JAMES
RAYMOND FISHER, JR., Ph.D.
©
February 3, 2017
My graduate education in social, industrial and
organization psychology failed to inform me much beyond what I had experienced
in the field on four continents, but I thought it was very perceptive when it
declared that sex roles were learned behavior, not biological but cultural and
psychological.
We are born physiologically a male or a female, but
that does not mean our minds will necessarily wrap around this biology as
definitively what we are as an individual.
People are sending me excerpts from books written by
people in my field claiming there is an assault on masculinity by the feminine
movement and political correctness.
RELAX! It – or they – change nothing!
My mother had more masculine courage – meaning moral
or psychological courage than my da had.
My da had the worn out masculine courage of not being afraid of any
other man. He died a courageous death
with that masculine form of physical courage at three days past his fiftieth
birthday from a terrible disease, multiple myeloma, the same disease that
killed Sam Walton the founder of Walmart.
We have gone from brawn to brains and brains have
much more to do with moral courage than physical courage. It is the psychological courage that held our
family together; the psychological courage that my mother stood up to my da
stating that “Jimmy is going to go to college and make something of himself.”
It was the moral courage of my mother – not my da –
answering the phone and talking to the bill collectors when they threatened to
sue. I laugh about the latter as we had
nothing if they did so.
It is the moral courage that finds a mother standing
up to authority and not backing down when they threatened to take our modest
home away from us, while my da stood behind smoking furtively asking, “What
did they say?”
We kept our home, we stayed together, and I went on
to college and have had the career that allowed me to write missives such as this in my
dotage.
By coincidence, I will soon be publishing – what I
think is my best writing – a nonfiction book on this very subject, THE VELVET
GLOVE & IRON FIST” (Kindle Library, Amazon.com).
The “Iron Fist” is the masculine approach to the
problem solving; the approach that threatens and boast, swears and accuses; and
sometimes becomes violent, thinking that such action demonstrates courage when
it demonstrates just the opposite.
It isn’t political correctness that hyper sensitive
males are seeing, but the VELVET GLOVE unclenching the IRON FIST so it can
slide into the glove and act sensibly. Saber
rattling may be construed as masculine but diplomacy and civility now save the
day.
In this most confusing, demanding, ambivalent and
ambiguous time, is it any wonder that the gender assigned at birth flies out
the window when a person’s social identity and his or her relationships to
others confronts the reality of experience? Remember, we all come from women, and most of our nurturing is likely with women, and therefore why the surprise when the physiological male has
attributes and behavioral aspects more associated with women?
My advice is to ignore these academic experts and
give sex role identity a rest. We have
too many real problems that can no longer be ignored, including the most
important of growing up.
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