Our Son's, Our Schools
by
Warren Farrell
© 1999
author of
The Myth of Male Power

In the last third of the 20th century,
feminism freed women and girls from the straight-jacket of stereotyped
sex roles. No one did the same for men or boys. This is not women's
fault. Women cannot hear what men don't say. But it does have an
impact.
Girls used to be minorities in college and graduate school. Now women
are almost 60% of full-time graduate students. They are also 54% of
full-time undergraduates and almost 70% of part-time undergraduates.
In high school, girls are more likely to be in clubs, in student
government, on school newspapers, to receive better grades, to be
valedictorians and salutatorians, to win scholarships, and to have
higher professional aspirations. In contrast, they have fewer
discipline problems and drop out less.
This change is occurring for many reasons. Our sons are often being
raised only by their mothers, then entering elementary schools with
almost all female teachers. Girls have role models. Boys have gangs.
Yet our daughters are still being treated like disadvantaged
minorities with federal programs like Girl Power focusing millions of
dollars on our daughters' special needs-while no program focuses on
our sons' special needs.
Nothing tells the story more dramatically than our sons' and
daughters' suicide rates. As feminism has helped our daughters get
love and respect for being whoever they want to be, our daughters'
suicide rate has declined. Meanwhile, our sons' suicide rate has
soared. Why? Start with the power of our children's first love.
Fortunately, our daughters now have the option to pursue boys and take
sexual initiatives. But our sons still have the expectation. If they
do it too slowly, they are still called a wimp; but now, if they do it
too awkwardly, they are sued for sexual harassment; and if they do it
too fast, they are a date rapist.
As feminism has helped our daughters to have more ways to gain love
and respect, it has also encouraged sexual harassment and date rape
legislation that has given our sons more ways to lose love and
respect. And people who feel unloved and disrespected are most
vulnerable to suicide. So when our sons and daughters are nine their
suicide rate is identical, but by their early twenties, our sons' rate
is six times as high.
Feminism helped us become aware of the price of our daughters
becoming sex objects, but not the price of our sons becoming success
objects. ... our sons did not become successful by expressing who they
were, but by repressing who they were.
By focusing only on our daughters, we have identified only the ways
our daughters experience low self-esteem and depression. So we catch
their experience before it becomes suicide. Boys' experience of
depression and low self-esteem is hidden in the cracks. By calling it
aggression or delinquency or drinking or drugs, we miss the depression
until we stand before his coffin.
The reason boys' experience got hidden in the cracks evolved slowly
over the past third of a century. It started with the shadow side of
feminismÑthe belief that since our sons would grow up earning more
money, they must have more power, privilege, and attention to their
needs. We lost sight of the fact that men had been historically
obligated to raise money just as women had been obligated to raise
children, and that obligations are not power, but, well, obligations.
We failed to see that women's attention to men's needs was
conditional. Few women competed for the man reading I'm OK, You're OK
in the unemployment line. It was conditional on his willingness to
earn money that a woman would often spend while he died sooner.
Therefore, homeless men and gay men did not have women providing for
their needs. It was conditional upon men being willing to die in war.
Few beautiful princesses married conscientious objectors. Women fell
in love with The Officer And The Gentleman, not The Private And The
Pacifist.
Feminism helped us become aware of the price of our daughters becoming
sex objects, but not the price of our sons becoming success objects.
We falsely assumed that our sons' greater preparation for success
meant a greater concern for who he was. We missed the fact that our
sons did not become successful by expressing who they were, but by
repressing who they were. Successful men did not express feelings,
they repressed feelings. This is still the norm in most North American
high schools. The girls are most likely to fall in love with our son
if he is a football player. A football players soon learns that being
in touch with his feelings is dysfunctional, that acknowledging his
pain leads to him leaving the game. And then the cheerleader would no
longer cheer for him. She would cheer for his replaceable part.
Our sons need love and approval too much to look underneath the
cheeringÑthat her cheering is not for who he is, but for his
willingness to deny his feelings. Our sons are still being taught to
receive love by sacrificing their bodies. But instead of calling it
child abuse or prostitution, they call it '`becoming a man.Ó Or
scholarship potential. Or identity. Few parents protest. Most applaud.
Our daughters have entered the Era of the Multi-Option Woman, while
our sons are still in the Era of the No-Option Man. Our daughters now
have the option to perform, the option to pursue boys, and the option
to pay; our sons still have the expectation to perform, pursue, and
pay.
Our daughters are still giving their love to men who perform, and
watching mothers do the same. Worldwide, two and a half billion of our
daughters-as-women are still enough into the fantasy of being swept
away that they were glued to Princess Diana's wedding. Few of our sons
have castles to offer.
When these fantasies of security become the trauma of divorce, our
daughters demonize the men who failed to save them. They join First
Wives' Clubs. Their fantasy of being swept away has been swept away.
It is difficult for a woman who is rejected to feel a man's feelings.
It is easier to label him a jerk. (It hurts less to be rejected by an
object than by a human being.) A success object who fails becomes an
object of contempt and the focus of the male-bashing that is
ubiquitous today.
On a deeper level, our sons' depression and heartaches get lost in the
cracks because virtually every society has had an unconscious
investment in men protecting us. People who protect us have to be
willing to die, not encouraged to be in touch with their feelings. It
was part of our genetic heritage to select men who were
killer-protectors.
Our genetic future, though, is dependent on selecting men who are
nurturer-connectors. This will evolve not from a women's movement
blaming men or a men's movement blaming women, but from a gender
transition movement helping both sexes to make a transition from
following rigid roles to negotiating trade-offs in a multi-option
world. For the past third of a century, we have introduced our
daughters into a multi-option world. Now it is time to introduce our
sons.
Warren Farrell, Ph.D. is the San Diego-based author of Why Men Are The
Way They Are and The
Myth of Male Power. He is on the boards of many men's and
children's organizations. Reach him at 103 North Highway 101, #220,
Encinitas, CA 92024

Copyright 2001 Author
Name, all rights reserved