I just want to say thanks to all the fantastic men (and supporters of men) that I have come across this year. Thanks for all your support. Thanks for standing up for men and men's health. Thanks for taking an interest. Thanks to all of you and your weird and wonderful ways.
I have had a hoot this year getting to know some great people.
Merry Christmas (or if you don't celebrate christmas - have a happy holiday season).
Remember the holiday season can be a great time - and also a time full of stress. So as i always say (actually I stole this from a website as most of you know) - Softn the F up. If you need support over this holiday then ASK for it. You know my number and email. It's always there.
Lud
Southern Fleurieu Mens Health
This is a place where men of the Southern Fleurieu can come for information, make comments and interact with others. Please feel free to come in look around.To make a comment. Click on the 'orange' comment button at the end of the post. Write your post in the box provided. A drop down box will appear saying comment as..'select profile'. Click anonymous.Click 'post comment' Your post should soon appear.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Thursday, December 13, 2012
WHY GIRLS DON'T LIKE IT WHEN MEN!!!
Just thought I would pass on this article that was given to me by a young woman. Good discussion.
“Okay, so here’s why girls don’t get flattered when guys comment on their bodies.”
A few months ago, you said I looked “objectively really hot, actually, you’re definitely the hot one of us.” I laughed and thanked you because we have the kind of relationship that allows for that kind of banter. Your phrasing amused me. I took a little bow.
You asked me why girls get upset when guys comment on their bodies, and wondered why my reaction to you was different than, say, a girl’s reaction to a random guy on the street. Why I was mildly flattered, instead of scared or angry. You honestly didn’t understand, and wanted to know.
I tried explaining, but I think I left you more confused than I found you.
I have a better explanation now.
The first time I can remember a guy staring at my boobs, I was in eighth grade. I didn’t even notice; I was still a kid and was largely oblivious to such things. My dad, however, did notice, and started glaring at the twentysomething stranger ogling his thirteen-year-old.
I could maybe have passed for fifteen back then. There was no way anyone would have mistaken me for an adult. That wasn’t the issue, though. To that guy, it wasn’t about who I was or how old I was. I was a set of boobs to him, not a person, certainly not a child.
My experience is pretty common. Girls start getting unwanted attention at a young age, and it happens for the rest of our lives. Men yell things at us on the street and invade our personal space on the bus or trolley when there are plenty of other seats. They try to look up our skirts when we sit down. They don’t listen when we try to rebuff them. We see reports of yet another girl raped on her way home last weekend, another woman whose body was found in a ditch. We’re told not to go out alone at night, to take someone with us even if we’re only driving to the store or the library or the gas station. We’re told to carry our keys like weapons, to park in the lot instead of the structure because it’s better to get rained on than raped and murdered. We’re told not to walk alone even during the day. We’re told close friends might rape us if they’ve had a bit to drink because they’re men, that it’s wrong, but it happens sometimes and we should be on our guard.
Imagine hearing that from the age of five. Imagine being told from childhood that men are more likely to hurt you than women are. Imagine knowing that, though you might be smart and well-trained, men will almost always be bigger and stronger than you, and you wouldn’t be able to beat most of them in a full-on fight. I can best my brother at arm-wrestling, yeah, but that doesn’t have many practical applications.
Now imagine that one of the people you’ve been taught to regard as a threat to your body says he wants your body. If he really does, you’ll have a hard time stopping him, and people will treat you as an object lesson for others, like you’d done something wrong for “letting” him hurt you. They’ll ask why you didn’t do more to protect yourself, why you wore that dress, or walked into the parking lot at that time, or talked to that person. Why you went out after dark or flirted with someone at a party.
I’m not saying all men are awful. I’m saying that decent men should be the norm, but there are a lot of men who aren’t, and who make us feel unsafe in our normal lives. We can’t tell the difference between decent people and potential rapists by looking.
What you said to me was meant as a compliment, and I took it as such. That’s because I’ve known you since we were kids, and I know you didn’t mean any harm. We have the kind of relationship where words like yours are appropriate, and you’ve never strayed outside the bounds of what’s okay. I don’t have that kind of relationship with the car full of drunken guys I walked past on the way home from D&D last weekend.
Girls get upset when guys comment on their bodies because we’re being treated like sources of pleasure, not people. We get angry because we can’t go about our business without having to worry about sexual predation. We get scared because, when it comes down to it, if a guy tried to act on his shouts of “Hey baby, nice tits, keep it up” we probably wouldn’t be able to stop him, and some would blame us.
Girls get upset because we’d much rather be seen as people, not just bodies.
Festive Season Check Up
Its that time of year when many of us will be allowing ourselves a small amount of freedom to indulge more than usual. Nothing wrong with that - its part of our festive spirit.
However..... (Always a 'however') this also gives us a good excuse to book in to our GP and get a health check up. So I reckon if you live on the Southern Fleurieu why not book a time NOW for your post festivities check up. Don't wait till later. It can be quite hard to get in to see someone down here, particularly with the holiday crowds swarming in. So go on..... book yourself in for a mans health check early in the new year.
However..... (Always a 'however') this also gives us a good excuse to book in to our GP and get a health check up. So I reckon if you live on the Southern Fleurieu why not book a time NOW for your post festivities check up. Don't wait till later. It can be quite hard to get in to see someone down here, particularly with the holiday crowds swarming in. So go on..... book yourself in for a mans health check early in the new year.
Are men getting MORE INFERTILE?
Male fertility in downward spiral
Medical Observer, 5 Dec 2012
Drawing on a huge database of partners of infertile women undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART) procedures, researchers in France examined semen concentration in more than 26,000 men who were generally representative of the French population.
They found a continuous decrease in semen concentration of about 1.9% per year, indicating a drop of 32% over a period of 17 years.
Focus on Ageing: what has sex got to do with it?
Focus on ageing: what has sex got to do with it?
In the latest issue of The Healthy Male newsletter we discuss how reproductive health changes as a man ages, and how keeping a healthy lifestyle into old age and getting treatment for medical problems can help to prevent some of the changes linked with ageing.
Download The Healthy Male or sign-up to have it delivered to your mail box.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Men's Health Art Project
Have a look at some of the art works that Mike Tye has been working on with men from the Men's Shed and The Men's Get Together. Still lots of work to do as you can see.
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