Jaded Scribe said:
But, on the flip side, how do you know that it was your "feminine" upbringing that fucked with your head, and not something else, whether inherent in your biology or your experiences?
I've been analyzing this a lot. Some actions clearly lead to particular results.
Jaded Scribe said:
If one of my boys was overtaken with a burning desire to cut lumber, fine. All I ask is that he get a college degree first (in what field, I don't care). And I expect that regardless if they want to be a musician, an artist, or whatever. It provides a backup.
As a sidenote, I don't have a degree and I'm fine without it. It's just my way of doing things: I always learn on the fly. I'm completely incapable of learning by reading books and memorizing. BTW that's one thing that women around me never understood: they thought good grades = success in the future, which is crap.
In general, university education is way overrated today. Heavy studies made sense in the middle ages, when most people didn't even know how to read. Today, all the information is available online for anyone to learn. So unless one wants to become a doctor, a nuclear physicist or something else demanding, a degree is usually just a piece of paper saying 'this dude has sat through several years of listening to some claptrap'. Take computer science for example - I personally know hundreds of great programmers, IT technicians etc. and not a single one has studies this stuff. One guy that did, is an artist. Go figure.
While this has little to do with gender issues, forced education is... Just not good. Also, I'm a strong opponent of teaching children by forcing them to sit tight for several hours a day, memorizing stuff. People should find their ways to contribute to the society. Children should be raised that way too. And I know I'm an idealist.
Jaded Scribe said:
They lose nothing by being raised to be in touch with their feelings. That it's ok to cry if they are upset (with some caveats about the appropriate time and place), that they should be attentive to the feelings of others, and encouraging empathy and a nurturing attitude.
Nothing bad with knowing ones feelings, it's how we deal with them. For example, there's a huge difference why and how women and men cry: crying helps women to cope with issues, i.e. actually makes them stronger. It doesn't work the same way for men. Men tend not to cry unless they're completely exhausted. Overriding this behavior (in either gender) by encouraging the other policy can be very disruptive. That's just a tiny example of very complex problems. There are millions of such small issues, which the other gender usually doesn't understand well.
Jaded Scribe said:
But at the same time, they run, jump, play, fight with each other, and enjoy all the traditionalist things a boy is expected to enjoy.
I guess your boys manage just fine. That's good.
What we can see around us, are often atrocious examples.