What I Didn't Learn About Manhood From Esquire

[This originally appeared on the Mars Hill Church blog]

I was originally assigned the task of looking at advice on how to be a man from a men’s magazine. Problem is, there wasn't any.

Esquire's June/July 2010 issue was called How to Be a Man. Appropriate. With a title that declarative and a tagline of “Man at His Best,” I was anxious to comb through it to see what they had to say about manhood. With a base circulation of 700,000 and competition like GQ, Maxim, and Details, Esquire is arguably one of the largest and most influential men’s magazines in the world. They've got to know what they're talking about, right? Esquire’s website describes their audience as "the affluent and successful man." Should be exactly what I'm shooting for here.

With Irony As Our Guide

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Hip Hop Daddies Pt. 2

This is an ongoing conversation. To read the first parts, click here.

As I’ve been processing this “manhood” deal within the Hip Hop context, I’m left wondering, who does this generation look up to? In a knee-jerk reactionary statement one might say, “These rappers.” But is that the whole scene? Let’s break this down a little more. When a young boy is growing up, he receives many different messages about manhood. Manhood, for him, doesn’t start at 18, it starts the moment he comes out of the womb.

For many urban boys, manhood messages come in the form of people telling you to “get up and take it like a man” after you’ve just fallen off a bike at age 3. Manhood message come in the form of your family pulling back on the physical and emotional support that is so needed around the age of 4-5 because they fear it will make him too “girly” and not into a man enough “man.” Manhood messages come in the form of your friends telling you to “suck it up” when something bad happens to you—like the death of a relative. Manhood messages come in the form of “firm handshakes” instead of hugs. Manhood messages come in the form of being told the only sports for “real men” are football and or basketball. Manhood messages come in the form of older men—a lot of times uncles and or fathers—giving you hard alcohol at a young age to “teach you” how to be a “man.” Manhood messages come in the form of friends and certain family members telling you that in order to “be a man sexually” you have to have multiple sex partners and “don’t love them ho’s.” Manhood message start when you see men in the media using the gun as symbol of manhood and a sign of respect. Manhood messages come in the form of love being expressed to you, typically around the age of 3, as distant, alone, remote, internalizing, and “sissy” if expressed to openly.
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