-
Website
http://artofmanliness.com -
Original page
http://artofmanliness.com/2009/03/28/the-art-of-manliness-weekly-roundup-i-love-you-man-edition/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Marisa Duma
2 comments · 2 points
-
vanderleun
2 comments · 137 points
-
Alison_H
4 comments · 1 points
-
Corey
15 comments · 2 points
-
jurisnaturalist
3 comments · 23 points
-
-
Popular Threads
TRUTH
I was very turned off by them; only when Paul Rudd and Jason Segal went on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos, did I then realize that there would be some quality to this film.
Great review
He speaks of "traditional" manliness that has only been traditional for a short time in history.
There IS manliness, but it is not confidence in oneself, single-mindedness, the ability to lead, etc.
It is opening the door for a "lady" and, with grace, passing through the door first when she refuses to enter before you (for the record I will enter first if it looks as though it is more efficient overall for the other person to have opened the door). It is occasionally dealing with it and letting a lady open a door for you. It's telling your significant other they're attractive, and when they present scientific (scale-related :) ) data that they've gained weight telling them "so what" instead of getting a new scale.
It is stopping rape, and stopping abuse as a man, because men still have so power in society that people think women were "asking for it".
I think this blog does a much better job of showing what manliness is than Dr. Mansfield does. He talks of a world where men are men, where a token "manly woman" is accepted, and the rest are screwed.
The Art of Manliness blog would like to have a world where all men are confident in themselves, considerate, and skillful.
I know which I prefer to read.
And Jesus, the manliest of all. Some might see him as weak, but he stood up where it mattered. He did not give in to raging impulses, but dealt righteous fury when there was injustice (the Pharisees, temple vendors). We all know his kind and soft side, but many ignore the fact that he stood up for and defended the down-trodden, the social outcasts, justice and righteousness.