• Iapar
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    72 years ago

    Really? In a country where there is a resturante that is called “heartattack” and a healtcare system that is called “unamerican”? I can’t fathom how this is possible.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      You seem like a very angry person. You should probably stop calling people ‘tards’ and ‘pussies’ while you advocate for for mental health and against sexism but I would first work on that near homicidal rage you seem to be harboring.

  • @[email protected]
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    462 years ago

    Has anybody considered that maybe we don’t want to live longer?

    My entire life, I feel like my only value as a person has been to provide financial benefit to others. There is no passion. There is only obligation.

    I’ve met those obligations. Those obligations required a whole lot of struggle and doing whatever was necessary with no regard to my physical or mental well-being. If at any time I tried to take pause and do something for myself, I was considered loathsome and…favorite zeitgeist buzzword, toxic. Only when I returned to giving all of myself to others was there any tolerance of my existence.

    Now in my fifties, I’m tired. I don’t mean I’m I need a nap tired. I mean it at an existential level.

    I refuse to spend my remaining years in doctors offices as they systemically extract every remaining dollar I’ve got while telling me I’m a terrible person for not living a perfectly physical life. I’ll choose the early exit and a nice clean estate to leave to my daughter.

    When my time comes, I will go quietly into that cold dark void, and I will do so enthusiastically. I see no value in prolonging the inevitable merely for the benefit of others. Let me have this one small thing

    • @[email protected]
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      212 years ago

      I’m so sorry to read this. It must be ok to do stuff for yourself, anybody that tells you no is the one being toxic. As they say in fight club, you are not defined by your job. Especially in this time of AI and extreme automation, we must normalise that not having a job, or not living for your job, doesn’t mean you are worthless. This is valid for women as well, btw.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      Seems like you are in a tight spot. It must be immensely hard for you to feel the burden of “having to give” while it seems that nobody really cares about your well-being and gives back. I’m really sorry for you. It’s obvious that you’re far from happy about that. That’s only natural. I bet most people would feel the same if they were in your spot. And yet, it really sucks that no one around you seems to see.
      I can understand that you got exhausted by all of this and don’t want to continue living like that any longer than you need to.

      I hope I don’t cross any line, whith the following. My apologies if that happens. Please feel free to ignore this completely if you’d rather not talk more about this.

      Would you like to change your situation if it were possible somehow?

      You said that you were misunderstood as “loathsome” and “toxic” when you tried to care for yourself. If it’s okay for you to tell us more about your situation: How did that happen?

      • @[email protected]
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        182 years ago

        It’s not personal issues, it’s patriarchal issues. Just about every guy I know past a certain age, myself included, feel the burn from this. You are expected to just give give give and anytime you have needs, including some damn rest, you are looked down on for it and marginalized. You don’t see how much of a dog shit deal this is until you burn out.

        • 520
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          42 years ago

          If you don’t have a reason to keep on living, you have to make one. Set your direction. You don’t have to live just to provide for others.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            May I suggest revenge? Great reason. Also nazi hunting is pretty sweet. Take a few of the bastards with you.

          • @[email protected]
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            112 years ago

            If you don’t have a reason to keep on living, you have to make one. Set your direction. You don’t have to live just to provide for others.

            It’s like you didn’t read what he said. You can do exactly that, set your own reason and start expressing yourself as you feel. The problem is that you are looked down on for it and marginalized. One of my best friends is gay, and he works in sales. He has to conceal much of himself to get by, and even in situations where he’s comfortable discussing his orientation, even amongst his own circles the issue of talking about your feelings is still difficult for people to accept.

            If it’s an issue for gay people, imagine how fucked it is for straight people. Your comment comes off as if you clicked reply on the wrong thing.

            • 520
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              32 years ago

              I get that it isn’t simple or easy. There are parts of myself that I hide in public too, things that shouldn’t matter but for some reason do.

              But if people are demanding that you give and give and give until there is nothing left, you owe it to yourself to either tell them to get fucked or find a way to get them out of your life. Easier said than done, I know, but it is the only way you will be free of that bullshit.

              • @[email protected]
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                22 years ago

                Bud, we hide this shit because the punishment for not doing so is worse than whatever we gain from not hiding it, we wouldnt have started hiding it if it weren’t

                • 520
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                  12 years ago

                  I have autism. I know far more about that than you’d think.

              • @[email protected]
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                52 years ago

                you are looked down on for it and marginalized

                You just said and exact quote

                you owe it to yourself to either tell them to get fucked or find a way to get them out of your life.

                When that list includes your own mother, father, siblings, supervisor at work, and SO, I think your advice is tantamount to amputating a limb because of the discomfort it experiences in life, as opposed to recognizing the issue. I’m taking what you’re saying as aloof to the very subject matter here, and hence the subject we’re discussing here in the first place. The idea of telling your loved ones to get fucked and get them out of your life is in line with the issue of suicide, depression, and anxiety.

                The depression from where you just became lonelier, and the suicide as many people see it as an “out”. You may as well just say, go kill yourself if you don’t like this world…and then we’re back to square one again.

                Either way, have a nice downvote for your terrible attitude. I hope you have something better to say than the old “toughen up” advice that constitutes what makes this fucked.

                • 520
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                  If I sound aloof then I am sorry. But I have had to make similar choices. Saying goodbye to shit people can be truly difficult, but it’s either that or endure their shit if they won’t listen to you.

                  I am not saying to wallow in loneliness. You will need to find non-shit people to make a friend network, even just a small one.

                  It is a lot of effort and even the prospect is scary as fuck…but living a life enduring an untenable burden will never be better.

                  Sometimes life gives us impossible choices. Like upend everything or live in misery.

  • Rottcodd
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    2 years ago

    Ironic that the thread is about men dying on average younger than women, and the majority of the responses are people completely ignoring that fact and instead just taking an opportunity to negatively stereotype men so they can shit on them collectively.

    • @[email protected]
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      112 years ago

      Men typically die younger than women across the world. Men tend to be higher risk takers and tend to be less social due to toxic masculinity. The strength of your social network is a huge factor in anyone’s lifespan/quality of life. Then in the west you have the “manosphere” (Joe Rorgan, Andrew Tate etc.) as a very popular men’s place for socializing, which is isolating in it’s own right and drives things that are, once again, already predominant traits in men like going to see doctors less and listening to their advice less.

      These are the things I’m seeing brought up and they’re all real known phenomenon. Where’s the lie?

  • @[email protected]
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    1242 years ago

    i wonder if this is correlated with the loneliness increase / the loneliness gap. if you’re a guy, lonely, prone to depression, in a crumbling post-capitalist society that’s getting more malignant by the day…how much will to live can you have

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      I want to kill myself because I hate myself, not because of capitalism. This kind of doomer shit doesn’t fucking help anyone. The absolute hopeless outlook of people on social media is pathological at this point.

      You’re all loved. You’re valid. We’re not gonna let anyone murder you en masse. Things will get better. It might be slower than we’d like at times, but nobody has been able to stop progress yet.

      • @[email protected]
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        622 years ago

        It’s less acceptable for men to open up, it’s one of the toxic masculinity traits that harms men the most.

        • @[email protected]
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          82 years ago

          So when my woman gets less attracted to me as a result of me opening up, that’s toxic masculinity at work?

        • @[email protected]
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          252 years ago

          I think as men get older, we also tend to have less close friends than women. Or at least it sure seems to be that way for many. Saw it with my dad before we lost him last year. I see it with my brother and myself. It has brought me and my brother somewhat closer in that we text and talk more than we used to despite not living close and being pretty different personalizes.

          I have a few close friends, but not male ones. I had to stop working at a young age and I feel that is when I stopped having a connection to any sort of male bonding.

          But I agree, that it still seems unacceptable to open up, share feelings, and be vulnerable as a man. Probably why I have mostly had women as close friends most of my adult life.

          • WashedOver
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            52 years ago

            I have to wonder about the generalized differences between men and women not helping here either.

            Men can bond over problem solving or following a sport /passion. Work often helps create an environment for plenty of problem solving and sharing of sports.

            Women typically share about most things and want to just be heard with their gf’s and that is a wider bandwidth to contribute to a relationship with. A listening partner to vet their feelings with often.

            Men typically are either figuring out their hierarchy subconsciously and couldn’t afford to share their losses as easily. Plus most men don’t really want to hear it. Older men often don’t know how to deal with it. There’s a reason a lot of our happy places are places where we don’t seem to think like fishing, watching sports, etc

            I discovered after my father passed unexpectedly from a heart attack the majority of his male friends were those with health issues that he was helping out with from rides to doctors, to money for things like medicine. He didn’t follow sports and outside of gambling didn’t really have hobbies.

            I didn’t really put that together until years later when I looked back with this problem solving mindset. All those men that came up to me at his funeral were men he helped in one way or another. Some of them were going to lose some of the freedom he provided with his ability to still drive and shuttle them around. I’m not sure what friends he had outside of this dynamic during his short lived retirement. When I called his old co-workers that I knew of when I was younger to inform them of his passing often they had not seen or heard from him since they last worked together.

            It’s something my lonewolf personality is going to need to address as I get older too.

      • @[email protected]
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        372 years ago

        Men and women seem to make friends differently. Men have more of a tendency to make friends through work. The change in work culture can cause these to collapse more easily. It’s particularly harsh at retirement. They not only lose their day-to-day reason to go on, but the friendship net that should help them.

        By comparison, women tend to make friends independently of work. This makes their friendships more tolerant to changing jobs, or leaving work. Women also seem to be better at maintaining friendships at a distance.

        Lastly, there is the (slightly controversial) glass floor. It’s the inverse of the glass ceiling. Both men and women have a bias to help women in distress over men. This makes it a lot more likely that someone will step in to help, before the downward spiral gets too deep. This is partially why men make up a large proportion of the homeless.

        • @[email protected]
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          122 years ago

          I’m pretty surprised by the friend-making info you shared. Do you have a source? I’d like to read more.

          • credit crazy
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            42 years ago

            In terms of making friend stats I don’t know of any study’s but I do find it extremely believable from my life. My dad is probably the only man I know of to have a friend group and even then it’s just him and one other guy. Meanwhile I walk around and see women walking around exclusively in groups. I suppose it really doesn’t help that in the place I’m from socializing with coworkers is considered lazy and generally shushed.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        It isn’t. When you look at studies they reveal that loneliness is very prevalent in multiple groups of people and in general. In some studies older women are the most lonely group.

        Gender and Age Differences in Loneliness: Evidence for People without and with Disabilities

        Gender Differences in Loneliness Over Time: A 15-Year Longitudinal Study of Men and Women in the Second Part of Life

        There is much activity by anti-feminists in particular to push the narrative that men are the most lonely group and that of course the reason are women. This is heavily pushed by media because people seemingly like that idea more than that gender stereotypes targeting men are potentially more at fault.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I mean, gender stereotypes still tend to be sourced by a person. It makes sense the most stretched stereotypes would come from people that don’t actually fall into the demographic themselves. You wouldn’t hear Mexicans claim “Oy mijo, we are all so lazy!”

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          Of course, because if men ever have it bad, it’s their own fault and of course women actually have it worse. And now you know why mortality for men is so high.

      • arefx
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        22 years ago

        This is the energy I wish everyone carried.

    • @[email protected]
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      252 years ago

      Nah, the older men I know either won’t go to a doctor because they didn’t need them when they were younger, are scared of them, can man up through whatever pain they have, whatever. These are folks with Medicare, so at least access to doctors. These are all married men with kids. They don’t go until they’re literally forced to and by then, it’s already too late and they just die.

      • @[email protected]
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        182 years ago

        I won’t go to a doctor because my experience with doctors is they tell me I’m imagining it, refuse to order any tests, then send me a bill for hundreds of dollars for the privilege of hearing them gaslight me about my symptoms.

        I won’t open up emotionally to people for similar reasons: experience of it going wrong.

      • @[email protected]
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        132 years ago

        Sounds all too familiar. I blame the pain pendulum swinging too far the other way. Doctors do a he’ll of a lot more then manage pain… but to a patient pain is usually the number one reason they are in front of the doctor. When the doctor will not even write the smallest script to alleviate their pain, or even worse accuses them of being a drug seeker either directly or with their indirect language (that we can all read through) men tend to give up. If you can’t even help me with the easiest part, or are going to become adversarial about it then what’s the point of going to the doctor? Obviously that question is rhetorical…

        They really need to loosen their grip on low level pain meds and really start diverting people into pain management programs when necessary. This opioid backlash has only hurt the general public. Pain doesn’t just disappear if you don’t treat it, this just leads more people into buying diverted scripts, becoming their own doctor and then eventually using fentanyl pills or just “heroin”.

        • @[email protected]
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          102 years ago

          I don’t go to the doctor because even with insurance it’s too expensive. The whole billing system is complicated as fuck and makes it impossible to predict how much an appointment will cost. Then on top of that if you need more tests or specialists that’s a huge pain in the ass. My mom got to the point that managing my grandparents healthcare shit was basically a full time job. Nooo thanks I’ll just off myself if I get to that point.

          • @[email protected]
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            That’s a whole nother layer, and is also why I have a decade gap in my medical history. Then the doctors and nurse practitioners have the gall to gasp that I haven’t seen a doctor regularly in 10 years…

            One protip is if you don’t own anything, you can just let those bills go to the void of collections. Collections will run a hard game at first, just trying to recoup the 2% it paid for the debt. But after awhile they give up… can’t draw blood from a stone.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    That’s weird. Well, I’m gonna go catch a speeding bullet with my teeth, wish me luck!

  • PeleSpirit
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    182 years ago

    “There’s been a lot of research into the decline in life expectancy in recent years, but no one has systematically analyzed why the gap between men and women has been widening since 2010,”

    Since 2010, what happened in 2010? Was that when they started prescribing oxy willy nilly, maybe. I think women took as much though, why would bring down the life expectancy just for men.

    • The Picard Maneuver
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      182 years ago

      100% with you on opioids being a leading cause.

      To your 2nd point: in pretty much all drug abuse/addiction, men are more likely to abuse or become dependent, and they tend to use higher amounts on average.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        The addiction rates of legally prescribed opioids is surprisingly small. The problem was pill mills and diversion to the secondary market. People who are looking to get high tend to have a very large chance of becoming addicted. If anything the pendulum has cut people on both sides. First they had pill mills and pills flooded the streets. Then they basically stopped almost all prescriptions and then you had everyone all the sudden scrambling for pills, real pills evaporated quickly. Fentanly 30s started flooding the streets and then just fentanyl powder sold as H, because why pay more for a pill if it’s the same stuff.

  • @[email protected]
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    302 years ago

    I wish the men in my life would visit a doctor, get an annual check up, and take more preventative measures protecting their health.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 years ago

    As long as men are going to be the ones having to do the grunt work, having to be the one to bring in the money and do the dangerous jobs, this will never change.

    Unfortunately, most people don’t want that to change.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      People who want to maintain traditional gender roles don’t want change. Feminists on the other hand would like to see more women in trades and more men in nursing/teaching and do want change.

      The craziest part to me is when people act like it’s the opposite way around.

  • caron
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    352 years ago

    Yes, but what about those women who have to lose their husbands and sons? They are the real victims.

    • kase
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      102 years ago

      You’re not wrong that they matter too, but both things can be bad

      • caron
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        302 years ago

        I don’t know how many people have noticed, but I was being sarcastic.

          • 520
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            92 years ago

            Lol it was a reference to how Hilary Clinton once said wives and daughters were the real victims of war.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          Hillary Clinton, 1998?

          Women have always been the primary victims of war. Women lose their husbands, their fathers, their sons in combat.

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          32 years ago

          I don’t know how many people have noticed, but I was being sarcastic.

          Best to use /s when you are.

          Even italicising a point doesn’t seem to make it through the consumption to understanding; need to be more explicit here it seems.

  • @[email protected]
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    162 years ago

    So I’ll be honest and say I have no want to prolong my life any longer than I absolutely have to. I have a myriad of mental issues, no plans to start or have a family and in general very little want to live another 50ish years.

    I think that’s not uncommon in a lot of men either. There’s very little incentive to make it that long anymore. I’ll be working till the day I die and some poor choices in my life up to this point have put a significant damper on what’s left.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        I’m guessing no, since that would defeat the entire point of what they just said. I can relate to this.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        I did for a while. It never eased the existential dread of existing another day, so I eventually stopped once my therapist and I agreed that I could be a functioning member of society.

        Talking about things doesn’t really do much for me. I’m extremely self-aware of why I am the way that I am, and it’s something I’ve come to peace with. I’m not necessarily unhappy, just content with living a very, very uneventful and short life.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I see. So if there was a possibility to improve that, would you be willing to take it or are you fine as it is?

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      no plans to start or have a family

      Do you want to start/have a family? Society seems to pressure people into the mindset of wanting to “start a family”, but many people don’t actually want to, and that’s fine too.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        Nope, and while that’s a fine choice to make, it still leaves me pretty much alone for the remainder of my life.

        I don’t like making friends, nor am I good at it, and whenever I do manage to make one it fades away extremely fast no matter the effort I put in. Which makes it very clear it’s a me problem, so I just stopped trying.

  • ANGRY_MAPLE
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    642 years ago

    The fact that so many men are dying young should be it’s own issue, full stop. There is no reason to try to start a competition over it, or to try to force the topic to change to something else. This IS important, and it should be treated as such. Gain some empathy.

    Did women get the rights to vote and wear pants just because they secretly wanted to? No. They fought against the standards of the time, and they had support from other groups. They didn’t have that support just because of their genetics, but also because other people had some goddamned empathy. We need to move past the “fuck you, I got mine” as a society if we EVER want things to be good overall. Nothing really excludes you from doing that, at least not if you actually care about others. I don’t even really care if someone has a damned disco ball down there, it’s horrible that people feel the NEED to live in a way that cuts their life short.

    If you hear that a large group of people is dying young, the correct response is to figure out why, and solve it. The correct response is not to turn it into a competition or to blame the people who died so young. The correct response is to try to find a solution, and to possibly literally save lives. You are a bad person if you are happily ok with this going on. If you hate half of the population so badly that you don’t care about their death, you have no business telling that population how to live or how to be happy.

    It’s tragic really. Imo, this is yet another situation where tradition and societal pressures kill people. Don’t be miserable to try to make dead people happy. Dead people who cared so little, that they didn’t put anything in place to help you in the future. Dead people who only cared about what they personally experienced during their time on earth. Dead people who had a very large hand in causing most of the pain that these people are feeling today.

    Dudes reading this, I know it might be difficult depending on where you are, but please check up on your friends. Don’t tease them when they open up about serious things, and please listen to them talking about things they love. Change starts with you, and it starts with me. We can make a new future, and we don’t have to keep trying to please the people who will never see it.

    Try to not be too hard on yourself, you’re probably doing the best that you can. Your best might “look like” 20% one day, and 80% the next, but it will still be YOUR 100%. You are only human, and no one is perfect. Please keep up the hobbies that you love, and always look towards better and brighter things. Some days that might be looking forwards to Friday, and other days that might be discovering a new passion. Love unconditionally, and build yourself and others up relentlessly. The odds that you specifically exist are so miniscule that it could almost be considered a miracle.

    Even if it might not feel like it today, you are important. You have value. No one else out there has your exact combination of attributes, and only you can fill that role. Even if you’re in your 50’s, you can still pursue your passions and dreams. Many of the people who poop on your ambitions are people who regret not fulfilling their own. Don’t listen to angry people for live advice, as their methods are the best way to stay angry.

    Please keep doing your best, and best wishes to y’all. It’s tough out there and I can’t imagine how tough it would feel to go at it alone. Strive for a better tomorrow, and never give up. Giving up is the only way to guarantee that this continues.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Competition? What do women have to do with this? Who is happily ok with this going on? Who are you talking to?

      • 520
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        There are a decent number of people just in these comments that are willing to just dismiss this as ‘toxic masculinity’ and move on. They think toxic masculinity is something entirely created and maintained by men. It is not. Many men have stories of women holding them to toxic masculine standards.

          • 520
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            It is an explanation of the misconception many people are under and why it is a misconception.

            It is commentary that makes no assumptions of the person reading it.

              • 520
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                32 years ago

                What part is either assumption or prediction? Just read the comments.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      The fact that so many men are dying young should be it’s own issue, full stop. There is no reason to try to start a competition over it, or to try to force the topic to change to something else. This IS important, and it should be treated as such.

      Did women get the rights to vote and wear pants just because they secretly wanted to? No.

      Sorry, couldn’t resist.

      • ANGRY_MAPLE
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        Tbh I only mentioned it because I saw other comments trying to turn the post into yet another game “who has it worse” or “who can we blame so we don’t have to put any effort into fixing it”.

        I also saw some toxic comments stating that men should just pull themselves out of it. I brought up the rights situation because it was another scenario that required more than just one group of people to make any proper change. We’ve done it before, why not again?

        Expecting a group that is already struggling with life to suddenly magic themselves better is unrealistic at best. So, I tried to remind people that working together would be better.

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          You’re fine, it was overly verbose for my taste/consumption, but informative. When I see that much verbosity I’m suspect that it’s actually just a ChatGPT-type generated text/comment.

          To the point, I was just friendly teasing, by emphasizing via italics, the fact that you were talking about something that shouldn’t be done, and then actually doing the thing you said you shouldn’t be doing, all in the same comment.

          • ANGRY_MAPLE
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            32 years ago

            It’s all good! I wanted to make sure that I clarified just in case

            • Cosmic Cleric
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              22 years ago

              Fair enough. Sincerely, no insult was meant (unless you really were using ChatGPT, then in that case “fuck you!” >:p ).

          • Kilgore Trout
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            62 years ago

            I am trying to understand what you meant to say, since it was not clear.

            • Cosmic Cleric
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              22 years ago

              Check the parts I italicized, they’re emphasized to make my point.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          or to try to force the topic to change to something else.

          Seems like this is the point. No double standards.

          • Cosmic Cleric
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            or to try to force the topic to change to something else.

            Seems like this is the point. No double standards.

            Or more like saying we shouldn’t do this and then doing what you’re saying you shouldn’t be doing.

            I would have thought the emphasis by italicizing would have been enough to make my point. Apparently it wasn’t.

  • @[email protected]
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    442 years ago

    Oh good. Another article about men struggling with X. This certainly means that help is coming, right? Right guys?

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Another article you don’t want to mention to someone else on account of being shamed for acknowledging men have problems at all 😃

      • @[email protected]
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        172 years ago

        It’s ok to be weak without support structures, you’ll be fine. It’s ok to not have friends, making friends is hard, 15% of the male population having no close friends is something you can work past, you’ll be fine. It’s ok to have mental health problems, despite there not being any help or support for them, it’s ok to let them take over your life from time to time, lonely men’s bills pay themselves, right?

        But you’re men, you’re meant to be strong, and stoic, and nothing is meant to phase you emotionally. You’re allowed to cry, just don’t be pathetic looking when you do it. Cry like a fucking man.