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Dr. Peggy Drexler

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Role Models and the Real World

Posted: 04/12/2012 4:55 pm

"Who will be my role model, now that my role model is gone?" -- Paul Simon

These are tough times for role models.

I'm not a football fan, and I haven't spent a lot of time in Arkansas. A week ago, you could have told me that Bobby Petrino was a Las Vegas lounge singer.

But there he was: the hugely successful Arkansas football coach, married father of four, braced and battered from the motorcycle accident that brought his downfall, confessing to an "inappropriate relationship" with his tall blond assistant and promising to (bring in the chorus) dedicate himself to "repairing the damage I've done to my family."

This is the same man -- the role model -- who sat in countless living rooms telling mothers and fathers that he can help mold their son into all that he can be.

It's the same sad and sordid events that have played out from sports to entertainment to politics to religion. Public Falls from grace are not exclusively a male prerogative, but they seem to dominate the category.

As media gleefully unwrap glittery celebrity packaging to reveal damaged goods, it's increasingly clear that we can't rely on public figures to provide the trail-makers that young boys can follow to manhood.

Pile these disappointments on the steaming heap of anti-role models -- who make millions by being precisely the kind of men we would hope our sons will never be.

The undependability of heroes comes at a bad time in the lives of boys -- when the very definitions of manhood are in play, and more and more are being raised in homes without a male-in-residence.

I got to know many single mother and two-mother families in the course of writing Raising Boys Without Men. Virtually all of these mothers understood the importance of men in the lives of their sons. They turned to family, school, sports and other places where male influence resided.

Some found, however, that it's not always easy to find a man you trust enough and who is available enough to show your son how to be one.

Family members are wonderful -- if you have them. Coaches are fine -- if your son cares about sports. Schools should be a source of male guidance, but with increasing female domination of teaching, a boy can be in seventh or eighth grade before he even encounters a male teacher. Plus: there is no real research that says male teachers improve a boys academic performance or masculine social development.

The increasing fallibility and uncertain availability of XY-chromosome role models combines with the blurring of gender roles to raise a question: Does a male role model actually have to be a man?

Gender roles have always been subject to society's expectations, and society's expectations have disassembled the testosterone fueled male archetype. Tony Porter caused an Internet stir with a call for male engagement and self-examination in a TED presentation called: "Don't Act Like a Man." Whether all this is gratuitous male bashing or a reasoned call for recalibrating the historic markers of masculinity depends on whether you think 21st century men are being ruined or updated.

Either way, the once-direct line between what men are and what boys copy is subject to diversion by forces we may not understand for a generation.

In my research, I found women worked very hard to bring men into their sons' lives. But most were happy to take on the role themselves -- even the basics.

Watching the strong women in their lives, they can learn how to respond to challenges without aggression. They can learn the power of reliability and the importance of respect. They can learn determination, decision-making and independence.

Boys can learn how to treat women by watching men. But they can just as easily learn it from watching how women demand to be treated.

The term role model was first used in a study of the socialization of medical students -- a reference to our tendency to compare ourselves to those in social groups we would like to join. Another definition says that role models affect us in ways that make us want to be better people.

In joining the society of strong and caring men -- and in learning how to be better men -- having a male worthy of respect and emulation is a wonderful and powerful thing in a boy's life.

But heroes are fallible, fathers leave, and stand-ins won't always be there. For single and two-mother families, none of that means the lessons of manhood can't be passed on.

Male role models are constructed of stronger stuff than chromosomes.

 
 
 

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11:09 AM on 04/16/2012
Any good adult can be a fine role model in many ways for a child of either sex. That being said, I believe that any male or female child that does not have a suitable adult of the same sex as role model will be short changed in some ways as they grow up.

Deadbeat fathers as an outgrowth of divorce or unwed fatherhood are a reality and they have resulted in a generation of dubious men who grew up without a sense of responsibility towards spouses, children, even employment etc as viewed from a male perspective.

Bottom line for me is, a child male or female, needs a fine example of each sex to grow up well and be comfortable with what both men and women can give to family and society at large.
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Chris Long
04:54 AM on 04/16/2012
If you depend on sports guys,good luck. They are mostly dirt bags like Rodman etc. with very few Esiasons or Tebows. How about female role models Spears, Lohan not any better.
06:32 PM on 04/15/2012
"show your son how to be one"

I honestly have no idea what you are talking about. How to be a man? You are a male or a female human being. What we teach our children is how to be a human being who is part of a family, a society, a world. It makes no difference if our child is male or female--we should teach them the same things. What would you teach a male child that is different from what you would teach a female child?
07:22 PM on 04/15/2012
" What would you teach a male child that is different from what you would teach a female child?"

Are you completely unaware of any differences between men and women?
08:44 PM on 04/15/2012
Well, answer the question. What would you teach a male child that is different from what you would teach a female child? If you are having difficulty, then perhaps you should re-think what it is you think you know.
09:42 PM on 04/15/2012
"Are you completely unaware of any differences between men and women?”"

Why don't you answer the question. What would you teach a boy different than what you'd teach a girl? You've clearly thought about this incessantly. Please give some specifics on what you'd teach a boy if you ever had one, that you wouldn't teach a girl.

Obviously we are all aware of the anatomical differences between men and women. That's a silly comment used to avoid the fact that you have no idea how to answer the question.
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nikanj
free the fnords
09:49 PM on 04/15/2012
Well, how to write your name in a snowbank comes to mind . . .
something i've always wished i could do !
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nikanj
free the fnords
06:25 PM on 04/15/2012
So the bad-boy biker / football player got called out and has damaged his family
(very publicly). But I imagine this author would call out 'kudos' to my (ex) sister in law,
who left her husband while her kids were young because she was pursuing relationships
with other women. (And, after dragging her kids through much turmoil, finally ended up
married -- to another man). How is what the guy did, so much 'worse' ?
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
01:10 PM on 04/21/2012
Two acts of disgusting behaviors don't make anything better. This is not a contest about who is worse.
03:23 PM on 04/15/2012
Does a male role model actually have to be a man? Only if you want them to grow up to become men.
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hornedcog
Tax Tea Now!
01:57 PM on 04/15/2012
Cults will no doubt enjoy a rising popularity. I'm just fooling.
01:53 PM on 04/15/2012
Dr. Drexler,

Do you think it's ok to raise a girl without a female role model or do you think it's only male role models that don't matter?
09:23 AM on 04/15/2012
Dr. Drexler is not saying that men are unimportant in a boy's life, In fact, just the op. But as she correctly points out, men are not always there. When there is no man in or near the family, what should a single mother do -- simply give up on helping her son become a man?
01:51 PM on 04/15/2012
What if there is no mother in a girl's life? Does she think a single father can do well or only single mothers?
02:03 PM on 04/15/2012
What about single fathers? Does Dr. Drexler think they can raise girls alone? Or to her are only women role models important?
09:20 AM on 04/15/2012
It's amazing to me how people can read what they want to read. Nowhere does Dr. Drexler say that men are not important in a boy's life. The opposite -- they are a "wonderful and powerful thing in a boy's life."

She's saying that men are not always available. In the absence of a man in or near the family, what do you want women to do -- give up? Or should they show their son the attributes, and give the guidance that helps them become men?
10:33 PM on 04/15/2012
You have to really explore all her writings and you would see why she offends so many men. Not just this article.
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
01:12 PM on 04/21/2012
She seems to "offend" the same few men - over and over. Peerhaps they seek feeling offended?
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jstrate
11:37 PM on 04/14/2012
I'm not sure anybody has much of a clue why men turn out to be the way they are as adults and no doubt variance can be parsed out to parental genes, the home environment, and the outside environment. My guess is that there are some men out there who would have been better off without a father in the home since that father was nearly always drunk and abusive. What kind of role model is that? I know a few of these men. All of them wear scar tissue, but they have turned out better than their fathers (perhaps because of regression to the mean). Since they had a truly rotten father, these are the ones that really need to learn what it means to be a responsible adult male--sober, hard working, a loving father, and respectful to women.
08:52 PM on 04/14/2012
By all the comments here I'm glad to see that most people see Dr. Drexler as the sexist she is. As a father to two young boys, I see what they will be up against in the near future and am more committed than ever to teach them to be empowered and to steer clear of the misandry that permeates the media. The sad thing is, I used to support feminists until I realized that their goal is not equality but rather the total elimination of masculinity. Now I could care less about their issues.
06:36 PM on 04/15/2012
What is masculinity? I am the mother of 3 boys. I have never taught them what it is to be a male human being. I have only taught them what it is to be a human being. What could they possibly be missing with my approach?
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
01:13 PM on 04/21/2012
Paranoia is an illness
07:12 PM on 04/14/2012
A cross-dressing hermaphrodite lesbian is just as good a role model as a heterosexual cis-male.
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see-ellen2001
06:36 PM on 04/14/2012
I would like to see more male early childhood educators and elementary teachers. Better for kids to have good male role models early on.
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SeaBlood
cynical about religion
05:35 PM on 04/14/2012
Here is a side note ( hopefully a humorous one) . I once had a German Shepherd dog. Usually, I was the one who walked Bobo, but occasionally my wife would take on the job. Now, here's where the humorous part comes is: Sometimes we both walked Bobo together. On such occasions, when the three of us arrived home, Bobo would stop in front of the entrance and wait for my wife to go in. Then Bobo would continue our walk----just the two of us. It seems Bobo craved XY companionship and he was telling my wife to go home and let the males bond! I don't know if German Shepherd lie about feelings.
08:43 AM on 04/14/2012
Woman good, man bad.
02:02 PM on 04/15/2012
Exactly. Obviously, Dr. Drexler thinks single fathers are horrible since women can raise boys but men can't raise girls.
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jf12
Esta vez saldré como las otras y me escaparé.
12:16 PM on 04/16/2012
Yes, she has said.
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
01:16 PM on 04/21/2012
I couldn't find that anywhere in her writing - - could you point out where she says that?
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Kellybelle22
Medicine. Marriage. Motherhood.
08:09 PM on 04/15/2012
Except she doesn't say that. You're the one who creates this "war" in your own mind and comments. You claimed I brought this topic up on another reply yesterday to Edtastic, but I was actually only responding to his ongoing mentions of the same war.

I don't see it as a war, but of course I'm also happily married and know my husband is vital to our entire family. Why does this have to be portrayed as a war by you guys? Because you're divorced and angry about that?
10:15 PM on 04/15/2012
Same article, same response.