Playing
At Adventure
by
Fred Reed
A friend recently
sent me a
story from the New York Times about survival schools
in which men, mostly young and urban, paint themselves in camouflage
and pretend to be soldiers or survivors of plane crashes. These
games are a pursuit of manliness, avowed to be such by the participants.
(Manliness likes to be unconventional, [an instructor]
added. "It likes to disobey the law. So now we have reality
camps.)
The woman who
wrote the piece made the participants seem fairly ridiculous, which
one would expect of a writer both female and an ornament of a volcanic
vent of conventionality. They also made themselves sound ridiculous.
Being interrupted by ones cell phone in the midst of a firefight
is hard not to smile at. I once covered Mitch WerBels survival
school (Cobray) at Powder Springs in Georgia, in which bored podiatrists
came to learn Advanced Sniping Techniques, having learned
earlier in the morning This little thing is the trigger.
It was absolutely ridiculous.
Ridiculous,
until I thought about it. Why were intelligent men (some were engineering
students for example) playing like little boys, I wondered? The
answer I think is that today there are so very few outlets for manliness.
Such is the grip of feminism on the country that the very word sounds
faintly silly.
Manliness certainly
isnt in demand. The women of today seem to want a metrosexual
who loves to shop, helps with the housework, and never does anything
that she wouldnt want to do. He may wear an earring. Modern
marriage sounds like a sort of heterosexual lesbianism. The man
should be as little like a man as possible while having complementary
genitals.
This gelding
of men, pushed everywhere in the media (note the universal prevalence
of girlish male models with waxed chests and slight figures) can
easily be seen as the desired consequence of female hostility to
men; the corresponding de-feminization of women, as another front
in an anti-male war led by hostile feminists. Perhaps. I have assuredly
thought so at times. Yet women seem as unhappy in their mannish
roles as do men in womanish ones. One thing is sure, which is that
women do not understand mentheir drives, needs, nature, or
inner light.
For example,
I would love to set out on horseback across the Great Plains as
they were in say, 1825, with a few friends, a good rifle, and a
dog or two. Why? A woman would call the idea absurd, and say that
I was trying to prove my manhood or regain my youth or something
similarly psychotherapeutic. But thats not it at all. It has
nothing to do with impressing anyone, and everything to do with
a freedom and independence that a man craves, even when he doesnt
quite know that he does.
I think of
huge skies with the occasional buzzard circling in the updrafts,
of towering clouds darkening with distant rain, wind picking up
and hissing through the brush, and nobody there, nobody. For a rifle,
Id like the Savage thirty-thirty lever-action that a buddy
had for a while, not because it is the best gun for the purpose
but just because it was such a sweet weapon.
How do I explain
to a woman why I love the wild places of the earth, places where
I can be alone with the jungle or the plains or the mountains? Alone,
and left alone? Where things are not certain, predetermined, and
suffocatingly secure? What meaning can a sweet rifle
have for her? None. Why would she want to be uncomfortable and insecure?
She does cupboards and rugs. I put up with them.
A normal woman,
bearing no ill-will but simply puzzled, will lapse into boys
and their toys. A hairy-chested feminist, more poisonous but
equally uncomprehending, will run on tediously about machismo and
phallic symbolism. Both are clueless.
I have no fantasies
about shooting anyone. I have seen enough of that for one lifetime.
I dont hunt, having no desire to kill anything I dont
have to kill. I dont need to pose with a rifle. Having carried
one in the Marine Corps, I do not regard them as exotic. But when
you are far from anywhere, you provide your own security. I am comfortable
with the idea. So are a lot of men. In todays suburban, mall-ridden
world security is what answers 911.
Somebody said
(or if no one did, I will) that women are realists pretending to
be romantics, and men, romantics pretending to be realists. Yes.
The male desire is to explore, to fly higher and higher, to invent
and dare and go and see. The Apollo landings were not inspired by
a desire to know the nature of lunar rocks. A man does not get on
a rice-burning crotch-rocket on a desert road in Arizona and scream
through the hot vastness, wap-wap-wap through the gears, 95, 105,
120
125 (go baby, get it on, do it for me), because it is particularly
practical. It is the sheer glory of the thing, the speed and power,
controlled but on the edge.
And now he
wakes at five-thirty for the two-hour commute from Fredericksburg
to Washington in crawling traffic, then to his cubicle at Agriculture
where he tracks soybean yields in North Carolina. For his entire
life.
It is not what
men are wired to do. We just do not domesticate well. While male
behavior is perhaps no more inherently absurd than female, it has
little application to the suburbs and bureaucratic salt mines.
The world today,
the modern parts anyway, is very much a womans world. It will
become more so. The economy values orderliness, routine, and avoidance
of waves. It needs patient people who will do the assembly-line
work of huge offices whirring with air-conditioning. Women are better
at this. Im not sure that they really like it, but they handle
it well.
Women want
security, comfort, nice houses and nice cars. Men eventually feel
cramped by them. Of course there are exceptions. The old social
order, in which women were shy and retiring and stayed in the house,
was to a considerable extent artificial. You now see women on the
long mountain trails, sometimes solo, and diving the deep walls
in the Caribbean. But they are exceptions.
And so you
get a young engineer who knows that something is wrong but may not
know what. Hes bright. Engineers are. He is working on some
detail of the hot section of a big new high-efficiency turbo-fan.
It is interesting work and well paid. After work every day he goes
to the local hangout to check out the babes, though somehow they
arent quite what hes looking for, and his buddies come
by with their new Lexuses, and they drink beer and talk about the
market. Every night. Another birthday rolls around. He asks the
overarching question for a lot of young males today in a world that
isnt theirs: Is this all?
Maybe
he gets a motorcycle, or skydives, but its still the controlled
world, artificial adventure. Or, just maybe, he goes to some silly
survival school, an answer arguably ridiculous to a question that
isnt.
April
29, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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