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As boys enter the second decade of their lives, they are confronted with tremendous challenges at home, at school, and in personal relationships. In a phenomenon long overlooked by the media and policy makers, adolescent boys are the most at-risk group in our society today, facing the highest incidence of addiction, violence, mental illness, and emotional neglect. Building on his pioneering work in The Wonder of Boys, Michael Gurian now explores the misunderstood life of the ’90s male adolescent, providing parents and mentors with eye-opening and practical wisdom. Gurian answers tough questions about the changes boys face, focusing on new understandings of the hidden biology of the adolescent male; the development of emotional structure and social adaptation; the changing emotional safety within the family unit; necessary rites of passage; and the critical shifting in the attitude of society, educators, and the media in order to nurture adolescent boys into loving, wise, and responsible men. Giving us the tools to better nurture, discipline, and cultivate our adolescent males, Gurian delivers the most responsible and enlightening assessment of young manhood in our time.
Carrying forward some of the themes first introduced in his book The Wonder of Boys (1996), Gurian focuses on male adolescence, a crucial stage of development that, he argues, is in crisis today, being both misunderstood and diminished in importance. Drawing on his own research and experience as a psychotherapist, he lays out a picture of male adolescence that is often bleak: adolescent males are four times as likely as females to commit suicide; only one out of six adolescents diagnosed with ADHD is female, and that 90% of adolescent discipline problems in schools are about males. The thrust of his approach, however, is proactive and ultimately imbued with hope. Gurian emphasizes the importance of family in the three distinct stages (transformation, determination and consolidation) of male adolescent development, which can begin as early as nine and extends through the early 20s. In the nurture/nature debate, Gurian falls somewhere in the middle, explaining and validating the importance of both male "hardwiring" (the genetic component) as well as emotional and cultural "softwiring." With persuasive eloquence, Gurian outlines thoughtful and practical steps parents and other caregivers can take to create the kind of positive role-models and nurturing support systems that will help boys successfully negotiate the passage to manhood. (July)
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August 14, 2008: This is a must read for anyone who raises, lives with, works with, counsels, teaches or needs to relate to young men in today's society! I found it so enlightening and helpful to me as the mother of two sons, an elementary school teacher and a wife. It really opened my eyes to some of the reasons why 'boys will be boys' and led me to appreciate so much more the differences between men and women. We need more people in our society who are educated as to how to mentor boys as they grow into young men.
The Barnes & Noble Review
Our Boys, Ourselves: Why Adolescent Boys Are Freaking Out, and What We Can Do About It
Dead-eyed schoolyard killers, slackjawed video-game addicts, rat-pack gang members dedicated to ritual violence and self-mutilation: The '90s sure are a great time to be a boy.
Ignored and essentially stigmatized by decades of academic theory and gender revolution, boys are literally America's latest bete noire 15 times as likely as girls to be victims of violent crime, 6 times as likely to be dosed with Ritalin, 4 times as likely to be diagnosed as mentally disturbed, 4 times as likely to commit suicide....
The list goes on, but for therapist and manhood guru Michael Gurian, it's time to redirect our energies. Like a growing number of educators, researchers, and parents, Gurian, author of the bestselling The Wonder of Boys, feels that our recent hyperfocus on the troubles of adolescent girls has demonized boys, blaming them as the cause of female self-esteem problems, when it's really boys who are the sinking ships in our postmodern society.
Gurian is certainly on to something, and his passion is contagious. He forcefully and, I think, fairly argues that any attempt to "reinvent" manhood, to groom away male traits such as aggression and love of hierarchy, is doomed to fail. But far from throwing out those early-'90s "problem girl" books, such as Reviving Ophelia and Failing at Fairness, he wants to supplement their lessons with suggestions on how to give boys the structure and guidance they need.
The new studies quoted by Gurian (and citedapprovinglyby Mary Pipher, author of Revivin Ophelia) show that it is boys whose self-esteem plummets more deeply in adolescence, boys who are increasingly failing to graduate from high school and college, boys who are victims of violence or perpetrators of it. As our society moves into the endgame of the industrial revolution, adolescent males have been cut loose from any sort of structure whether it be familial, clan, tribal, religious, or work-related. Subject to an average of seven testosterone washes a day beginning around age nine, boys are biologically in need of hierarchical structures, and the mentoring available within them, in order to learn self-knowledge and self-control. Without these structures, they become scared, fragile, numb, and capable of doing harm to themselves and others.
So to paraphrase the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man" what can a poor boy do (except sing in a rock 'n' roll band)? Gurian's book details the three stages of adolescence and comes up with an impressive set of frameworks for parents and educators to apply to the children with whom they come into contact. These guidelines are pragmatic, frequently combine cutting-edge science with the ancient truths of religion and anthropology, and seem neither too new age nor too repressive.
I felt equal relief that Gurian also doesn't come off as an ideologue or woman-basher. For instance, I can't imagine too many feminists arguing against his goal of Stage 3 (ages 18 to 21) emotional maturity, which is that males be "developmentally ready to understand that adult love is love practiced like a spiritual discipline." Much to my loss, I had nobody to explain that to me at 21. But as a parent of a 12-year-old boy, I can see myself reaching for this book often over the next decade.
Don Wallace is the author of a novel, HOT WATER, and of essays in Harper's, Parents, The New York Times, and other publications. Articles by Wallace appear in the current (July) issues of Redbook and Self.
As boys enter the second decade of their lives, they are confronted with tremendous challenges at home, at school, and in personal relationships. In a phenomenon long overlooked by the media and policy makers, adolescent boys are the most at-risk group in our society today, facing the highest incidence of addiction, violence, mental illness, and emotional neglect. Building on his pioneering work in The Wonder of Boys, Michael Gurian now explores the misunderstood life of the ’90s male adolescent, providing parents and mentors with eye-opening and practical wisdom. Gurian answers tough questions about the changes boys face, focusing on new understandings of the hidden biology of the adolescent male; the development of emotional structure and social adaptation; the changing emotional safety within the family unit; necessary rites of passage; and the critical shifting in the attitude of society, educators, and the media in order to nurture adolescent boys into loving, wise, and responsible men. Giving us the tools to better nurture, discipline, and cultivate our adolescent males, Gurian delivers the most responsible and enlightening assessment of young manhood in our time.
Carrying forward some of the themes first introduced in his book The Wonder of Boys (1996), Gurian focuses on male adolescence, a crucial stage of development that, he argues, is in crisis today, being both misunderstood and diminished in importance. Drawing on his own research and experience as a psychotherapist, he lays out a picture of male adolescence that is often bleak: adolescent males are four times as likely as females to commit suicide; only one out of six adolescents diagnosed with ADHD is female, and that 90% of adolescent discipline problems in schools are about males. The thrust of his approach, however, is proactive and ultimately imbued with hope. Gurian emphasizes the importance of family in the three distinct stages (transformation, determination and consolidation) of male adolescent development, which can begin as early as nine and extends through the early 20s. In the nurture/nature debate, Gurian falls somewhere in the middle, explaining and validating the importance of both male "hardwiring" (the genetic component) as well as emotional and cultural "softwiring." With persuasive eloquence, Gurian outlines thoughtful and practical steps parents and other caregivers can take to create the kind of positive role-models and nurturing support systems that will help boys successfully negotiate the passage to manhood. (July)
Beausay and Gurian are both clinical psychotherapists, previously published authors, and the fathers of boys. In their new works, they focus on the development of adolescent boys, sharing a concern for boys' complete growth--physical, spiritual, emotional, and religious--to adulthood. The books have different tones, however, and are directed at different audiences. Beausay addresses the parents of teenagers, assuring them that they will survive. Teenage Boys! is very upbeat with a flexible, not prescriptive, approach; suggestions are practical ideas for parents to try. Gurian's book is less a parenting book, although it will interest parents of adolescent boys, and more a work on adolescent male psychology. A Fine Young Man draws from biology, psychology, and sociology to paint a detailed picture of the tasks an adolescent boy needs to undertake to become a mature adult. Although the volume is somewhat scholarly in tone, no detailed bibliography is provided. Gurian helps his readers understand the teenager in depth, but his ideas are sometimes subject to challenge. Teenage Boys! is highly recommended for all parenting collections. A Fine Young Man is recommended for collections in adolescent psychology and larger parenting collections.--Kay L. Brodie, Chesapeake Coll., Wye Mills, MD
July 1998
Our Boys, Ourselves: Why Adolescent Boys Are Freaking Out, and What We Can Do About It Dead-eyed schoolyard killers, slackjawed video-game addicts, rat-pack gang members dedicated to ritual violence and self-mutilation: The '90s sure are a great time to be a boy.
Ignored and essentially stigmatized by decades of academic theory and gender revolution, boys are literally America's latest bête noire -- 15 times as likely as girls to be victims of violent crime, six times as likely to be dosed with Ritalin, four times as likely to be diagnosed as mentally disturbed, four times as likely to commit suicide....
The list goes on, but for therapist and manhood guru Michael Gurian, it's time to redirect our energies. Like a growing number of educators, researchers, and parents, Gurian, author of the bestselling The Wonder of Boys, feels that our recent hyperfocus on the troubles of adolescent girls has demonized boys, blaming them as the cause of female self-esteem problems, when it's really boys who are the sinking ships in our postmodern society.
Gurian is certainly on to something, and his passion is contagious. He forcefully and, I think, fairly argues that any attempt to "reinvent" manhood, to groom away male traits such as aggression and love of hierarchy, is doomed to fail. But far from throwing out those early-'90s "problem girl" books, such as Reviving Ophelia and Failing at Fairness, he wants to supplement their lessons with suggestions on how to give boys the structure and guidance they need.
The new studies quoted by Gurian (and cited approvingly by Mary Pipher, author of Reviving Ophelia) show that it is boys whose self-esteem plummets more deeply in adolescence, boys who are increasingly failing to graduate from high school and college, boys who are victims of violence or perpetrators of it. As our society moves into the endgame of the industrial revolution, adolescent males have been cut loose from any sort of structure -- whether it be familial, clan, tribal, religious, or work-related. Subject to an average of seven testosterone washes a day beginning around age nine, boys are biologically in need of hierarchical structures, and the mentoring available within them, in order to learn self-knowledge and self-control. Without these structures, they become scared, fragile, numb, and capable of doing harm to themselves and others.
So -- to paraphrase the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man" -- what can a poor boy do (except sing in a rock 'n' roll band)? Gurian's book details the three stages of adolescence and comes up with an impressive set of frameworks for parents and educators to apply to the children with whom they come into contact. These guidelines are pragmatic, frequently combine cutting-edge science with the ancient truths of religion and anthropology, and seem neither too new age nor too repressive.
I felt equal relief that Gurian also doesn't come off as an ideologue or woman-basher. For instance, I can't imagine too many feminists arguing against his goal of Stage 3 (ages 18 to 21) emotional maturity, which is that males be "developmentally ready to understand that adult love is love practiced like a spiritual discipline." Much to my loss, I had nobody to explain that to me at 21. But as a parent of a 12-year-old boy, I can see myself reaching for this book often over the next decade.
Don Wallace is the author of a novel,Hot Water, and of essays in Harper's, Parents, The New York Times, and other publications.
Loading...Michael Gurian: I am doing great, thanks for having me.
Michael Gurian: Well THE WONDER OF BOYS is about boys in general. A FINE YOUNG MAN is about boys 9-21; it covers the 3 stages of adolescence and lays out a plan for raising boys, stage by stage. This one is definitely about adolescence. Thank you very much on the compliment on the THE WONDER OF BOYS, I am glad you liked it.
Michael Gurian: I will answer the 2nd part first. I was surprised when I started out years ago, less surprised now. The sheer weight of the painful statistics were surprising, the extent that boys are suffering. I am on my 5th book about boys. In terms of the exact research it comes from a number of areas. I have lived in a bunch of other countries so I bring an anthropological approach to how boys were raised. I have also been studying the natural sciences--brain science to understand how a boy is built biologically, also the field of psychology and sociology--all of those put together along with my own personal experiences as a family therapist has built this book. But also the internet has been an immensely valuable research tool for chapter tone, which is filled with statistics, which I obtained from various websites like the National Institute of Mental Health.
Michael Gurian: Well, there are 3 answers to that question 1) Yes, that is normal for some boys that age. It is a time when boys start to pull away from authorities and parents and can become obnoxious. 2) He may be worse and I can't say anything to that nor to what the parents are doing because I don't know more about your family, but 3) either way, you as the older brother can play an essential role as a mentor to that young man.
Michael Gurian: Thank you for that question, it is a question on the minds of many of us like myself who also experimented with marijuana in college and am raising children. I believe the best policy with young men is to tell them honestly that you smoked marijuana in college and remind them that your brain and your body had finished their development, so that a college student smoking marijuana is very different than smoking it at 12 or 15 or 16 years old--when the brain and body are still developing. To help brief yourself for this conversation with your son, you might want to check out chapters 2 & 5 which go into detail on how the brain develops throughout adolescence and hopefully armed with that information and perhaps even having your son read it himself, he will be able to see the dangers that don't exist as much for an adult in college but definitely exist for an adolescent boy.
Michael Gurian: You are asking one of the most important questions any one in our culture can ask today. It sounds like you are doing the right thing. The 2 key things I can say in general are 1) Get your son involved with you in choosing who his male mentors will be and if possible keep the father as deeply involved in his life as you can. And when your son begins the process of pulling away from you, if the father and other males are not intimately involved in his life, then you have the difficult task of not only remaining his mother, but also shifting your style of discipline and parenting to become more "fatherly." For all these questions so far, A FINE YOUNG MAN is like a training manual.
Michael Gurian: Yes, for many years to come I am sure we will get conflicting reports, however, the biological evidence that homosexuality is in most cases already a part of the brain system at birth seems to me over 15 years of research to be indisputable. I also think it is the most supportive position to take because if we continue the cultural language of homosexuality being "just a lifestyle choice" then we don't have the incentive to fully accept into the human community gay boys and men as well and lesbian girls and women.
Michael Gurian: Yes, the book will help quite a bit, the bottom line suggestion that I would make is to increase your authority as disciplinarian and as father including spending more time with the boy. Often boys--and I was one of these--lie as a way of telling their fathers they need more love from the whole family system.
Michael Gurian: Yes, I do. Boys get warmth from dads who appear not to give it in very subtle ways that are often hard to notice. Boys also get from these kinds of dads a lot of other things they need. If the boy grows into adolescence needing more warmth from men, he will go find mentors who will provide it to him. Your commitment to give him that warmth is something he will also savor all his life.
Michael Gurian: Great question, in one swoop you have destroyed my whole argument! Seriously though, while I also watched a good amount of TV, and while I am not an anti-TV maniac, I also think 1)TV has changed since you and I were young and is more dangerous to kids in its content. 2) I know now how watching large amounts of TV and playing lots of video games negatively affects the brain development of 9-14 years old boys. So I wrote chapter 8 of A FINE YOUNG MAN so that people could see just how careful we have to be with our young adolescent males. Restricting TV doesn't mean no TV, it means monitoring what is watched, setting in home schedules for what is watched and watching some of it with the kids in order to build up their media literacy.
Michael Gurian: Depending on how old your son is, 5-10 minutes is not too worrisome, especially if you or your wife tends to be a little late for things as well. Should he go consistently twenty minutes or more, then I would crack down. Again, this depends on what age your son is. If he is quite young, I would worry about this more then if he is in the second stage of adolescence, which is 14-17. Either way, I think you will find the information in part two of A FINE YOUNG MAN very helpful.
Michael Gurian: Thank you for that absolutely huge question! Truly the best resource I can give you are my books which are packed with information on how to teach this stuff to boys. If you and your husband can work out common values in regards to teaching respect for women, your son will learn those. Absolutely! Twelve-year-old boys really would rather develop along the moral lines of their parents then anyone else, and issues of sexism are definitely moral issues in our world today. So if your family treats them with that kind of importance, but without overreacting to the normal jokes and jokes of a 12 year old he will turn out great.
Michael Gurian: Every child is an individual and I believe first and foremost every parent needs to trust their intuition at the same time, my work is definitely based in the reality that boys and girls have different brain systems, different hormones, and different innate behavioral systems. Our task is complex because we have to nurture and honor the boy as a boy but not remove him from what works for girls so far that he feels alien to girls. Over the last 30 years, we have experimented with turning girls into boy and girls into boys. Most of us are now seeing the flaws in this experiment and yet we are thankful that boys have more emotional options because of it and girls have more social option because of it. So when we raise our own kids we can have the best of all worlds now. We can let boys be the natural creatures that they are and we can help them to develop in the areas where traditionally they have been restricted from developing. For instance, in the area of talking about feelings, both THE WONDER OF BOYS and A FINE YOUNG MAN try to create a new system of thinking about males in which boys can have this whole new range of nurturing and life experience and yet not lose their boyishness or be convinced that being male is in some way defective.
Michael Gurian: I think there are a number of reasons why boys are making up 70% of the D's and F's... 1) A lot of them feel pressures to enter the workplace and prove themselves as early as possible. 2) Our high schools are not as boy friendly as we like to think. Boys need a lot of attention from their teachers--many of the boys who drop out are in classrooms with 25-30 students. These boys simply are not getting the educational environment they need. 3) A lot of what is taught in high school is not what boys want to learn. Boys who are vocationally directed find this boring, so they drop out. 4) Boys are now getting the lowest grades and they involve themselves in less student activities than girls. We haven't noticed this coming onto us, but actually our schools have become places where the power that girls have is increasing and it is confusing to a lot of boys who feel left out, isolated, and unable to find a niche.5) A number of the boys who drop out have difficult home situations and the school is really not to blame. It is important never to forget this. And lastly we find that boys who play organized sports successfully are less likely to drop out. One thing we learn from this is that sports can be great for boys but also, if a particular boy doesn't perform well in sports and has no other niche like debate or science, or chess; his lack of sports performance can really make him feel left out. These are just a few of the reasons that we are finding our boys so far behind our girls now in high school.
Michael Gurian: In a way yes, and in a way, no. On the no side, our boys are not going through the Great Depression or fighting a war. Most of them aren't scraping to survive. In this way our boys are actually living a life easier than perhaps a hundred years ago. However, while those obvious pressures may not exist for many of our boys, the pressures have become subtler and in that way are worse for boys now than ever before. Pressures like sexual pressure, pear pressure, breakdown of moral authorities, families in crisis, lack of spiritual focus, lack of mentors, lack of rites of passage etc. These are not like a war, but they can be even more debilitating to a lot of boys and if we add in lack of economic opportunity--brought up in poverty or a victim of racism--we have a boy living the hardest life a boy has lived in long, long time.
Michael Gurian: About 15 years ago, adolescent boys began to form gangs in the inner-cities. That was our first huge warning from the culture of boyhood that our guys needed more love and attention, structure and discipline, more opportunity and understanding. Over the last 15 years, the pressure on boys, the pain they experience, has been building and building and now we are seeing in rural areas the same sort of violent behavior we have been seeing in the inner-city. This is the next wave of signals from the culture of boyhood that we have as a civilization in the late 20th Century, neglected our boys.
Michael Gurian: Well, I have to thank you all for having me and for asking questions. I am honored to be part of a whole new way of looking at our culture through the eyes of our boys. Thank again!
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