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How men grieve

Men, it seems, have ways of grieving a loss that can be quite different from women's ways. I've just started reading this new book about that by Daniel Duggan. Be it over death, loss of employment, a breakup, guys have their own path.



One of the complaints of the early feminists was that, like Aristotle or Melvin Udall*,  our culture always assumed that the male was the standard human and so women were always treated like strangely defective males. The revolutionary turnabout in our culture in the last 50 years has produced the precisely opposite situation, especially in the world of counseling and therapy: what is wrong with men is that they are not enough like women!

This conflict often shows up between husbands and wives who lose a child, where their gender-specific ways of handling such a grievous loss become grounds for the further tragedy of divorce.

The author of Men, Grief and Solitude shows that, among other male-specific patterns, some reactions to loss and sorrow that seem like avoidance or shutting down are actually entrance-ways to the masculine way of grief.

Worth considering.


*The misanthropic romance novelist Jack Nicholson played in the 1997 film As Good As It Gets. When asked by a breathless female admirer how it is that he manages to write women characters so truly, his answer...well, here it is.



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PsychToon 1

Excellent question

A Jungian analyst down in LA opens his professional site with this: Why do we choose partners who fail to meet some of the important needs in our life, even though there was something about them that caused us to deeply love them initially? Falling in love is an overpowering experience. To me, it is one of the most easily accessible signs of the reality of the unconscious, showing that we are often in the grip of forces we neither understand nor control. When, with time, that ecstatic and tumultuous state subsides, it becomes clearer who the beloved idol really is. And every one eventually reveals feet of clay. What sometimes happens then is that instead of the idealizing obsession we had in the beginning, we switch gears and what strikes us most are flaws. It's almost all we can see. Qualities that once drew us in now put us off. This change of view can feel deeply disappointing. Or even like betrayal. But it's usually the case that our own projections and deep needs