Thursday, June 7, 2007

More and more woman landed on Mars

I like this article by Dina Zaman in the Star today, not because of the sympathy, but simply because I never read any article by women trying to understand what men are going through actually, despite their superficial strong image, characterized and demanded by the society.

The only thing I read from women about men is that men are such an ass. I guess we like to highlight only the negative side of ppls.

Some bits of this article is a bit exaggerating or not applicable to most of us, but I think the general idea is true, Its is not easy to be a man!

Is it tough to be a man?

[source]

WAVING his hand at me, my friend asked: “Do you know why men visit prostitutes?”

“For sex?” I answered, blithely.

“No! To talk! Men pay prostitutes to listen to them. All the women do is listen. It’s not always about sex!”

In my short life as a woman, I have come to learn one thing about men, and one of the easiest ways of handling their ridiculous logic is by nodding and hemming at the right moments while daydreaming about my next project.

Meanwhile, I store the bits of useful as well as useless information they spout at me in one corner of my brain so that when they ask whether I’m listening I am able to regurgitate their pearls of wisdom.

Then they beam and say I am a marvellous listener. I flutter my eyelashes and coo, “Chen-chew baby.” Then when I am home I detox my brain. Whew!

I don’t mean to malign my male friends at all; in all honesty, I have utter sympathy for them, because the truth is that to be a man, especially a very successful man, is tough. We’re Asians, and our society is patriarchal. And in spite of everyone saying that they are Muslims, Christians, Buddhists, atheists, I’m beginning to think that money is their real god.

Being a woman is fantastic in spite of our troubles, MPs coming up with crackpot comments about our menstrual cycles (they should try living with endometriosis; that should shut them up good and proper) and clothing; despite the crap and battles we wage, I personally feel being a woman is 200 times better than being a man.

At the same time, I note that 21st century living is a killer. To be a man in this century, I think, would probably mean a lifetime swallowing Xanax (a short-acting drug used to treat anxiety disorders). My friend’s outburst earlier on became a nightlong conversation about what it meant to be a contemporary Malaysian man.

It is not enough to have a good job, he has to be a millionaire at that. It is not enough to have a wife and family, because as he rises to the top, there is pressure to conform to society’s idea of wealth: taking on mistresses and other wives.

Friends and peers compete with each other on who has a better Number Two while nubile women throw themselves at him. If that’s not enough, men compete over other things: cars, watches, clothes, holidays, hobbies, country clubs.

My God, these men!

And, yes, he has to be the best lover in the country. No wonder Viagra is doing brisk sales. All these pressures would render even a tomcat in heat impotent.

I also believe women too play a part in this. I may have said I’m all for women’s rights, but I’m not blind. It’s never enough for some women. A lot of mothers, wives and girlfriends want this, this, and that.

You can’t marry the girl you really love, you must marry a girl from the right sort of background.

Wives, especially the harridan types married their men because of prospect! Ambition! Security! Hell, in this town, what is love? It sure ain’t carte blanche to the good life. If you call this feminism, well, it’s bonkers.

I have this friend. Very successful divorced man, who’s in love with a single mother but his maman wants him to marry a virgin from the right background. I still remember him bawling at his mother over the phone, “Mak! I don’t want a virgin! I’m not a virgin myself!”

A lot of times, I blame mothers (not all, so don’t chuck the kuali at me yet) for these pressures. Men can’t upset their mothers, not in Malaysia anyway. Which is probably why we single girls opt to stay single: nobody wants to deal with fearsome mothers-in-law.

The pressure to succeed is another thing. From the time men were babies, it’s been go, go, go. The straight As. The degrees, and then the jobs. Hitting big time. Their fathers are equally as cruel as their mothers. That’s it? You call that success? Turn your company into a PLC first, then we'll talk.

Men in the end believe that money is power. This goes from top down and bottom up. A man’s role is to provide. Full stop. No wonder they go absolutely potty. They’re not taught correct responsibility, respect towards women and others.

With their families and society perpetuating the myth of Man, and them bending backwards so these men will thrive in this country, KL Tower, we have a problem.

So while our men are waging corporate wars, building bridges and making and breaking multi-million dollar mergers, the retail industry throws them for a loop. Before you put on the Zegna suit, perhaps monsieur should visit the spa and have a facial while at it. Mon dieu. Talk about the emasculation of the male gender and ego.

And these are heterosexual men we are talking about. You try talking to the gay boy who’s a corporate raider but has to pretend he’s straight and has to do all the right things so his cover won’t be blown ... that one lagi sakit otak.

Men, for all their blustering, have fragile egos. Women may weep and wail, but when push comes to shove, women dust themselves off after a fall or two and get on with it. Men drown themselves in material things because these are symbols of masculinity.

As I listened to my friend explain why it’s tough to be a man, I was struck by an image of a tired and bored circus lion jumping through fiery hoops.

“So what do you think?” My friend asked. “Am I not the saviour of all men?”

I looked at him.

“Erm,” I said, “I think you’re going to have a heart attack by the end of the year.”


Dina Zaman’s journalistic hero is Tintin, Boy Reporter.


6 comments:

nananane said...

reading the title, i tot is about astronaut. wrong.

well, i've heard bout a man upah a prostitute just to make her listen to him. kesian, i tot.

i agree that being a man is 200 times more harder than being a woman. but only who's being a REAL man who works on whatever he's doing and understand the purpose of being him.

the fact that more man in penjara, pusat pemulihan, i guess bcos the same reason. being a man is not easy as the pressures living as MEN. U know masculinity and materials that ended up with something evil.

I can see how hard my big bro being a big bro to me and the rest of my lil bros. Or else, my parents akan memberi syarahan he shud do this and this. But as for me, he do the roles well.

And livin in 21st century, the pressures, responsibilities, roles, duties. Everything is 200 times more harder than women as being just good is never enuff.

About the gay thing, seriously sakit otak esp Malay. It's not easy to act straight when he's not esp. when the mom keep asking bile nak kahwin.

Well, men, stay tough, dats ur role. But u can weep sometimes. Slow things down wont get the world stop spinning. (^___^)

H said...

Very understanding la Dayana :D
I cant agree more with what you said

But when you point out that only men who work hard feel its hard to be a man, I think being a women and successful in carrier and also (a wife and a mom if married) in this male dominated world is equally hard for women as well.

Its more stressful for women i guess lately when less men are available for them
Especially, when more and more guys ended up in jail, sad u know, not many guys in universities, and many successful guys are gay.

Majority rules and knowledge is power, guys figure out the consequences.

Anonymous said...

I think I have long landed on Mars. Not enjoying it sometimes. I had once got into an unofficial relationship where most of the time I had to act as the 'man', which partly I liked due to the autonomy that comes with the role, but most of the time it was damn tiring. Being a man is equally as hard as being a woman.

Yes, a man does need to be heard. He needs to feel that he is adorable, admirable in order to raise his level of motivation and honestly from my experience, to make him happy, just listen to him, praise him, and act as if there is no one can help you other than him. Try acting like a damsel in distress (sometimes it is fun, but it lowers the girls' power..hahah..)

H said...

Afni,
I think u did, very insightful view
Men and women r diff, but we are equally created, yes, this include the need to be heard etc, thx for understanding
p.s. I still remember, we were still kids that time, back at kampung, me n shafiq on the male side, you and my sis on the femaleside, we all hv ths debate bout men vs women, who is better, haha, smart kids

Anonymous said...

Hahaha.. I do remember that time too..we were smart..hahahah

H said...

i guess we r, intelligence is an inborn capacity, praise Allah for that, but intelligence is not a ticket for success, prayers for an easy path and His guidance. Amin