• @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    How about don’t assume all mean are sweaty horny jerks.

    It’s hard to set yourself apart when you’re dismissed right from the start because of your identity. That’s why lonely men kind comfort in the company of other men, cause men are less prejudiced towards men.

    I welcome the ban. Equality means equal respect. I die on this hill proudly

  • freamon
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    111 year ago

    There was a TV show called Moonhaven where men were a bit more like this. It was cancelled after 1 season, of course.

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    621 year ago

    I mean, the problem here is that if you want emotionally available men you have to treat men better.

    Good luck getting people to do that.

    Look up Troy Hawke on Instagram and use his act as a guide.

      • @[email protected]
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        321 year ago

        You must be new here. This is a comment section. Others call it a thread. You use it to comment on things.

        • Xanthrax
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          1 year ago

          It’s cool. I’ve been here a while. Enjoy the incels.

          The answer is “incels”. You’re talking to incels.

          Enjoy the gratification online, but it’s gross.

            • Xanthrax
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              1 year ago

              I’m talking to you numb nuts. Look ONE day back in my comments. My point was they were talking, and you are talking/ virtue signaling to incels. Continue to do so. It’s a good red flag.

              • @[email protected]
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                31 year ago

                Yeah, and I’m talking to you. All I said was that I wasn’t the same person you asked your original question to. “Who are you talking to?” Was not asked to me. I must not have taught you very well.

                In comment sections and threads, anybody can jump into conversations. You can see that when I jumped in after you asked a question.

  • @[email protected]
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    321 year ago

    Please, I don’t accept hugs. I dont want kisses. Please, don’t touch me. There are plenty of other ways to show affection, I can do that, but please, do not touch me, I dont like it.

    • southsamurai
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      91 year ago

      Is that for everyone or just people outside of your comfort group?

      I ask because a stranger touching me is very likely to draw back a figurative nub, but I love touch from my people. I’m kinda anti-kiss post covid, but I’m a hugger still lol.

      I feel you though, everyone gets to have boundaries, and it isn’t a rejection of affection to prefer non touch methods of showing it.

    • Boozilla
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      291 year ago

      Nobody should force a hug or a kiss on anyone. As I replied to another commenter on here, as soon as he waved me off I dropped it and did not make an issue out of it. I respect your boundaries. If you don’t want to be hugged, kissed, or touched that is 100% OK and nobody should pressure you into it, ever.

      But try to understand that in the vast majority human relationships, hugs and the like are considered normal, healthy behavior. They are not considered a “creepy attack from a creepy creep”. I’m not talking about random strangers copping a feel here. I’m talking about close friends and family.

      Human touch is very, very important. Read up on Harry Harlow’s monkey experiments.

      I’m fairly convinced the lack of touch and general warmth in our culture is one reason we all hate and mistrust each other. I realize causes and symptoms get blurry in this arena (correlation vs causation and all of that) but it’s fairly obvious people aren’t giving or getting enough love and affection in their lives. There’s so much hostility, repression, and isolating going on.

      • @[email protected]
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        121 year ago

        Harry Harlow’s monkey experiments…

        Yeah, but some of us are in our 50s and we had the wire mother. It’s too late for us.

      • rustydomino
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        71 year ago

        That’s a pretty Westernized view - it’s absolutely NOT a cultural norm to give close friends of either gender hugs in most Asian cultures. This includes societies that are very Westernized like Taiwan. It doesn’t make people any less friendly or emotionally vulnerable- but hugging is something we just don’t do.

        • Boozilla
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          91 year ago

          Cultural norms can be good or bad. There are plenty of bad norms in the US. I won’t speak to Asia’s norms, and wasn’t talking about Asia. I was talking about my own culture in the US. Perhaps people in Asia have other wholesome ways of expressing these things. Or perhaps Asia’s cultures are damaged and damaging like my home’s culture is. I don’t know.

          But your comparison feels like whataboutism and deflection. Humans wanting to touch and to be touched in non-sexual ways isn’t weird or shameful. That’s what I’m addressing here.

          Humans not wanting to be touched is OK, too. I’m not advocating for nonconsensual hugging or touching.

          What’s weird to me is how even discussing it brings out instant defensiveness in some folks, which is kind of proving the point that I am trying to make.

          • rustydomino
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            21 year ago

            No shaming at all! But I think it’s important to recognize that not all cultures express affection the same way.

            One very poignant scene I remember well was when a Disney exec met the famous Japanese director Hiyao Miyazaki for the first time. The American exec rushed forward to hug them and I remember thinking that Miyazaki may have felt pretty uncomfortable with that. As an Asian American that spends a lot of time in both cultures I find that Americans tend to (for lack of a better word) impose their cultural norms on others - either through well meaning ignorance or cultural chauvinism I don’t know.

            (Note: I tried to reply to this comment but it got put into the main thread. Copying and pasting here for visibility, apologies for duplicate post)

      • Exocrinous
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        31 year ago

        I’m talking about close friends and family.

        My family hugged me when I was a small child. I’m an adult and I still haven’t fully recovered.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          I know this is a joke but my dad was excessively touchy and huggy when I was growing up and it’s the reason I hate hugs now.

          • Exocrinous
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            21 year ago

            It’s not a joke, I am dead serious. I just phrased something unusual as if it were normal because I don’t believe in upholding neurotypical norms.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    At risk of being a dork I’ll also compare this to Star Trek (largely because OP is a clear fan). Both series are really timeless and impactful imo because they portray people as almost supremely emotionally intelligent. Everyone is very professional when they need to be - capable of great emotional restraint, but also deeply empathetic and caring and ‘tender’ when the time is right.

    I mean Gimli is supposed to be the “emotional hothead” of the Fellowship and he’s literally more chill and emotionally controlled than most of the people you run into working retail

        • @[email protected]
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          121 year ago

          Oh Walmart isn’t the bottom of the barrel. A rite aid in the bad part of town is worse, or fuck being one of the only two people controlling a dollar store seems like some kind of weird hell.

    • @[email protected]
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      capable of great emotional restraint, but also deeply empathetic and caring and ‘tender’ when the time is right

      Then there’s Beverly who wanted Worf to live as a cripple and would deny him both an honorable death and a chance at a normal life, all because she couldn’t reconcile her views with those of a different culture. That episode still pisses me off to no end.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Television in general can be “competency porn”. Nobody speaks to each other in real life with the attentiveness and thoughtfulness of TV show characters. Most people are devoid of empathy and bad at conversation. If you try to be as attentive and witty and empathetic as characters on TV (the ones at least that aren’t written to be terrible people a la IASIP) people will think you’re autistic.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        It’s almost embarrassing to admit, but TNG was a factor for me in finding emotional maturity.

        I was a happy, naive child that was lucky to get to 8 before everything sorta fell apart. Parents divorced, sexual abuse from within the extended family by different people, having to toughen up at school due to the emotional issues starting to crop up, abandoned by a parent because of their addiction, and even the social pressure during the satanic panic (this was obviously the 80’s).

        Somehow, I did manage to keep some of the happy-go-lucky and naivete, but otherwise I had a rough time reigning in my temper and sometimes would break into tears from being overwhelmed (alone, obviously, because I had to be manly).

        When I got into watching TNG, I really admired Picard as a character template, and worked on some of my own self perceived character flaws, and why I acted the way I did. Essentially, looking for the causes and not the symptoms. It was the start of a growth that continues still. His morality and introspection as an archetype gave me hope.

        A therapist surely would’ve been a better way to go about it, but those weren’t really much of an option for us back then.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          I wouldn’t be embarrassed about that at all. TNG also showed me the world I wanted to build for the future.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Thank you!

            I’m a pretty pragmatic at heart, so I feel silly sometimes when realizing that I used fictional characters for inspiration to build myself up. I don’t aspire to be the hero of anything, but do want to be someone that is worthy of respect.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              Reality reflects art reflects reality. Star Trek has inspired countless people to live up to their potential and even bring to life the fantastic devices we see in those shows.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        As someone who spent time in the military, I know exactly what you mean.

        I wish the people I worked with were 25% as competent, rational, and level headed as the crew of the Enterprise.

        Edit: Spelling

        • @[email protected]
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          301 year ago

          It’s funny, when I was a fresh college grad I actually considered joining the millitary because I really did have a desire for that competent, almost bureaucratic professionalism and mature outlook.

          Then I kind of got my heads out of the clouds and realized diction and reality are pretty separate

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          turn it around, only shitty people tend to be promoted to such positions, it’s like the saying that the best president is one who doesn’t want the position.

          • caseyweederman
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            21 year ago

            I was just making a joke about how every admiral in the franchise turns out to be the bad guy in some way, due to malice, incompetence, or because they were replaced by aliens wearing their skins.

  • @[email protected]
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    561 year ago

    Sure, the last time I tried to be tender and emotional like this my wife mocked me for crying. Do I wish for close relationships like this with my fellow men, yes but there’s no room for it for some of us. Toxic masculinity is also expressed by the women in our society (USA)

    • @[email protected]
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      So what if you get mocked for not being “manly”? Man up and double down. Tell her a real man knows it’s ok to show emotions from time to time

      • @[email protected]
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        371 year ago

        You can’t demand people accept you because they just won’t. If this guy’s wife doesn’t respect emotional expression that’s not likely changing.

      • VaultBoyNewVegas
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        131 year ago

        I know that’s an extreme comment but I couldn’t imagine being with someone where I have to be guarded or keep walls up, that’s really unhealthy.

        • @[email protected]
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          There is no reality where I would expose myself to that kind of abuse, because it is abuse. Anyone mocked for having emotions is being abused.

          I can’t speak for anyone else, but I would find far more contentment being alone and free to cry when needed than being afraid to show emotion around someone who is supposed to love and support me.

          I suppose I’m lucky to be with someone who has expressed satisfaction at the fact I don’t bottle up my emotions.

  • Ogmios
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    181 year ago

    Paraphrased from the last thread I saw about this: Women always want these types of men from LotR, but they never want to be like women from LotR: Strong, gentle, soft and loyal.

      • Ogmios
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        41 year ago

        So by your logic is the OP a femcel, or are you just embracing double standards? I encourage you to like whatever type you like, but try to understand that certain personality types “click” with certain personality types. If you want a specific type, then you ought to put in the effort to make yourself into the type of person who can support that type.

        • @[email protected]
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          In the meme it is a request, be more like this, you are implying that no woman is what you’re saying.

          Some women are strong, gentle, soft, and loyal. You can prefer that, but to say they never want to be or aren’t already, that is the incel shit.

          • Ogmios
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            41 year ago

            Can’t say I disagree with you there. You’re just reading too much into my post.

  • @[email protected]
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    271 year ago

    You get to express yourself in a healthier masculine way in Middle Earth because you’re not worried about fucking driving an hour to work and back to make some asshole rich while you worry about if you’re going to eat next week, all the while trying to numb your senses with substances and stave off the fear that at any time, an illness could ruin you and your family financially and put you on the street. At least in ME, the existential problems men face are quantifiable: there’s an orc that wants to kill me, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      Capitalism makes you emotionally unavailable? What?

      My dear, I don’t think that’s the problem here

      • @[email protected]
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        If capitalism is about competition, then the need to divide and display individual strength are characteristics reinforced by capitalism.

      • @[email protected]
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        141 year ago

        Try reading “The Way We Never Were”. While capitalism isn’t the cause, it’s certainly a contributor in the whole idea of men not needing anyone, men being sole provider, separating men from the tribes that gave them that emotional or physical support…not just men but women too.

      • @[email protected]
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        Okay, I’ll admit, in a 2 sentence blurb, the connection might not seem “all there” but yes. Yes, the toxic world that is based in capitalism, our current paradigm and the one we’re comparing to LOTR, dividing and conquering people along arbitrary lines all the while we’re scrambling to get as much money as possible in order to fulfill some 60 year old notion about what being a man or what being a woman means, yes that turns people toxic and we express ourselves in toxic manners because of it.

        Identify a problem you see with modern men and I can probably boil that point down to how it’s capitalism motivated.

        Side note: certain places in LOTR resemble real world medieval feudalism, such as Gondor. You’ll note how toxic men from Gondor are. The economic system that drives us influences our behavior.

        • nifty
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          My interpretation was always that distance to the enemy determines your pov. Shire was furthest, easy and laid back. Gondor is practically frontline, so some characters were more pragmatic and Machiavellian.

          Rn I am speaking only about FOTR.

  • @[email protected]
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    731 year ago

    That’s what happens when a gentleman who fought in WWI and dreamt of a cottage writes fantasy.

  • rustydomino
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    No shaming at all! But I think it’s important to recognize that not all cultures express affection the same way.

    One very poignant scene I remember well was when a Disney exec met the famous Japanese director Hiyao Miyazaki for the first time. The American exec rushed forward to hug them and I remember thinking that Miyazaki may have felt pretty uncomfortable with that. As an Asian American that spends a lot of time in both cultures I find that Americans tend to (for lack of a better word) impose their cultural norms on others - either through well meaning ignorance or cultural chauvinism I don’t know.

    Edit - replying to Boozilla. Not sure if it worked.

  • Pistcow
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    141 year ago

    Wait…you don’t kiss your bro’s forehead and hug!?

    • @[email protected]
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      Yeah it’s not cause youre naked together in the same bed that you can’t kiss forheads and hug. It’s not gay.

      Like even if he put a finger in it’s not even like that

      • Pistcow
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        91 year ago

        Nothing more masculine than sharing heat in cold conditions.

  • @[email protected]
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    321 year ago

    The fellowship, especially the human members were made up of aristocrats doing things for honor and Valor. But most humans in 4th age me were living in squalor, a shell of a former great empire and people. Even the movies did a decent job of showing the distrust, violence and squalor and curruptability of average men.

    All that said yes show less toxicity and more role model responses to hard situations is a good idea. But drama sells.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      Excuse me? Doing it for honor and valor?

      They were doing it to save middle earth from a tyrant who would have enslaved everyone under his rule.

      That was one of Tolkien’s concepts, that a king should protect his people and lead by example. There is no battle in which Aragorn didn’t lead from the front.

      The 4th age was one of peace and prosperity. Please share the source for the peoples of middle earth living in squalor.

      • 100_kg_90_de_belin
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        21 year ago

        If a king can’t protect and take care of his people then they are better off without him, that’s what got heads rolling around Europe at a certain point

      • @[email protected]
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        Well you definitely right about the motivation. I guess my thoughts were 1. all the elves could have just bailed on ME but some stuck around. 2. Aragon in the books always intended on being king and was further motivated by elronds requirement to marry his daughter so as much as he may have done it to lead from the front it was still a game of houses. 3. Overall you absolutely right about the forth being prosperous i had the industrialisation of bag end in mind in particular. Yes sams family fixes it over 3 generations and it was 1 town trading with sauromon, but it def was the exploitative example I thought of. 4.Other than the wizard and hobbits it was all nobility in the fellowship etc… last is the “height of humanity” were the early numenorians so what was left of civilization by the lotr saga anyway was diminished

        Thanks for checking my generalization I should be more careful not to twist tokens intent

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          No worries. I appreciate you coming back to reiterate and elaborate on your thoughts. And having a civil discourse on Tolkien.

          I just want to add on some details about Aragorn for those coming to know more.

          That whilst he did intend to reclaim the throne, the way he went about it was about as noble and selflessly as possible. He didn’t do it by conquering or by force. He did it by proving he was worthy of being king. He rescued Gondor from certain destruction. He healed people " the hands of the king are the hands of a healer. " Then when he finally does reclaim it, he ruled in a way basically the opposite of the last millennium of rulership. And worked to undo a thousand years or more of gradual decay.

          “Kings made tombs more splendid than the houses of the living and counted the names of their descent dearer than the names of their sons.”

          • @[email protected]
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            Beautifully said. And honestly I kind of forgot about this and its a major theme. I got prrtty hung up on magic leaving/dying and the fact there were still humans like the haradrim or Easterling. I think aaragon made peace with them? I really dont know how I managed to not weight his reign with more importance, guess it shows my own bias pessimism. He was basically the perfect archetype and all the symbolism of him planting the 4th tree, etc making him more a messiah than hungry for power. I didnt really think he purged humanity of sin though … did he ever go so far to suggest that?

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Yeah he was borderlining on messiah-ish but I think given Tolkien’s distaste for allegories, he didn’t want to make any character too messianic.

              My reading of Aragorn is not of a messianic figure, but more of an example of what a true leader should strive towards. He left no one behind, " we will not abandon merry and pippin to torment and death." He knew when things were beyond him, parting ways with Frodo, knowing he would eventually be a risk to Frodo. Most of all, putting his kingship for the betterment of the people.

              I think it resonates even louder for me now because of the current geo-political situation.

  • @[email protected]
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    381 year ago

    Whoa, this comment thread is wild. Sorry to those who have to deal with shame. I also don’t like being hugged or kissed, but that’s true regardless of their gender. That said, you should be allowed to cry, and you should at least be allowed to express your feelings. It’s not a sign of weakness, and if anything, a sign of bravery.

    But, reading your comments, grateful to not have a wife who judges my masculinity. I still gotta do my part around the house and stay respectful, but if I needed to vent over a bad day, she’s all ears. Thanks for that.