Last week, my wife gave birth to a beautiful, healthy, bouncing baby boy. He is all the things that you hope new babies are. A blessing. Loud. Adorable. Soft. Precious. Gassy. Alert. Moderately bemused. Perpetually hangry. Vaguely human. Somewhat reminiscent of Fred Sanford.
He is also life-changing. Heās our second child, but our first boyāmy first sonāand there are myriad reasons why this first son status is so crucial. I look forward to people asking if I plan to dress him like a miniature replica of me, just so I can respond, āWhy would I do that? Heās his own person, not a miniature replica of me,ā and walk away. Iām anticipating the day Iām able to teach him how to catch, because then his big sisterāwhoās practically a catching maven nowāwill have someone to play with while Iām crafting clever Facebook statuses about fatherhood. And Iām more than anxious at the thought of our first trip to the barbershop, because if itās anything like my first trip to the barber, I might have to fight a barberālike my dad almost had toāand Iāve never done that before. Mostly though, Iām beyond grateful for this boy person in my life because holding him in my arms and looking into his eyes will finally teach me to do something Iāve never done, which is respect and honor men.
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Although I am 39 years old, and although Iāve encountered tens of thousands of men in those 39 years (the vast majority of whom, I think, were human beings) and although I am a man, treating men with kindness and compassion is something that I just never learned to do. When Iād see men and boysāand this includes when Iād look in the mirrorāand Iād ponder whether to have any empathy for them, Iād just think āNah.ā
Of course, Iāve grown to respect men and think of them as equals worthy of protection and care. I wasāand still am!āaware of all of the statistics about how boys are more likely than girls to drop out of school and how men are more likely than women to be incarcerated and how males (in general) are more likely than females (in general) to be Kappas. And these things mattered to me, but in theory. They mattered mattered. But none of it mattered mattered matteredāit wasnāt realāuntil that boy was born, and I held that boy against my manly chest. And then, and only then, did I start to really get it.
Now, because of this male child that Iām legally and morally obligated to care for, I am more sensitive to the unique challenges facing men. Iām more cognizant of the language I use, the images I consume, the music I listen to, the people I surround myself with, and the sports teams I root for. Iām more mindful and respectful of my dad and my uncles and my cousins and my homies and my barber and my favorite male barista and the rest of the men currently in my life, and I even find myself thinking back on past relationships Iāve had with men and wishing Iād regarded them with more empathy. I now shudder at the thought of all the times I was on the basketball court and guarded by men shorter than me, and how boorish and vulgar I was when Iād post them up and dunk on them. Iām ashamed of myself.
Just think, for a moment, about how much better men would be to men if more men had boys. That should be a requirement, actually. Vague eugenics aside, how else can you expect men to have any sort of compassion for a gender comprising half of Earthās population if we donāt literally create one of them with our own sperm? Where else are we going to find that? How else will we learn to respect them?
This transformation hasnāt happened overnight. I still have considerable biases and blind spots about men that need rectified. But now, when I look in my sonās sleepy eyes and he stares back at me, wondering when this awkwardly bearded man is going to hand him back to his mother, I know that I have an investment. A stake. Some skin in the game. (Itās his skin, but still.)
Thank you, son.
Straight From
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