 |
|




Click to buy

Why did you write VoiceMale?
I'm a journalist and my first instinct is to break a good story when
I see one. And this– marriage from the men’s perspective – is one of
the great, largely untold stories of our time.
I have a personal interest, of course, in that I’ve been married for
18 years myself. But the spark that really ignited me came about
four years ago, after my first book, FatherLoss, came out. I had
given a talk to a group of men at a church sanctuary. In the
question-and-answer period afterward, the men in the room just
started flowing about their marriages. I remember one talked about
how his wife didn’t understand his way of communicating. Another
mentioned that his sex life had deteriorated since the children were
born. Another man noted that the more housework he did, the more sex
he had.
I remember asking these guys: Why don't you tell these stories out
there in the real world? And the answer came back: No one’s asked.
As a journalist, that was my cue.
Starting with a couple of the men in that room, in fact, I launched
the research for VoiceMale. I ended up sitting down in the dens,
kitchens, back yards, offices of 70 men, and asking every question I
could imagine. These men were of every ethnic, economic and age
class, married from a couple of weeks to 72 years. I also
commissioned a scientific survey through a university to ask a
nationally representative sample of 300 men some of these same
questions.
VoiceMale is not necessarily the whole truth, but it’s men’s truth.
|
|
 |
Guest Article... |
VOICEMALE: Introduction
by
Neil Chethik © 2005

INTRODUCTION
American husbands. Fifty years ago, it seemed the
best of times for them. The heroes of World War II and other
adventures, they married their hometown sweethearts and busied
themselves with the American Dream. The GI Bill educated them,
corporations lavished job offers upon them, and their role in the
American family was clear-cut and advantageous: bring home the
money, discipline the children, and keep the lawn looking as
good as the Jones’. In exchange, they got security, sex, and their
meals served up. With their wives economically dependent on them,
some husbands even felt free to probe outside the marriage for
sexual or emotional “add-ons,” convinced that their wives wouldn’t
do the same.
A half-century later, this portrait has gone the way of the Edsel.
Today, American husbands no longer dominate. And we know it.
Twenty-first century wives seek equality in their marriages, and
often exit those relationships if they don’t get it. And the
legislatures, courts, and media increasingly back up the women. At
the same time, men no longer need to walk the aisle in order to have
sex with a woman, live with her, or even have children with her.
And yet, American men keep marrying. We may wait a little longer
than we did in the fifties; we may wed for different reasons; the
dynamics of the marriages may be vastly altered from the past. But
those who argue that man’s natural state is promiscuous detachment,
serial monogamy, or some other erstwhile form of isolationism,
haven’t listened closely to the American husband. Despite fifty
years of gender-role havoc, a husband’s relationship with his wife
remains the most important aspect of his life.
I come to this conclusion after fifteen years of researching and
interviewing men, and writing about their personal lives. My first
book, FatherLoss, focused on how sons of all ages come to terms with
the deaths of their fathers. I found that contrary to the
stereotype, men grieve profoundly. We may not grieve like women, who
tend to cry and talk when they grieve. But men’s style of coming to
terms with loss – a style that emphasizes action and thinking –
seems to fit our character, and get the job done.
Likewise, men’s perspective on marriage has often been
misunderstood. While hundreds of books have been written on
marriage, virtually all come at the topic with a woman’s
sensibility, using female-oriented language, focusing on issues that
mostly concern women and wives. Few authors seemed to acknowledge
the complexity and diversity of the male perspective.
This book aims to remedy that. Traveling from coast to coast, to
cities and farms, ivy towers and factory floors, I have surveyed
nearly 360 married American men of all ages, classes, religions and
ethnic backgrounds. To these men, I asked every question that I
could muster; with them, I explored every detail of marriage we
could imagine.
And, again, the stereotype falls: Rather than the “checked-out”
male, I found that most husbands are keenly aware of, if at times
utterly perplexed and chagrinned about, the state of their unions.
While some men I interviewed acknowledged that they’d never before
spoken about their marriages in such depth, virtually all had
thought about the issues, and many had wrestled intensely with them.
They’d also wrestled, sometimes literally, with their wives.
Husbands report that they disagree with their wives on issues
ranging from money to in-laws to housework to children to sex.
Physical violence – against husband or wife – had touched nearly one
in five marriages. A third of husbands reported that they had
considered getting a divorce from their current wife, and almost one
in ten had actually separated from her for some period of time.
And yet, in one of the many striking findings of my survey, more
than 90 percent of currently married men said that if given the
choice today, they’d marry the same woman again. The vast majority
of husbands consider themselves happily married. They recognize that
marriage takes work, and work pays off. From unimaginable
low-points, for reasons practical, emotional, and prideful, American
husbands seem determined to weather the rough times of their
relationships, and keep their marriages intact.
I’m one of those men. Born in the dead center of the post-war Baby
Boom, I am, in matters of marriage, a member of “The Straddle
Generation.”
One of my feet is planted in the era of “Father Knows Best.” My
parents married in 1953, just days after graduating from college. My
father’s military service, education, and career choices dictated my
parents’ travels in their early years together. When their kids were
young, my father made the money, my mother the meals. He left home
each morning; she stayed home all day. Thus, I got a taste of the
traditional American family that in some circles is so lovingly
remembered today.
But as I came of age in the late 1960s and early 1970s, I found
myself stepping into a fresh, feminist world. My mother returned to
graduate school, then launched a professional career. My female
classmates in high school and college competed with me for grades
and jobs. “A woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle,” one
popular bumper-sticker trumpeted at the time. And I found it
occasionally hazardous to disagree.
It was in the echo of this era that I met my wife Kelly. We crossed
paths on the job in 1983, both in our mid-20s. I was lured by her
luminous smile and optimism. Our differences in personality,
sexuality, and family background made for a tumultuous courtship.
But something told us not to give up, and after four years of
struggle, we pledged ourselves to each other for life.
And then our troubles really began.
I remember a particularly rude awakening in the first year of our
marriage. The bedside clock blazed 3:02 a.m., but it was Kelly who
was in a state of alarm. Pushing at my shoulder, I heard her say:
“We’ve got to talk right now.” I extracted myself from the arms of
sleep, and rolled to face her. It was the third night in a row she’d
awakened me this way. As before, she was sitting back against the
headboard, sheet pulled to her waist. “I realize now that we have to
get divorced,” she said steadily. And then she concluded: “The
sooner the better.”
I have never been a morning person. But I tried nonetheless to catch
on to the rhythm of this conversation. Yes, we’re having problems, I
thought to myself. We’d been sex-less for weeks. Finances were
tight. And worst of all, I was not meeting her standards of
affection; cuddling, hand-holding, and little nothings, it turned
out, did not come readily from the married me.
Despite my haze, I knew that my response in that bed would be
momentous. And so I paused before I launched. “It may be so,” Kelly
remembers me finally saying. “It may be that we’ve made a huge
mistake. It may be that our life together is over. But” – and here
is where I got to the crux of my response – “I am not going to talk
about it right now. I’m not going to talk about something this
important in the middle of the night.”
Then I dove back into the mattress, and fell asleep.
Eighteen years of marriage later, Kelly and I can look back and
smile at that moment. Since that wake-up call, we’ve grappled with
our physical needs, spending habits, household chores, and a laundry
list of other differences and disagreements. Some of these issues
could actually be labeled as “solved.” The great majority of them
have resulted in hopeful accommodations, wobbly compromises, and
agreements to disagree.
And yet, buoyed by my research on this book, I’ve learned to trust
those compromises, to celebrate those temporary agreements. They’re
really all a married couple has. While marriage may be a venerable
institution with a history many thousands of years old, each bond
remains fragile.
It appears to be wives who most often call attention to this
fragility, to the struggles and shortcomings of their marriages. But
most husbands are well aware that difficulties exist. In the past
forty years, they just haven’t felt comfortable to speak. My hope
was to change that. From mid-2003 until late-2004, I criss-crossed
the country, determined to talk about marriage with as many and as
varied a collection of husbands as I possibly could.
Using my contacts from years of writing about men, I found husbands
in their living rooms, kitchens, backyards, dens and workplaces. I
met with jobless men in downtown parks, and inmates in jail.
Sometimes, we talked for hours in our first meeting as I explored
the man’s “relationship history”: the marriages they saw as
children; their own early love relationships; their initial meeting
with their wives; the decision to marry, and the arc of the marriage
itself. After this initial conversation, we often spoke or e-mailed
frequently in the months that followed.
Not surprisingly, many men were wary at first. I assured them of
anonymity (the names used in this book are pseudonyms, and some
details are changed), but most did not know me well enough to trust
me at first. Some wondered aloud whether it was appropriate to
reveal details of this most intimate relationship in their lives.
But in the end, virtually all of them did. Ultimately, they came to
believe that I was not there to judge them, but to listen to their
stories. They also recognized that they might be able to help other
couples by sharing those stories in detail.
As I listened, I was struck both by the vulnerability and astuteness
of their responses. We’ve been led to believe that men are
emotionally disabled, relationally inept. Yet most of the husbands I
interviewed were nothing like this stereotype. They could identify
the troublesome dynamics in their marriages, their marital
strengths, and the series of tradeoffs they made to maintain their
relationship.
I also heard about one of the pervasive differences between them and
their wives: the way they experience intimacy. Women, having grown
up with talking as the currency of communication, often define
intimacy as face-to-face conversation on important topics. “How do
you feel?” is a common conversation-starter for women. For many
husbands who hear those words, they are a conversation-killer.
Men grow up in a boy-culture that emphasizes action and teamwork, so
it made sense to me when they said they felt closest to their wives
when they were not face-to-face, but side-by-side. Working on a home
project, attending a ballgame together, sitting in the front seat of
a car on a long drive – these (along with the activity of sex) were
the men’s most commonly mentioned moments of marital closeness.
In my in-depth conversations with seventy husbands, I also was
struck by some trends and tendencies among them. I noticed, for
example, that men who spoke highly of their fathers tended to be in
good marriages, a connection that had rarely been analyzed. It also
emerged from these in-depth interviews that husbands who felt that
housework was shared fairly – and whose wives felt the same way –
had happier sex lives.
In an effort to objectively test these and other observations, I
contracted with Dr. Ronald Langley at the University of Kentucky’s
Survey Research Center to conduct a national telephone survey of
close to 300 husbands. The results of the HusbandSpeak Survey
confirmed the connection between good fathers and good marriages. It
confirmed the relationship between housework and sex. And it offered
scores of other insights into men’s attitude and activities in
marriage. (See A Note on the Research, at the end of the book, for
more details.)
In the following pages, you will find the results of both the
HusbandSpeak Survey (288 husbands) and my in-depth interviews
(seventy husbands) blended together through four sections. In Part
One, Why Men Marry, you’ll learn what men are looking for in
potential wives, why they make the decision to marry, and what
impact the wedding itself has on them.
In Part Two, The Arc of the Marriage, you’re invited to follow the
husband’s perspective through four major phases of marriage: the
honeymoon phase (the first three years of marriage); the family
phase (years four to twenty); the empty-nest phase (years twenty-one
to thirty-five); and the mature marriage phase (years thirty-six and
beyond).
Part Three of the book, called HusbandSpeak, will focus on several
of the most important findings from my survey, including the link
between sex and housework; the impact of fathers on shaping men into
husbands; the willingness of husbands to change; the impact of
affairs; and how a man’s second marriage tends to differ from his
first.
Finally, in Part Four, How Men Do Marriage, I’ll share what I came
to see as the masculine style of loving. It’s a style that emerges
from the combination of men’s biology and training.
In the course of the chapters ahead, you will meet, up-close,
husbands of all ages, races, religions, and backgrounds. You will
hear words that will both inspire and appall you. You will see
couples in the throes of love-making, and mischief-making. You will
smell the anger, feel the blows. And, if you are like me, you will
be uplifted by the time you finish this book. That’s because you’ll
discover that despite our many differences – in expression,
aggression, and emotion – most husbands and wives ultimately want
the same thing: a safe, caring, fellow traveler in their journey
through life.
Copyright © 2003 by Neil Chetnick 
"A surprising, challenging, and compassionate book on
the inner world of a misunderstood species --the modern husband.
Nearly every husband will understand himself better if he reads this
book; nearly every wife will say, 'Now I get it.'"
--William J. Doherty, Ph.D., professor of Family Social Science at
the University of Minnesota and author of Take Back Your Marriage 
|
|
 |