Abstract
This paper explores masculinity in light of the relationship three men had with their fathers. Three stories are offered as individual poetic inquiries, initiating discussion among the authors. By understanding the relationship with our fathers through collaborative writing, we are comprehending our own embedded masculinity in society and at the same time, we are finding new understandings of what it means to be a man. We reflect on the idea of
Introduction
This paper is the result of multiple comings-together (Manning, 2009) at a panel presentation during the European Congress of Qualitative Inquiry (ECQI) in February 2019, Edinburgh, Scotland. Each author shared a narrative about the relationship with our respective father. The feedback from audience members was interesting. For some, our stories regarding our respective father were understood as
In this process, we came to understand how the presence of a father in our life varied considerably and how this difference promoted and also hindered aspects of our development. Since the conference, we have reflected upon our relationship, discussing the similarities and differences in our narratives, viewing them as constitutive elements of who we are becoming as adults. Depending on the memory, moment, or the ground we traversed in our individual journey with our father that we shared, all three of us had strong needs to distance ourselves or get closer to our father. Here, we face the multiplicity, the fragments, and the complexities of
Harrison (1978) warned men of the problems of performing masculinity: premature death, higher levels of drug abuse and an unwillingness to ask for medical help when it is needed. Attempts to assert a tough and dominant masculinity sustain these patterns (see Sabo & Gordon, 1995). Such patterns, however, can be modified or even eliminated, which is where the authors found commonality in their purpose/desire for continuing this discussion. The men contributing to this essay have pushed back against the attributes of masculinity that Harrison (1978) warns us about.
The socially prescribed male role, by contrast, requires men to be noncommunicative, competitive and nongiving, inexpressive, and to evaluate life success in terms of external achievements rather than personal and interpersonal fulfillment. All men are caught in a double bind. If a man fulfills the prescribed role requirements, his basic human needs go wanting; if these needs are met, he may be considered, or consider himself, unmanly. (Harrison, 1978, pp. 68–69)
As we work on our own emotional needs, we find ourselves struggling with our respective father that lives in us—his temper, his violence, his coldness (see Ronai, 1995). Our fathers are a part of our individual identity, a part of how we think about ourselves and our masculinity. Our fathers are constantly with us, even as a ghost, reminding us of their absence. We can’t vomit them up or excrete them out. They have made their way into our consciousness. When we realize we are not thinking about them every day, we know we are beginning to heal. Eventually, we can reach the point at which they are filed away like papers in a filing cabinet, but they remain where we put them; we can always retrieve the file and revisit our fathers and contemplate our writings and relationships
Each of us had a father who introduced and presented us to the world. In our young minds, he was all-knowing. As we grew up, we needed to have the freedom to find our way of understanding the world that could be different from what was presented to us. We have used the similarities and differences of our narratives to “make a space that we can project ourselves into … where what is, was or will be might become a little slippery” (Tamas, 2017, p. 112). It is the fragmented memories and uncertain stories that we tell ourselves and others about who we are, where we came from and how we came to be the persons we are now (Rath, 2012, adapted from p. 442) that the
One thread that we found common in our storying of our fathers is
We see our individual fathers as someone that is/was not aware of who we were and who we are now; they were neither aware of our singularity as children nor as adults. We felt unseen. Just as a tree meets the problem of the large rock underneath it by growing roots around it, so too have our lives grown around the large immovable rock that represents our respective fathers (Davies, 2020, adapted from p. 2).
Pease (2000) believes it is important to dis-identify with abusive fathers. Is it in our individual best interest to stop blaming our fathers for their shortcomings so that we can move beyond the anger and deal with the hurt that their abuse and/or absence caused (see Farmer, 1991). Detoxifying the image of father means recognizing that our respective fathers have been wounded as well. Maybe our fathers were distant because they learned to be that way from their fathers. Maybe their fathers didn’t talk to them either? About his own father, Auster (1982, p. 20) writes, “He never talked about himself, never seemed to know there was anything he
This beautiful act of writing gives us an avenue to be able to express our sadness, pain, and/or anger. We need to be able to express our sadness/pain/anger in order to be able to see, reflect, and engage the intensity of the rejection felt from him, showing our fathers how they have damaged us. Such expressions also show how much we have needed this work—of looking into ourselves—to meet and to nurture our emotional needs.
Method
After presenting our conference papers at ECQI in February 2019, we were paid a beautiful compliment during the question and answer session: “I regularly find myself in panels/sessions on ‘feminism’ and I have not been in a session as ‘feminist’ as this in years! Thanks.” This prompted us to think about ways of bringing our writing together to create a single body of writing. Instead of bringing our writings together to tell, once and for all, what our fathers’ fathering might mean, thinking with Gale (2018) we began exploring what work this body of writing can “do” in the world. This encouraged us to think more about showing how viewing our fathers through new eyes might be generative of new possibilities for becoming men/sons/fathers. This also moved us to wonder about potentialities in terms of our own way of fathering others who perhaps consider us to be a father figure in their life.
The guiding theoretical framework in this study was postmodernism. With a concern for storytelling, blurred genres and new ways of composing ethnographies where no single version of truth is privileged, our writing is at home within Denzin and Lincoln’s (2005) eighth historical moment (i.e.,
Upon returning from ECQI, we exchanged emails and agreed to tweak our writing, incorporating helpful comments/feedback/suggestions we received from the audience members at the conference. We then re-circulated the newer iterations of our writing among ourselves. As a way of interrogating what our writing can do, we continued with a “…‘round-robin’ email approach to share our ideas” (Lahman et al., 2010, p. 42), outlining the stories and sections of each other’s texts that resonated with us the most. Our emails acted as
Given the volume of our combined writing, as a way for a “… reader to come to know … through very few words” (Glesne, 1997, p. 206), we agreed to rework our conference presentations in a more expressive, poetic format. We set ourselves the goal of creating a 1000-word poemish (Lahman et al., 2019)
To summarize, we worked collaboratively, writing and sharing our ideas on what the other had previously written through a series of email exchanges. Below are the poetic compositions resulting from our combined efforts “… to give ourselves over to a different mode of knowing: to poetry’s knowing” (Faulkner, 2007, p. 218).
Poetic Compositions
Gabriel
This dance that never started and will never end
I remember us walking down streets
with him pointing at women:
"Did you notice that she was looking at you?"
"You are attractive and you will like them too…"
Walking with him
Simple moments that frame who I am
Shaping the way I walk, the way I see
* 1
I am not sure how the distance started…
Maybe it was always there
For years it was me the one who listened
Of his problems
Hours listening what was going on his job
Then on the trial, the news, the crisis
But this was unbalanced,
What about me?
What about me feeling lonely?
Me feeling an outsider at school
Me not knowing how to approach other people….
The distance was always there
It’s just that it was covered
Having him as the center…
*
It was not easy to see him as flawed
That maybe all the stories about others
were stories about himself…
Not being able to deal with them.
I needed to understand women differently as well
After understanding that his stories
Were his and not mine
*
After losing his job and his career
It was harder to be around him
He would just talk about issues and more issues
No space for anything else
He was always waiting for the day
All would be ok again,
The money would come back at any moment
And it never did…
*
One day we ‘hired’ him to do some home improvements
As a way of helping him…
The result was not the expected
He fought with my -then- partner
Later on that week, speaking on the phone,
I don’t remember well what I said,
But he replied
"you cannot talk like this to your father"
I felt so frustrated, because he was treating me like a child,
So, I said OK
And I stopped talking with him…
*
It was not easy to develop my own identity
To create a person different than him
Mostly because it meant to not be understood
Or even seen
By him.
The distance was always there
Because he never got the difference
Between us
He never got that I read books
Or that I would practice arts
Or like philosophy
*
One day he left
It was not painful as I thought it would be
Their relationship was not good
And the pain was more about not knowing
How
*
The distance with him
Helps me to develop myself
To explore ways of being a man
That are not the ones my dad
And his dad
Would embody
I have been looking for ways
To connect with my feelings
To find the manners
That feel truer
This challenge is not just about my dad
But about the ways of being a man
Around me
It is not about him as a person
But as the representative of a culture
The representative of a way of understanding
Life
Masculinity
Women
Body
And a large etc.
*
Understanding my father
Not just as a person
But as part of a whole community
As son of my granddad
As brother of his brothers
Makes me see further
Understand
How different it can be
The persona we become
*
I became a father-figure for my brothers
I guided them, showed them what I found
On life
They followed so many of the things I found
And fought for…
As if those things were normal
I fathered them…
Took interest in
Their development,
Their interests,
Their abilities.
I am proud of the men they have become…
*
One morning, he came in to woke me up
It was mother’s day and he said
"lets do a nice breakfast for mum"
I liked those times
They were happy
When I saw love between them…
*
He used to play the flute in the night
Before we fell asleep
And I loved it so much
But with the new-big-job he stopped playing
And the old wooden flute was broken
Instead, we would stay awake to see him on the evening news
Intrigued about all the things he was doing
And proud of his achievements.
One of his birthdays, I convinced my mum
To buy a new wooden flute
He did not like it…
*
The distance was always there
But it was not noticeable
Or it was better to not see it
*
One day I had a fight with my brother
He said to me
"you cannot hit someone younger than you"
And he slapped me on the cheek.
*
He tries
I know he tries
But in a way that is not nice
He does not get some boundaries
Some things that are uncomfortable
Or important
He tries to break the distance
But the distance is there.
*
Maybe the distance is not the problem
But the lack of awareness
Of this distance
This distance that makes me different
That distance that he needs to understand
Not eliminate
This distance that makes me the man I have become
This man that he (maybe) does not understand
*
Sometimes I wonder about time
How these lives unfold
Mine and his
How these events and relationships
Produced so different people
But sometimes I look at a photograph of myself
And I can see some gestures
That I know I have seen in him
The distance collapses for a second
How close are we?
*
So I wonder about the mistakes I will make
I wonder about the relationships I have not managed well
And the ones that I will mess up
And the distance collapses again
*
He calls me
Without any reason
And that is the surprise
That there is no apparent problem behind his call
No demand
Just a question, "how are you?"
Not perfect, but good enough
It shows me he still cares
And loves
Despite the distance.
Daniel
Facing the uncannies (Roselló, 2017) of my child- and adult-hood, I want to
trace the here-and-nowness of being an adult child of an alcoholic and
just as a tree meets the problem of the large rock underneath it by
growing roots around it;
my life has grown around the
large immovable rock of
Finding and discovering by investigation
love and forgiveness in a son-father relationship
where it was difficult to say, "I love you" (Clarke, 2018).
Then, I want to
honor and celebrate loving in son-father relations.
Rather than asking, what does it mean to be an Adult-Child-Of-an-Alcoholic; I ask
how is it to be
This text of “the self…” is becoming an
“…occasion of folding and unfolding selves,
Relating to my
father’s drinking, I want to
trace the selves and subjectivities co-implicated in my father-son relationship.
**
Living with cancer,
suffering with two brain tumors,
my Dad died in hospital in 2014 with me by his side.
Throughout my life,
traces of his troubles have kept
turning up,
again and again.
“I am interested in matter, both as a noun
uncanny matter mattering,
assembling traces of
who he was,
and
what he was like,
at his worst.
It matters to me, for example, this material matter of:
alcohol
(hidden under)
a tea cosy.
**
We all carry a rucksack, and
there are stories sliding around:
folded, unfolded,
“enfoulded and enfoundling” (Davies, 2020, p. 1),
inside all of us.
There are many stories sliding around inside of me now.
**
When my Mum was diagnosed with
myotonic dystrophy, her GP advised my Dad to
stop smoking; reasoning it would help
slow the deterioration of her health.
I hated being around him when he was
smoking and drinking, and
I spend my life, trying to get him to stop.
He didn’t
**
On the wall in my study at home,
a shelf now hangs,
emptied of most of its original contents,
He started a collection of miniatures for me.
Just like family and friends, Dad would add to the collection.
When I was 16 - in secondary school-, I made a shelf for them in woodwork class.
When I came home from University -in my first year of study- to
visit family and friends;
I found that the
drank every bloody last one of them.
No acknowledgment, apology or replacement.
**
Dad turned into a shadowy figure.
When his drinking got all too much for her,
my Mum moved around the corner, to
live with her Mother and Brother.
They were more reliable in giving her the care she needed.
Losing his temper, he used to say things like:
“They didn’t want to know me. They didn’t want to know me”.
And
“Son, you don’t even know you are born”.
And
“You’ll never understand”
But,
if you don’t tell me,
I never will!
**
Ring. Ring. Son.
I was born, after
This ring
Was first sworn
To be worn
To say
I love you.
I was born, through
This ring
But
“Son, you don’t even know you are born”
Attached, to
This ring
I am
Still,
Being born.
Maybe
Perhaps, through
This ring
A Baby Clarke, will be
Born
Attached, to
This ring
Son, Daughter,
You don’t even know you are born
**
After his Father died,
his Mother turned to
took in a lover whose
older children also moved in.
Compared to my Dad,
these older children were
stronger, rougher, tougher and
one was a boxer.
They kicked him out of his bed and he had to sleep on the floor:
“We had to sleep with coats over us! But…
Son,
you’ll never understand”
**
While receiving chemo and just before he went into hospital,
I thought he was off the booze.
He wasn’t.
As the sole Administrator of his Estate, it fell to me to close his bank account.
On one of his final statements…:
1. Bargain Booze
2. Bargain Booze
3. Bargain Booze
4. Bargain Booze
5. Bargain Booze
6. Bargain Booze
**
Although he was kicked out of his own bed
Although he didn’t stop smoking
Although he drank all my miniatures
Although he drank his way through chemo
Although…. Although… Although….
He still
took us on our first family holiday to Italy when I was 10
He still
took me to keyboard lessons on Monday nights
He still
paid for me -4 years on the trot, during my undergraduate!- to
spend the summer in America with my girlfriend
He still
came to all my graduations ceremonies,
He still
gave me the ring he used to propose to my mum with, so I could propose to Amy
He still
gave me his wedding ring to melt down and make both mine and Amy’s wedding ring
He still
did the best fathering he could
He still
eventually became the father I always wanted
He still… He Still…. He still….
**
All the ‘
all the ‘
folding in and
stretching out.
**
Tracing his troubles,
learning to love,
I have written to
inscribe my identity as an adult child-of-an-alcoholic in language,
presenting his troubles to myself in a manner that is
“not so scary” (Roselló, 2017, p. 246).
My writing has become an act of remembering that
although he had his troubles,
he is still my Dad and
our bond continues (Paxton, 2018).
David
Holiday calls for Christmas—another for birthdays
Missed calls equal missed opportunities to have a conversation
Trying to force into existence a relationship that will only come through forgiveness
Instead, I focus on dissolvement of the toxic interactions we have
Keeping a pretense of a relationship to satisfy a social expectation—a family expectation
This pretense of a relationship is not working too well for me
Nor is it working for my dad. We both deserve better, more
Just as we have come to believe that [people] have a right
And perhaps a duty to dissolve abusive relationships…
Perhaps this assumption will be extended to relationships between child and parent—even adult children (Chapin, 2002)
***
My mother was caught in a winding, suffocating sheet of repressed anger and frustration (see Petry, 1975)
A sheet representing white male privilege. The man goes to work;
the wife stays home, makes the meals and does the laundry.
On the clothesline, Mom hangs the sheets engulfing and suffocating her (Purnell, 2013) ii]
She is finally able to escape the suffocation when she leaves my father.
She becomes a single mom and I lose an already fragile connection to a man—
who is not present, absent.
What I did not realize until this process of writing this narrative
By choosing to live with my mother, my father interpreted this as rejection.
Rejection I now equate to a divorce between my father and me.
My father has distanced himself from me and I from him
This distancing does not help my father and me find any type of resolution—not now, not in the future
All narratives are a dynamic never-ending story (Charlés, 2008)
Perhaps resolutions come as the pages are unfolded,
Narratives are not a finished manuscript; they represent a moment in time.
For that moment, the best and healthiest resolution may not be a happy ending; The best resolution may be an end, some things don’t end well—they simply end (Purnell & Bowman, 2014).
***
What does it mean to end a relationship with my father? It is not an erasure
However, my father is absent in my life, absent in my photographs
There has only been a speculative hope of what might be one day.
Ending this relationship, means erasing the
It adds to the silence or what McGuire (1985) calls an open silence full of meaning—open to interpretation.
The silence actually helps me to reflect on my role in the estrangement with my father.
I have been chiseling away at this boulder that blocked access to my father,
Over the years, as I thought I was making headway around this obstacle,
However, I was actually creating a more difficult obstacle to overcome.
The broken pieces that fell from the boulder became a dense solid wall—a wall I built.
As I take fingers to my keyboard trying to figure out how I am going to proceed,
I begin think about the scars this relationship has imprinted upon me.
Scars are living reminders of how physical or emotional pain effects our lives.
By triggering emotional responses from the cicatrix created by these wounds,
I am reminded of how the scars of a failed father/son relationship still haunt me.
The bodily marking that these scars have left upon me form petroglyphs
Telling a story of my failed relationship with a man who was absent, not there—a man called father
We make decisions about when or how to try to
We do this with obsolete scripts requiring a happy ending
Trying to force a happy ending keeps us stuck in these difficult relationships
Instead of happy endings we need
We need to end stagnant relationships that become unchangeable—in order to find change
***
Every act of writing a person’s life is inevitably a violation
“Language can never contain a whole person” (Josselson, 1996, p. 62).
As I learn this failure of language, I begin to see the damage of my own words.
The damaging words that I thought were breaking up the boulder
Continued to add to the wall being rebuilt; I begin to see my own failures—as a son
***
I always feared my father, but I step out of the fear and let anger control my thoughts,
“You are the one to blame; you are the one who abandoned me.”
In my anger, I can hear how much of my anger I take from my father
I can hear how much of it is tied to an ethereal definition of masculinity
I can hear how destructive anger is. I fear that my father lives in me;
I fear the anger waiting at the ebbing tide of my life.
I realize that I cannot continue being the vessel that harbors this anger—I visit my father
The first thing that struck me when I went to my father’s house was his eyes
His eyes were always filled with defiance in the past. Now, they were sad.
The sadness was deep and showed (perhaps) a realization of the cost of stubbornness
A stubbornness we both share; The sadness showed a regret.
Regret for all of the lost time that could never be regained—But perhaps start anew?
My father invites me inside. We sit on the couch as he starts telling me a story.
“When we lived in San Diego, your mom and I knew this couple
I remember this time your mom offered to watch their eight children.
They needed to go to a funeral back East and could not afford to take their kids.
I am not sure why your mom liked them. The father was a real asshole.
He was so mean. If the kids dared to look at him in the eyes, he would hit them.
He would get mad for no apparent reason and make his kids miserable—He was a terrible father.”
Discussion
Through the poems above, we have explored the connections of our individual narratives with our respective father. Each of us has a different process of dis/connecting with them, ushering in different emotions, and different implications for the impact fathering has on our lives. In each case, the relationship is relevant and has marked who we are and who we have become. Our father–son relationship seems a fertile place to consider our masculinity, reflect upon our place in society, and rethink the ways we want to take care of others. In our own father–son relationship, we start understanding what it means to live in this society, what our role is as men, how we are expected to behave and how we, as men, can care for ourselves and others.
We need to either figuratively or literally face our fathers in order to consider ourselves. This reflection-in-action sometimes means we need to get closer to our respective fathers and sometimes means to take distance and separate ourselves from our fathers in order to affectively engage the impact on our individual sense of self.
Reflections on Fathers and Fathering
It is activism to question the conditioned psychological roles that we have been given and/or expected to demonstrate as men. Our challenge to roles is an act that installs a process in us, a process of getting in contact with our emotional needs, and to challenge who we are with others. Sometimes, it means to get distance from some people and get close to others. To break a pattern means to make changes. Distance and closeness with our father works not as a physical process, but an ontological one. We get closer or distant to someone who is constitutive of our subjectivity. How to assemble and disassemble from our father is felt in our bodies as a process of change and becoming.
As a practice of identity, a practice of caring and responsibility,
Our ways of caring are shaped by the caring figures we have interiorized. In this way,
Masculinity and Transmission
We understand that our sex and our gender are not necessarily aligned. The ways we perform our gender identity are shaped by our culture, and this culture is also expressed in our family. In psychoanalysis, it is common to propose that the ego is shaped by the internalization of the paternal figures. Butler explains:
There is a ‘kind of thought’ about masculinity and femininity, understood as equivalent to the thought of sexual difference, that takes place in the course of a transmission, and it is understood as a relay or a transposition; the mobility and temporality of this thought, although partially conscious, ‘is primarily an unconscious process’. (Butler, 2012).
In general, it is assumed that the transmission of identity happens through primary relationships, especially regarding masculinity and femininity. For this reason, we return to the relationship with our fathers and consider it as connected with our own masculinity. Manhood seems a concept embedded in different cultural practices and performances, with a cohesion that results from father/son unconscious transmission. In our work, we are trying to show how this transmission can be challenged, in the course of our lives. Through these poems, we are working against the “unconscious” transmission that happened with our fathers. Through reflexivity and self-awareness, and through reflection on our relationships, we try to challenge the “toxic” parts of our socially shaped masculinity.
But if something about sexual difference persists, I am not sure that what persists are established semantic ways of organizing sexual difference, already formed legacies of the past that are relayed into the present without translation or transposition, without some loss or new twist and turn, without some queer derailment or deviation. (Butler, 2012, p. 13)
Butler proposes that there is a process of deviation from the transmission of sexual difference, and it is this process of change what we are trying to exemplify in our poems: how there is a
Feminism
How can writing about fathers be considered feminist work? We are using our stories to revisit what we have understood to be the meaning of being a man. Through this exploration, we found new ways to grow around and/or chip away at the rock of estrangement in our father/son relationships. This rock represents both our individual fathers and our challenge of masculinity. Understanding our father–son relationships seem to be the starting point of the individuation needed to become the man we want/need to be.
Avoiding toxic masculinity requires that each of us does
Drawing from the strength of our shared experiences, we have recognized that in order to make change within the more powerful domination of male masculinity, we needed to combine our narratives instead of speaking from isolated voices. This has transformed the way we understand the violence of how masculinity is perceived by boys and young men today. This process of recognizing as social and systemic what was formerly perceived as “normal” and “just the way boys are” has also called on us to push back against these norms and give a different perspective on what it means to be masculine and what it means to be a father.
Activism
We developed this project with the idea of inquiry as activism. Our exploration of our father–son relationships aims to challenge social norms and realize the way our identity has developed through interwoven experiences with our respective fathers and each other. Through this exploration, we arrived at the need to change the social codes and rules that define what it means to be a man and explore masculinity in the context of feminism. We must speak out for others to stop viewing toxic masculinity as normal.
According to Wade (1997, p. 25):
any mental or behavioral act through which a person attempts to expose, withstand, repel, stop, prevent, abstain from, strive against, impede, refuse to comply with, or oppose any… type of disrespect or the conditions that make such acts possible, may be understood as a form of resistance.
Thus, writing in a way that challenges ourselves, allowing us to engage in resisting the oppression caused by practices of masculinity constitutes our practice of inquiry as activism.
We agree with movements such as #metoo. As such, we need to acknowledge the need to change deeply rooted behaviors. These behaviors can be understood as psychological dynamics and social interactions. Viewed in this way, we need to be reminded how elements that are working together need to be challenged together. With understanding comes the possibility of change and the potential for creating new plots for our life, becoming better fathers for ourselves, our children and anyone who falls into our purview of care.
Opening…
Our journey started at the ECQI conference where our individual voices in each of our papers resonated loudly and there was additional appetite among the audience to further understand these collective experiences in the light of feminism. There is still more to think about and to reflect upon, in both academia and our own lives. The work we have done is not separated from the persons we are every day, from the practices we engage in our quotidian, from the way we say “hi” to people, from the way we kiss our partner or hold our son. Our reflections regarding our fathers have taken us to a deeper place, raising questions about
This “body” of writing opens a discussion on the question of what it means to be a man and to be a father. This role is crucial for us, as we reflect how fathering (together with mothering) is the capacity to care for others, for not only the present but also, and more importantly, the future. Some of the roles associated with masculinity have proved damaging to the health of men. Many men have been socialized in a way that tends to disconnect them from their feelings and emotional needs. Through this collaborative writing, we found each other’s words resonating an acknowledgment of not only our emotional needs, but our desire to push back against the accepted social narrative of what it means to be a man.
We imagine a different father: a father that is aware of their emotional needs. That is able to talk, share, and be open to a conversation about
Footnotes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
