The Good Men Project

"Good Men is a revelation, a frank, exhilarating glimpse into the lives of men who are on the quest toward self-awareness."

Neil Chethik

author of FatherLoss and VoiceMale

December 31, 2009

My New Years Resolution: Remember to Breathe

Filed under: Relationships — tmatlack @ 5:59 am

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By Tom Matlack

Thirteen years ago, after I had been kicked out of the house for being a drunk and a liar, I started going to a New Age massage therapist named Melissa. I had just been the chief financial officer of a billion-dollar enterprise, and I had two baby children and a heap of problems.

Melissa had wild red hair and often missed appointments to tend to her black Lab, which slept under the table at her office when she was there. She used crystals to read my body energy and described how the ability to give energy (or love) resides in the right side of the body and the ability to receive energy resides in the left side. Her crystals determined that I, like most men, was strongly right-side dominant.

Whenever she mentioned this dualitydubious as it soundedit reminded me how I couldn’t seem to receive love from my kids, my family, the world, or a higher power. When she touched the left side of my body my heart hurt. At first I cried facedown, so she wouldnt see my pain. But soon I realized she already knew how much trouble I was in; there was no use hiding it. So I lay face up, with salty drops rolling down my cheeks and into my ears.

There was much that I desperately wanted to control in those days, but couldnt. Sometimes I would arrive at Melissas office so distraught that she had me lay down immediately on the table so she could go right to work. As she touched me, she sometimes asked me about the visions she said she was having of blockages in the flow of energy in my body. Or I would speak, unprompted, about my guilt over not being present enough in my kids lives or about the wreckage caused by my alcohol addiction.

In the years since I have experienced many, many blessings. Ive been sober since December 28, 1996. I have had a role in my kids lives. I have had financial success. On December 28, 2002 I remarried, to the woman of my dreams. On Valentines Day 2005, my wife and I had a child, a son. In the last year I have edited a book and produced a film on manhood. And in promoting The Good Men Project book and film, I have been to Sing Sing and Hollywood and on media outlets all over the country.

Yet, as I think about New Years resolutions I am brought back to Melissa. My right side still dominates. Like many men, I still have trouble letting the world, or my wife or my kids, love me. Through obsessive activity, I keep them at too far a distance.

The men’s movement I am attempting to spark with The Good Men Projectthe book, the film, the website, the panel discussions and presentationshas taken me away from the very principles that got me this far. I have become an Internet whore. I have no interest in pornography; Im talking about Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Huffington, blip.tv, Flickr, Scribd, LinkedIn, and old-fashion email. My laptop and BlackBerry are always on, and I can tell you exactly how many people are watching me and which influencers I am chasing like a beagle on a foxhunt.

When I was talking to my wife the other night about New Years resolutions, she volunteered that shed like me to spend less time on my social media family and more with my real family. We need you, she said matter-of-factly.

I also have been thinking of the times in the last year when I treated men and women working on our Project with anger rather than compassion. I have a bad habit of using my own urgency as a weapon at moments when I perceive others have let me, or our greater goal, down. Im not proud of it. I know anger is generally counterproductive.

What Melissa used to say, and I know to be true, is that doing less isnt a matter of giving up on a goal in life; it is actually a way to be more effective and accomplish more. I’ve learned a similar lesson from the yoga I’ve been taking for a decade now. Though your instincts might tell you to hold your breath and push to your limits during poses, you are reminded to relax and breathe. In fact the breathing is the whole point. This, too, I know to be true: You can do just about anything a hell of a lot longer, more effectively, and more enjoyablyswim or read or make loveif you just remember to inhale and exhale.

So my resolution is to bring what I learned from Melissa, and what I learned on my yoga mat, back more deeply into my life. Yes I want to continue to expand the Projects role in the lives of men. But the best way to do that is to be less insecure, to receive love from my wife and kids, to have more faith, to show love and receive love, to let go more often, to develop my left side instead of pounding away with my right fist on a table or a Blackberry, to laugh and cry in the face of my own anger, and to remember, when all else fails, to breathe deeply.

*****

Tom Matlack is the cofounder of The Good Men Project.

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December 30, 2009

Moral Compass

Filed under: Moral Compass — Tags: , , , — tmatlack @ 11:00 am

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Moral Compass: Tale of the Tiger Poll

Filed under: Moral Compass — Tags: , , , — tmatlack @ 6:00 am

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In a Moral Compass installment last month, we asked whether getting caught in his extramarital affairs was the best thing that ever happened to Tiger Woods. Two statements that artist Jenny Holzer made in a recent interview with the New York Times seem to have particular relevance for our Tiger question: Protect me from what I want; and Abuse of power comes as no surprise.

Few would disagree that Woods made some incredibly bad choices. And despite the immediate consequencesto his personal life and his business empire80 percent of the respondents to our poll said yes, getting caught was good for him. .

Now the question is how will he respond to this crisis? His initial reaction was to issue a vague statement of remorse and then disappear. But what will he do in the coming months and years? Will he agree that getting caught was good for him? Will Tiger eventually tell his story, and if he does, what will he say? Moral Compass Tiger Poll results

A number of companies that have sponsored his career and profited from his success have abandoned him. Under what circumstances would they reconsider that strategy? Should they reconsider that strategy?

Assuming Tiger returns to playing golf, everyonegolf fans and casual observers alikewill want to see how he performs. But just as compelling will be his performance off the course.

 

December 29, 2009

The Good Men Films Role

Filed under: Guest Blogger — Tags: , , , — tmatlack @ 5:30 am

Good Men Project Film Poster

Guest blog by Jeff Nepute

The way the men inThe Good Men Project film candidly talk about their experiences is awe-inspiring, but for the men who watch the film, such candor seems attainable.

I showed the film as part of a lecture about men and masculinity I gave recently at Colorado State University. Although I used this film in a college lecture, its premisehaving a group of men come together to talk about fatherhood, their relationships with their fathers, their families, being husbands, vulnerability, and moreshould have appeal far beyond the classroom.

In this film, men really have the chance to talk about men as men, to speak from the heart about what matters to them. How many men have lived their whole lives wishing to be closer to their dads? How many men wish they could have said I love you to their fathers but never found the courage to do so. How many men have carried pain from their lives silently, never being able to talk about it?

It seems as though part of the male code is to pretend that we dont need others, that we can be the lone wolf, that we never suffer or worry. But that does not explain the full extent of mens experiences.

Many colleges offer psychology-of-gender courses that really focus on the psychology of women. These courses are extremely important, but when they present males solely as perpetuators of sexist beliefs about women, they can alienate the men in the class. These men receive the message that talking about gender means being blamed instead of being welcomed into the conversation in the way thatThe Good Men Project films rich, vivid storytelling does.

The film helps men to talk openly about their own worries and passions, but without stripping them of their love of sports, of toughness, or other characteristics common to many men. This film fills an important need for men trying to better understand masculinity and a more diverse range of roles for men; it adds a voice proclaiming that men deserve to explore their various rolesas women have done for decadesand that by doing so they can create a better tomorrow for men and women alike.

*****

Jeff Nepute is a graduate student in the Counseling Psychology program at Colorado State University. He is working toward a Ph.D. His research explores substance use and violence and their relation to gender messages. Nepute also studies how gender messages and expectations affect mens and womens experiences.

A DVD of the film can be purchased here.

 

December 28, 2009

Man-to-Man with Cosmetic Dentist/TV Personality Dr. BILL DORFMAN

Filed under: Man-to-Man — Tags: , , — tmatlack @ 9:20 am

DorfmanB1.) Who taught you about manhood?

My dad was the best role model a guy could ever ask for.

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

Yes it has shaped me, built me, crushed meI guess thats life.

3.) What two words describe your dad?

Supportive, loving.

4.) How are you most unlike him?

I am an aggressive entrepreneur; he was a laid-back businessman.

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

I never let anyone make decisions about my money without me being involved.

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

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

For me, mine. He has supported me in everything I have ever attempted and has given me unconditional love always.

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

I hope it is balanced.

9.) When was the last time you cried?

Friday. My childhood neighbor of 46 years, Mrs. Mary Alice McCarthy, passed away.

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

Find the best role model you can and copy him.

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

I work out four times a week no matter where I am in the world. Sometimes I work out with other guys, sometimes alone, but either way it gives me a chance to clear my head and break a sweat.

*****

Dr. Bill Dorfman is a leading dentist who is responsible for creating smiles for many of Hollywood’s brightest stars. He is the dentist featured on ABCs Extreme Makeover and the number-one guest cohost on the new syndicated daytime talk show The Doctors. In addition, Dr. Dorfman is a world-renowned lecturer and author of the best-selling cosmetic dentistry book The Smile Guide and the New York Times bestseller Billion Dollar Smile.

 

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