I have noticed this repeatedly in life, but keep forgetting about it.
When in any kind of group, be it social or Christian setting, when women have problems with divorce and coping, they get lots of support from their group.
But if a man dares mention this in the same situation, he's treated as damaged goods, or a failure.
Is this a surviving leftover from pre-feminist America? (joking...)
It makes me wonder what we are supposed to say in groups, maybe we're always supposed to be uplifting?
When in any kind of group, be it social or Christian setting, when women have problems with divorce and coping, they get lots of support from their group.
But if a man dares mention this in the same situation, he's treated as damaged goods, or a failure.
Is this a surviving leftover from pre-feminist America? (joking...)
It makes me wonder what we are supposed to say in groups, maybe we're always supposed to be uplifting?
This, ladies and gents, is why the family unit and friends closer then brothers are so important to the life of a man. Nobody can nurture like a woman. Nobody can understand the man better than the friend closer than a brother.
A criticism I do have of modern evangelicalism is its tendency toward getting men to open up in ways we are simply not wired to open up. .