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male looking for female friends (19 อ่าน)
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Article about male looking for female friends:
The Men Who Have Mostly Female Friends. Tom, 27, first noticed that his friendships were skewing womanward in college. Since then, he’s found it even more difficult to make male friends.
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“It really is easier for me to just be casual with women, and eventually become friends, rather than dudes,” he says of his platonic friendships. “Maybe that's a problem on my part.” Tom isn’t the only one who has noticed the gender imbalance of his relationships. Recently, when he had a few acquaintances over to watch wrestling—he’s actively trying to cultivate male friends—he took a picture of the group hanging out and sent it to his roommate. She responded immediately, “I had no idea you had this many male friends!” There were four men in the photograph. Tom scrolled through his recent texts: Of the ten friends he’s texted most recently, all except one are female. Friendships between men and women are on the rise in the U.S. In recent times, there’s been less cultural skepticism around friendships between gay men and straight women—though those relationships can also be fraught—but platonic relationships between straight, unmarried men and women are still subject to some suspicion, particularly beyond childhood. In his 2008 book Buddy System: Understanding Male Friendships, Geoffrey Greif, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Maryland School of Social Work, wrote that 65 percent of women and 75 percent of men reported having nonsexual friendships with the opposite gender. (He attributed the reported discrepancy to the subjectivity of relationships, and concluded that an equal percentage of men and women have platonic friendships. I attribute the difference to typical male hubris.) Greif says that the number of men in platonic friendships with women has likely increased since he published Buddy System . The rise of male-female relationships in general has also made way for guys like Tom, whose friends are almost all women. Tom and the other men I spoke to for this piece, all of whom have wide networks of close female friends, are encouraging counterpoints to last week’s viral essay in Harper’s Bazaar . Writer Melanie Hamlett described straight men as “stranded on an emotionally-stunted island” with no friends, theorizing that many men, lacking intimate male friendships, are acting like “emotional gold diggers” toward their wives and girlfriends. “Men are taught that feelings are a female thing,” one woman told Hamlett. Thus, Hamlett theorized, men save their emotional sharing for their partner, whereas women are more likely to share their feelings with a network of therapists and friends. Hamlett cites one man, who started a “men’s group” to create a non-threatening space to share feelings. “I needed support and intimacy that wasn’t tied up into one relationship,” he said. But Hamlett’s essay doesn’t address the men who recognize the importance of emotional sharing, and who seek that out not just from one woman but from a network of friends. Those men aren’t necessarily the emotional parasites that Hamlett describes. Rather, in my experience, friendships with men can be very symbiotic: They listen well, they know how and when to give advice, and they bring a unique perspective to my grievances. While I disagree with Hamlett’s implication that men are incapable of “unpaid emotional labor” in their relationships—I have scream-cried my feelings at many, many men—I do see where the archetypal male friendship, which is built on sports and beer, might preclude the airing of feelings. That model is culturally reinforced to the extent that, for a long time, men with mostly female friends were objects of suspicion. I remember feeling a vague mistrust toward Adam Driver’s character in Girls when all his friends were revealed to be women in a 2012 episode. And, a few years later, I shyly confronted the man I was dating about why he didn’t have any male friends (he had never thought about it before) and then less shyly insinuated that he had hooked up with one of his female friends (they started dating after we broke up). Now the tropes about men with mostly close female friends look archaic: It seems very ’80s—very When Harry Met Sally —to assume that a man who spends most of his time with women is just trying to hook up with them, or that he’s gay. Perhaps because #MeToo has made me more aware of the ill effects of masculinity when it’s concentrated in a toxic clique, I feel unsettled by men who don’t have female friends. It’s like looking at a man’s bookshelf and seeing only Christopher Hitchens titles. Greif attributes the increase in platonic friendships to more equality in the workplace, and stronger policies and better education surrounding sexual harassment. (I’d also suggest that efforts to make college campuses more female-friendly, first with the genesis of co-ed colleges and more recently with attempts to make campuses safer for women, has led to a stronger infrastructure for co-ed friendships.) “Rather than having the experience that my father had, where the only woman he would see at the workplace was bringing him his coffee, men and women are now co-equals at work,” Greif says. “That opens up a different kind of relationship, which is more apt to lead to a platonic friendship than ever before.” Friendships between superiors and subordinates are still rare today—in Mad Men times, when bosses were mostly male and women primarily reported to them, platonic friendships at work were even more unlikely. Now we expect men to make themselves available to female co-workers as friends and mentors, and vice versa. When Vice President Mike Pence said that he wouldn’t dine alone with any woman except his wife, the backlash was immediate: Pence’s puritanical resistance to unchaperoned chit-chat with women at work was seen as discriminatory and antiquated. While the office is a common place for men and women to develop relationships (the term “work wife” has slipped quietly into the “this sounds sexist” class of phrases), some men are chronic befrienders of women in and out of the office. They become close with their girlfriends’ friends or their female roommate’s friends, they develop friendships with women they date when it doesn’t work out, or they make one female friend at work and their circle spirals out from there. By The Editors of GQ. By The Editors of GQ. By The Editors of GQ.
Male looking for female friends
JohnSi
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