences our health and well-being, but we are not aware that it exists.

    Here’s The Father-Wound Quiz I use in my counseling practice to help people assess whether they may have been impacted by an absent father. Please check off each statement that is true for you.

    1. My father died when I was still a child (  ).
    2. My parents divorced or were separated when I was young (  ).
    3. My father was physically present, but emotionally distant (  ).
    4. Growing up, my father worked a lot and he didn’t have enough time to be with me (  ).
    5. My father was very critical of me (  ).
    6. I never felt I could please my father (  ).
    7. My father rarely said, “I love you, I’m proud of you, I believe in you” (  ).
    8. One or both of my parents had mental health problems (  ).
    9. One or both of my parents had drinking or drug problems (  ).
    10. I sought out father-figures to help compensate for my father’s absence (  ).
    11. During adolescence I often got angry and sometimes got into fights (  ).
    12. During adolescence I was eager to fall in love or had early sexual experiences (  ).
    13. Having a best friend was extremely important to me (  ).
    14. I felt lonely and depressed growing up, even though I covered it well (  ).
    15. As an adult I have had difficulty finding and keeping a healthy relationship (  ).
    16. I’ve been married and divorced at least once (  ).
    17. I have difficulty committing to a relationship (  ).
    18. I sometimes pick partners who aren’t good for me in the long run (  ).
    19. “Looking for love in all the wrong places” may have been written for me (  ).
    20. With my own children, I worry about whether I’m being a good parent (  ).
    21. I’ve vowed to be a different kind of father than my father was for me (  ).
    22. I have been very successful at work, but less than successful in my love life (  ).
    23. With my spouse or partner I often feel like a critical parent or a demanding child (  ).
    24. I haven’t made as much money as I’m worth or become as successful as I want (  ).

    Even those with healthy, involved fathers will check off a few of these statements. However, if you checked six or more, you may be suffering from the effects of an absent father. The more items you checked, the deeper the wound is likely to be.

    Experiencing Healthy Rites of Passage

    Bill Kauth is the co-founder of the ManKind Project. It offers one of the most powerful rites of passage programs I’ve ever experienced. I first met Bill Kauth in 1980 at a conference that had emerged from the consciousness of the women’s movement. I immediately felt I had found a kindred spirit. We were both impressed with the positive energy of women coming together to break out of the old restrictions that society had placed on them. It felt good to support women, but we also recognized that men needed to find their own support and break free from their own restrictions.

    I still remember my own introduction to the New Warrior weekend (Now called The Mankind Project’s  New Warrior Training Adventure) . It was 1991, twelve years after my men’s group began. We joked that we felt like “an old married couple.” We knew each other well, felt safe and comfortable, enjoyed ourselves immensely, but were growing a bit bored hearing the same stories. We decided to attend the New Warrior weekend. Although it’s impossible to describe any kind of ritual initiation because the real value is in the experience, here are some of the things I learned:

    • Being with other men in this well-crafted weekend experience was transformative. I felt a host of feelings: Anxiety, confusion, exhilaration, joy, and true brotherly love. By the end, I felt more myself, more deeply connected to others, and with tools that I could use to be more successful in life.
    • I broke through my “Mr. Nice Guy” image to share a lot of my woundedness and anger. I found that my anger didn’t destroy people. In fact, it was appreciated, and there was a group of supportive men to help me guide my anger and who taught me ways of expressing it that would help, rather than harm, myself and others.
    • Most of my life I felt like the Lone Ranger figuring things out on my own, doing what needed to be done by myself, solving my own problems. I thought being stoic, independent, and self-sufficient was what it meant to be a man. During the weekend, I learned to be part of a team, to work together in support of shared goals, and found that success was sweeter and more lasting when achieved together.

    Being part of a men’s group that has been meeting for forty-six years has been a great gift that I recommend to all men. In my book, 12 Rules for Good Men, I talked about the long history of men’s groups.

    “Looking back on our heritage as men to our lives as hunter-gathers over the last two million years, one of the things that stands out to me is that men spent considerable time in small groups with other men.”

    I concluded,

    “Bottom line—Being in a men’s group combats loneliness and keeps you alive and well.”

    If you’d like more information about my work and upcoming opportunities, please visit me at https://menalive.com/.

    If you are not already receiving my weekly articles and newsletter, you may do so here: https://menalive.com/email-newsletter/.

    The post In Search of Mature Masculinity in a World of Wounded BoyMen: Part 3 appeared first on MenAlive.

    In Part 1, I discussed the origin of my own search for masculinity growing up with an absent father. I also introduced you to Michael Gurian and Sean Kullman and their book, Boys, A Rescue Plan: Moving Beyond the Politics of Masculinity to Health Male Development.

                    Another colleague I had the pleasure of interviewing is Gary Barker, founder and CEO of Equimundo: Center for Masculinities and Social Justice. In a recent article, What is a ‘masculine’ workplace, anyway? Barker says,

    “In his recent appearance on Joe Rogan, Mark Zuckerberg said that workplaces need more ‘masculine energy’ and that the workplace had been ‘neutered.’ I began to ask myself, what about workplaces exactly have been neutered? And what masculine energy is Zuckerberg trying to bring back?”

                    We are living at a time where a regressive kind of masculinity is coming to power throughout the world. We see it with the election of Donald Trump, who once again has ascended to the U.S. Presidency. We are also hearing more about a certain kind of masculinity represented by media personalities Joe Rogan and tech billionaires, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk.

                    Gary Barker says,

    The bottom line: a restrictive old-school version of masculinity is generally not good for men ourselves, for the people in our lives, nor for businesses. Nor for the world.”

                    Richard V. Reeves, Founder of the American Institute for Boys and Men and author of Of Boys and Men: Why The Modern Male is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It, offers timely wisdom about the importance of paying attention to the problems of boys and men and the dangers of our failure to do so. Reeves was recently interviewed on John Stewart’s The Daily Show by comedian and actress Desi Lydic.

                    “Politicians on both left and right have failed to engage constructively with the problems of boys and men,” says Reeves. “Views on what it means to be a man in the twenty-first century have hardened along partisan lines, but people can hold two thoughts in our head at once. We can be passionate about women’s rights and compassionate toward vulnerable boys and men.”

                    In these polarized times with conflict between the left and the right, too often one side blames the other. Some believe that If women are not doing well, it must be men’s fault or if boys and men are not doing well, women must be to blame. But Reeves recognizes that men’s and women’s issues are opposite sides of the same coin and must be solved together or not at all. Says Reeves,

    “Too often, there is the belief that men don’t have problems. Men are the problem. And if we continue to just see men as problems rather than having problems, then it’s going to be a very, very, difficult time for us over the next few years.”

                    Ruth Whippman is a feminist mother with three boys who was confronted with these conflicting views of masculinity. I interviewed her and wrote an article, BoyMoms and BoyDads: What We Can Learn From Ruth Whippman & Richard Reeves About Sex, Power, and Parenting. In her book, BoyMom: Reimaging Boyhood in the Age of Impossible Masculinity, Whippman says,

    “While the left branded masculinity as toxic, the right sold it as the answer to all our problems, with both politicians and online influencers peddling a new brand of wounded, furious manhood, drawn from a combination of superhero fantasies and defensive rage.”

                    Whippman goes on to say,

    “Everywhere I turned inside my own brain I found contradiction and hypocrisy. In the fevered, absolutist climate of #MeToo, it is hard not to start to see men as the enemy… Disoriented, I veered wildly between disgust and defensiveness. While the feminist part of me yelled ‘Smash the patriarchy!’ the mother part of me wanted to wrap the patriarchy up in its blankie and read it a story.”

                    Failure to recognize and take seriously the problems of boys and men lays the foundation for the rise of authoritarian leaders that we are seeing in the U.S. and around the world. Internationally acclaimed historian, Ruth Ben-Ghiat has been studying and writing about men like these for many years. In her book, StrongMen: Mussolini to the Present she describes leaders from the past like Benito Mussolini and Adolph Hitler along with contemporary leaders like Vladamir Putin and Donald Trump. She says,

    “For ours is the age of authoritarian rulers: self-proclaimed saviors of the nation who evade accountability while robbing their people of truth treasure, and the protections of democracy.” She goes on to say, “They use masculinity as a symbol of strength and a political weapon. Taking what you want and getting away with it, becomes proof of male authority.”

                    Like all authoritarian rulers, they are really not “strong.” I believe they are actually very wounded men who feel frightened and and are forever looking for “more”—more validation, more love, more recognition—to fill an inner void that they are reluctant to address. Rather than being healthy, mature men, they are “boymen” who have never truly grown up.

                    Prior to Donald Trump’s November 2016 election, I wrote an article, “The Real Reason Donald Trump Will Be Our Next President,” that was posted on my website on May 7, 2016. This was written at a time when few people, including Donald Trump himself, believed that he would be the next President of the United States. In the article I said,

    “Our presidential candidates reflect the view we hold of ourselves. Donald Trump is a wounded man and has suffered abuse, neglect, and abandonment as a child. Many of us resonate with his rage.”

                    My clinical experience working with men in the U.S. and around the world, convinced me that though males occupied positions of power, too many felt wounded and disempowered and would vote for “strongmen” rather than “healthymen” if given a choice. Clearly in the recent Presidential election the majority voted for the Donald Trump and Republicans rather than Kamala Harris and the Democrats, including many men and women who had previously voted Democratic.

    From Artificial Intelligence to Evolutionary Intelligence—From Boy Psychology to Man Psychology

                    In my book, 12 Rules For Good Men, Rule #4 is “Embrace Your Billion Year History of Maleness.” With all the talk these days about “artificial intelligence,” it is good to remember that human intelligence has been evolving on planet Earth for three to four-million years. In researching the book I wondered when did “males” and “females” first evolve in evolutionary history.

                    At the beginning of the chapter describing Rule #4, I quoted the cultural historian Thomas Berry who said,

    The natural world is the largest sacred community to which belong. To be alienated from this community is to become destitute in all that makes us human. To damage this community is to diminish our own existence.”

    I believe that it is clear to anyone who is willing to see the truth than our disconnection from the natural world has produced a kind of destructive and artificial intelligence that is undermining our life-support system that is necessary for our survival.

                    Our modern confusions and conflicts about “masculinity” and “femininity” keeps us from recognizing and appreciating the evolutionary history of “male” and “female.” In his book, The Hidden Spirituality of Men: Ten Metaphors to Awaken the Sacred Masculine, Matthew Fox says,

    “The universe invented sex and sexuality one billion years ago.”

                    According to mathematical cosmologist, Dr. Brian Swimme and historian Dr. Thomas Berry, in their book, The Universe Story, they say,

    “Life first evolved on Earth about four billion years ago. Prior to the evolution of sexual reproduction, cells divided into individual sister cells.”

    Swimme and Berry call this living organism Sappho.

    “But one billion years ago, a momentous change occurred. The first male organism, Tristan, and the first female organism, Iseult, were cast into the ancient oceans.”

                    This was the first love affair and, as the story goes, the rest is evolutionary history.

                    In their book, Boys, A Rescue Plan, Michael Gurian and Sean Kullman go into great depth in helping explain the confusion about sex and gender and conclude,

    “Human beings are sexually dimorphic. Our chromosomes set us up that way in utero. We develop during our lifespan as male and female in body and brain, even as particular brain characteristics in a male or female lean toward extremes or middles.”

                    They go on to say,

    “Dimorphic doesn’t mean stereotyping. It doesn’t mean one boy-type, one girl-type, with no variety. Sexual dimorphism creates averages and means for male and female on the brain sex spectrum.”  

    They backup their findings with data from a host of scientists.

    According to David C. Page, M.D. professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and director of the Whitehead Institute, where he has a laboratory devoted to the study of the Y-chromosome,

    “There are 10 trillion cells in the human body and every one of them is sex specific. We’ve had a unisex vision of the human genome. Men and women are not equal in our genome and men and women are not equal in the face of disease.”

    Marianne J. Legato M.D, is founder of the Foundation for Gender-Specific Medicine and author of numerous books on sex, gender, and science, including, Eve’s Rib:  The New Science of Gender-Specific Medicine. She says,

    “Everywhere we look, the two sexes are startlingly and unexpectedly different not only in their internal function but in the way they experience illness.”

    Just as there are biological and evolutionary differences between male and females there are differences between man psychology and boy psychology. In their book, King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine, Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette, say,

    “In their radical critique of patriarchy, some feminists conclude that masculinity in its roots is essentially abuse, and that connection with ‘eros’—with love, relatedness, and gentleness—comes only from the feminine side of the human equation.”

    They go on to say,

    “Patriarchy is the expression of immature masculinity. It is the expression of Boy psychology, and, in part, the shadow—or crazy—side of masculinity. It expresses the stunted masculine, fixated at immature levels. Patriarchy, in our view, is an attack on masculinity in its fullness as well as femininity in its fullness.”

    For most of human history, there were Rites of Passage where boys were initiated and supported in moving from boyhood to manhood. But now, as Moore and Gillette point out, men are fragmented—various parts of their personality are split off from each other leading to often independent and chaotic lives.

    “A man who cannot get it together is a man who has probably not had the opportunity to undergo ritual initiation into the deep structures of manhood. He remains a boy—not because he wants to, but because no one has shown him the way to transform his boy energies into man energies. No one has led him into direct healing experiences of the inner world of masculine potential.”

    I was fortunate to have experienced several initiations throughout my life and now help guide others. You can learn more about what we do by visiting us at MenAlive.com and MoonshotforMankind.org.

    The post In Search of Mature Masculinity in a World of Wounded BoyMen: Part 2 appeared first on MenAlive.

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