"The anti-boy propaganda. Girls are sugar and spice and everything nice, and you’re just a dirty mutt."
Recently, we rounded up some confessions from women sharing the hardest parts of growing up as a girl, and many people found it sadly relatable. So, when I came across a Reddit thread sharing the opposite perspective, I had to share it. Here's what men say are the hardest parts of being a boy:
1. "My dad laughed at me when I was 8 for crying over a dead pet. I learned to hide that sh*t real quick."
2. "I had no male mentor to help me figure things out. Things like, for instance, girls. Or a role model to target my ambition. I spent my young adulthood pretty lost. My father was a good father in that he was loving and provided for us, but I don’t think I really ever got any guidance or life advice from him."
3. "Learning to distinguish between what you actually want and what you want because other people want it for you. Meaning who you really are vs. who you're trying to be to fit in."
4. "The pressure to become a successful leader and a provider for a family."
5. "Puberty was not fun, cracking voice constantly and non-stop boners."
6. "Learning through both actions and words that my emotions and boundaries are neither welcome nor respected."
7. "People don’t talk about the fact that men have body image issues, too. I was a fat kid growing up, and constantly seeing the men on my TV screen being absolutely jacked (even the kids in high school movies!) and the overweight characters being the annoying sidekicks or creeps really made me feel low about myself."
8. "Trying to deal with simultaneously being seen as a threat/creepy and being told your whole worth and value as a man is determined by how many women you approach, sleep with, and date."
9. "Toxic masculinity works better than being yourself 90% of the time."
10. "The lack of nice long warm tight platonic hugs."
11. "You feel like you need to 'prove' yourself in some way during or right after puberty. The way most dudes do it comes off as cheesy (I slept with all these girls, or look how big my truck is, or look how good at snowboarding I am). For me, I felt the need to punch an older bully while I was a freshman in high school. I got some respect from everyone after that and wasn’t messed with again, but I really didn’t want to do it and it took me some time to build up the courage for it because I didn’t know how bad he would hit back and how much trouble I would get in. I didn’t want to be in the situation in the first place, but I had to do something. There are all kinds of little events like that you need to tackle when really I just wanna chill and not be bothered."
12. "I was a bit of an outcast in school cause I wasn’t into typical guy hobbies and wasn’t participating in the macho competition that most of my friends at the time were into. I always got along way better with women since I prefer to just be chill and have a nice conversation rather than have to prove myself to be accepted by others. Thankfully, I kind of found my place in the adult world, but I’m still considered 'weird' by most people, and a lot of my relationships tend to be rocky since I don’t carry myself as a typical guy, although I’ve been called attractive many times so I’m lucky in that regard."
13. "You’re expected to know everything and fix everything, but nobody wants to teach you how to do it. Also coming to terms with the fact that you’re only loved for what you can provide is really depressing."
14. "You have an adult level of moral culpability around age 13 that you're not psychologically ready for, and you don't understand why unless you have VERY wise and compassionate teachers and parents (which most people don't; wisdom and compassion are rare). There's a reason teenage boys are so angry; they have correctly intuited that the vast majority of adults in their lives (especially female authority figures) are too scared of them to treat them fairly and will err on the side of hysterically exaggerating their faults, downplaying and squandering their talents relative to girls, and overpunishing and overblaming them for any difficult situation."
"To a teenage boy, the whole world is a f*cking conspiracy to damage them, and it's worse for boys that are bigger and VASTLY worse for Black and Latino boys because the 'danger' and 'crime' associations are much stronger. It's contemptible beyond words, and it's largely the reason boys do so badly in school."