Rights of Passage
by
Kenneth F. Byers © 2005

Risk!
Risk! Care no more
for the opinions of others
or for those voices.
Do the hardest thing on earth for you.
Act for yourself.
Face the truth.
Katherine Mansfield, Journals

Having studied, lived with, observed, therapist-ized, raised
from birth, been one and now coaching, many hundreds of men during my
awake years (mine started at age 45), it might not surprise anyone that I have
come to several conclusions about men. First is that we are truly
magnificent. In fact, we are equally as great a miracle as women, although we
may not always smell as nice and perhaps we really don't multi-task quite as
well.
We are, however, often an enigma to the opposite gender and
almost always to ourselves. We are highly complex extensions of our
genitalia and like it or not, that is one of those truths we must face. Frankly,
living that enigma really is a great way to go through life but it is also so
often misunderstood that it creates great social and emotional barriers to
happiness. Yes, for us men testosterone is not only a way of life, it is the
essence of life. It is what makes us go, create, perform, compete,
achieve, defend, and sometimes make complete asses of ourselves. (That
last in deference to the opinion of others.) It is at once the most
creative and most destructive agent on the planet. We get to live with
this paradox full time and few ever get the chance to examine it and hence
potentially gain control of it. There are many areas that we can explore
in an attempt to gain this control and we will look at many of them during the
course of this article, but the most critical is what I call the great missing
link: Rights of Passage.
Most sociologists refer to this phenomenon as RITES of Passage
and that has been historically appropriate but I call it RIGHTS of Passage which
I believe is more appropriate to our times. First coined and translated
into English by Arnold van Gennep in 1906, Rites of passage has been the
defining point of departure for the transition from boy to man since the
beginning of the homo sapien era. Western culture and rapidly most other
cultures around the world have given up the traditional spiritually based
"rite" for the concept of instant gratification. This, of course, is a
direct result of the unprecedented increase in the speed of human evolution
which is communication based.
The need, however, for a passage or ritual to identify the
transition is not culturally based, but soul based and is therefore still
required to enable men to identify themselves as adults, have society recognize
that fact and assume the responsible nature of that title. Without it we
carry adolescence further and further into adulthood which is reflected in
behaviors that are seen by others as non-responsiblity for our own actions. It
is called "extended adolescence."
What has become known for the first time in history in any
culture as male mid-life crisis is actually only the soul's need to express its
RIGHT to discover its own maturity...and it will rarely be denied this RIGHT
even if the psyche must create a crisis to force it to happen. So, the
"Right of Passage" is really a critical element in the evolution of
the life of the modern male. The "crisis' is manifested in every
action that a man takes and is evident as at least a partial motivation in all
his choices. How each man handles this inevitable transition is a measure
of the development of his character.
Contemporary literature, and in particular modern media, has
chosen this inner conflict that all men experience to some degree as suitable
for comedic commentary. The American male in particular, regardless of
ethnic origin, is so often seen as incompetent and denigrated within the
family structure that it has become a self-fulfilling role model. Watch
almost any TV sitcom and one sees the male as either continually representing
infantile intelligence and gross behavioral ineptitude, or capable of little
other than vengeance and uncontrolled violence. That is simply not
the case. The great majority of us are capable, effective and loving but empty
at some level. That emptiness is the result of incomplete passage into
manhood. That passage is the "truth" that is searched for throughout
the mythologies of all cultures.
In future TRANSITIONS we will
look at one corner of a very small part of one major factor in this puzzle;
father absence. In successive issues we will look similarly at the many
other factors that play a role in understanding gender realities. Rights
of Transition will be the thread that ties them all together.
©Copyright 2005, Kenneth F. Byers

Dr. Ken Byers is a coaching professional with a thirty year background
in business, industry and therapy. He specializes in telephone based Men's Life Coaching and cross-gender personal coaching, helping businesses and individuals identify, define and achieve their Vision through Essential Self-management Technology.
Ken can be reached at: 415/239-6929
E-mail:
mekendar@pacbell.net
Website:
http://www.kenbyerscoach.com/