this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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As I psychologist, I’m concerned about mental health, especially the mental health of men and boys because it’s been overlooked for so long. Because there was so little interest in how much the negative discourse around masculinity impacts boys, my colleagues and I ran a survey. We found that around 85% of respondents thought the term ‘toxic masculinity’ is insulting, and probably harmful to boys.

My latest research has just been published. It assessed the views of over 4000 men in the UK and Germany, and found that thinking masculinity is bad for your behaviour is linked to having worse mental wellbeing. [... And] positive views of masculinity are linked to better mental wellbeing.

This is why we oppose the usage of the term toxic masculinity and any negative generalizations of men as a gender.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

feel like it’s being imposed on them

Because it is.

The “be a man” sexist narratives all have one thing in common: they treat masculinity as prescriptive, not descriptive

“This is the way a man should behave” instead of “this is how we observe men behave”

It’s about control. People are very sexistly invested in what men are “allowed” to be

And notice it’s not what the man wants to do, he wants to sit on the couch and play video games, putting in only enough effort needed to do that.

That doesn’t jive with other people, tho, they want that man to be financially productive so they can profit off of him. The prescriptions have nothing to do with what is good for that man, and therefore nothing to do with what it is to be a man.

All forms are simply different variations of “here’s the way to act that is best for me (not you, the man being talked to or about)”