this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2024
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So, back when I was "still cis tho", there were a lot of aspects of male gender norms that bothered me deeply and of course I totally understand why now. Even though these days I obviously have a clear reason for feeling that way, I'm still curious if cishet men also have issues with how norms or expectations around gender and sexuality impact them in a negative way.

I'd love to hear your thoughts on how those norms impact you, whether good or bad.

Also, I should mention that since this is a bit of a sensitive subject we're talking about here, please be thoughtful and sensitive when discussing with others in this thread. Thanks! <3

EDIT: Much thanks for all the great responses here! I know it's a difficult topic of course, so I appreciate you sharing your thoughts/feelings like this.

Speaking of which... I just looked at /c/menby and some of the posts on the front page there are over 2 years old. I see a lot of the discussion here centered around not being able to share feelings and/or not having the spaces or support to do that in. /c/menby seems like the perfect place for that, just sayin'.

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[–] Thordros@hexbear.net 23 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

there are also women who look at you like panting just for existing positively with children.

I wouldn't know. My children were all born girls. Most of them weren't girls, as it turns out, but that's another story. And it probably colored my experience a bit differently.

[–] carpoftruth@hexbear.net 13 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

And it probably colored my experience a bit differently.

This is a good point. I have a son and most of the kids involved in the programs I volunteer with are boys (or at least male presenting, they're young so who knows who they will be in 10 years). You saying this has helped me appreciate how my experience has been colored. When I am a male mentor figure to a boy, his mother sees a positive male role model teaching and supporting her son and dad sees a patriarch training a recruit. There's the same low level paranoia about pedophilia that permeates any interaction an adult man has with any child, but it's not the same level of paranoia as when an adult man interacts with a girl child. When I am interacting with girl children, mom is more likely to see a threat and dad is more likely to see a queer, because interacting with children is women's work. Also, by age 8-10 I'm sure girl children have started internalizing the very real dangers of maleness to them as young women.

I'm thankful that for the most part these are just vague societal undercurrents and systemic forces rather than factors that play a real role in my day to day life doing volunteer work. Really I just want to be a safe person to kids including nd/queer kids and teach them to value and understand the natural world.

[–] Thordros@hexbear.net 12 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

You saying this has helped me appreciate how my experience has been colored. When I am a male mentor figure to a boy, his mother sees a positive male role model teaching and supporting her son and dad sees a patriarch training a recruit.

I appreciate being seen. That means a lot to me. Care-Comrade

You hit the nail on the head. If I brought a couple boys to go play with dinosaur toys in the sand at the park, and I watched them intently, and engaged with their interests the whole time, I'd be the coolest, most extremely bangable single Dad in the region.

But I brought a couple girls to go play with dinosaur toys in the sand at the park, and I watched them intently, and engaged with their interests the whole time. There's now a weirdo playing with little girls at the park. Where are their mothers? POLICE???

Living with that hanging over your head as a dad who's a primary caregiver really fucks a guy up.

[–] Thordros@hexbear.net 10 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Also, just based on my experience pushing a giant stroller around, I could probably rant for a week straight about wheelchair accessibility in public spaces. And I was just pushing a baby around! I didn't have to deal with that ABSOLUTE FUCKING BULLSHIT for the rest of my life! And I'm still mad about it! Imagine how wheelchair users feel! Holy shit. I am mad again.