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  Main Page › Children › Peer Relationships
   
 

What I Would Like Men to Change (as a Whole)

   

Author: Maureen Valdes Marsh

When a friend threw out this topic for a column, I thought, "Oh boy! This should be easy!!"

Wrong.

I spent the better part of the week mulling this over: If I could, what would I like to change about men, as a whole.

Everything that came to mind seemed so superficial and trite. How could I take something and apply it to all men. The usual things that annoy me about men just didn't seem big enough anymore to warrant wanting to apply it to the entire collective. "I would make men better listeners," and, "I would make men less coarse" (no belching or spitting), just didn't seem all that important in the greater scheme of things.

This drew me in deeper and I very became contemplative.

What would I change about men as a whole?

If I could, I would remove the warring faction that resides inside of men - that most women seem to lack.

As long as man has walked the earth, he has waged war on other men. Men reach for sticks, stones, guns and bombs when they perceive a wrong. Civil wars, world wars and cold wars have been launched by men who's goals are to exact revenge, dominate or enslave. While there has been a marginal amount of women who have used war as men have - Catherine the Great, Margaret Thatcher and Golda Meir for example - war is predominately a man's game.

In the smaller scale of day-to-day living, when two men perceive a wrong they will often times opt to duke it out - fisty cuffs behind the pub. It makes them feel better to know they have superior physical power over their enemy.

When two women perceive a wrong, each will turn to her support group (friends or family), talk about the wrongdoer and label her with names commonly associated with ladies of the night and kennel dogs. Rarely will a women resort to physical war games -- unless of course, the women are guests of the Jerry Springer Show.

But without the proverbial magic wand, waved at just the right moment back at the primordial pond, such a change can't be made. Men will continue to beat their chests and thrust their fists.

Belching I can live with.

War I can't.

Copyright (c) 2005 Maureen Valdes Marsh - All Rights Reserved

Author Bio:

Maureen Valdes Marsh

Maureen Valdes Marsh is a survivor of corporate America (and Catholic school!). Having worked in the real world for far too long, Maureen pitched it all in for a slower pace and lifestyle. She took her love of vintage clothing and rolled it into an on-line business of her own - launching Vintage Grace in October, 2003.

Her many careers included a stint at a magazine and independent newspaper in the Sierra Foothills of California - where in additional to being the Financial Manager - Maureen worked as a reporter and graphic designer. It was this love of writing and creativity that led her to include a column on her website titled, Musings of Vintage Grace.

Through her Musings column, Maureen is able to reflect both humorously and pensively about life through the eyes of an aging (tail end) Baby Boomer.

Her writing and love of vintage clothing has led to a book deal with Collectors Press. The book (to be released in Fall 2006), tentatively titled, 'Be There or Be Square: Fashions Flare in the 1970s', is a humorous look at America and what can only be considered "Fashion Don'ts" of the 70s.

When Maureen isn't writing or selling vintage clothing, she can be found 2 days a week working for the American River Conservancy. The Conservancy is a not-for-profit land conservation organization located in the Sierra Foothills. The Conservancy works to protect the valuable resources of the Sierra Foothills, Rivers and Mountains as well as its habitat and open spaces for generations to come.

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