The Good Men Project

"The essays pack unusual power, just plain healthy, straightforward, emotional power."

F.D. Reeve

Author of The Toy Soldier and Other Poems and The Blue Cat Walks the Earth

May 29, 2010

Man-to-Man with Men’s Health front-of-book editor JASON FEIFER

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , , — tmatlack @ 11:30 am

JasonFeiferPhoto1.) Who taught you about manhood?

No doubt, my dad did. But because that’s the obvious answer, and there are so many dad-related questions below, I’m going to veer slightly off topic here.

Until a year ago, I didn’t think much about manhood. And to the extent I did, I certainly didn’t think it was something worth defending. The concept seemed rough, blunt”defined by dudes in Bud Light commercials, the way patriotism can feel like the exclusive province of Glenn Beck zealots. Women I knew would complain about their dating life and tell me, Men suck “well, except for you,” and I would be smugly pleased to be singled out, somehow a scrawnier but nobler version of whatever manhood had become.

And then I got a job at Men’s Health. We have a columnist here named Jimmy the Bartender, a sort of Ann Landers type who’s cooler, more sensible, and appreciates a good beer. Men write him with their troubles at work or home, and he advises them on the most thoughtful, respectful solution”and the guys who write him (men and dudes alike), and Jimmy himself, consider these answers to be a roadmap of manhood. Readers love Jimmy. They send him thank-you notes, and many have told me he’s the first thing they read in the magazine. One guy accidentally flipped over Jimmy’s column in an issue, concluded that the column hadn’t run that month, and sent us a deeply bitter, threatening letter, promising to never read us again unless Jimmy was restored. I directed him to that month’s column, and he remained a loyal subscriber.

I’ve learned something by watching all this go down with Jimmy. Manhood is something that every man, no matter his disposition, can consider an honorable ideal”not always achievable, but certainly recognizable and always worth pursuing. And manhood is simple, really: It is to be good and respectful, supportive and fair. That actually is worth defending. Screw the Bud Light guys; they don’t own this.

2.) Has romantic love shaped you as a man?

Of course it has. When you’re close with someone, you see the real-time value of being honest and open, and the real-time harm of being selfish and quiet. And when that relationship is romantic, the rewards for being honest and open are plenty reinforcing.

3.) What two words describe your dad?

Energetic, giving.

4.) How are you most unlike him?

He runs marathons. One time I called him and we spent a few minutes talking before I learned that he was on mile 24, sounding as if he was out shopping for milk. Me, I’m left wheezing after chasing a New York City bus to its next stop. But I’ve inherited his solid calves, which pop out of my legs despite any effort on my part, so yay for me.

5.) From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?

Have you ever tried crossing the Triborough Bridge from Queens without cash? A funny thing happens: They wait out your lame excuse, take your license and registration, tell you to drive through an hour’s worth of traffic down the bridge and into the Bronx, turn around, drive another hour’s worth of traffic back up the bridge, retrieve your license and registration, and then go the hell back where you came from to find an ATM, extract some cash, and do the whole thing over again. I will never make that mistake again.

I mean, listen: Mistakes, I’ve made a few. Many more serious than the toll bridge. This may sound overly simplistic, but learning from mistakes taught me that I can learn from my mistakes”an enormous lesson in itself. When you finally figure that out, you stop feeling bad about an error and start looking for the lesson. It’s the best part of screwing up.

But also: Can’t NYC just put some damn credit card swipers in those toll booths? Is that really so hard?

6.) What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and is it accurate?

Is it possible to find consensus among women who have known me in different ways, over different periods of time? Unlikely. But I suppose they’d all at least agree on poorly dressed, which I accept. But in the past few years I’ve started buying shirts that actually fit me, and I think that’s an improvement.

7.) Who is the best dad you know, and how does he earn that distinction?

I’m answering these questions while visiting my parents over Thanksgiving, and I am sitting here on a chair on the patio, using my dad’s laptop, and my mom is in the chair next to me reading a book. My dad just came out with a bowl of cashews for himself, and asked us if we wanted any. My mom took one. I took one, then another, then another, and so my dad just set the bowl down next to me.

“Take it,” he said.

“No, no, I’m good,” I said.

“Take it. I don’t want it,” he said, even though he probably did. He left it next to my chair, where I promptly ate the entire bowl.

A bowl of nuts isn’t much of a sacrifice, I know, and it isn’t the most important thing a father can give his son. But growing up in an environment in which this repeated itself in endless (and considerably weightier) variations by both parents”in which supportiveness is the norm and I learned, as a matter of course, that selflessness is more satisfying than selfishness”has shaped me in ways that are so ingrained, I’m fortunate to not even identify the moments in which they took hold.

8.) Have you been more successful in your public or private life?

I used to think I wouldn’t be happy in my private life until I was happy in my professional life. That was an imbalance. Now I think I need to build both at the same time, so that’s exactly what I’m doing. (To be fair, that’s a lot easier to say now that I have a job I love.)

9.) When was the last time you cried?

I was watching Up, and then suddenly: Tears! Tears! Man, that was a good movie.

10). What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?

Hang on. It’ll start to make sense soon.

For Bonus Points: What is the your most cherished ritual as a guy?

I’m a Miami Heat fan because I grew up down there, and I take every opportunity to see the team play. But these days I live in Manhattan and almost love going to Knicks games more. The team sucks and the seats are cheap, and that means I can go with a pal”sometimes for $10 each!”"and we can sit in the nosebleeds, talk, drink expensive beers, and, on account of not caring who wins, we’re guaranteed to leave with no disappointments. When discounted Knicks tickets go on sale, I always buy two per game. No doubt, someone will go with me.

Here’s hoping the Knicks continue to suck. Sorry, New York.

Jason Feifer is the editor of The Best Life, the front-of-book section at
Men’s Health. His work has also appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Salon. He lives in Manhattan, but really hopes Dwyane Wade stays in Miami.

 

Man-to-Man with Photographer J. STEPHEN HICKS

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , — tmatlack @ 6:00 am

1.) Who taught you about manhood?

Me.

2.) Has romantic love shaped you as a man?

Of course.

3.) What two words describe your dad?

Alcoholic.

4.) How are you most unlike him?

Im a focused and dedicated man, husband, and father.

5.) From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?

Not being accountable makes relationships unsuccessful and impossibleI needed to fess up overall about my shortcomings.

6.) What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and is it accurate?

Consistent, steady. YES.

7.) Who is the best dad you know, and how does he earn that distinction?

Several actually, but I’ll point to my friend Mike. He always makes time for his kids and addresses them honestly and emotionally.

8.) Have you been more successful in your public or private life?

Private.

9.) When was the last time you cried?

Today.

10.) What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?

You learn from your mistakes. Learn to be honest with everyone. Trust in the journey.

For Bonus Points: What is the your most cherished ritual as a guy?

Mountain-biking with my buddies on Sunday morning at the top of Corral Canyon [near Los Angeles]. Ive been doing it for the last 14 years.

*****

J. Stephen Hicks is best known for his female glamor photography. Over the last 20 years he has forged a prolific career photographing some of the worlds most beautiful women. He lives in Southern California with his wife and two children.



 

May 25, 2010

Man-to-Man with Mike Letourneau

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , , , , — tmatlack @ 6:00 am

1.  Who taught you about manhood?

This is probably a cliche answer, but my biggest influence was my dad.  He would pull me aside with little tips on what it takes to “be a man.”  I specifically remember when he taught me how to shake a man’s hand…”Squeeze just enough to have a presence, but not enough to challenge.” To this day, I feel bad when I shake a person’s hand and can tell instantly that they weren’t taught this rule. Other than my father, I would say Bruce Willis, Bill Murray. Oh, and Sully from Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman — that guy could throw a tomahawk like nobody’s business.

2.  Has romantic love shaped you as a man?

Hell, yeah. When I was a much younger, and a much more hopeless romantic, I used to think that a failed relationship meant that I, personally, had failed in some capacity. Now I realize how many life lessons I’ve learned from those experiences. For instance, I would never know how to cook cornish hens if it wasn’t for a girl!

3.  What two words describe your dad?

Smart ass

4.  How are you most unlike him?

We’re similar in a lot of ways. But I’d have to say spelling.  My dad is a terrible speller, and I’m pretty awesome at it.

5.  From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?

I was really passive when I was growing up. Like, beyond laid back. Almost even apathetic. I didn’t really set any goals for myself, and just kind of floated along. Now I’m more involved, a little more assertive, and overall more confident. I think back on what I could have accomplished if I had prompted to myself to be a bit more motivated.

6.  What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and is it accurate?

Umm, in no particular order, I’ve gotten — amazing, silly, stubborn, thoughtful, and dork. And yes, all true. Oh! and humble…yeah, definitely humble.

7.  Who is the best dad you know, and how does he earn that distinction?

Again, probably a common answer, but it would be my own. He loves his kids, which is always important.  But most of all, he taught me to appreciate the little things in life. Sitting next to a campfire, the art of making a really epic sandwich, a cold beer after a hard day of work outside in the sun. I think I’m a much happier person because of all that little stuff.

8.  Have you been more successful in public or private life?

I feel pretty good in both cases. There’s always more work to be done on both sides, but I’m in a good spot right now. I have a job that I actually enjoy going to, and along the way I’ve met some really amazing people. I haven’t settled down to raise a family yet or anything…but that just sounds too crazy right now. In fact, just writing that phrase freaked me out a little.

9.  When was the last time you cried?

About six or seven months ago. I was at the tail end of three 16 hour shifts, and just broke down for about 3 minutes. It was a good time.

10.  What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?

First of all, nobody is paying attention to you nearly as much as you think they are. Just do your thing, try to be kind, and eventually it’ll all fall into place.

Bonus: What is your most cherished ritual as a guy?

In general, I’m not a very ritualistic person. But one thing that I need to do every day is play guitar. It’s less a ritual and more of a necessity.

Bio: What’s up?  I’m a 29 year old audio engineer at a post-production studio in Boston MA, known as Soundtrack (www.soundtrackgroup.com).  We work on radio and tv projects involving everything from recording vo and mixing, to sound design and original music production. I also play guitar in a band known as Rocket Rocket (www.rocket-rocket.com, site currently under construction). In my free time, I enjoy eating bacon, playing with dogs, and ripping 80s metal guitar solos while riding on a dragon.

PEACE!
Mike

 

May 22, 2010

The Teacher

Filed under: Good Men, Man-to-Man — Tags: , , , , — tmatlack @ 5:00 am

Bern Cohen stars as Rebbe Horowitz in the 2010 Sundance Festival selection, Holy Rollers, which premiered May 21st nationwide. Holy Rollers is the story of a youth from an Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn who is lured into becoming an ecstasy dealer by a pal who has ties to an Israeli drug cartel.

Bern’s other principal film roles include Tickling Leo with Eli Wallach, 27 Dresses with Katherine Heigl, Fallen Star (formerly Goyband) with Tovah Feldshuh, and Brooklyn Rules with Alec Baldwin.

Bern grew up in the Al Smith Projects in New York’s Chinatown and attended Adelphi University on full scholarship and started his New York professional acting career while still in college.

By age 26, Bern had decided to leave acting in favor of a more involved role in parenting his two children. He went into education, teaching and eventually becoming an administrator, where he became known for an ability to turn failing schools into successful schools with demanding academic models and supportive behavior remediation.

After taking early retirement to return to acting studies with Penny Templeton and Ruth Nerkin, Bern rejoined the New York acting corps.

MATLACK: Tell me a little bit about the film and your role.

COHEN:  Sure. Holy Rollers is taken from a real crime case that took place about six or seven years ago involving a group of young Hasidic Jews from New York City, who realized, after getting off a plane, that—you know, when they get off a plane, and they’re praying, and they’re being very religious or spiritual, and thanking God that they just landed safely and all that—they realize that the customs people never inspect them, because the customs people would never go and say, “Hey, you, stop praying, I want to search you.” So, one of them got the idea that they just smuggle drugs. And it’s a story about how this guy lured other young Hassidim into drug smuggling without telling them, actually, that they were couriers. They were told either that, in some cases, that they were bringing in medicine that was gotten wholesale, and that’s why they have to smuggle it in.

And two young stars, Jesse Eisenberg, who just had Adventureland and Zombieland and The Squid and the Whale, plays the young Hassid lured in by Justin Bartha, who was in Hangover last summer, and he’s now on Broadway, starring in Lend Me a Tenor.

So these two guys create this little Jewish smuggling scene within the Hassidic community, and I play their rabbi, who learned about it, and tries to get them to stop.

MATLACK:  It sounds like a great film. I’m going to have to check it out.

COHEN:  Well, I’ll tell you, it got into Sundance, which is terrific, since they only take twelve films in the American competitive category, and there were about two thousand applications. Probably out of about one hundred reviews I’ve read, I would say ninety-seven percent were very, very positive.

MATLACK:  So, let’s talk about you a little bit. You grew up in the Al Smith projects in New York.

COHEN:  Right. The only white kid in my fifth and sixth grade classes—very interesting time period.

MATLACK:  What impact do you think that left on you?

COHEN:  Well, it made me very international, and very multicultural. I grew up with a dream of America being this place that people from other countries came to because it was a great country. I mean, people learn that in your social studies books, but I really felt that, and lived that, and grew up with that.

As a result, when I was a teacher, I worked in bilingual education and multicultural education. Growing up like that, in a multicultural setting, made me very sensitive and feel very fortunate about living in multicultural America. I became an ESL teacher.

MATLACK:  Tell me about that.

COHEN:  Well, I went to Adelphi University on an acting scholarship. After I graduated, and I also started working as an actor on Broadway, and also, working as a substitute teacher to [support] myself. I realized, working in the schools, that it was really needed there. So I ended up studying ESL, English as a Second Language, and reading, and when I became a teacher full-time, I concentrated on that population. My first teaching job was fourth grade teacher, but I spent most of my career at the high school level.

Shortly after I worked as a fourth grade teacher, I realized that there was a more urgent need for me, and my personality, and my ability to work with tough, hard, inner-city kids, because I grew up there myself and I wasn’t afraid of them.

MATLACK:  You became involved in taking over several low achieving New York City schools.

COHEN:  Well, after my career as a teacher, and I became an administrator, I got a reputation for being an activist. At my first school that I became an administrator of, it was a failing school, and it turned around within a year because of things I did, and then the second school, same thing. And then I became a district administrator, and turned around the whole district in Harlem and upper Manhattan.

Within eighteen months, you can turn around the worst school in the worst neighborhood if everybody is on board. Then a high school came to me and said, “Stay.” I thought that was a good idea, in terms of my age, and retiring, and wanting to go back into acting, o I took over one of the worst high schools in the state at the time. They called it “Drugs and Thugs High School,” and I stayed there ten years, and then retired and went back into acting.

MATLACK:  So how old were you when you went back into acting?

COHEN:  Sixty-two.

MATLACK:  Wow.

COHEN:  Well, when I was 60, two years earlier, in addition to working full-time as a principal, I decided to go back to school at night, to refresh my acting skills, because I had an acting scholarship in college, and I was working off-Broadway, but I really wanted to come back and get into film, which I had no training in.

And I guess, [because of] the more mature face, and being more mature, and also new at the same time, I have had steady work for five years. It’s been awesome.

MATLACK:  Congratulations.

COHEN:  It’s been non-stop. I’ve done nineteen films with speaking roles, and plays and musicals in New York. I’ve been very lucky—you know, the right energy, the right place, and the right time. And it’s working.

MATLACK:  That’s very inspiring. I have ten questions on our little quiz, and often, kind of the first thing that comes to your mind is the best. The first one is, who taught you about manhood?

COHEN:  I would say my father.

MATLACK:  And the next one is, how has romantic love shaped you as a man?

COHEN:  Romantic love shaped me as a man because the woman with whom I have romantic love has made me feel more comfortable in being a man.

MATLACK:  What two words describe your father?

COHEN:  Oh, the first word that comes to mind is community, and the second one is strength.

MATLACK:  How do you think you’re most unlike your father?

COHEN:  Oh, probably in the tenderness side of me, that he either didn’t have, or I never saw.

MATLACK:  From which mistake did you learn the most in your life?

COHEN:  I witnessed a crime, and reported it, but the mistake was that I did not tape record or photograph. And as a result, I learned that whenever I am in an unbelievable situation, I need to add another dimension to my own word.

MATLACK:  What word what the women in your life use to describe you, and do you think it’s true?

COHEN:  They would use the word patient.

MATLACK:  Who’s the best father you know, and what makes him so?

COHEN: The best father I know is my cousin Gerald. Outside of myself.

MATLACK:  (Laughter.) How many kids do you have?

COHEN:  I have two children.

MATLACK:  How old are they?

COHEN:  My son is 40, and he just returned yesterday from Nigeria. He was, for three weeks, training doctors on how to improve their response to disasters and emergencies.

MATLACK:  Wow.

COHEN:  And my daughter is 38, and she teaches on a reservation in New Mexico.

MATLACK: Wow. I guess you’re right. But tell me about your cousin.

COHEN:  My cousin Gerald—I’m struggling with words. I’ve known him all his life, and he’s 55 now. And I think he’s the best father, because he’s experientially challenged, but he gave so much love to his two children that they exceeded many times the expectations that one would have for a child of any parent. Just because of the love and support that he gave them.

MATLACK:  Yeah, that’s all it’s about.

COHEN:  You know, he’s uneducated and unsophisticated, and yet both of his girls ended up as valedictorians of their high school—valedictorians of large New York high schools, because of the love and support that this uneducated and relatively unsophisticated man gave his two girls.

MATLACK:  Have you been more successful in your public or your private life, do you think?

COHEN:  Yes, I’d consider my private life. I feel very successful there. But I guess successful means accomplishments, and I’ve been very accomplished in my public life, both as an educator, and yes, I have four books published on education. The New York Times published two books [on] multicultural education.

MATLACK:  Wow, that’s great. When was the last time you cried?

COHEN:  I cried yesterday.

MATLACK:  About what?

COHEN:  When my son arrived home safely.

MATLACK:  What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?

COHEN:  Not to be afraid of their feelings.

MATLACK:  Not to be afraid of their feelings?

COHEN:  Yeah. Not to be afraid of their feelings, and not to be a slave to someone else’s feelings. I wrote that. “We are all slaves to our emotions”—William Somerset Maugham—but “we should not be slaves to somebody else’s emotions”—B. Cohen.

MATLACK: Last question. What’s your most favorite, cherished ritual, as a guy?

COHEN: I would have to say fishing.

MATLACK:  Fishing? Where do you fish?

COHEN:  In the Hudson River. I’m standing in my apartment right now, which is basically surrounded by the Hudson River in New York.

MATLACK: What kind of fish do you catch?

COHEN:  This time of year, small, clean striped bass, swimming in from the ocean. Another thing that’s interesting that I’d like to share is, I lead annual trips to the Amazon jungle.

MATLACK: Tell me about that.

COHEN: I just came back recently from my eighth trip to the Amazon, and I started it when I was a high school principal, and it grew to a little side business, where now it’s primarily adults. I take fifteen people each year. I go Easter week, because it’s fascinating to observe Easter in the Amazon [in the] little villages. It’s really interesting.

MATLACK:  What’s your objective in taking the trips?

COHEN:  I personally loved observing animals in the wild. My second goal is sharing the excitement that people experience. It’s just awesome. The whole idea of just seeing everything from snakes, twelve-foot long alligators, monkeys, constantly… you know, after two days, the monkeys aren’t even exciting to you anymore. You look for something more exotic.

MATLACK:  Well, thank you for your time.

COHEN:  Thanks.

 

May 11, 2010

Man-to-Man With Steven Ing

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , , — tmatlack @ 6:00 am

1.)Who taught you about manhood?

The circle of men in my adult life taught me and continue to teach me about the spiritual mystery that is at the center of manhood.

2.) Has romantic love shaped you as a man?
Of course, since no woman loves a man she does not respect. Romantic love has been the crucible that shaped me, exposed my fakery as a man and challenged me to sort out the purpose of my life. Romantic love is the arena where the significant women in my life, in their knowingness, have unconsciously known that there is no modern test of manhood—no dragon, wicked witch or worthy deed to overcome—and in their knowingness they became the test in a pass/fail system.

3.) What two words describe your dad?
Unpredictably violent.

4.) How are you most unlike him?
I’m just like him.

5.) From which of your mistakes did you learn the most?
Although my mistakes have been many and often extremely painful, one does stand out: my failed first marriage. Never did I try so hard or believe in something so strongly and yet fail so spectacularly and publicly. The lessons of that 18-year-long effort have taken years to harvest.

6.) What word would the women in your life use to describe you, and is it accurate?
Some women would call me “beloved” and others by words they likely only share at their support group meetings. But I think all would describe me as “intelligent;” now if only I could use my power for good!

7.) Who is the best dad you know, and how does he earn that distinction?
My dad is the best dad I know and he is because he was a beautiful, violent and unpredictable man who prepared me for a beautiful, violent and unpredictable world.

8.) Have you been more successful in public or private life?
I am now and have been for the last many years at the top of my game in my personal life—if I were any more deliriously happy I would have to be arrested or would become perhaps the target of jealous assassins. My professional life (although very successful by most measures) doesn’t come close to measuring up to that standard.

9.) When was the last time you cried?
I was just talking recently to a client who was concerned that his recent crying jag might indicate a sign of depression. He then told me about it: it was during a scene from the film “Avatar” where the allied forces of the planet overcome all obstacles to fighting as one and launch their attack on the invaders to protect their planet. Sacrificial heroism—there is no greater love. It got me the same way.

10.) What advice would you give teenage boys trying to figure out what it means to be a good man?
Find your place in the circle of men. Permanently abandon yourself to life as a student in all things. Master the swordplay of male sexuality.

For Bonus Points: What is the your most cherished ritual as a guy?
I am a churchgoer and a lover of ritual there but that is not where I find my most cherished rituals. I find the word “cherish” more applicable to my sex life with my wife. Like exotic birds dancing in some ancient mating ritual we talk, touch, move and think in this area like no other. My faith helps contextualize my sex life but my sex life feels like a far older part of God than my Christian faith. This ritual both informs my spirituality and grounds it in a way that keeps me from climbing into some Procrustean bed of religiosity. Like whales mating in the darkest deep cold brine, the hottest blood of my life is best when surrounded by the darkest, most mysterious, spiritual parts of my life.

*****
Steven Ing is a licensed Marriage & Family Therapist who works mostly with men, preferably those convicted of either violent or sexual offenses. He blogs as the Sexual Futurist, has a website dedicated to helping the loved ones of those arrested for sex crimes and has produced a TV show called “Tell Me About Your Sex Crime” which seeks to promote understanding, prediction and prevention of sexual criminality.



 

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