Warning: This post discusses sensitive issues such as dildos and naked men. Please remove all minors from the premises, and if you are offended by these topics yourself, please avert your eyes. You'll have to avert them for a long time, though, because this is another one of those seriously lengthy pieces, longer than Rasputin's or Dillinger's...well, never mind. Standard suggestion applies: print it out if you need to, and take it to the "reading room" if you prefer. But you might want to follow some of the links too, so take a highlighter with you.
...And finally we get to the Ceremony of the Ripping Shirt, where we cavort around like apes in the jungle, revealing our manliness to other men, becoming the true warrior-king-lover-gods that we always were but Brenda Weatherby in tenth grade would never believe it. Then we make a conga line and dance out into the woods and plunge into the river and splash around like alligator gar on cocaine until we feel manly enough to take off all our clothes and rip the guts out of a wild hog.
I felt so much better after doing this the first time. I went back to Grapevine, Texas, where I live, and I told my girlfriend Wanda Bodine everything I'd been through, and she said, "That sounds great. Did they teach you how to wear the same color sock on both feet?"
You ever feel like women don't understand how manly we are?
Joe Bob wrote that gem of a book in the early 1990s – a generation ago. But some humor has a surprisingly long shelf life. And if you thought the contrived manly rituals that Joe Bob so engagingly lampooned were dead, you haven't been paying attention. Don't feel bad; I was kind of taken by surprise too a few years ago, when an organization called The ManKind Project, aka MKP, briefly hit the news after a Houston-area participant committed suicide (more on that in a bit). I started a couple of different blog posts about it, never got around to finishing them, and put MKP on the back burner with a bunch of other topics. But that's okay, because many other people wrote about it, so there was plenty of critical information online for those seeking something besides pro-MKP propaganda. Besides, a tragedy of this nature deserves more than a drive-by snark.
MKP made the news again in late August of 2010. This story wasn't tragic like the one mentioned above, but was newsworthy nonetheless. And while the ManKind Project was not the target of the suit as had been the case with its Houston branch in the suicide incident, MKP was certainly a focal point. An Orange County, California attorney, Steven Eggleston, sued his former employer, personal-injury law firm Bisnar/Chase LLP and its partners, John Bisnar and Brian Chase, because, Eggleston alleged, Bisnar had insisted that he attend a ManKind Project weekend retreat. More specifically, Eggleston alleged that he was forced to quit his job because the law firm docked his pay as a result of his refusal to sign up for MKP's New Warrior Training seminar. After he'd been on the job for about two months, Eggleston claimed, his supervising attorney, Bisnar, told him about a seminar that Eggleston really needed to attend. He said Bisnar clarified that he couldn't tell him that the attendance was a requirement for employment, but that it was very important for him to attend anyway.
Yet when Eggleston pushed for details about the seminar, Bisnar was cagey, in essence saying that what happens at a New Warrior Training weekend stays at a New Warrior Training weekend. All Bisnar would really say was that the New Warrior Training seminar would enable Eggleston to "have closer, stronger, and better relationships with men."
But Eggleston was uneasy, so he did a Google search and found some disturbing reports that led him to fear he would be stripped naked, that he would not allowed to leave if he wanted to, that he'd be required to discuss details of his sex life while handling a wooden dildo called "The Cock," and that he might be pressured into allowing other guys to touch his genitals. Not to mention that he might have to observe or even be part of a ritual in which nekkid men beat cooked chickens with a hammer. (Which, I have to admit, is really dumb; you're supposed to beat the chicken before you cook it.)
When Eggleston refused to sign up for the next scheduled warrior training, Bisnar allegedly became hostile and tried to pressure him into signing up at a later date. Eggleston claimed that Bisnar also docked his pay from a draw of $15,000 a month to a mere $10,000. (To those of you who are struggling to get by on much, much less than ten grand a month, I'll remind you that it's the principle that's important here, not the amount of money.)
Eggleston told Bisnar he didn't want to attend at a later date either, and he claimed that as a result of his refusal, Bisnar stopped paying him the draw altogether and told Eggleston he would only receive money for cases that were settled. Things got so bad that Eggleston quit in March 2010, and he claimed that the law firm has continued to retaliate against him by, among other things, refusing to provide him with accountings about cases he brought to the firm.
Here's a link to a PDF of the complaint: http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/09/03/Sensitivity.pdf
And here's an HTML version of the above.
This story created quite a buzz among the California legal community and far beyond. The headline writers had a field day. There were all sorts of headlines about nekkid men and wooden dildos, of course, but my favorite of the bunch was on an AOL News piece: "What Do You Say To A Naked Lawyer? Here's A Suit". I wish I'd written that. Readers chimed in as well with their own smart-aleck or outraged comments. Some outrage was undoubtedly misplaced; there were grumblings about MKP being part of the anti-Christian/pro-homosexual/New-Age/New-World-Order/liberal conspiracy. But at least one commenter on the AOL piece linked to above got it right, in my view:
cinorjer 5:27 AM Oct 12, 2010
To those of you who want to connect this to your favorit[e] rants about homosexuals or liberals, it's none of that. It's just about business owners who can't seem to get that just because you pay someone to do a job, it doesn't mean you own them and can dictate their private life. There are just as many bosses who insist their employees go to Christian retreats and join Bible studies, and retaliate if you decline. And in every case, eventually someone has the guts to draw the line. What's interesting in this case is, the bosses are lawyers and should have known better than to even offer such a whacko retreat, even if voluntary. In fact, all of these "team building and self exploration retreats" are bogus excuses to spend money on a billion dollar industry that doesn't help the company one bit. They were setting themselves up for just this sort of trouble. Makes me wonder what sort of inane advice they like to hand out to their clients.
Well, they're personal-injury lawyers, and apparently successful ones, so I imagine they do all right. Still, "cinorjer" is spot-on about mixing work with personal-growth retreats. Whether it's ManKind Project, Landmark Forum, a Tony Robbins event, or some other LGAT (Large Group Awareness Training) crap, employers have no business pressuring their employees to participate, unless it is industry-specific and directly related to their professional development.
Speaking of Landmark Forum, this aggressively litigious organization must have taken umbrage at being mentioned by name in an opinion piece about the Eggleston case that was published on the Bloomberg.com site. I am guessing that Landmark contacted Bloomberg and that either the author, Susan Antilla, was pressured into removing that mention, or the editors did it for her. The notice at the beginning of the revised piece practically rolls over and wets itself in submission, noting that Landmark "runs traditional seminars in business settings." In what is apparently one of the sanitized paragraphs on her post Antilla writes:
It isn’t unheard-of for a company to dispatch employees to so-called boot camps that promise to improve interpersonal skills or even transform their sometimes-miserable lives. One is Vancouver-based Lululemon Athletica Inc., known for its line of athletic wear. It has gone so far as to require franchisees to attend seminars run by a self-help group. .
Ms. Antilla, thank you for trying, anyway. That "self-help group" is Landmark. By the way, in addition to Landmark, Lululemon is, or at least was at the time this Fast Company piece was written, heavily into The Secret. In case you haven't noticed, New-Wage has seeped into every nook and cranny of the corporate world.
Obviously, some firms just haven't gotten the memo about separation of business and an employee's personal journey, and Bisnar/Chase seems to be one of those firms. ABC News quoted Bisnar's partner Brian Chase as saying that their law firm has a distinct New-Age feel. According to a September 30, 2010 story about the incident, Chase said, "We have yoga on Fridays. Bisnar will encourage people to go to professional seminars for trial lawyers or paralegals. He also encourages people to do personal development. He's passed out Deepak Chopra books. We've had tickets to Anthony Robbins' seminars. He encourages people to better themselves."
Indeed, John Bisnar's bio page on the Bisnar/Chase Web site includes these glimpses into Bisnar's personal passions:
...When asked about the firm's guiding principles, Mr. Bisnar will point out, "The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success" by Deepak Chopra as the bible by which the firm is run. One of his philosophies is "Do the right thing by the client and profits will follow." Another is "Our employees will treat our clients no better than we treat our employees."... [Does this mean they try to coerce their male clients into signing up for nekkid retreats? Yikes. ~CC]...John has lectured at schools, colleges, universities and civic groups on the topic of the causes, effects and recovery from childhood abuse... He has been an active member of two men's support groups since 1996: one is devoted to personal growth and the other to growth of your business.Mr. Bisnar is a former member of the Board of Directors and Board of Trustees of various businesses, non-profit and religious organizations.
He is a devoted husband and a father to three adult children and one grand-child, so far. John and wife Kimberly are avid world travelers, seeking to experience different cultures, people, religions, flora, fauna and the beauty of our physical world. Meditation, personal growth, scuba diving, skiing, organic gardening, photography, exotic travel, internet marketing, the Lakers and most of all Kimberly, are his passions.
Gosh, he sounds like a veritable prince of a fellow; I can't for the life of me figure out why Steve Eggleston wouldn't want to get down and get nekkid with him. But I'd keep a rein on that "internet marketing" interest if I were you, John. At least you should read Salty Droid's blog, lest you find yourself tangled up with some of the scoundrels Salty writes about, or become one yourself.
What's the big fat hairy deal? (as Garfield the cat might have said)
Eggleston himself is a former chiropractor, and I confess that when I learned this, my immediate thought was that many if not most chiros, at least in the U.S., seem to be involved with various New-Wage/selfish-help/McSpirituality activities, not to mention a range of questionable alt-med remedies that are sometimes based in New-Wage/McSpirituality concepts. Since Bisnar/Chase's bidness philosophy seems to be quite entrenched in New-Wage beliefs and practices, it is easy for me to imagine that at the beginning of Eggleston's employment there, both sides thought it was a match made in heaven. I confess that I briefly wondered why a little weekend Gestalt-ish gathering, even if it involved nudity and weird exercises, would be such a big deal to Eggleston.
Eggleston himself is a former chiropractor, and I confess that when I learned this, my immediate thought was that many if not most chiros, at least in the U.S., seem to be involved with various New-Wage/selfish-help/McSpirituality activities, not to mention a range of questionable alt-med remedies that are sometimes based in New-Wage/McSpirituality concepts. Since Bisnar/Chase's bidness philosophy seems to be quite entrenched in New-Wage beliefs and practices, it is easy for me to imagine that at the beginning of Eggleston's employment there, both sides thought it was a match made in heaven. I confess that I briefly wondered why a little weekend Gestalt-ish gathering, even if it involved nudity and weird exercises, would be such a big deal to Eggleston.
But then I reminded myself that even if Eggleston is the kind of (ex)chiro who is or was involved in silly New-Wage activities, that isn't the point of the suit. If the events occurred as he claimed, it seems to me that Bisnar/Chase was clearly out of line. No means no, Mr. Bisnar, and you shouldn't penalize a guy for not wanting to join your bizarre-o manly brotherhood. Of course, the outcome of the case is not up to me to decide.
Though the employer-coercion angle was the real story as far as I'm concerned, it was the nekkid-men/wooden-dildo aspect that created the most buzz about this case. That's not surprising, given our culture's giggly junior-high attitude towards sexual matters; as you can probably figure out from this post, I'm sometimes just as bad about this as anyone else.
But the truth is that nudity has been part and parcel of encounter-type groups for more than forty years. Esalen, anyone? And that wooden woodie is simply a variation on the Native American "talking stick," long popular with New-Wage retreat leaders who think it oh-so-cool and enlightened to pilfer indigenous traditions. Also SOP at countless LGATs and retreats over the past few decades are the cathartic exercises, as well as the general atmosphere of sexual/spiritual/emotional "openness" that to an outsider seems to be little more than crass exhibitionism and voyeurism – not to mention the possible practice of therapy without a license, about which we'll have more later on in this post. Then there's the fact that MKP has attracted so many passionate fans and equally passionate critics. The ManKind Project is almost yawningly normal in all of those respects.
F'rinstance, MKP garnered controversy a few years back when some therapists were recommending the New Warrior Training weekend as a tool to help in "reparative" or "conversion" therapy to turn gay men straight. The thinking, apparently, was that getting gay guys in touch with their true mythopoetic manly nature would somehow set them on the path to hetero-happiness. This notion caused quite a stir in the MKP organization and factions of the gay community. (Note: ManKind Project is not to be confused with another group, People Can Change, which sponsors a retreat called Journey Into Manhood (JIM). It's easy to confuse the latter with MKP because they have reportedly incorporated several mythopoetic/Gestalt-type elements such as nudity, "trust-walking," and so forth. People Can Change was examined in a November 2010 ABC Nightline story about retreats purporting to "cure" gays who want to be "cured.")
ManKind Project was finally obliged to issue a declaration that New Warrior Training is emphatically not recommended for "reparative" therapy, and that MKP openly welcomes men of all sexual orientations, straight, gay, bi, and what have you. The statement reads in part:
- We do not, and will not, attempt to change a man’s sexual orientation.
- We stand firm in support of gay and bisexual men.
The sad case of Michael Scinto
But the most dramatic negative publicity MKP has faced has to do with litigation. Before the California lawsuit, and in fact two years before James Arthur Ray's infamous Death Lodge brought more unwelcome publicity to these sorts of retreats, ManKind Houston was sued for the wrongful death of a participant, 29-year-old Michael Scinto – the suicide I mentioned at the beginning of this post.
Michael Scinto's sad story was first written up in a much-referenced piece by Chris Vogel in the October 4, 2007 issue of the Houston Press. I'm probably at least the 100,000th person to cite this story, but if you've not previously done so, I urge you to read the entire piece; it is well-written and has good background information about MKP, as well as numerous anecdotes about their LGAT-ish ways. Vogel really did his homework. For those who don't want to take the time to read his story right now, I'll review the basics here.
According to Michael Scinto's parents, who filed the suit, Michael had struggled with alcohol and cocaine for years, but had been sober for nearly a year and a half before taking MKP's New Warrior Training in July 2005. He'd heard about the training from his Alcoholics Anonymous sponsor, Kim Sawyer, a "business coach" who had joined MKP more than a decade earlier. Kim managed to sell the idea to Michael, telling him that the $650 New Warrior training would be the best thing he could do for himself. As was the case with everyone else who attended, Michael was not told specifically what the weekend would involve. Though he signed numerous confidentiality contracts and liability waivers, and filled out a medical questionnaire (is this beginning to sound familiar to those of you who have been following the James Ray Death Lodge story?), he was promised that all activities were voluntary and he could leave at any time. In addition, he trusted Kim Sawyer, who had been his AA sponsor for about eight months.
The retreat was a shock to Michael, to say the least. Upon arrival at the event, men in dark clothes and black face paint stripped him and fellow "initiates" of their keys, wallets, cell phones, and watches. For many guys, no doubt, that kind of thing is just a game, little worse than a frat hazing or at worst, military boot camp, sans the obligation of subsequent deployment to troubled foreign shores. But for those who are as fragile as Michael apparently was, it's much more serious.
During one of the emotional group exercises, Michael became distraught, crying and explaining that he had unearthed a traumatic childhood memory. He wanted to leave, and he asked for his stuff back so he could. Unfortunately he didn't have his wheels with him; the men had been encouraged to carpool to the retreat, which took place in a very isolated rural area 110 miles north of Houston. Staff members got hold of Kim Sawyer, who encouraged Michael to stay, telling him that leaving would be difficult and it would be best if he expressed his thoughts and worries openly with the group. Michael was left with two choices: stay and continue, or try to walk away alone down poorly marked country roads, lost and terrified that someone was coming after him.
The latter wasn't mere paranoia. Michael had had a confrontation with the group leader, and here's what he wrote about it later in a letter to the Madison County Sheriff's Office:
He told me that if I left I would be causing harm to the other participants. I told him that I did not care. I told him to get my stuff so that I could leave. He said that if I left they would kill...(I was) convinced that if I ran they would catch me. At this point I feared for my life.That's how the quotation appears in Vogel's article, ellipses, parenthetical phrase and all. Though the quotation does not make it completely clear who or what would be killed if Michael left, the implication seems to be that he thought the leader was threatening him. After the talking-to by his AA sponsor, however, Michael stayed.
In his letter to the sheriff's office, Michael described the bizarre goings-on, including those nekkid blindfolded "trust walks," various nude dances and rituals, men sitting nude in a circle discussing their sexual histories while passing that wooden dildo around, and naked men beating cooked chickens with a hammer. This was the stuff that scared the be-jeezus out of that Cali lawyer, Eggleston, when he read about it a few years later.
Michael wrote that on the third and final day the participants were threatened with imprisonment, and told not to discuss any of the processes they'd gone through. Then they were allowed to leave.
Michael's father, Ralph, later said his son had returned home terrified. Michael also started drinking again after his return, so there went nearly a year and a half of sobriety, right down the drain. He told his dad about the threats when he'd tried to leave the retreat, and added that he had "fired" his AA sponsor, Kim Sawyer. He also told his father that he had consulted with an attorney to get a restraining order against Sawyer, who, according to Michael, had been hounding him with phone calls ever since the retreat.
Around 5:00 on the evening of July 25,** 2005, fifteen days after the retreat ended, Ralph received a phone call from his son's employer, who said that Michael had not shown up for work that day. Ralph panicked and called his daughter Becky, and the two of them drove to Michael's apartment. They banged on the door but there was no answer. When Ralph turned the knob, the door opened, and he and Becky entered the apartment. Ralph Scinto screamed at the site of his son's decomposing body on the carpet, a shotgun lying beside him. Blood was everywhere. Michael had died from a self-inflicted shotgun wound to the head.
Stunned, the Scinto family began investigating the ManKind Project. They discovered it to be an international organization with thousands of enthusiastic and vocal loyalists who claimed the training had changed their lives. But they also found what Houston Press' Chris Vogel described as "an underworld of critics with bone-chilling tales of physical and psychological abuse." Michael's sister was able to figure out Michael's password so she could get into his computer. It was there that she found MKP's Houston membership roster, which included many of the city's prominent doctors, lawyers, businessmen, educators, people associated with the arts, and, not surprisingly, therapists and addiction specialists. There were even some Roman Catholic priests on the roster. Michael's sister also found the letter he had written to the Madison County Sheriff's Office. The research she compiled formed the basis of the family's eventual lawsuit.
The Scintos, Vogel reported, became convinced that MKP targeted vulnerable members of 12-step recovery groups, and Vogel's own research seemed to confirm this. He told the story of one guy named "Bob," who didn't want his real name used because he said he feared retaliation. Bob said there was lots of subtle pressure and soft-sell from some members of his 12-step group, who used virtually every conversation as an opportunity to pitch MKP's warrior weekends. Bob did his research and decided MKP was not for him. He also warned one of his friends in his 12-step group, a guy whom he considered to be particularly fragile, not to attend. But Bob said that upon learning of his warning to his buddy, MKP members became angry and started going after him in subtle ways. (Once again, this sounds familiar: recall the tale of former James Ray follower Connie Joy and her husband, who tried to protect other Ray followers from blowing all of their resources on pricey events. Their efforts did not exactly endear the Joys to Ray or his top minions.)
Things became so uncomfortable for Bob that he felt compelled to change meetings, but even that wasn't very effective, he said, because MKP members were at all of the meetings. "It's scary because they know all your secrets," Bob told Vogel, "and physical and emotional retaliation or blackmail is possible. It's like a virus here in Houston." Indeed, there seem to be numerous other tales of participants, and not just in Houston, who said they feared to rock the boat, because they were afraid their most intimate and embarrassing secrets would be spilled by guys who appeared to have no respect for those "confidentiality" agreements.
This is not to imply that the MKP leadership endorsed such clearly unethical tactics. After all, the organization claims to be focused on removing the shame from men's intimate issues, while protecting participant confidentiality. However, humans being the sometimes vengeful creatures that they are, "blackmailing" is always a potential hazard in these situations. Whether MKP endorses it is moot; once the damage is done, it's done. In that sense I suppose it's a good thing that men are asked to give up their cell phones and other electronic gadgets while at the training; since virtually every phone has a camera these days, one can only imagine the humiliating "revenge porn" that could end up online.
Another problem that emerged for the Scintos as they continued their research was that MKP's leaders appeared to be practicing therapy without a proper state license. A spokesman for the national group, Les Sinclair, denied the therapy allegation, saying that what MKP does is "therapeutic in that it's healing." He added that a lot of therapists attend the retreats, and that the MKP "process" is a very powerful one that breaks down men's armor or shield "to get down to their core and who they are."
Critics of these types of events say that there's very little to distinguish the latter from some kinds of therapy. For his October 2007 Houston Press article Chris Vogel talked to cult researcher Rick Ross, who expressed concern not only about what some have viewed as coercive mind-control tactics used by MKP, but also about what seemed to be an inadequate vetting system to determine who could and couldn't withstand the stresses of the program. Ross told Vogel, "What they have is one size fits all, and that's the problem. So, the net result is you get people with issues and troubles, and the pressures of the program can crack them and cause them to have emotional distress. And that's why they have waivers you have to sign...they want them because everything has not always been fine and they don't want the legal liability."
This issue is by no means unique to MKP; it's an ongoing discussion point for critics of LGAT events. And despite MKP's claims that they don't perform therapy, the organization has been recognized by the American Psychological Association, which actually gave an award to a guy named Christopher Kenneth Burke for his 2004 doctoral thesis on MKP's effects on men who had taken the training. Under "Division 51 (Society for the Psychological Study of Men and Masculinity)", Burke is listed as the winner of the award for Dissertation of the Year. His thesis, which basically said that MKP had a positive effect on the group of men he studied, was written more than a year before Michael Scinto's death, and more than three years before the first Houston Press article about the matter. Here's a link to the document, all 356 pages of it. MKP also has a page on their web site with information about this and other abstracts and theses regarding ManKind Project.
In the interests of continuing to keep things in context, I want to stress that so far in this section, I've been drawing mostly from a Houston Press story that is more than three years old as I write this. Apologists for MKP might be quick to point out that things have changed. But I think that is only partly true.
The Scinto family's case, as you may know if you followed this story, was settled in 2008. In a June 2008 Houston Press piece, Chris Vogel reported that ManKind Project Houston agreed to pay Ralph and Kathy Scinto $75,000 to settle their wrongful-death suit. That may seem like a pittance, but the Scintos were apparently satisfied, saying it was never about the money. MKP Houston further agreed that they would change the way they did business, which was really what the Scintos said they'd wanted to accomplish. Vogel wrote:
According to the settlement, The ManKind Project Houston must implement several changes to the way the group screens applicants, discloses information about the program and handles participants who want to leave the retreat during the weekend program.This only applied to the Houston group, but the national organization was greatly influenced by the incident as well, which we'll get to momentarily.
The ManKind Project Houston agrees to have its questionnaire for applicants reviewed by a licensed mental health professional on how the questionnaire can be improved, and the organization agrees to implement the recommendations accepted by its board of directors within six months. After the improvements have been made, the group agrees to have each applicant's questionnaire reviewed by a licensed mental health professional who knows what goes on at a retreat to determine if the applicant should be allowed to participate...
Yet in January of 2009, according to yet another piece by Chris Vogel in the Houston Press, ManKind Project Houston had not yet lived up to the terms of its transparency agreement. Vogel was actually reporting news from another writer who has frequently blogged about the ManKind Project, Dr. Warren Throckmorton, Associate Professor of Psychology and Fellow for Psychology and Public Policy at Grove City (PA) College. Here's the link to Dr. Throckmorton's post.
It wasn't mere coincidence that the MKP folks had a meeting the following month and finally decided to make some real changes to the national organization and the web site. In August of 2009, more than four years after Michael Scinto killed himself, Dr. Throckmorton and, subsequently, the Press's Chris Vogel, reported that MKP was finally going to give the world a glimpse into its seekrit world of manly rites and rituals. Dr. Throckmorton reported that MKP said one of their reasons for doing so was to address "criticisms" published on the Web, specifically, from Dr. Throckmorton and the Houston Press. The changes, as summarized in Vogel's piece, were to include the following:
- Members will be released from their confidentiality agreements and will be encouraged to tell anyone who inquires about the initiation and other MKP programs
- The organization will revise its website and provide a detailed description of the initiation as well as publish new, detailed brochures
- MKP will modify its confidentiality agreements and training program to reflect this new found transparency.
A little HIS-tory (and, inevitably, some Cosmic Connie her-story)Despite my snarky tone about MKP, I do not mean to imply that I think men's emotional and sexual issues are trivial – quite the contrary. I've always been pretty sympathetic to the stuff that men go through; even in my most staunchly feminist days in high school I had close male friends and spent hours listening, fascinated, as they told me some of their most intimate secrets. They did this because they trusted me, and their trust was well-placed because I kept their confidences. I considered myself fortunate because I was able to manage to be a confidante without falling prey to the "buddy syndrome" (always the buddy and never the girlfriend). I had male friends who were just friends, and male friends who became boyfriends, and ex-boyfriends with whom I remain friends to the present day. It was a good mix. Though I tried for a short time to take the hard-line feminist view that portrayed men as "the enemy," just because it was a novel idea to try on for size, I knew that mindset was crap and quickly abandoned it.
Despite my compassion for men and the unique problems they face, I feel compelled to add that this doesn't mean that I'm the ideal partner – far from it; my own self-centeredness often gets in the way of that. Let's just say that Ron has to put up with a lot of nonsense from me. I've also done my share of griping about how men don't understand women. And even now I occasionally fall into stereotypical thinking, as I demonstrated recently in a discussion on Steve Salerno's SHAMblog when I embarked upon a misguided attempt to "protect" a young female participant from what I perceived to be predatory behavior from an older male participant. Both participants let me know, in their own way, that I was off base.
The point, anyway, is that I have been interested in "men's issues" in one way or another for much of my life. I became particularly interested in the men's movement in the early 1990s, and you must believe me when I tell you that my original intent was not the collection of future snark material. I was still partly trying to play it straight in those days, torn between wanting to continue on a more or less "spiritual" path and coming to terms with the satirist and snark who dwelt within and was making her presence increasingly obvious. Even as I was creating the mock ads and articles that later became my BLP (book-like product), Cosmic Relief, I was trying gamely to fight my own growing cynicism. In my exploration of the men's movement as it existed at that time, I met some genuinely nice folks who were sincerely concerned about gender roles in a changing society. Several factors fueled my interest. One was that I struck up a friendly long-term correspondence with journalist David Kaplan, who was at the time the "Men's" columnist for the now-defunct Houston Post. (David, who now works for the Houston Chronicle as a business journalist, currently specializing in retail reporting, had his own rather disturbing nekkid story to tell in a 2008 piece for the Chron.)
Also in the early '90s, a former business partner and I briefly did some promotional work for Texas psychotherapist Marvin Allen (not to be confused with the football player), author of In The Company of Men: A New Approach to Healing for Husbands, Fathers, and Friends and Angry Men, Passive Men: Understanding the Roots of Men's Anger and How to Move Beyond It. Marvin gained fleeting notoriety for co-leading some "Wildman Gatherings" and other men's events, mostly around the Texas Hill Country. In fact, the ManKind Project mentions him briefly on their "history" page, to which I'll provide a link later on; they name him as a victim of misrepresentation by the mainstream media. If you follow the link in the second sentence of this paragraph you will see a portrayal of Marvin not as a martyr to journalism but as somewhat of a prick, a New-Wage egotist who wasn't above attempting to throw an elder statesman of the men's movement under the bus. You'll also see that some of the most troublesome issues regarding the men's movement back then are still issues today.
Notwithstanding the unflattering portrayal in that 1991 article, which described events that took place a couple of years before I met Marvin, he seemed to me to be a perfectly decent, almost humble guy and a gracious host who, along with his wife Carol, invited my partner and me to spend a weekend at their beautiful Texas Hill Country home to talk business. Ego aside, he appeared to be driven by a sincere need to help other men. Alas, my partner and I were never able to make much headway in our marketing efforts, which included an attempt to get some sort of men's conference going at a big Houston New-Thought church, with Marvin as the keynote speaker. Perhaps his work was too controversial for the church, or maybe his own financial limitations at the time had something to do with his reluctance to retain us, or perhaps my partner and I were just a less than effective marketing team. I'm thinking the latter might have played a significant part; that short-lived "business partnership" didn't really work for either my partner or me. However, Marvin did write a nice blurb for Cosmic Relief... but then again, so did Joe Vitale, so take that for what it's worth.
Before meeting Marvin Allen, I had also worked on several writing and promotional projects for a Houston clinical psychologist, Dr. Richard Austin, Jr., who was working on a book about inter-gender communication. Through him, I met and got to converse at length one evening with one of his buddies, author and social commentator Dr. Warren Farrell, author of The Myth of Male Power. The Myth of Male Power did and still does attract critics who say Farrell was rationalizing too much on behalf of men, but I found his ideas interesting at the time. He was riding the wave of current trends to be sure, but Farrell was no Iron-Johnny-Come-Lately. He had actually been writing about male-angst issues for years; his book The Liberated Man was released in 1974.
And Farrell was hardly the only person writing about men's issues in the 1970s. After men recovered from the first shock of the neo-feminist movement that emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s (and was itself a sort of offshoot of the civil rights movement), there was a surge of male "Us-Too-ism," mostly among privileged white men. A new men's movement rose. Warren Farrrell, Marc Feigen Fasteau (The Male Machine) and Herb Goldberg (The Hazards of Being Male, originally published in 1976, though the link is to a newer edition), among others, all produced books exploring the ways in which men suffered as much as women from sexual stereotyping and cultural expectations.
Though it's not apparent when reading the history page on the ManKind Project Web site (I'll give you the link a little later), the emerging men's movement was not without its share of female advocates, and some of these women were...gasp...feminists. In 1974 consulting psychologist Anne Steinmann co-authored a book with researcher and academician David J. Fox called The Male Dilemma: How to Survive the Sexual Revolution. (The description on the Amazon link lists 1983 as the pub date, but the edition I have says 1974.) Based on twenty years of research, this book asked and attempted to answer the poignant question of how men could come to terms with increasingly conflicting expectations in a changing society. And Phyllis Chesler, author of the 1972 classic Women and Madness, subsequently turned her attention to men in a 1978 work, About Men. This book explored the male mythopoetic spectrum in a very sympathetic way, drawing on art and literature as well as philosophy, religion, and psychology.
But I think it is fair to say that few in the mainstream culture really paid very much heed to "men's issues" until the mid 1980s. There was still too much anger over women's problems – much of it justified, I believe, in light of the genuine and blatant legal and social inequalities that still existed. Where men and gender issues were concerned, the 1970s were characterized mostly by reactionary attempts to defend the patriarchy, a classic example, plucked at random from my store of old magazines, being actor James Caan's remarks about "liberated women" in his February 1976 Playboy interview with Murray Fisher. [Sample quotes: "I believe that the husband should be the head of the household, that he should be the boss – when it comes to the big decisions." "Men have run the family ever since the caves, and I think that's the way it's printed in our nerve endings, or we wouldn't have been doing it that way all these generations." "I happen to believe that a woman isn't truly fulfilled until she has kids – and raises them full time." "I'm not sayin' [women] shouldn't have equal voting rights, equal pay for equal jobs or any of that; but in personal relationships, I think the male is meant to be the final arbiter; and I really believe that if she's married, a woman's place is in the home – at least until the kids are grown." (He added that 70 percent of the women he knew would agree with him.)]
James Caan – or Jimmy, as his b.f.f. Mr. Fire says he prefers to be called – was certainly not the most radical or vocal defender of the "old ways," and no doubt his arguments would still hold up today in some religious and social circles, but in any event he probably would have scoffed at the idea of a men's retreat. And so, I imagine, would many other men back then, no matter what their views on feminism might have been. Things began to change in the mid-1980s with the beginning of those wild-man wilderness retreats, which became more popular as the nineties rolled around. It took a couple of poet-philosophers with pagan hearts to really get the ball(s) rolling. Robert Bly (Iron John) and Sam Keen (Fire in the Belly) provided just the right dash of mythopoetic inspiration to create a brave new generation of wounded warriors. Maybe it was simply another idea whose time had come. Or maybe the baby boomers were just bored. Yeah, I think that's it.
Inevitably, then, the lampooning began in earnest, via everyone from Joe Bob Briggs, with his classic from the heyday of the Wounded Men's Movement, Iron Joe Bob (lovingly dedicated "To Bobby Bly"); to Tim Allen (Tim's next-door neighbor on his TV sitcom Home Improvement, Wilson Wilson, Jr., was the quintessential middle-aged multi-culturally literate SNAG (Sensitive New-Age Guy)).
I made my own (very) modest contributions to the merriment as well. One of my first efforts was a 1991 piece that took a couple of gentle swipes at the naked-wildman theme, among numerous other New-Wage fads. That piece was published in the Winter 1992 issue of Skeptical Inquirer. Then there's this, borrowed from the aforementioned Cosmic Relief. And there is this two-page "feature article" in Cosmic Relief [Warning about the latter: Crude humor. And in case you are wondering about the relevance, there was a very vocal and, in my opinion, sometimes ludicrous anti-circumcision contingent in the men's-rights movement. There still is; to my surprise, anti-circ billboards have been popping up in the most unlikely places all over Texas, including my little rural neck of the woods.]
Quite without my intending it, my inner snark was being richly fed as I continued to frequent the New-Thought church alluded to above. I had attended briefly years before that, but had begun hanging around there again because my business partner attended, and she talked me into getting involved in a committee for a relationship conference that the church was sponsoring. That's how I met Ron. The church had a short-lived men's group, many of whose members also participated in the church's various singles' groups and events. The participants were a personal-issue-obsessed lot, and I met more than one annoyingly whiny SNAG. Oh, my Goddess, the place was a hotbed. Ron was a notable exception to the SNAG demographic and was alternately as amused and annoyed as I was by the prevailing atmosphere. Within a couple of years of meeting each other, we had pretty much drifted away from the church, though we've remained close friends with a few folks who still attend.
As the millennium turned and the world moved on, I honestly believed that the Wild Man/Wounded Woman/faux-Native crazes were pretty much passe. Of course, I was wrong. The first Houston Press article about ManKind Project popped up, as noted above, in October of 2007. And then in October of 2009 the James Ray sweat-lodge debacle came to light. While not related to MKP, Death Lodge clearly demonstrated that in some circles the ersatz-indigenous craze was alive and well, though unfortunately the same could not be said of several of Ray's participants.
The ManKind Project itself is firmly rooted, so to speak, in the New-Wage Wounded-Warrior craze, and by many accounts was actually responsible for the original wild-man-themed retreat. Their first such event took place in January of 1985, according to some accounts, or in February of 1985, according to other accounts. Either way, it was probably pretty cold outside. Three men, former Marine Corps officer Rich Tosi, social worker and therapist Bill Kauth, and university professor Ron Hering (now deceased), took eighteen guys into the woods of Wisconsin on what was then called the "Wildman Weekend."
I know what you're probably thinking: "Wisconsin? In the dead of winter?!? They had to be friggin' nuts, no pun intended!" Then again, Tosi was a Marine, which inevitably brings to mind a certain Geico car insurance commercial. Anyway, the Wildman Weekend rapidly morphed into the New Warrior Training Adventure.
Here's the version of MKP history, including some scholarly-like analysis of the whole mythopoetic men's thing, that currently appears on the organization's Web site. Those of you who are critical of New-Wage attempts to co-opt Native American spirituality will be particularly interested in the section titled, "The Influence of the Original Americans."
And here is a Texas-focused narrative "history" that appears on the ManKind Houston web site. The main writer of the article, Sonny Elliott, aka "Talking Hawk the Seer," wrote:
During the last three years of my consulting business, I would not take on a new client unless he agreed to come to Houston and take the training, as I knew that I could move him and his wants much faster if we had this common bond, especially around accountability issues. On one training I brought four men to Houston, and often one or two men at a time. Like Levi, I brought over a hundred men to NWTAs.I noticed that although the piece quoted above was apparently compiled in December of 2008 (the 4/91 designation in Sonny's sig simply means that he took his first Warrior training in April of 1991), there is no mention of Michael Scinto's case. In fact, there seems to be no mention of Michael Scinto whatsoever on the MKP Houston site. I guess that is a part of their history that they would rather forget.
But the world keeps turning, and in October of 2010, MKP International celebrated its 25th anniversary at the Galt House Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky. Over the years the organization has inspired numerous offshoots, including The Inner King Training, described as, "An advanced, experiential four day training that initiates men into sovereign, kingly energy." The link in the previous sentence leads to a rudimentary page; here's another one, only slightly less rudimentary, that lists the benefits you'll gain, noting that "you'll get all of these benefits 'in your body' -- in your heart, your guts, and your balls -- not just your head." The organization offers a free mini-course online, but "if you really want that 'Kingly Way Of Being' to become an effortless part of who you are as a man, then you probably want to consider coming to the Inner King Training." No word on whether or not paper crowns are offered, like they used to give away at Burger King. But if you're interested, the history of the Inner King Training is recounted here.
But we're different! Really, we are!You don't really have to read between the lines on MKP's main Web site to figure out that they're on the defensive and have been for some time. As implied above, they've pretty much come out and admitted as much. There has been considerable fallout from Chris Vogel's Houston Press articles and Warren Throckmorton's blog posts, not to mention the discussions on critical forums (here is a link to the very long discussion on the Rick Ross forum, and here's a much shorter one on the New Age Fraud forum). In response, the ManKind Project folks have expended an impressive amount of time, energy and space on their Web site addressing various accusations. (If you read the FAQ page for the Houston MKP group, though, you'd think there never was any controversy at all.)
When ABC News did their September 2010 story about the California attorney's lawsuit, they naturally brought up the Scinto tragedy. Carl Griesser, executive director of the ManKind Project, offered his insights.
"I personally have a lot of sadness that Michael Scinto died the way he did," Griesser said. "It's a tragedy. I don't see his participation [in the seminar] as being contributory in any way."No, Carl, it makes you guys sound and look like a pack of obsessed cult members. And you guys are doing that to yourselves; don't blame the "negative publicity." The MKP site explains, among other things, that MKP does not use brainwashing techniques; that there's a reason for all of the secrecy; that all of the nekkid stuff is totally voluntary and non-sexual, even when the naked guys are gabbing about their sex lives; and that MKP is not a bunch of New-Wage money-grubbers.
Griesser admitted that negative publicity had tarnished the image of the ManKind Project, which was created in 1985 as a male answer to the women's movement. Through responses on the group's website, Griesser is trying to combat the perception of some that the group is a cult.
"It makes us sound and look like a bunch of idiots," he said.
Let's take the money-grubbing issue first, with a couple of questions from the FAQ page on the MKP Web site:
Are you just trying to sell me a bunch of products?No. We hope that you will participate in the organization at a level that you're comfortable. We hope that you will join a men's group - most of which are completely free.Well, MKP is a business, and of course there's nothing wrong with a business making money. And perhaps the MKP people are not making obscene amounts of cash on the order of the schemers and scammers that Salty Droid likes to skewer on his blog. Yet MKP is no stranger to the standard LGAT-style hard-sell and soft-sell tactics to get guys to sign up and keep signing up. In his October 2007 Houston Press article Chris Vogel wrote:
How do you make money?The majority of our organizational income comes from the tuition for our trainings. We run with a balanced budget to the extent possible. The ManKind Project has no brick and mortar headquarters, though several of the individual centers do. We have a very small staff of paid employees, and some Committee Chairs are offered a small stipend for their service. We also raise money through donations, and through inexpensive membership fees in some areas. We earn a small amount of money each year through the sale of ManKind Project goods, like hats and shirts. No one ever has, and no one ever will, get rich from the ManKind Project. That's not what we're about.
It costs $650 to attend the initiation weekend, and then an additional $190 to attend eight weekly Integration Group meetings where men discuss how to incorporate the organization's philosophies into their everyday lives. Suggested activities to do during the Integration Group meetings include shaving another man's face, kidnapping a member of another Integration Group, and changing clothes with another man. Additionally, members can choose to pay hundreds of dollars more to work as staff members during retreats and to take advanced training courses, so they can rise within the organization's ranks and one day lead an initiation weekend. Members also pay yearly dues and are encouraged to make donations.
Granted, that was written a little over three years ago. But $650 is still the average fee for the New Warrior weekend, according to the FAQ page for the New Warrior Training Adventure, although the going rate now seems to be $750 in Houston. I can only assume that the rest is still reasonably accurate as well.
One of the aspects of MKP that frightened attorney Steve Eggleston, and was mentioned in his lawsuit, was the impression that participants in a New Warrior training are not allowed to leave the training, that once they're there, they are all but trapped until the weekend is over. This too is addressed on MKP's FAQ page.
Why are we asked to carpool?We ask all men who come to the training, including staff, to carpool. Occasionally there is limited parking space, but our primary reason for car pooling is to begin to challenge the isolation with which many men live their lives. Great friendships have been borne between NWTA participants simply by sharing the journey into self-discovery with another. We also take our environmental impact seriously, and carpooling is a significant way to shrink our environmental footprint.This sounds so reasonable, not to mention ecologically correct, but I bet they weren't all that reasonable when Michael Scinto tried to leave back in 2005. I have no doubt they've liberalized their practices a bit in the years since then, but it appears that some of the manipulative tactics are alive and well, as evidenced by the language in the explanation above. The implication that wanting to leave the training is akin to running away from responsibilities is straight from the LGAT playbook.
What if I decide to leave? How will I get home?When you arrive at the training site you will be asked if you are willing to do everything necessary to get what you came for. If you decide you want to leave, one of the weekend leaders is likely to challenge you to stay by reminding you of this commitment.
Many men experience a time on the weekend when they no longer want to be there. Some ask to leave, and then decide to stay. The vast majority are glad they did. This is part of the process; we expect it to happen, just as many of us experience days when we would rather leave our jobs, leave our relationships, run away from our responsibilities. We will ask you if this is one of those times that staying might serve you more than leaving. And then, if you decide to leave, we will help you do that. If you decide to leave the training, we will either return your keys to you if you drove, help you make phone calls to arrange transportation, or have a staff member drive you home. You are free to go, and we will ask you if it’s what you really want for yourself.
Inevitably, MKP had to address the enormous elephant in the room: Chris Vogel's Houston Press article:
Are you really as weird as the Houston Press article says?We know we're a bit unusual, even controversial, but we're nothing like the Houston Press described in their article. Our Executive Director Carl Griesser has written a response to that article... [SEE BELOW. ~CC] We are proud of who we are, the work we do and the positive impact we have had on more than 40,000 men.Here is the link to the first part of Carl Griesser's rebuttal to the Houston Press article.
Regarding that therapy issue discussed above, Griesser writes that MKP does not practice therapy. He says that instead they see their trainings as being akin to "experiential education programs such as Outward Bound," explaining that like Outward Bound, the trainings are "intense and personal group experiences, designed to challenge participants to develop new awareness and skills." Chicken hammering and proselytizing are useful skills to be sure. On the issue of licensing and certification Griesser has this to say:
In those states which license therapists, therapy is typically defined by a licensing board, and those definitions vary from state to state. It’s certainly true that some of our processes could be used in group therapy. That does not mean, however, that when we use them we are acting as therapists. Most of the processes we use were developed by unlicensed workshop leaders unrelated to MKP. I believe that what makes our training unique, and uniquely effective, is the sequencing of processes to create an initiatory experience. I think the real question at issue is whether our processes involve some risk to participants, and, if so, whether our leaders and staff are competent to facilitate them. The answer to the first question is yes, and because that’s true we have an extensive training program for leaders and staff. On every NWTA three to five certified leaders supervise all processes, and personally lead the most challenging ones. We have now initiated over 40,000 men and almost none have had significant emotional problems during or following the training.On a separate page, Carl Griesser addresses what he calls the most "outrageous accusations," e.g., that on the New Warrior Training Adventure dangerous and coercive mind-control tactics are used, as are bizarre processes, some of which involve nudity. Among other points he justifies the secrecy and the requirement that men relinquish their possessions during the training:
In traditional cultures surprise was an important element in the process of initiation, and many of us in the U.S. recall the miniseries Roots in which boys were snatched by the men of the village and bags were tossed over their heads. The men who choose to come to our trainings obviously are not snatched from their homes – they come of their own volition. Still, we believe it is important to create a clear separation from “normal” life. For this reason, the initial processes on our training are designed to wake men out of the slumber of their daily lives. They are not “stripped” of their possessions, but they are expected to relinquish possessions which will distract them from being fully present for the training, and their possessions and persons are searched to make sure they have not brought illegal drugs or weapons. Most of us are not used to this type of treatment, and some men find the process uncomfortable. However, it is never meant to be bullying, shaming, or coercive.Well, Carl, it may not be intended to be bullying, etc., but you know what they say about intentions and Hell.
As for the chicken-hammering ritual, while Griesser says he has never actually seen it happen, he concedes that it might occur in some groups, but that it is intended to be self-parody.
Our intention is to invoke the jester as a way of remembering not to take ourselves too seriously. While most of our processes are carefully planned, this one is left to the imagination of a few staff men who create it. I’ve never seen chickens being hammered, but it could happen. For the record, these would be well-cooked, tasty chickens, and, yes, this does sound completely bizarre when described out of context. In context, it’s usually simply very funny.Out of context, it's pretty funny too, actually.
Here are more links on the MKP Web site explaining secrecy, nudity, and some of MKP's other major PR challenges.
- http://mankindproject.org/specific-answers-no-bull-shit-faq
- http://mankindproject.org/stepping-mystery
- http://mankindproject.org/phearing-phallus-sexuality-and-nudity-nwta
Are you affiliated with James Arthur Ray or the Spiritual Warrior Training?The ManKind Project is in no way associated with James Arthur Ray or the Spiritual Warrior Training. We are deeply saddened and extend our heartfelt condolences to those affected by the October 2009 tragedy in Sedona, Arizona.Apart from its understandable desire to emphasize its non-affiliation with James Ray, MKP very much wants to communicate that all of this 'splainin' is in the service of transparency and the wish for men to make more informed choices about whether or not to sign up. It's also a way of attempting to put the controversial practices into context for the benefit of outsiders; after all, a common complaint MKP has about the media is that the reports of ritual nudity and the like are taken "out of context."
MKP's more recent communication efforts are better than utter secrecy to be sure, yet I find it hard to overlook the fact that most of the "transparency" came only after MKP's hand was forced. Michael Scinto's parents had to keep raising hell, and people such as Chris Vogel and Warren Throckmorton had to keep writing about it, until finally changes were made to MKP's propaganda and some of their policies, if not necessarily to their actual practices during retreats. There's nothing like negative buzz to make an org scramble to save its image. But even with the "transparency," they're still doing much of the same nutty stuff, and, it seems, keeping the business alive by creating obnoxious proselytizers who, like Eggleston's employer, apparently feel obliged to pressure employees into attendance.
All of this makes me wonder: How beneficial to consumers is MKP's, or any LGAT's, self-imposed "transparency?" MKP's changes were, as Warren Throckmorton and Michael Scinto's family noted, a step in the right direction. But "Caveat emptor" is still pretty sound advice here. For beneath that veneer of raw honesty – which in a sense has become just another marketing tactic for LGATs and some Internet marketers – it seems to be business as usual. There are times I seriously wonder if critical bloggers and investigative journalists are doing much more than unwittingly providing their targets with loads of free marketing advice, giving them the ammo they need to fine-tune their pitches to an increasingly suspicious populace.
My take on all that MKP 'splainin'
As far as I'm concerned, apologists can argue till they're bluer in the face than my profile pic, but many of the points that MKP is striving to make in their "no-b.s." approach are moot. Whether or not ManKind Project officially falls under the category of "cult," for instance, is almost beside the point. What seems apparent to me is that like so many other similar organizations that aggressively encourage ongoing participation, MKP fosters an obsessiveness, not to mention a predictable sameness in speech and behavior, among long-term members. When I look at that ManKind Houston post linked to above, for example (and here it is again), I am struck by how obsessive author Sonny Elliott appears to be, even stating that at one time he didn't accept clients for his consulting business unless they agreed to take the Warrior Training. I'm struck too by how consumed he seems by his role of wise elder to his MKP brothers, and most of all by how self-consciously faux-Native the whole shtick appears. (I mean, really: Talking Hawk the Seer?)
Regarding the matter of "dangerous and coercive mind-control tactics," I always try to take a more moderate stand on these issues, ever conscious that when discussing matters such as mind control it's easy to come off like a wacked-out conspiracy theorist. While I don't see anything sinister in MKP's intent, it is mind control of a sort – a point that, all good intentions aside, seems apparent in the results. I've read the glowing testimonials and am not trying to invalidate anyone's positive experiences, but I would still argue that MKP, like most LGATs, inevitably produces a sub-culture of men who, though originally in search of a more "authentic" life (whatever that means) nevertheless end up as robo-members, parroting the party line and doing what they must to gather more members into the fold. That's a pretty cultish result, even if MKP isn't a cult in the classic sense.
This doesn't mean to imply that all members are disengaged from life; certainly many claim that MKP has helped them more fully engage in their lives and relationships, and some of them seem intent on doing good in the world. But there is also something inherent in the very structure of the organization that encourages robotic behavior. For the most part, as I've said countless times before, I find the robo-phenomena merely silly or annoying. And yet there is the occasional tragedy – Sedona and San Diego; the Turning Point suicides; Michael Scinto's case – that gives me real pause to wonder how benign some personal-growth groups, including MKP, really are.***
Some might ask how I could have devoted so much verbiage to claiming sympathy with men's issues, even presenting my own bona fides, such as they are, and still remain so snarky and critical about the ManKind Project. In case it isn't obvious from context, both here and elsewhere on my blog, I would simply answer that question by noting that I am also sympathetic to women's issues (being a woman myself, and fairly well-schooled in feminist as well as anti-feminist thought), and I am sympathetic to addiction issues (being a recovered alcoholic); yet the snark and critic are alive and well on these fronts too. I've made plenty of fun of women's issues and 12-step groups. My perspective is a product of my own experiences and observations. YMMV and all that.
The beat(ing) goes on...The lawsuits, the criticism, and MKP's resultant need to endlessly explain themselves have apparently not slowed the organization down very much. Their activities are not just confined to the United States; they've had an international presence for many years. A UK journo, Tom Mitchelson, ventured out on an MKP weekend and wrote about it in March 2010 (thanks to Warren Throckmorton for the link).
Here's how one day ended and the next one began for Mr. Mitchelson...
It's very late. I am tired and hungry and even my sleeping bag in a freezing yurt with strangers seems attractive. It's not. I don't sleep because, a couple of hours later, the rhythmic banging of drums begins.Sounds like fun, doesn't it? And later...
A man appears at the door: 'Men, we have work to do.' We are ordered to strip and line up for a cold shower. While each man steps under the water, the others watch and count to 60.
As I am led, blindfolded, naked and freezing, I am strangely resigned to this new, weird way of life. The other men in the group are all relaxed about such a journey.Even more fun, and drearily familiar to anyone who has been following stories about MKP. Later Tom sums up his thoughts.
In the candle-lit room, we are led by hand around the circle of men. Our animal names are called and all the men cheer.
With horribly vivid images playing in my mind of pot-bellies, male genitalia and saggy bums, I return to my yurt and sleep for a couple of hours...
The overriding message of the course seemed confused: That we were suppressed warriors and had become emasculated; that we had to reconnect with the wild man; and to get in touch with our feelings. It was 21st-century New Age meets Neanderthal man.I shook my head as I read this, almost feeling that I was in a time warp. Was this piece really written last year, or in 1990?
The cult-like intensity with which some of my fellow warriors converted to the brotherhood astonished me.
I had been given a chilling lesson in how easily - and how fast - the kind of men I rub shoulders with every day can alter: can become aggressive and subservient by turns; and gripped by something strange.
And something else shocked me. This was an organisation that aimed to tell me how to be a man.
Yet not once during that weird and frightening weekend did I ever hear it acknowledged that we men share a world. With women.****
Meanwhile, here in 2011, the case of the California lawyer, Steve Eggleston, awaits resolution, which may come soon. A motion for judgment on the pleadings is set for January 28. That could possibly end the case, with the court deciding that even if the stated facts are true, there is no viable case. Or the judge might allow an amendment, giving the plaintiff a chance to come up with new facts and file an amended complaint. Alternatively, the court could decide that the case is legit as is, which means that it possibly could go to trial, but an attorney I know tells me that only about 2% of cases go to trial. Most settle.
In any case, I'm rooting for Eggleston. And I'm hoping that more employees have the courage to follow suit (pun intended) when subjected to similar pressure from bosses who are personal-growth fanatics – even if there's no potential nudity, chicken-hammering, or cock-talking involved. In the Bloomberg piece I cited above, Susan Antilla suggests that Eggleston's case may have launched a whole new genre of harassment suits from guys who "are determined to keep their pants on."
As we move into the second decade of the new millennium, I fully expect the "men's movement" to continue in various guises, and for the ManKind Project to continue to hone its message in order to neutralize the criticism that just won't go away. But as far as I'm concerned, Joe Bob had the whole thing nailed, nearly twenty years ago.
PS ~ If you just can't get enough of Joe Bob – and I can't – here's another one of his classic works: The Cosmic Wisdom of Joe Bob Briggs. His piece on an imagined conversation between classic hustledork Zig Ziglar and a man with no arms is worth the price of the book. Sadly, this collection of truly cosmic wisdom seems to be out of print, and no, you can't have my hardcover first edition. Joe Bob, if you're out there, bring that book back! And I need to get you to sign my copy.
PPS ~ Speaking of court cases, we're less than three weeks away from the beginning of James Arthur Ray's trial on three counts of reckless manslaughter. It begins February 16, 2011. Meanwhile, Ray continues to tweet insensitively and inanely, or to allow his minions to tweet for him (same difference).
* Yes, I confess: I am a fan of Two-and-a-Half Men.
** July 25 is my sister's birthday, so it's an easy day for me to remember. But I am also thinking that it should be some sort of remembrance day for those whose lives have been destroyed by LGATs and selfish-help. Not only was July 25 (2005) the day that Michael Scinto's family learned of his suicide, but July 25 (2009) was also the day that Colleen Conaway leaped from a third-story balcony in a San Diego Mall during a James Ray "wealth" weekend. As it happens, the Transformational Leadership Cartel also holds its summer meeting around that time. (This year, the meeting is actually from July 27-31. July 27 is also Whirled Musings' anniversary; this blog will turn five this year.)
*** Even so, as I discussed at length on a March 2010 post, I am still not inclined to push for draconian regulations for the selfish-help industry or outright banning of some of the more controversial events.
**** Ladies, contrary to the implication made by that UK journo I quoted above, MKP has not forgotten us. On their site they link to some similar programs for women – programs that are not affiliated with MKP but that march to the same mythopoetically enhanced New-Wage drum. There is, for example, Woman Within International. Besides their basic Woman Within training, they hold all kinds of workshops on everything from sexuality to healing the wounds of incest to healing shame. Costs are not listed on the Web site, though, because, according to their FAQ page, the weekends are held in such a wide variety of facilities. And then there's the Women In Power Program, which teaches us gals how to discover our "Inner Predator." (Warning to Inner Kings sharing a den with a newly self-discovered Predator: please take proper precautions to protect your manly parts.)
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Good stuff. BTW, another good lampoon of the mythopoets was "Fire in the John" by Alfred Gingold.
ReplyDeletehello cosmic connie, well i man-aged (now you have me doing it)...to read all way to the end..(bitta skimming)..and am left with a feeling of 'yes but'. thanks for all your research and shared experience..but your snarky cynicism, noted from the opening paragraph was a bit disappointing for this middle-aged "womanist". i too have supported the mens movement, wounded warriors, and new age sons...and have degrees in "gender studies"..and came to the decision that mens issues are mens business. i have faith they can sort this out..without our twitter and bisted "help". i think it was jung or robert johnson who reminded me that if i fall into the critical cynic (especially toward things male)..i have failed to "integrate" me own inner male)..and mind me own business. for example profs like that joseph gelfer fella are doing a fine job and standing strong in the line of fire from male peers too !)in finishing..yes there are a lot of charlartans and scammers and egomaniacs in new-age/new-wage movement...but show me where there aint ! just don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. in appreciation of your musings.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your comment, Numenoldmen. And thanks for reminding me of "Fire in the John." Though it's out of print it can still be obtained on Amazon:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.com/Fire-John-Alfred-Gingold/dp/0312074832
I appreciate your comment, sj gylany. Sorry to disappoint re the snark, but hey, snark is what I do on this blog, and even in my longer and marginally more thoughtful pieces I gotta sneak some in.
ReplyDeleteNow, while I agree with you that men can and must work out some of their "issues" without interference from women -- theoretically, this will allow them to be better men when they return to the company of women -- this post was framed around several points that are not specific to the "men's movement," among them:
(1) New-Wage/selfish-help/McSpirituality LGAT trainings -- not just the men's-movement events but the whole lot -- are, IMO, often silly, often snarkworthy, and occasionally deeply harmful to some individuals.
(2) Employers should NOT have the right to impose these "trainings" on their employees.
In other words, while this blog focused on ManKind Project, I see MKP as part of a much larger pattern of New-Wage ideas and practices permeating every aspect of our culture. Some of that is good, some not so good. But the point is that I have not just targeted MKP on this blog (and I waited YEARS to write about them). On this forum I snark about and criticize many ideas and people within New-Wage culture. Perhaps that simply means there's a lot I have failed to "integrate" (according to Jung or Robert Johnson). I'm willing to entertain that notion. :-)
I agree with you that there are lots of charlatans and scammers in all areas of life, not just New-Wage/self-help. But by my own choice, this blog has a fairly narrow focus. I'm not trying to take on the whole world.
If you're new to Whirled Musings, you might be interested in these links that provide an indication that I'm not throwing the baby out with the bathwater. (They were written during the time The Secret was in its heyday but the basic stuff still applies.)
http://cosmicconnie.blogspot.com/2006/12/yule-blog.html
http://cosmicconnie.blogspot.com/2007/03/chopra-secret-and-unenchanted-world.html
And here's an older piece, from the back pages of Cosmic Relief:
http://home.swbell.net/moonshad/wet-blanket.html
Thanks for stopping in!
I enjoyed your long take on the subject, Connie. I was invited to join several men's groups and found the first highly cultish, the second boring (but still men in that group had affiliations with MKP and wanted to go in that direction). It seems that MKP is the standard model for men's groups, for better and worse. Neither of these groups fit for me at all, and I couldn't understand the appeal of being verbally abused by other men--I had enough of that as a kid, thank you. Interestingly I've found that groups of men that identify as men feel different than groups of men that identify as people. I prefer the latter.
ReplyDeleteBTW, Numen, Old Men is a book by Joseph Gelfer that critiques various Men's Movements including MKP. Highly recommended for a more academic take on the subject. See also Gelfer's online book The Masculinity Conspiracy which is in the process of being written:
http://masculinityconspiracy.wordpress.com/
Thank you for your insights, Duff. Perhaps the verbal-abuse "trainings" appeal to some types of men (and women) who live by the "no-pain-no-gain" rule.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, our pal Pervlina has apparently started a men's group in Las Vegas.
http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2010/11/las-vegas-mens-group-meetup-dec-7th/
One female contributor to his forum had doubts about that:
http://www.stevepavlina.com/forums/social-relationships/55473-steve-s-men-only-group-sexist.html
Also, Pervlina initiated a discussion about MKP on his own forum a few years back:
http://www.stevepavlina.com/forums/character-contribution/3046-mankind-project.html
I'm glad to learn about Joseph Gelfer's work (I have been a bit out of touch with more recent contributions to the literature). Now I have more to add to my reading list!
Thanks again for your participation on this blog, Duff.
SOL..thanks cosmic connie for your "non-snarky" reply to my comments..eh eh eh...and the blog links..and yes...saving the whole world...i tend to respond this way..often..go figure. so when it all gets too big (the problem/corruption/ignorance)..i revert to little old me, and integrate, integrate, integrate. power of one and all that. and thanks for bringing a smile to my snarky face...whirled musings indeed!
ReplyDeleteoh..cosmic connie i think i just posted a reply..bit of a luddite. but wanted to add a p.s...are you familiar with the "meaning" of me surname? riane eisler's word for the partnership model, or non dominant societal structure..rather than patriarchy or matriarchy...aint it time for gylany?...told you i make "big" (whole world) gestures!
ReplyDeleteConnie, I would VERY much like a list of employers who are personal-growth fanatics, so that I and other job-hunters know not to work for them. (or at least can negotiate a way we can "relate to" and "bond with" them in a different, WORK-related way).
ReplyDeleteThanks especially for bringing up the "wanting to leave the seminar is avoiding your responsibilities" conflation. These kinds of conflations and equations probably go on all the time in the corporate world.
Seeing how many important people in Houston are involved with MKP, and seeing how many higher-ups in Albany were similarly in deep with NXIVM (at least they were a few years ago), makes me worried that I will not be able to build a career in either of those cities, or any other similarly "new-waged".
I seriously think that I stand a much better chance of building a career in a place like Australia, where choosing not to go to Landmark, etc. is MUCH less likely going to make my boss think I have problems with interacting with people, or even a faulty neurology.
@sj gylany -- Nothing wrong with wanting to save the planet in your own way. It's the conspicuous altruists who get my goat, the kind that Salty Droid is currently examining on his blog, and that I lampooned years ago (again, when The Secret was in its heyday):
ReplyDeletehttp://cosmicconnie.blogspot.com/2007/03/save-children-save-your-image.html
Gylany sounds like a fine idea. I think, however, that it will be met with resistance among certain factions... the Catholic Church, the Taliban, most of the planet... But screw them.
I think I actually mentioned somewhere on my blog that years ago I dated a psychology major who told me that my big problem is that I have "an unintegrated personality."
Yeah, I did mention it. I just Googled myself and here it is:
http://cosmicconnie.blogspot.com/2006/11/one-stop-shopping-for-soul.html
This will be a bit lengthy. Sorry, but please bear with me here.
ReplyDeleteI believe that bosses who pressure their employees to attend LGATs are just one part of an overarching trend of employability being linked to privileged status.
Think about it-- often the employee, not the boss, ends up shelling out the money for the workshop. And upkeep of appearance, white teeth, regular hairstyles, "professional" dress, etc. all cost money, straight out of the worker's dwindling paycheck. Obviously, the one who has the money and time to keep up with this stuff-- the one of greater socioeconomic privilege-- is going to have a much easier time meeting these standards!
Of course, it's a whole new and dangerous animal altogether when your emotional health and character, like appearance and workplace fit, are presented as things that must be continually upkept-- in everyday terms, what must be purchased, on your own, again and again.
What is presenting a professional appearance and attitude but a social skill, after all? And what are the attributes most prized by employers? Why, social or "soft" skills, of course!
And yes, social skills can be purchased: whether it's a cosmetic surgery procedure, a New-Age workshop, a fun outing with friends, membership in youth sports, membership in church... all them personality-buildin' things ain't free. In fact, they're getting more expensive every year.
Not to mention, this lovely piece of work. Now, to be fair, the article this is based off of is a lot more objective than the Yahoo piece suggests. But.
* I don't want my employer digging into my personal life to check for likeability and cultural fit.
* I have the right to be free of worry that negative occurrences in my personal relationships could cause my boss to doubt my interpersonal skills in the workplace or wholesale.
* I don't want to be found less employable for choosing not to follow society's normative lifestyle paths. Don't think I don't notice that the exemplars of emotional intelligence in the cottage industry spawned from Daniel Goleman's ideas just so happen to be white, rich, beautiful, heteronormative and, especially, utterly content with and committed to the status quo.
* I want to stay within a budget and spend my money as I please, without worrying that I could become a "poor fit" if I fail to spend enough money on image and "personal brand" maintenance.
* I think the use of the phrase "it's an investment in yourself" should be banned, except when talking about saving for retirement.
*** Most of all, I do NOT think we should be encouraged to think of relationships as badges of proof of our sociability, that we must collect and purchase like baseball cards. When we think of love as a must-have commodity, we creep people out in our desperation to get it.
Consider that my manifesto for true workplace freedom, Connie... the freedom to be ourselves and do our jobs without fear of mistakes and consequences.
Ah, Frances, I would very much like to provide a list of employers who are personal-growth nuts, but I am not privy to that info. I just kind of assume that many if not most have been infiltrated by the beast in one way or another.
ReplyDeleteAustralia apparently has its share of New-Wage influence too, but perhaps its corporate culture has not been so permeated. But give it time...
As you seem to be, I am uneasy about the ways that businesses increasingly want to stick their noses in employees' private lives. (Also see Lucy Montrose's excellent comment, above.)
@Lucy Montrose, no need to apologize for a lengthy comment. You make several salient points. Despite the "everyman" appeal of many classic self-improvement works, New-Wage/McSpirituality/selfish-help has always been a game for the privileged -- i.e., those who have enough time and money on their hands to create designer lives for themselves.
ReplyDeleteApropos of this, I've long been amused by the many ways in which privileged multi-culti New-Wagers have capitalized on traditions from the world's poorest societies. I also find it amusing that New-Wage marketers capitalize on their supposed empathy with "everyman/everywoman's" struggles -- proclaiming that they are all about helping everyone find fulfillment and happiness -- yet they are elitists of the worst kind (e.g, the Transformational Leadership Council and similar groups). And employers in their own devious ways continue to foster this sort of elitism. It's pretty disgusting.
Your points about corporate intrusiveness into employees' private affairs are well taken. This is a matter that really resonates with me, as I've never really been a good "fit" in a corporate environment, which is the big reason I have continued the feast-or-famine struggles of self-employment for many years. (BTW, we've had discussions about these matters recently on Steve Salerno's SHAMblog.) While I see nothing wrong with employers attempting to humanize the work place, many have gone too far in their systematic and aggressive "humanization," which becomes just another way of *dehumanizing* the work force.
I appreciate your providing the links to those articles. Another related article I recently found is Joseph Gelfer's piece about LOHAS and the "Indigo Dollar."
http://numenoldmen.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/lohas.pdf
In contrast to my own generally shallow and snarky treatment of all things New-Wage (this being but one example, from a few years back
http://cosmicconnie.blogspot.com/2006/10/plastic-fantastic.html), Gelfer provides a thoughtful and well-researched analysis of the ways that "spiritual" marketers conflate consumption with spiritual development.
Anyway... thank for your contribution to the conversation, Lucy.
A couple quick notes:
ReplyDeleteAll these selfish-help "courses" are for those with the means to create designer lives for themselves, yet, at least a couple that I've encountered, try to lure those who *don't* have the means, by dismissing the financial concerns of the reluctant. E.g. "you'd let money stop you from having a better life?", "after you take the course you'll attract what you need to pay it off", "what's really important?", etc.
Robo-members . . . ha ha. The robo-phenomena, for me, is worse than silly or annoying. When someone returns home to their family & friends roboticized and asshole-ized all hell can, and does, break loose. Marriages break up, family members become estranged. The casualites of these mind-twisting, robo programs are more than the tip of the iceberg, the ones who lost their lives.
2 cents,
Barbara
Excellent points, Barb, and you have presented more evidence in favor of the argument that these groups are insidious.
ReplyDeleteYou're spot-on about how relationships and families can be broken up. To give but one example...as you probably know, I've shared the stories of a few folks whose relationships have apparently been disrupted or even destroyed when their loved ones became involved with that silly cultish sex-and-money group, Access. There are countless other examples in groups as trivial as Access and as large and influential as Scientology, Landmark, Tony Robbins' organization, etc. (I know some people will take exception to my grouping all of these together, but so be it.)
As for the New-Wage leaders or groups who encourage people to stretch way beyond their financial means, that's very unethical if not borderline criminal. By shaming those who are reluctant -- and shaming is exactly what they aim to do, even if it's in the guise of "inspiring" or "encouraging" their marks -- the New-Wage perps are still catering to the privileged, and fostering elitism, in two ways:
1. By creating or exacerbating envy of the "elite"
2. By convincing "ordinary" people that they too can become one of those elite (both financially and spiritually) if they're just willing to "invest in themselves."
It's the New-Wage version of what used to be called snob appeal.
http://www.fallacydetective.com/news/read/snob-appeal
Connie,
ReplyDeleteWell written post. Not incoherent at all :-).
Interesting that this whole line of crap was started by a Marine. That disturbs me not a little, as you can imagine. I will do a little more research to see if I can find out more about this guy.
I have often considered and compared the experience of becoming a Marine with some of the cult conditioning you and others discuss. In a lot of ways it is similar. We take in young, impressionable people, put them into a completely different environment in which they are off-balance and disoriented, break them down to a more basic person, then build them back up and mold them into a person who can follow orders and accomplish incredible feats in the interest of the new core values we instilled in them. I think the difference is that we try to point the rationale for action externally - they serve not for themselves, but for the greater good. When they fight, they fight to protect each other first, then for the lofty goals of Country and Corps.
I guess my point is that for a former person to use those same skills we use to build Marines for the less than shining purpose of developing a New-Wage following is pretty disappointing.
One other comment, if these "men's movement" folks are actually using "Wounded Warrior" as a title for their fragile ego issues, shame on them. There is a real Wounded Warrior project out there doing good work: http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/
Thank you for your comments, Dave. I can well imagine how disappointed you are that a fellow Marine would co-opt the training for a New-Wage venture.
ReplyDeleteI have done only rudimentary research on the founders of MKP, including Tosi, the ex-Marine. I would imagine you are interested in his service record, so perhaps you can find out something about that. I was (and am) more interested in finding out what other ventures he and the other founders and directors have been involved in. They say on their FAQ page that no one ever has or ever will get rich from MKP. But I'm sure some of them are into other New-Wage or other bidness ventures.
Both military training and LGATs can render a person ill-suited for 'civilian' life. As Barbara above observed, "When someone returns home [from an LGAT] to their family & friends roboticized and asshole-ized all hell can, and does, break loose. Marriages break up, family members become estranged."
The same sometimes happens to men and women returning from war. But as you noted, Dave, military training at least serves a larger and loftier purpose than self-realization. LGATs purport to be all about helping their participants have more fulfilling lives, but their real purpose seems to be to mold them into effective recruiters for the LGAT.
I agree with you about the REAL Wounded Warrior Project being a very good cause. But the "wounded warriors" in the context of my post -- and the men's movement -- are indeed mythopoetically inspired. Here is yet another example:
http://menandthegoddess.com/2010/04/19/men-and-grief-part-4/
Connie,
ReplyDeleteI read it, but I don't have any idea what the guy is saying. I don't think the "men's movement" is for me. I've never been the touchy-feely type, at least not with men. Probably some inner flaw, I'm sure.
I'm glad I've never had any exposure to the LGAT process. I want to keep it that way.
Stick to your guns, Dave (so to speak).
ReplyDeleteI have always found it interesting that some guys who have never actually been on a battlefield (or even served in the military) are so captivated by warrior imagery. I remember when Joe "Mr. Fire" Vitale -- who to my knowledge has never served in the military -- returned from his harrowing trip to Russia and wrote a long blog post about it. His recounting of his exchange with a SNAG-gy New-Wage magazine publisher really made me roll my eyes:
==BEGIN SNIPPET==
When I told a friend who has lived in Russia about this adventure, she said, “You were thrown to the Russian wolves! No American should ever go there without a professional Russian escort set up in the US in advance.” She added, “Not having a valid Visa in Russia is a death-defying danger.”
When I met with Michael Abedin, publisher of Austin All Natural magazine, at the grand opening of the Vitale Cigar Bar in Wimberley, Texas, he said, “You have the look of a great warrior about you.”
What does that mean?
“You look tired and exhausted, but you returned from battle wiser, stronger, and transformed.”
==END SNIPPET==
See what I mean? Eye-rolling.
Link:
http://blog.mrfire.com/escaping-russia-a-harrowing-law-of-attraction-lesson/
yep, "warrior" myths abound...as does western white man's (sic) tendency to perpetuate the "hero myth" onto our males (and females!). with the only reference point for a male navigating life being the "quest for the holy grail" or the "battle with dragons"...we've externalised the existential struggle !(yes psyche- speak).the thing is, as i see it, because we lost touch with ceremony and ritual (not appropriated type)where we could externalise our psyche contents healthily (and creatively)...we're left with a dominant military "ritual" to to rely on...and "return from battle and become wiser etc.." aaaagh....paalease !..you wanna change the world...start wif ourself...eyes rolling?:-)
ReplyDeleteI thought the festiveal they posted on their website looks like a larf, whatever their cult status.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MK17fiJXrVc&NR=1
I'm all for that, they should push for a penis festival if they want to do something worthwhile.
@sj gylany (Feb 03): I understand there is a need for ritual in our lives. But I'm not sure how we as a society can address this without introducing yet more silly New-Wagey stuff into daily life. (Not to mention without encouraging OCD types who already have their own peculiar "rituals" that in many cases interfere with their functionality.)
ReplyDeleteSo, HHH, you're thinking that maybe MKP would go over well in the Land of the Rising Son? I mean...Sun?
ReplyDeleteRising son. Ha.
ReplyDeleteNo, I just reckon the bible belt needs to have 6' pink cocks paraded down it's high streets.
I am absolutely certain this would go down a storm in the UK, (with great franchising opportunities for all involved).
Talking about sex rituals, I didn't realise you could buy them on ebay. Did you know you can buy a succubus on ebay? Seems quite a reasonable rate too.
In fact, now I look, there is all sorts of magic you can buy on ebay. I'm behind the times, Connie, way behind.
ReplyDeleteOh look, someone here sells vampire and werewolf abilities.
Sorry, sidetracking.
Great reading, even for painful-LCD-screen-of-endless-scrolling reading. I've never heard of MKP or Access, but that got-damn Secret is impossible to avoid these days (I'm sure even cockroaches look upon them with awe).
ReplyDeleteThe most deplorable thing of whole industry is the fact that hook people through the one human emotion even the most downtrodden manage to hang on to, hope, then try to suck them dry through shaming and endless sales pressure. Sheee-ite, healthcare is expensive, but doctors don't send endless emails to get you in for a prostate exam then lock the door until you upgrade to the vasectomy!
Co-opting Native American rituals (or not so incredible simulations of them) is almost as old as violating treaties with them. On the other hand, real Native Americans are at least up front about their aims when their fleecing the white man at their casinos.
You're sharpening stones, walking on coals, to improve your business acumen . . . Look who bought the myth, by jingo, buy America! It's a sign of the times! (And this was in 1987.)
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your blog post; some of it is accurate.
ReplyDeleteI participated in MKP for 4.5 years, and generally left vowing not to recommend it to anyone. I gave the organization too many opportunities to redeem themselves, you might say.
It came down to three major issues mentioned in your article:
1) The re-traumitzation of men as a healing method without adequate follow up or even understanding of trauma.
2) The new age guru phenomenon, which happens often in many healing work, where narcissists quickly become leaders. (Not all MKP leaders were narcissistic; some were very interested in helping and *were* helpful, but the fact that there were so many guru-narcissists was a bit disturbing.)
3)The parroting of jargon, cliches and platitudes. (Mind control?) Well, this comes really from wanting to fit in and the psychological phenomenon of transference, which is often not well understood.
MKP was of course not "all bad". Men are attracted to it because it provides some alternative to the emotionally vacuous and shallow culture that refuses to deal with anything substantial like trauma, family, love, etc.
But unfortunately MKP falls prey to their own ignorance of themselves or of the history of psychology, philosophy, and the new age movement - largely because they decided long ago to be rather anti-intellectual and anti-self critical in their approach.
Although I don't think MKP is a cult, and I do think MKP has "good intentions," I strongly feel that MKP is very ignorant and even has "cult-like" tendencies" and deserves to be critiqued.
The sympathy I have for MKP stems from the reality that men need mental health services and personal growth opportunities, and we have a very difficult time finding them, especially in American culture.
What really deserves to be criticized is that MKP fails at creating a safe place for men to grieve and an open place for men to grow that is not polluted by idealistic grandiosity, narcissism, myopic philosophies, and thought-terminating cliches and platitudes.
I have first hand experience with MKP, and its flip side, Woman Within. Like any communal experience, whether it be a church sermon, group therapy, or a Superbowl party, when people get together in emotion laden situations, bonding happens. That is who we are. That MKP has a focus for that bonding that involves allowing men who have grown up in our culture with little way to define themselves is just a different piece of the bonding puzzle. The methods use are very much part of human programming. We use these exact same tactics in schools, churches, TV shows, literature, commercials, business training, sporting events, etc etc. The fact that MKP is aware of the goals, setting these events in a particular order to achieve a place for men to open up about pieces of their lives they have stuffed down is simply the focus of this particular human activity. That some men found this process deeply painful and committed suicide is very saddenning, however to blame MKP process for their suicide seems very much to be blame seeking. I do not agree with all the philosphy behind these projects, and there is no reason I must do so. However, to assume that MKP fails to create a safe place is to assume that there is such a perfectly safe place for people who are facing deep emotional and psychological trauma. I think that is disingenious and scape goating rather than looking at MKP as another choice, imperfect as are all human endeavors. I have worked with a number of liscenced therapists and didn't find them to be any better informed, any less narcicisstic, or any safer at dealing with my trauma than these self help organizations like MKP. I think MKP is less dangerous than most, trying to provide the best it can, and as with any organization, bad people can always find ways to manipulate their way into positions of power. I really do think they are attempting to provide safe, bonding experiences for men compared to a wide variety of alternatives. I find it interesting that many commenters are dissing men trying to rebuild their own lives, but are conding using these tactics to create men who kill upon command.
ReplyDeletePlease stay away from this New Age cult. Additionally, if you are a Christian, please know that the practices of this group are incompatible with biblical principles, as idolatry, witchcraft, and perversion are contrary to God's will. Respectfully.
ReplyDeleteoh paa-lease..."respectfully"..more like medieval and small minded paranoia. why ARE some christians still scared of life..taking the "fire and brimstone" CULT of the bible so literally? sheesh.
ReplyDeleteCosmic Connie,
ReplyDeleteIt's been a few years since you wrote this post and a hand full replies (10 to 12) of genuine and gentle nudges telling you that you don't really understand what you just posted about. Have you done any more research or have you found out anything about MKP since then or did you simply rely on all of the negative articles which are also incorrect? Just curious.
By your own admission, you accept the description of yourself as "an unintegrated personality." That is a wonderful and healing description of all critical personalities in our culture. Our culture is bursting at the seams with this destructive behavior. Don't get me wrong, criticism, although destructive is a healthy part of life. We need it, but not on the scale we see it today. But, (and it's a big butt), it has to be factual. Point in case, Michael Moore and Al Gore lost all credibility ultimately because they started out factual in their criticism, but gave in to the temptation of "they will believe anything I say now" after gaining the power and started putting out seemingly factual statements and winning the hearts and minds of their readers because it was exactly what they wanted to hear.
I'm just curious if you continued to do research into MKP or was educated more by folks who really knew the truth. I do. I could tell you. All I'm going to tell you now is that most of your personal accusations about MKP are wrong.
I do agree with you about the first part of you post, which should probably be the main focus but turned into a mkp-bashing fest. I just understand why women are so afraid of a man getting in touch with the reasons he behaves the way he does. I can tell you this though. Women who have seen their men after mkp may have some super positive things to tell you about it.
Oh, the first part of your post is about organizations forcing their employees to attend a LGAT training as part of their employment, I 100% agree with you on that. You post should have been just about that, but you railed on mkp without understanding what it was or even attempting to see if the accusations are true.
https://theecofeminist.com/2015/03/01/guest-post-the-cult-of-the-mankind-projects-new-warrior-training/
ReplyDeleteThank you for your blog post. This link to my husband's story is the truth of what happens in a MKP bullshit "warrior training". Note the very last comments from the wife of a member who has seen two suicides from the class they've attended and a nearly 100% divorce rate. My husband was traumatized for years after Garth Alley - an Australian born in Canada by the way, as this crap is worldwide - groomed him in therapy to get involved in MKP then turned on him (and myself) like a fucking demon. MKP is a cult, and people like Anonymous (10/11/14 comment) are - similar to Donald Trump - love to threaten and dismiss and condescend because they have drank the Kool-Aid of misogyny.
Anon Oct. 11, 2014: Please accept my apologies for the delay in responding to this now three-and-a-half-year-old comment. First off, my mention of my "unintegrated personality" was a reference to the opinion expressed by a pompous psych major I dated many, many years ago. My initial references were facetious, and while in the comment section of one of my posts I said that I understood what the guy meant and didn't have a big problem with the essence of his remarks but rather about the context, I also didn't say that I *agreed* with him. To be honest, I don't know what an "unintegrated" *or* "integrated" personality might look like, but I presume that "integrated" is a good thing and that you believe that the MKP faithful are all that.
ReplyDeleteI don't think criticism of the type that I do here on this blog is at all unhealthy or destructive. It's the lack of criticism -- and critical thinking -- that is the real danger. So we'll just have to agree to disagree there.
We'll also have to agree to disagree about the general credibility of Michael Moore and Al Gore. Documentaries and books that present a specific point of view sometimes do fudge on the facts or give short shrift to the "other side." But in general I think these two men are credible and their causes and concerns are legitimate.
I have continued to do research into MKP and what I've seen is that it's like most LGATs (and cults and cult-like organizations) in that it has its passionate defenders/believers and its passionate critics. Many opinions are based upon first or secondhand experience and many are based on informed observation, so in that sense it is all, or mostly, subjective. Even so, it seems that real damage has been done along with the good that true believers insist is the norm. I err, if indeed it is an error (and I don't think it is) on the side of skepticism about these programs, but I can assure you that I have no fear of a man who is "getting in touch with the reasons he behaves the way he does."
Aimee, thank you so much for sending the link to your husband's post. In telling his story, he very concisely and eloquently summarized what is wrong with MKP and that whole mythopoetic/wild masculinity shtick -- and for that matter, what's wrong with LGATs in general. I won't go so far as to say that the Anon from 10/11/14 is a misogynist but I did detect a bit of condescension. Thanks again for posting here.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Aimee, I'd like to know more about how Garth Alley turned on your husband and you. Do you have any links to posts about that? You can share here too if you wish. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteHi Connie - I'm a bit delayed on my response, as I don't get notifications but today I received an email from a former MKP participant saying (direct quote) "For four years I have repressed the pain, the sadness, the cruelty, the aggressiveness, and the abuse (among other traumas) from that horrible weekend. I have night terrors and PTSD from the abuse they caused." As far as Garth Alley (garthalley.com), he was a therapist my husband originally went to after dealing with some major trauma back in Australia, which was also around the time we got engaged and were preparing for the massive life change of him immigrating to the States. He pushed my husband to go to MKP "support groups" that he was affiliated with (he's a 'group leader') and when I visited I joined him at a couple of sessions, and after coming to the States, he continued talking to him via Skype. He comes across like a cool uncle, and because he was a Canadian who'd moved to Australia, and whose son lived in the Northwest, we felt we hand something in common. I even did a solo Skype session with him - it was OK but not as good as my regular therapist so I didn't continue. He was definitely focused on my husband, pushing him to go to local events here in the Northwest, so he did because he trusted him. But ever since Australia he pushed him to attend one of the MKP warrior weekend retreats and only because he was coming to the US did he not go to the one in Australia. He signed up for the one outside of Portland (the Kiwanis rent the space out to them in Washougal, WA) and then he found out from Garth that Garth would actually be coming out from Australia to be a lead at it, so he was looking forward to it even though he was a bit nervous about it as my husband has never been much of a 'joiner'. As you see from the blog post, when I came to get it, suddenly 'uncle Garth' turned a 180 against Dan (and I) and after we left we never heard from him again.
ReplyDeleteI've now had over 5,000 views of this blog post so i'm hoping it's helping protect those who are considering going or have gone and have no one to talk to about it since they try to threaten you with legal action if you talk about it. They've moved their headquarters to Utah (so ironic) and if you google "Adelaide Crows Mankind Project" you'll see how MKP was getting their claws into sports teams in Australia this year...