The Problem With Men And Masculinity In The Church - feat. Kurt Francom

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 25 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @KurtFrancom
    @KurtFrancom ปีที่แล้ว +195

    It's always interesting to read the comments and I appreciate the feedback and different perspectives. There is a theme I see coming up a lot that will help me better articulate this concept in the future. Many are defaulting to the "men need to buck up" mentality. This is true, but this message is also part of the problem. It's a "just do more" or "try harder" message filled with shame and doesn't inspire the hearts and minds of men. It's like telling someone struggling with porn to "just stop looking at it" as if they haven't already tried that. Men have tried to "buck up" but have found little strength and support to do so. Men aren't lazy, they are mainly just misunderstood. They need real connection to other men (brotherhood) and mentorship from other masculine men who have experienced more of life. Masculinity bestows masculinity! Messages of "be stronger" by "doing more" don't offer anything to men. It's not a motivational problem, it's a connection problem. Men don't know how to connect with other men and therefore struggle to connect with God. As a church community, we can offer men real connection, brotherhood, purpose, authenticity, and adventure (like we do with youth), and address their core desires rather than their less-than-perfect behavior.

    • @stevehumble8865
      @stevehumble8865 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Kurt I agree with you completely on this. Men definitely need to be around other men and support each other in our struggles of life. I am a convert and was baptized at 16. I had an older father who was not involved much with my life because of bad health issues. After joining the church I learned a great deal about masculinity by being around strong men in the church and also by serving a mission. This influence changed my life and gave me a foundation. As an older middle age guy I see the importance of now passing this on the next generation of younger men.

    • @SirLorenKeely
      @SirLorenKeely ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Amen brother. Good to hear more out there who are working from this angle. And thanks Greg for pinning this.

    • @CMZIEBARTH
      @CMZIEBARTH ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@anthonyrippa686 It wasn't about telling members to interact with each other less.

    • @CMZIEBARTH
      @CMZIEBARTH ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@anthonyrippa686 Please read through Elder Cook's October 2018 general conference talk on this again. Seeing the move as nothing more than "less Church" is a misunderstanding. Also Elder Bednar's talk in April 2019.

    • @rodneyjamesmcguire
      @rodneyjamesmcguire ปีที่แล้ว +23

      My father, USMC Gysgt (Ret.), Vietnam vet, etc., taught me what it means to be a man:
      1) Be gentle, be kind, be humble, be meek, towards others, even if, at times, that means taking pain.
      2) How to fight. To have the confidence that you can take care of business, if you must. This confidence leads to an abhorrence for war and conflict (because you personally know the consequences), something desperately needed in our warmongering world.
      3) When you must fight, when there's no way out, fight, FIGHT. Prevail. Engage the enemy with such ferocity, that they have no choice but to surrender. And, it is honorable to do so.

  • @luddy2009
    @luddy2009 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Brethren, I feel this in my bones. I have felt this level of isolation, loneliness, and deep depression. I love Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. I love the Church. I love President Nelson and all of the General Athorities. I want to love every member of my Ward, and I jump at the chance to go and serve and help anyone, not just members of my Ward. However, none of it seems to really be edifying. Like stated, I only feel a deeper guilt trip at the end of the day, at the end of Elders Quorum, at the end of my meetings for my callings, at the end of Church every Sunday. I've not broken commandments, I've not broken covenants, I'm happily married and sealed in the Temple, have a beautiful daughter, and generally see all of the blessings that Heavenly Father bestows upon me and my family. What I do not feel is the love returned to me from those whom I would like to build friendships with. I don't blame those other brothers; I blame our current social culture. Time is always under stress; what do I do with this small amount of time I have?

  • @ydaani
    @ydaani ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Yes! I’ve been struggling with my feelings of returning to church after years of inactivity. This was one of the main barriers Ive had. I felt like it didn’t offer me much as a man other than hand me an assignment and preach to me about how I need to be kind, gentle, meek, obedient, etc. As a man that makes me feel like I’m resigning myself to a life of feeling “dead inside”.
    Thank you so much. This makes me want to come back to church and help rekindle an atmosphere where men get the attention and encouragement necessary to become actual red-blooded, excited about life, MEN

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Love hearing this.

    • @JerryBtrading
      @JerryBtrading ปีที่แล้ว +2

      This is one of the main reasons I left the church

    • @jeremybelinski7713
      @jeremybelinski7713 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Come back and be a big part of the change. We need MEN back.

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      This talk is just more of the same: "we need to do better". But you start with : "we need to BE...." this or that, and of course always come straight back to "well so how do we DO that", then out comes another list of stuff you have to "DO". Of course IN ADDITION to the load you're already carrying and can't just stop carrying. It assumes you already bring home a nice paycheck that keeps the family and wife minimally satisfied, and you'll keep going to all your meetings and service projects, but now take on another load of tasks designed to bring out your "masculinity". All while a whole generation is struggling just to find that nice paycheck that secures homeownership and the somewhat satisfied wife who can't find any "real men" and all without tearing down any of the stereotypes of what "men" SHOULD be, but just ADDING to them. This talk, in the end, does nothing but INCREASE the burden on men.
      It reminds me so much of taxes. They NEVER go down, but they always have yet another excuse to raise them, supposedly in order to save the minimal services we have, while you actually get less services and more excuses from the government. This is the same: It's a way of saying "men just aren't enough anymore, because you know, the poor women are complaining that there are no good men around." Oh really? Are there any "good women", or have they all become only fans spoiled rotten whiners by social media, insisting they somehow "deserve" the top 0.001% of men, and shouldn't have to "settle" for anything but the best of the best, without bringing anything to the table themselves.
      What's really driving this??

  • @ColemanOutdoors
    @ColemanOutdoors 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    My grandpa, who was an amazing man, even though he wasn't a member of the church, had a monthly get-together with his buddies grandma referred to as, Beer and Pizza.
    I can't tell you how many times I shared this with my EQP in presidency meetings. Call it Beer & Pizza or Green Jello & Funeral Potatoes, bottom line the men aren't MAKING time for BRO-TIME. It frustrates the hell out of me, but it just falls on deaf ears. "We should plan a service project of some kind" would make me want to pull out my wiskers! Services opportunities happen automatically!!! We need that adventure...that time to let our hair down and just be men.
    I loved the discussion. My hope is dudes will wake the heck up and change this, its on us alone.

  • @blakesmith4449
    @blakesmith4449 ปีที่แล้ว +70

    This has been a great discussion. I was recently released as an EQP and I spent my time trying to accomplish what has been discussed. We had activities, barbecues, real service projects, and created a lot of unity and brotherhood. Working to overcome the entrenched mentality about LDS men are supposed to be is challenging. Your discussion about church athletics triggered a not so pleasant memory. My church athletics experience wasn't like yours. I am one of those that is not the least bit athletic, more the artistic musician type. I began playing the piano for priesthood meeting my first Sunday after turning 12 and have been playing piano and organ ever since. My parents wanted me to participate in the athletics so they made sure I got there. I remember one practice where the coach, a big brawny prison guard, took my left handed ball glove from me and gave it to someone else saying, "He will actually use this." Later this coach hit a line drive right to me and I caught it bare handed. There was no way I was going to give him the satisfaction he wanted by dropping the ball no matter how bad it hurt. The coach then said, "I don't mind being put out but I hate being put out by someone like him." I quit going. I found my adventure climbing mountains and have hiked all over the west, seen the top of many western states, have been over 14,000' 5 times and am now working on the Appalachian high points. The sites are always amazing.

    • @jdavidhattaway6257
      @jdavidhattaway6257 ปีที่แล้ว

      Something special happens on a long trail. Hike the PCT in 2017 and half the AT in 2019. It is an adventure.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว +8

      It's admirable how you took action in your ward and in your personal life instead of sitting around complaining about the situation, wishing someone would come along to fix it. Thanks for your example!

    • @ethandenton3393
      @ethandenton3393 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I also feel like there’s just this idea like I can’t do anything that I want to do because there’s so many weekly church responsibilities, and we never get to explore masculinity except on scout camp outs, hikes an scout camp, but once those things are passed, then it’s like we all just drown in church responsibilities for the rest of our lives. Idk, maybe this is just my problem.

    • @aBrewster29
      @aBrewster29 ปีที่แล้ว

      I see value in the individual pieces of what was discussed, but the overall message felt a lot like needing to get back to the good old days of men being men. Notably lacking from this conversation was acknowledgement of or reconcilement with the emerging societal value of inclusivity, or recognition of any of the ways in which yesteryear’s masculinity did include harmful elements, such as what happened in your story.
      I mean, are we really throwing Fred Rodgers under the bus??

    • @TacShooter
      @TacShooter ปีที่แล้ว

      Coach sounded like the prison culture wore off on him.

  • @TrebizondMusic-cm6fp
    @TrebizondMusic-cm6fp ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Even setting up tables and chairs or helping with a move alongside my brothers gives me a fierce joy that I crave. When I was a teenager I didn't especially like being called to help with moves, but something kept me showing up for them, and in time I realized what it was: that working side by sice with other men in a common purpose. I don't even have to particularly get along with or personally like the other men I'm working with. If I'm working alongside them, I'm happy.

  • @epiphanyofsound
    @epiphanyofsound ปีที่แล้ว +109

    Our branch YM recently planned a winter camp out but it got canceled because the MOMS said it was too cold! WOMEN NEED TO ENCOURAGE MASCULINITY!!

    • @nicolethomas8605
      @nicolethomas8605 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agree 100%.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      The Boy Scouts of America used to have a "Year Round Camping Award" for troops that went outdoor camping every month of the year. We loved the challenge and learned the most from winter camping.

    • @melissalarsen6318
      @melissalarsen6318 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      100% agree!

    • @brycenewbold6168
      @brycenewbold6168 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 wow I remember so much from our snow camping trips in my ward Scout troop in Nor Cal. While I can't say that at the time I really ENJOYED freezing at night, it certainly was memorable lol!
      Safety first IMO when it comes to anything, but yes by all means adventure and experience great things, even transforming things, together as quorums and groups, brothers and sisters (and families). 👍

    • @confusedwhynot
      @confusedwhynot ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Crap

  • @suemckinney487
    @suemckinney487 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I wish this subject received more attention from our church leaders. Between our society, our church, and what’s going on politically, our men seem half-dead, fearful, unsure, and unhappy!

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They don't want to get political, or offend the women [who are mostly democrat] in any way, so they won't talk about it. They don't want to offend half the church membership, so their basically gagged.

  • @marilynwebb8003
    @marilynwebb8003 ปีที่แล้ว +72

    The loss of Church sports, to me, has attributed greatly to the decline of the men and boys in our church. This is why.. my husband played church sports all the 50 years we were married. Our 4 sons all played, our daughters played softball and volleyball, so did i. It was some of the funnest greatest memories of our family. The physical exercise, the sportsmanship, and sometime unsportsmanship, ALL were good.. taught us soooooo many good things. Then it all stopped.. why? Our sons that have served in the last 6 years as bishops say kids don't want to do sports.. they don't even know how.. being physically active is a important as being spiritually active.. especially for men and boys.

    • @MrSkoobydoo
      @MrSkoobydoo ปีที่แล้ว +11

      My son would go to Young mens and nothing would be prepared so they would end up playing basketball. I told the leaders that what I told my son, if he shows up and the only activity is basketball, he is free to leave. I love sports and I love the gospel, mixing the two has always been difficult.

    • @tanyarobinson1146
      @tanyarobinson1146 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      For us all the boys did was play sports and bully the boys that were not athletic. My worst decision as a parent was making my son go to young men's activities. I did not know about the bullying until much later. Scouts was a joke. He did get his Eagle, was the first boy in many years to complete the duty to God, and his leaders did very little to help him when they helped the popular boys. Sports are great but should not be the focus of every activity.

    • @nolankarns3332
      @nolankarns3332 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Speaking as a current 17 year old young man they rarely choose important educational physical activities. I would much rather split wood or learn how to build something than play basketball because while it can be fun the standard sports arent lasting experiences.

    • @kevindavis5416
      @kevindavis5416 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@nolankarns3332wait till you are 18 and an adult . Then u can decide anything u want to do . And not what your parents want you to do . Build a homeless house .
      Give to the poor personally . Create . Do the will of God . Hit it with a hammer -
      Brother .

    • @nolankarns3332
      @nolankarns3332 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kevindavis5416 Im already doing a lot of those things youtube.com/@goodtimber this is my families youtube channel Ive built a cabin on a mountain. We had the young men in our ward up for a campout one weekend and one of them even came up on his own the next week to work. Theres something about hard work outdoors that speaks to a mans soul. When you work with trees especially you can feel the soul of the tree. Sorry if Im rambling Im just really passionate about this stuff.

  • @stanleymcomber4844
    @stanleymcomber4844 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The men needed to be teaching in scouts program, as much as the male youth needed it.

  • @jodie672
    @jodie672 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    What a great, much needed and important conversation! As the mother of 3 men I am saddened by the way the whole world is changing their view and treatment of men. This inspires me to advocate for change. Thanks Greg! 👏🏻

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Love it!

  • @nadiadeskins6999
    @nadiadeskins6999 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    “Wing Night” started as a group of EQ friends from our ward would meet up at the local wing diner every few weeks. It was usually an impromptu set up when wings were half price:) It became so popular that friends who were not members of the church got wind of it and loved showing up to chat and just unwind with their male friends. Men need each other! It got so popular that at times there was no room to sit. This was a wonderful missionary opportunity and to this day non member friends and neighbours still text my husband to meet up for “Wing Night”. Ladies, encourage your husbands to get out and be with their buddies! They desperately need it.

    • @intheblue25
      @intheblue25 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes I enjoyed going to those on occasion. Our old ward’s EQ is now doing them too.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      We started breakfast burritos for men first thing on Saturday mornings for guys to sneak out while the kids are still lounging around and hang out. Every second Saturday of the month at my house. Casual and has had great turnout so far. Will definitely give the wing idea a spin when guys want to switch it up for a weeknight. Thanks for sharing this.

    • @danpiedra3910
      @danpiedra3910 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Many would say that it takes them away from focusing on their family. That having a 'guys night out' is counter productive to being a good father. I don't agree but could easily find many that would espouse this idea.

  • @mark1mod08
    @mark1mod08 ปีที่แล้ว +73

    This resonates with me so much. I love the church and even while I do not connect to the Mr Rogers types in the EQ, I value them and what they bring to the quorum. But we have to leave room for other types. There is room in the priesthood of God for aggressive, masculine men who have that part of themselves under control but are capable of exacting harsh correction and even violence when needed.
    The women in the Church are looking for these types of men, as well. There’s not enough. We’ve edged them out and made them feel unwelcome or tried conversion therapy (little tongue in cheek there).
    I’m a war vet who hunts, rides dirt bikes and prefers my solitude and privacy. I also love to serve my community. But there’s little question that modern Church culture has tried to squash those traits out of me. I’ve been told my whole life to essentially be like Mr Rogers.
    We need some Rogers but we need some John Wayne, too. 😁

    • @donaldlatham7040
      @donaldlatham7040 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      tempered, like captain moroni, the prophet joseph.

    • @Avoicecyringinthesuburbs
      @Avoicecyringinthesuburbs ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh man, glad I am not the only one whose noticed this Mr. Roger's. I made my comment before I heard the guest say it.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Most of the prophets are manly men--as was Jesus.

    • @geraldmartin3841
      @geraldmartin3841 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      In my opinion there is also isolation among women. There are clicks and competition rather than encouragement and true understanding.

    • @TacShooter
      @TacShooter ปีที่แล้ว

      Says "Mark 1 Mod 0"... XD Just pointing out that your perspective may not be typical.

  • @Avenger24601
    @Avenger24601 ปีที่แล้ว +65

    This is a super important topic. I’m tired of feeling dead inside and shrinking from taking initiative because I’m concerned about criticism. (All easier said than done. Five decades of “niceness” reeducation both in the Church and in society will do that to a man.)

    • @jillosborn6886
      @jillosborn6886 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Thank you for speaking up! I see so much of this and I feel like it is the reason so many good men are leaving the church...because they are exhausted of feeling dead inside. I am raising 3 boys and I want to teach them to be MEN that ACT in truth and Righteousness and are bold and agents for themselves, not ones that wait to be told what they "should' do. I want them to recognize for themselves what they should do and have the confidence and courage to do it.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I’ve learned the only way to stop criticism is to stop doing things that are worthwhile.
      Both these guys are my heros and get a lot of firing line criticism I’m sure. I asked a mutual friend of Kurt’s a while ago what he did when people were knocking him down and he said he takes a moment to feel the emotion, see if there is any truth in it that can help him be a better man and then steps into Warrior mode and soldiers forward.
      Having a strong Band of Brothers to feed my soul with positivity and strength has helped immensely. Come to AZ bootcamp mentioned by Kurt and hang out with us and see just how good life is when surrounded by men who are seeking Christ, praying for each other, and have each others backs. Greg, would love to see you there too.

    • @franciegwin
      @franciegwin ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If there is any way I can encourage the brothers, I'm a 70 yr old single sister, I want to do that.

    • @noskalborg723
      @noskalborg723 ปีที่แล้ว

      oh my. i still need to watch the video. but these comments make clear that Isaiah has come knocking. I wonder what April General Conference will hold for us.

    • @joshuafusselman3323
      @joshuafusselman3323 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dan, you're a super nice person! Can you give any more specifics on what you mean?

  • @AngelPuff1012
    @AngelPuff1012 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Please keep discussing this! This conversation needs to be heard far and wide in the church. I feel a personal urgency. I have felt like the church is FAILING my husband, for years. (And subsequently worried for my sons). There is a lack of spirituality because he feels he does not like church. He was converted to the church, a church with a different vibe. It all started with being invited to play church basketball.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I’ll keep talking about it.

  • @RA-go4zq
    @RA-go4zq ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Thank you both for discussing this. As a woman in the church I feel like this is extremely important right now. Very good insights and points, thanks for sharing it with us.

  • @joeswife
    @joeswife ปีที่แล้ว +36

    We need strong, diligent, spiritual, masculine men in the church...men who understand what it really means to honor their priesthood and are purposeful in it's use. I'm incredibly grateful to be married to a man like this. He loves and he leads.

    • @digdudemoose2536
      @digdudemoose2536 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Leah. Yes, amen, absolutely! I couldn't agree more with your comment.
      We also need strong, diligent, spiritual feminine women in the church...women who understand what it really means to honor the priesthood and are purposeful in supporting, encouraging, and uniting with their husband in its proper use, to bless the family.
      Just the fact that you recognize your husband as that type of man and express your gratitude for him being that man, shows that you are that type of woman also. It sounds like you are "equally yoked" in your marriage. It sounds like you and your husband have learned and understand that marriage and family life is a team sport that is designed to unite a husband & wife, rather than make them competitors. I compliment you both and admire what you and your husband have. May God bless both of you as you continue to stand united in leading and caring for your family.

    • @Mike-rt2vp
      @Mike-rt2vp ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yeah I think all the lost men already know this. Happy for you though.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      Some women have emasculated the men in their lives.

  • @rachelhaskin5558
    @rachelhaskin5558 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    I can’t help but remember the words of our prophet, reminding us that we won’t survive spiritually without personal revelation. Imagine how men and women could move forward together, following the spirit, making friends, hosting activities, etc? The church doesn’t have to do this FOR us. The task is on us. Follow the spirit, be WORTHY of the spirit and watch the transformations happen.

    • @Ideserveitall
      @Ideserveitall ปีที่แล้ว

      Great reminder Rachel Haskins!

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว +1

      100% this!

    • @tylersingleton9284
      @tylersingleton9284 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The church has beaten down fathers who seek revelation for their families. It is either personal revelation or general authority revelation that is acceptable, but fatherhood is a threat to local control. When a father says his family will be doing something different than the congregation, the church sends men across that farther's threshold to tell him some other revelation supercedes his.

  • @lordpizza4391
    @lordpizza4391 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    It's not just a problem in the church. This is happening in all of America and Europe and we have to realize that we're up against powerful cultural forces that want men to be weak and flimsy husks. It'll require serious effort to reverse the trajectory we're on as a people.

    • @danielcobia7818
      @danielcobia7818 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Those who wish for nothing but greater power for themselves definitely don't want strong defenders among the populace.

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's political. And no one wants to get political, so it's not goin to happen. This is all just talk and pretend. "oh dear, what shall we do? Goodness gracious, well let's discuss it, but make sure we don't offend anyone's political ideology. So.....once again, what can we do about. Well blablablabalblablablablab....and you know blablablablablablablaaaa, and bla blablabaaa, so I suppose blablablaaa. What do you think? Tell me your feeeeelings? do you agree? Oh no let's not offend the politically sensitive individuals in the audience, so blablablaaaa.........."

  • @GrantWilliams-h7o
    @GrantWilliams-h7o ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Im a young man (21). In a recent stake priesthood meeting the theme was centered around this General Conference talk. I’m so glad that the stake addressed the issues facing men right now.
    I’ve also had my fair share of men’s activities being canceled while the women’s activities go unhindered. In my current ysa ward the women had their campout. A few weeks later there was stake campout (for men and women). But no campout was ever planned this summer for the men of the ysa ward. It sucked

    • @tylersingleton9284
      @tylersingleton9284 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Few man ever told their wife she couldn't attend a RS activity, but tons of women have told their husbands they weren't allowed to attend an EC event, especially if it only served the men and didn't force the men to serve a single mother or widow.

  • @jvandusen83
    @jvandusen83 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    @kurtfrancom is my hero. He’s a true Superman battling for the hearts of men. Thank you for having the courage to speak the words my heart needed to hear.

  • @DadBeej
    @DadBeej ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I was attending the Warrior Heart retreat this last weekend when this posted and I have to add a resounding AMEN to everything Kurt and Greg discussed. I was invited by a friend and had no idea what I was getting in to. For 3 days I disconnected from the world so I could connect with God and the transformation in my heart and soul is life changing. When I was seeking what Father would call me, and received a name from him, I was filled with joy and love. It made me feel more alive than anything I've done in years of trying to be a good husband and father. Thank you both for sharing.

    • @austinmartineau5227
      @austinmartineau5227 ปีที่แล้ว

      No offense, but why does it take a retreat for this discovery and transformation to happen? It's really odd that we should be able to get this within the walls of our homes or our quorum, but are forced to go elsewhere for this.

    • @DadBeej
      @DadBeej ปีที่แล้ว

      @@austinmartineau5227 I think the retreat offered what the quorum and my home can't - dedicated space, free of distractions, being disconnected from work and my phone, with time to just focus on the topic at hand. You can pick up Eldredge's book, I highly recommend it, all of the content for the retreat came from there. But just reading it and thinking about what I read didn't prompt the experiences I had at the retreat. Being in the company of the other men, the brotherhood we built, the friendships we started were all facilitated in this event. The retreat is what we all want EQ to be, but our church culture doesn't foster the environment the retreat creates.

  • @mattwebb8234
    @mattwebb8234 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    When I was EQP 5-8 years ago. I was told I was the the best EQP in North America. I don't say this to brag but I must mention that my Stake President instructed me to have weekly meetings with my presidency and find a member to visit. I followed his direction and prepared strong meetings. It lead to the reactivation of several folks and providing a great deal of Service. Our lessons on Sunday were pure fire. I magnified my calling. We don't have folks doing that now. They are filling a slot.

  • @charlesowens8041
    @charlesowens8041 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    There is a difference between being kind and being nice. Being nice is phony, being kind is telling the truth.

  • @h.peace.
    @h.peace. ปีที่แล้ว +33

    This conversation is deeply frustrating. I’m now a single mom who was married in the temple. I have seen and felt the effects personally for my own family due to the many ills men deal with these days. I feel for men. It cannot be easy to be a man in this climate. At the same time, I have sons that I am raising. I want them to feel confident and empowered as sons of God. I don’t want to emasculate them. But what does that look like?
    Church ball was not the answer for my husband. He loved playing, but it did nothing for his inner struggles. I don’t know that the answer is more programs for men. I’m not saying that there is no place for activities for men, but I think the root of the problem is so much deeper.
    It’s makes me think of the quote from Ezra Taft Benson, “The Lord works from the inside out. The world works from the outside in. The world would take people out of the slums. Christ takes the slums out of people, and then they take themselves out of the slums.”
    There are many other women I know who are carrying the heavy load of single motherhood because their husbands have been led by worldly desires in various ways. It is the times we are living in. Only Christ has the power to change our hearts-if we ALLOW him.
    Regarding masculinity, was Christ masculine? I love the lyrics from the song Gethsemane, “The hardest thing that ever was done,
    The greatest pain that ever was known,
    The biggest battle that ever was won-
    This was done by Jesus!
    The fight was won by Jesus!” But what did that look like? What is masculinity? Yes, I want my sons to know that they have power within them to do incredibly hard and challenging things, but more importantly, through Christ they can do all things. What does that look like? It may be different for each of us, but I think one of the problems may be that we all see masculinity so differently. Why not look to the source of all truth for what that is and what that should look like?
    Clearly I don’t have the answers. All I can do is pray and continue to trust in the Lord and act in faith.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Appreciate this!

    • @TheBenJiles
      @TheBenJiles ปีที่แล้ว +4

      This is the question I was hoping they would directly answer as well.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I don't have answers. But I do know the problem relates to a refusal to acknowledge that men and women are fundamentally different creatures. We all need to respect that. Our Heavenly parents are fundamentally different. Gender confusion and feminism are Satan's prime tools to destroy us.

    • @jillosborn6886
      @jillosborn6886 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Loved your comment. Raising 3 boys, the best book I ever listened to was "Mother & Son: The Respect Effect" by Emerson Eggerich.

    • @h.peace.
      @h.peace. ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jillosborn6886 Thanks Jill! I’ll have to check that out.

  • @shanethompson2406
    @shanethompson2406 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    This is the most important podcast you’ve had. Sadly EQ doesn’t offer much to the men. We spend about an hour and a half together each month and hear from the same four guys about their missions and great spiritual achievements. We haven’t had any kind of gathering in over a year.

  • @hu1ksmash1ey
    @hu1ksmash1ey ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I agree with a lot of what was said - I find myself attracted to men who do in fact have their own life, have their own things going for them, enjoys spending time with his friends, is comfortable in his own masculinity. Those things are very attractive. Encouraging the men in our lives to go after the adventure in their hearts is so important because the epidemic of how “dead” men are nowadays really does worry me. What there really needs to be is balance. I don’t know what needs to be done to help resolve this problem, but I just try to love and encourage the men in my life as much as I can 💖

  • @incogneato790
    @incogneato790 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    Serving a mission was my battle/adventure from my primary years up to the end of my mission. My gf waited for me, so I was married less than a year later. Getting my degree and a job was the next battle but after that it was just 'coasting along' with no great battle to fight and I really felt the lack of it. I filled it with getting involved in politics for a while, then with some hobbies that challenged me. Men need something to struggle against, a struggle that is meaningful to them.

  • @nicklarson657
    @nicklarson657 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I love this episode. As a man who has been thru a 3 year addiction addiction recovery program that changed my life & taught me how to be a true version of a man. I fully agree with being real, confident & courageous. Most may mistake this conversation of being a macho man! That's not what being strong is. Willing to be honest, not live in denial, stand for truth, be an example of genuineness. To me, these are what a man...a true man of God is. I'm not an outdoorsman...never really cared much for going camping & hiking. It simply isn't me. However, I believe that these men retreats can hold the same effect by doing different things than going into nature. For example...I once held a men's Saturday get together where we talked about passion, courage, & never giving up. I played a awesome song by skillet - "lions" then shared the story of Sorichio Honda. The founder of Honda & all he went through to achieve his dreams. Love his quote. "Dare to do the things others only dream of." Then we played a race simulator on a 100 foot screen & competed with one another. This allowed me to share my passion of the automotive industry & what i do for a living because God guided me to do what I love with cars. I have a goal to do this at a real race track one day! Me and three friends (brothers) get together once a week and have a real, fun, and engaging place online as we play video games together. Using team work, competing in a healthy way & engaging. Video games are like anything else. They can be used in a bad way, but they aren't inherently bad. My wife fully supports thos because she sees how the connection with men helps me.
    I'm a bishop & I have openly shared my story over the pulpit & its amazing to me the men & women who come up thanking me that I'm so real because it gives them permission to be real & it gives the men in our ward the example of how we need to live who we are. Not some fake facade! I also grew up without a father so showing my two boys what a true man is. Burns in my chest! That comes by being there with my wife and showing them how I treat her, love her so much, & we have honest and respecting conversations.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      thank you for clarifying to people!

    • @nicklarson657
      @nicklarson657 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@CwicShow Thanks for hearing it!

  • @nadiadeskins6999
    @nadiadeskins6999 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    You both hit the nail on the head with your comments, thank you! It’s not a popular stance but it needs to be talked about. Raised by a young widow with no male father figure, I now love relying on my husband to tackle the challenges that are traditionally masculine in nature. I can probably figure out how to change the oil on my car, but I really don’t want to. I’d rather my husband just do it and I’ll make that sandwich thank you very much. Brethren, if you want a challenge, jump into a home renovation project and finish it. Your wife will love you for it and you’ll be quite impressed with yourself too:)

  • @SuperTotoro3
    @SuperTotoro3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This was time well spent!!!! Thank You BOTH!!! Please consider more episodes between the 2 of you - this topic is so central to our healing as a people, or at least in groups/wards etc where people are open to healthy change. So very grateful. This is one of my favorites you've ever done, Greg.

  • @spooniegee
    @spooniegee ปีที่แล้ว +48

    My father and my family converted in 1976 in Connecticut. There were lots of factors. One of them that he credits to his joining the church was church sports. And yes, these were chippy and feisty at many times. However, it was the first that interacted with religious people that were like him. He was a church goer most of his life, and the men were greatly outnumbered by the women the men that attended were soft, subdued and of the Ned Flanders type. Witnessing these examples both good and bad played a key role in his conversion. My dad was a great example to me then as well as today. He has stayed true to the faith over the years.

    • @ljmegross
      @ljmegross ปีที่แล้ว

      Excellent point. Church sports was very competitive, but it was one of the best ways to get men out and doing things together.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      Because of the competitive and aggressive nature of sports men--especially young men--get good socialization from it if care is taken to emphasis sportsmanship.

  • @HurqsWerks
    @HurqsWerks ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Talking about structure (min. 29:30): I felt lost and a little bit abandoned, because I realized I had been viewing life as a series of gates on a conveyor belt. Age 8, get baptized, become a Cub Scout. Age 9 - a Bear Cub Scout; 10 - Webelos Scout; 11 - Boy Scout; 12 - deacon; 14 - teacher; 16 - priest; 18, graduate high school; 19 mission. Then, there were no more gates. I just fell off the conveyor belt onto the floor. I didn't know where to go to figure it out. I'm still trying to figure it out 30 years later. It is hard to connect with other men to figure it out.

    • @candicesummers5427
      @candicesummers5427 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This may be why the new youth program encourages individuals to set their own goals rather than following a predetermined path of goals so that they have the tools and skills necessary to do this when they become adults.

  • @twoplustwoequalsfour48
    @twoplustwoequalsfour48 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is a breath of fresh air! 🫡💯💣💣💣💣🙏☝️💎🪓🔪🧨⚔️🛠️🧰💶💡💡💡💡⏰

  • @raeannaroylance5401
    @raeannaroylance5401 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    A battle to fight
    An adventure to live
    A beauty to love

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว

      Preach it!

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I wrote it on my son's whiteboard, except I changed it to a "woman to champion."

    • @stephaniecousins3094
      @stephaniecousins3094 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rolandsmith4394 I like your adjustment.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@stephaniecousins3094 thanks. It's the romantic in me.

  • @aaronattig5244
    @aaronattig5244 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    I heard 10 seconds of this and immediately felt heard for the first time in a long time. I would love for our seers to not (like it appears to me) only react but to get ahead of the struggles we feel and support us. Just to be heard for me might be support enough. But I lament cause I am heard by two guys I’ve never heard of before and not the men that are suppose to be my shepherds.

    • @stilllearning1160
      @stilllearning1160 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I learned over time that certain (most) church brethren / leaders, were willing to listen to you more to sus out what you thought so they could check up on your 'non- church' thinking or beliefs and as such were at best well meaning policemen. They were not able to be your friend because much of their 'testimony' was attained by learning some good principles and additions to their soul's life, but then mindlessly accepting all other church teachings as certain facts and calling this whole collective of concepts 'knowledge'. They were not free to, nor were they ever encouraged to engage in independent thought. I am not talking about advocating proud or rebellious questionings: - but rather suggest that many are called to rise within the church before they have cut their teeth on the disciplines of character including the disciplines of sound reasoning. So they have much 'knowledge' to questions their soul was not asking not were they willing to stake their soul on to struggle to find out.
      It is a fact to my mind that just as Jesus was allowed to learn certain things 'by the things which He suffered', that so must many of us too: - in fact this is necessary.
      I will be forever grateful to certain brethren (and they are few) who in leadership positions in the church could see the sincerety of a soul's heart beyond all else. Such individuals reflect and display the true love of Christ, without which the world and the church are lost.
      It seems to me that just because a ward needs a bishop or the stake needs a president that there is always someone to call to fill the role. This individual so called and set apart no doubt grows as they apply themselves to the task: but many don't have the wisdom or life experience as a servant of God to where their very best will allow them to effectively help those the are supposed to lead: so they folliw the 'church manual', cling to the prophet etc., but have not had an original thought themselves too much.
      Better perhaps to have 'acting bishops' etc., until enough real men of God have been fired in the kiln of life (under God).
      Thank you for your effort to read this far.

    • @JedWheeler-mo4fb
      @JedWheeler-mo4fb ปีที่แล้ว

      What’s up Aaron?! Hope you’re well! This is the 2nd time I’ve listened to this cause it’s great and saw your comment. I agree with you! I’m serving as EQ President and love this podcast. As I read your comment and as I’m serving as President, I’d love for elders to give me suggestions like you mentioned. If you feel they aren’t being proactive and should address things differently, let them know. I would definitely not be offended and would adjust our discussions. I’m definitely going to be and have been adjusting our activities and meetings. Good luck out there.

    • @majanielsen2480
      @majanielsen2480 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I had the exact same response to the first few seconds, it hit me like lightning. I deal with so much pain and grief over these issues and I agree with you that our leaders are lagging behind these issues. It almost feels as if they are even promoting the problem rather than striving to fix it. I still wait on the Lord with faith in these things. Wishing you the best man.

  • @AaronWerner
    @AaronWerner ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Today is your day! Go fight your battle, win or lose…do it with honor, courage and 100% commitment. If you fail, then you will fail with your head held high!knowing you are among the few that knows what it feels like to be alive! Risk is a must in anything worth doing.

  • @benlomond8055
    @benlomond8055 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Can you get this in front of the brethren? i was VERY UPSET when priesthood session was changed!!! I felt like the Church was acting in acquiescence to pressures of the world saying hey look we're not male shovanists NO we NEED WARRIORS OF THE LORDS TYPE AND THAT WAS OUR MEETING!!!!

    • @personalitymanager1580
      @personalitymanager1580 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hi. My husband passed 1 1/2 years ago. Every Conference he and his boys went out for dinner, after attending conference I thought it was terrible when they stopped that session.

  • @KrisKrisandtheMustacheMan
    @KrisKrisandtheMustacheMan ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Great topic - when my husband was EQP he found two big issues - men thought you had to fit into a specific mold to be active or accepted and men didn’t feel like they had support or friendship at church. My husband did his best to crush both issues. He targeted these two issues - in 18 months he went from 12 men attending EQ meetings to over 90 men attending. We didn’t have a huge move in rate - this was mostly working with activating the current pool of men on the rolls. One thing he did was encourage the men to be men, to step up and lead their families. He encourage the men to socialize outside of church with each other - etc.

  • @Mrsjakenbennit
    @Mrsjakenbennit ปีที่แล้ว +27

    As a YW president, I can testify of the utmost importance of the men in the church. These girls NEED their fathers and they need to know WHY they need their guidance, leadership, and love. The world is very loud, if we aren't teaching our youth then the world will teach them for us...and it will not be good or beneficial to their salvation by any means.
    We need masculine men so we can continue to raise up a righteous people, so we can have good role models for these young women to look up to and to aspire to have in a husband. Not just that, but when the fathers are present and strong in their family's life, it teaches these young women how to respect themselves and what to accept for themselves from others around them.
    We need our fathers to pry into their family's life, to be a little nosy and check in with their children. Open the lines of communication so it chases out shame and the want to hide things. It starts with the men bringing things into the light.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Men need to have purpose in front of their faces constantly. It is what fulfills us. If we are distracted or dissuaded by purpose, we don't know what to do with ourselves. We need more messaging, teaching, and support about purpose, goal, fulfillment with Christ as the example and a look toward the Plan of Salvation.

    • @ED-wired
      @ED-wired ปีที่แล้ว

      💯

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      You have a huge role in this. Teach the ladies to honor and cherish the priesthood held by the men. Ask them to let their dads champion them. Ask them to *find* opportunities to ask for fathers' blessings. Your big challenge is the man haters. Every ward has them, be honest.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว

      I read Strong Fathers Strong Daughters on the urging a female friend and was very humbled at how badly I was failing … but as a father of five I gotta show up and have made a lot of changes.

    • @digdudemoose2536
      @digdudemoose2536 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@roland smith Yes! Yes! Yes! This exactly. All our lives we're taught that we need to be good priesthood holders and lead our family. When we are not supported or even allowed to lead our family in FHE, family prayer, family scripture, family gospel study, give priesthood blessings, participate in family decisions, that is when we become dead inside. When the man in a family is relegated to only be the bank teller who hands all of the money over and then is not respected, appreciated, listened to, or allowed to participate in family decisions, that is when a man dies inside.
      We need to feel needed. We need to be appreciated for the sacrifices we make for our family. Our opinions matter. We need to be trusted and also not lied to.
      The cliché that all a man wants is sex is so shallow and superficial. What a man wants is to be respected, appreciated, needed, trusted, and included.

  • @Avenger24601
    @Avenger24601 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    NSFC (Not Safe for Church) but when the prodigal son came to himself he likely said, “What the hell am I doing? This isn’t me!”

    • @bplionel2
      @bplionel2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      J Golden Kimball approves of this story.

    • @bplionel2
      @bplionel2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@erichays7379 I refuse to call myself a nice guy. Though, I'm still working on being "kind", my goal isn't "niceness".

  • @toddchamberlain782
    @toddchamberlain782 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Need a discussion on how women can be King builders. Great discussion!!!

  • @Mammafly
    @Mammafly ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Thank you! Us women need men’s strength and support. And sometimes that looks like doing the dishes but that’s certainly not all of it. Most of the time I just need my husband’s steadiness. While I’m worrying and crying and feeling like I’m falling apart at times he’s there listening, discussing and comforting me. And I feel validated and whole.

  • @danielwadsworth1014
    @danielwadsworth1014 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    This topic was one of the main things I thought a lot about when I heard the church planned to separate from the Boy Scouts of America. I don't think I fully appreciated scouting while I was a part of it as I should have. I feel I was able to benefit by getting involved in what a young man naturally needs to prepare for being an adult man. Looking back, I believe scouts also provided my adult leaders many of these masculine opportunities you mentioned in this segment. It's very sad to me that, while I was able to experience the best of scouts, my son's will never be able to fully experience and appreciate what that program (joined with the LDS church) meant to me. I guess each generation has one thing or another that they have seen lost in the changing culture as time goes on. As the scout breakup was announced, I was under the impression that the church was going to create an alternative program and was excited to see a program come out and exceed expectations and accomplish what the BSA could never accomplish due to those limitations and various problems under their watch. I understand that President Nelson directed that we need to focus on a church endorsing a gospel centered home (not the other way around) and I definitely agree with that model. I also feel we've lost some of that needed network to get out and be men, especially since COVID.

    • @bettescott950
      @bettescott950 ปีที่แล้ว

      My experience in scouting started with a scout camp in utah, son came back ans said I'm never going again! .. no explanation til the next year when he told me his scout master expected all the boys to get in his sleeping bag 🙄; next was his first R rated movie at leaders house - in basement and other boys "took turns with daughter during movie"; next daughter had first abortion at age 14; went on YSA river run when stake brought more rafts than allowed; stake pres councillor stopped n almost arrested for taking youth down river more times than allowed ... that is tip of iceberg ... all happened in Utah.

    • @dcarts5616
      @dcarts5616 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bettescott950 I hope that you’re exaggerating about the sleeping bag. That’s disgusting. Why weren’t there two leaders present? Rafting story is funny actually, the R movie issue is maddening but normal, but the taking turns with the daughter thing, did this really happen?!? Holy smokes people are messed up. I’m sure the adults were charged for sexual abuse in both cases with the daughter and sleeping bag?

    • @etcomehome39
      @etcomehome39 หลายเดือนก่อน

      My son now a grown man with his own family really enjoyed scouting. We had great male models leading the program. The current setup is not working well I heard.

  • @incogneato790
    @incogneato790 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    My ward had an annual 'Man Camp' every summer until covid. It wasn't a formal church activity, just the men deciding on their own to go do it, every guy 12 and over welcome.

    • @thunderandrain09
      @thunderandrain09 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That reminds me of one family in an old ward who’s daughter was insulted that there was a camp out just for the guys to commemorate the restoration of the Aaronic priesthood and demanded that the girls should be able to go too.
      So it was announced the the daughters were also welcome.
      What a load of crap.

    • @incogneato790
      @incogneato790 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@thunderandrain09 Our stake holds separate YM and YW camps each summer. The church even owns a campground a few hours away and July is reserved for YW camps only. It's a pretty nice place with showers, flush toilets etc. They guys prefer to rough it out in the wilds. Having YW and YM camping together seems like a bad idea to me, and likely against church policy.

    • @thunderandrain09
      @thunderandrain09 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@incogneato790 same.
      I’m talking about the yearly father and sons outing.

  • @littleredhen3218
    @littleredhen3218 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    What an incredible subject to consider! This is a critical topic. We need to spend more time and thought to create venues and incredible adventures that have purpose. Keep talking. Keep bringing this topic up. For the sake of our men and our sons to have purpose and true meaning. Our men are such an under accessed resource. One of our greatest.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว

      Absolutely!

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว

      Thankfully our sons need only turn to God to determine their purpose and true meaning, no?

    • @bobrussell8339
      @bobrussell8339 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheArtOfNurturingHearts Obviously everyone needs to turn to God to find purpose, but when you use the word "only" you make it waaaaaaay too simplistic.

  • @tanyarobinson1146
    @tanyarobinson1146 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Many years ago, when I was a new RS member, just out of young women's, I said, Meekness is not weakness. The Saviour was not weak, he was meek. I was criticized by the teacher, so this line of thought has been happening for decades.

  • @lancebroshar5818
    @lancebroshar5818 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Greg,
    In our ward we have an Elders Quorum breakfast every third Saturday. The attendance ranges from 8 to 14. This breakfast has been going for almost two years. The men that attend love it.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว

      Awesome! Very important.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว

      Curious to know if having the monthly breakfasts has improved the connection felt during EQ meeting on Sundays. Also, has it lead to men connecting with each other to do other activities throughout the week? Or is it just come, eat, and leave. Repeat next month.

    • @lancebroshar5818
      @lancebroshar5818 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TheArtOfNurturingHearts its not just come and eat. We announce any needs in the Quorum. We had two men who were investigating the gospel attend before and each said that getting to know the brethren help them during their conversion process. We have a man attending who has been excommunicated and hopefully the fellowship will assist him in path back to the gospel. During the month of December we invite the spouses to attend. The brethren who attended love it. At one time we had 22 brethren attend the brethren. I hope this answers your questions 🙏

  • @williampaul7932
    @williampaul7932 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This is the best discussion I've heard about masculinity and the Church.

  • @confusedwhynot
    @confusedwhynot ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I wanted a strong man that could show our sons and daughter what it is to be a man of God that loves his family. I wanted him to spend time with worthy men enjoying experiences. Teaching our sons to be men. There isn't enough in the church to build strength in the brotherhood. My husband fell away and didn't spend time with our children. I wanted so much for him, but work was always his priority. I encouraged him to connect with other brethren. I never expected him to be there all the time, but he needed to be there for our family. Everyone needs something outside the Family. I wanted a strong man who wanted to build our family into an eternal family. Thank you for sharing!! My husband was lukewarm in the gospel for years. He wouldn't go with me to the temple. He would get angry with me when I did. He would take the boys to General Priesthood Session. There was so much wrong in our marriage. We were both choosing different paths. He chose the honors of men and worldly things that did not align with being a man of God. I chose God and our family.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Most every woman wants this.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm sure my wife is wrongly saying something like this about me. Divorce is not the answer. Just tell him *you* need him. Most men wouldn't marry in the temple at all, let alone have children, without yearning to be a real man. 60% of divorced are filed by women! That statistic says it all.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      My heart goes out to you. You described me a few years back. I was so steeped in shame about my own struggles I wanted to drag everyone else down to my level. Praying for him to get ignited and feel he is worthy and needed for God’s love.
      What Kurt didn’t mention is that there are always a few men at bootcamp who’s tuition was paid for by their wife and they aren’t sure if they will be invited back into the house when they return. I’ve seen a few make a real turn around. Others are “past feeling” and too comfortable in addiction and or complacency to change right away. Hard lessons.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Perhaps it's not the church that hasn't done enough to build strength with the other brethren, but, rather, not enough strong brethren willing to take the initiative to connect with other brethren. The church provides tools for connection (regular gathering, ministering), but it is the personal responsibility of each of us to do the actual connecting.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@TheArtOfNurturingHearts the church doesn't have any responsibilities outside supporting families and proscribing ordinances. What it does outside of those responsibilities probably hurts more than helps.

  • @danherrin7691
    @danherrin7691 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Good and a much-needed episode! This needs to discussed at church in Elders Quorum, but I'm sure it won't.
    One huge pet peeve of mine is the passive, milquetoast men in the church frequently refer to their wife to make the decisions and say "I better ask the boss first." No woman wants to be married to a man-child where she has to be in the masculine role in marriage or mother him. These guys really should grow some and man up and take the lead.
    Being a "good man" is not the same as being good at being a man. I'm so glad my son decided to join the USMC rather than go on a church mission. He went in a teenage boy and truly became a masculine man after his 4 years.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      It really peeves me when bishops and stake presidents virtue signal to the feminists: "dear sisters and brothers."

    • @kevins4254
      @kevins4254 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I respectfully disagree that no woman wants to be married to a man child. Many women have controlling personalities and they like being in charge of the marriage. The man will often cave in because the woman will take away what he wants. In fact, I live in Utah and many of the LDS men I know are very passive with respect to their wife. They think they are being respectful and loving, but they are actually timid. The women love it because they get whatever they want.

    • @rolandsmith4394
      @rolandsmith4394 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@kevins4254 usually what happens is the wife hooks the man by relying on him and praising his manhood. Later she becomes controlling and demanding, then lastly she demands complete controll. If the husband resists, she brings in the lawyers.

    • @mark1mod08
      @mark1mod08 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I joined the Corps right out of High School and never looked back. My middle son just finished Army basic. Missions aren’t for everyone, despite what is said. But it takes all kinds and I see a lot of value in Missions as well. Regardless, most young men need to head out on an adventure after graduation and before marriage.

    • @vendingdudes
      @vendingdudes ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@rolandsmith4394 I've noticed this and recoiled at the kowtowing to PC that it represents

  • @brice7649
    @brice7649 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I love this topic. It is a tragedy that we don't take the initiative to embrace other men and build a brotherhood. This is something I'm going to work on. Thank you for this discussion.

    • @IBNED
      @IBNED ปีที่แล้ว

      When I also joined the Masons I immediately had friends not just co-workers in a second job. Loved lodge much more than EQ

  • @Mike-rt2vp
    @Mike-rt2vp ปีที่แล้ว +24

    I think the church should bring back some type of athletics League or high adventure program including elders and young men. But personally I feel like the church should adopt a young men's and elders judo / jiu-jitsu program. It is a perfect metaphor for the battle of mortality while maintaining self-control and self-respect.

    • @carlavegas887
      @carlavegas887 ปีที่แล้ว

      That’s an EXCELLENT idea!

    • @darcyharefeld211
      @darcyharefeld211 ปีที่แล้ว

      The church is constantly taking the young men and the leaders on high adventure outings and the ward members are constantly asked to donate to their outings.

    • @bobrussell8339
      @bobrussell8339 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@darcyharefeld211 You must live in a highly unusual ward. Haven't heard of this since scouting was discontinued.

    • @darcyharefeld211
      @darcyharefeld211 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@bobrussell8339 I guess so. The youth, mostly the boys are pretty spoiled in my area. They are taken to many national parks areas to go on high adventure outings. The ward and stake are trying to raise money again for another one.

  • @melindawolfUS
    @melindawolfUS ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I used to work at an addiction treatment center for men and this discussion gets me thinking about one of the things our program did that made ours 10x more successful than any other center in the state of Utah .... our secret was putting the men to work.
    Men build things to build their confidence. Talk therapy is good for is revealing shame in a safe place - but a man doesn't like himself unless he likes what he's BUILDING in the world. These men would pay $8-10k a MONTH to go build fences, feed horses, repair equipment, work with wood and weld steel. And it was incredible how their internal pain was relieved and the majority no longer needed the 'medication' or substance abuse. Too much focus on 'self' in therapy can even create narcissism and it strikes me as a more feminine way of healing. But if you let men use their strength to build something, I think your masculine spirits are healed and edified.
    Instead of sitting together, bored, in another meeting... what if our men are better served by doing something of service or skill with their hands together, side-by-side as men. It kinda gives me chills to think about.
    I can see them in out in force singing hymns in a public place and preaching the gospel, out serving meals to the home-bound as well as administering the sacrament, dressing down to teach the teen boys a gospel lesson about a grafting parable while working in a real orchard. Listening to a conference talk while they whittle wooden toys outside to give to the needy. Even fishing together at a stream while you speak about the fisher of men? Let the spirit guide you ;) I think it's OK to get creative as long as we invite the spirit along.

  • @DonaldRichardson-d6k
    @DonaldRichardson-d6k ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As a long time member of the church, I have found that the opportunities for men are usually centered in the Elder's Quorum, Unfortunately most Elder's Quorums are just another Sunday School class in a different space. I think that most of the things that men would find uplifting could be accomplished in an active Elder's Quorum where all the members of the quorum are bound together by rubbing shoulders together. I have been in such quorums in the past. There was always a full room. The spirit there drew quorum leaders from other wards to experience it and see what they could do to duplicate it. I was an instructor for this group and had the OK of the Quorum leader to institute some programs. First, we, as a quorum, determined that we needed to do significant service projects once a quarter (share our sweat); we would bear our testimonies to each other each first Sunday (share our spirit); every major holiday we talked about our favorite holiday (shared our feelings). In addition, lessons would draw all into the discussion where they would share how they feel about the concept being taught (cause them to evaluate how they were doing on this concept). The last thing was a quarterly quorum social for the elders and their wives. This program was implemented and we became a very spiritual quorum that enjoyed each other and looked forward to work projects, lessons and socials. In less than a year we were the most spiritual quorum in the stake and had numerour visitors from other wards to visit to see what we were doing. The quorum continued until the leader and I were given other assignments.

  • @Xutto80
    @Xutto80 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Circa 1997- My Marine Corps Priest Qourum leader hosted a boxing match for mutual. It was not a lesson. Just wailing on each other. I have always had the same mentality. So I joined the Army right after my mission and went to Iraq and Afghanistan as an Infantryman. I’ve always thought about his good example of masculinity over the past 25 years. Especially the day he choked out a punk kid at scouts.
    I was young men’s basketball coach- only a few played so I invited the young women to join the team. We immediately improved and it was fun until a “mom” complained her son was playing with a girl. Then the Bishop folded like a wimp.
    For me, after 23 years of Army Infantry and 2 wars… I don’t get along with the weakness I see in local church leadership and members. They wouldn’t make it out of the covered wagon parking lot. If I ever return to church activities I’m bringing boxing gloves with me.

  • @artieaprilhemphill148
    @artieaprilhemphill148 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Wow!!! This is incredible! My husband and I have a road trip planned for Saturday, I can’t wait to listen to this and discuss it together! I know he will be as excited about this as I am!

    • @SynnJynn
      @SynnJynn ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I love that even your thumbnail and name showes unity!

  • @ericl2122
    @ericl2122 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Having served as EQP for the last 3 1/2 years, this discussion is on point. That said, even when trying to confront men in quorum about what they “need” from each other or what a quorum needs to be FOR THEM, that question is often met with silence.
    Other issues, and it’s discussed here, is the paltry budget given for men to have activities in the church. Even how the quorum is often shuffled off to the conveniently empty spot in the building for regular meetings (often a stage behind a curtain or a spare bunch of pews in the chapel when other meetings are done), while every other “group” has a dedicated room for their meetings…there is a cultural problem of relegating the EQ to a background role.
    To quote a line from a favorite movie “You people were given a Lamborghini and you treated it like a lawn mower!”…that’s how we use or treat the EQ, and we wonder why the men act like a lawn mower instead of a Lamborghini.

  • @laurimuse1390
    @laurimuse1390 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    Hello
    I’m a mom of 5 sons..
    and very active in the Christian community
    Active LDS member too..
    Other churches get men a ton better than we do!!!
    They have men’s groups!
    They talk about men’s needs and support each other as leaders in their homes openly supporting each other to be great husbands and fathers.
    I’ve spoken for 20 years in our LDS circles how we need this too
    We need Fathers and Sons groups!
    There’s a book called Raising a Modern Day Knight that speaks to this.
    Men are Wild at Heart and have large physical needs.
    Nerds and feminine men are praised in our LDS circles..
    But there are many other types of personalities!

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I agree that our sons need more connection with other boys and men. My son and daughters invite friends over to our house on a regular basis. They plan youth dances (swing dancing with uplifting music) every two months that attract 70+ youth. I've worked hard to connect my sons and daughters with great male and female role models. They are involved with a community choir, as well as an acting group. My children are thriving socially, solely because they make the effort to do so. We cannot possibly expect an organization to fill each of our social needs because each one of us is different with varying needs. We have to be responsible for our own lives. And this is coming from someone who use to isolate herself in her home, waiting for others to reach out, until God gave me a wake up call one day informing me that I would regret not making the effort to connect with those around me. Everyone is lonely. Everyone is waiting for someone to save them from their lonliness. Choosing to connect with others requires effort, but the results are so worth it! Truly, it is the only path to genuine connection. When we adopt greater responsibility, we find greater meaning.

    • @tifthetif6567
      @tifthetif6567 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      They are praised? Not in my lds church.. we called them loosers

    • @Ideserveitall
      @Ideserveitall ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TheArtOfNurturingHearts I love this!!!

    • @EmbraceDiscomfort
      @EmbraceDiscomfort ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Completely agree. There are 2 groups I know of MDK Knights and Squire program(Father/Son camp), that would be great for our men. But I think we have the resources to create something within our church, that has Christ as the foundation.

    • @HaleStorm49
      @HaleStorm49 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hmmm it's interesting that many of the trad wife channels on YT talk about how church is the worst place to meet men. Beta leaning, effeminate, wispy voiced men. I see this as well in the LDS church. Hate to point out the obvious but it correlates with the movement to get women in leadership roles in the church. What women need most of all are masculine competent productive high value worthy priesthood holders.

  • @DerGlaetze
    @DerGlaetze 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I converted to the LDS church when I was 20, in 1975. On my father’s side of the family, there is a long history of participating in one of many philanthropic groups, the Freemasons. This was a great source for many of our not-so-distant patriarchs to enjoy a brotherhood, along with other groups, such as the Rotary, Oddfellows, etc. Men’s needs haven’t changed. However, the demands of the world give little time for extracurricular activities, whether it involves the church or anything else.

  • @flygirl4eva165
    @flygirl4eva165 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    talk about hitting the nail on the head. Our society does not want strong men that’s the message that they are receiving. We need strong men, women love strength.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      This message is not getting to men. They get mixed messages from women. Some things must be learned from strong fathers.

  • @mattwebb8234
    @mattwebb8234 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    A masculine man prepares his lesson. He doesn't read a talk then pause ro see if someone has a question. I have so much to say on this.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว

      Amen!! And watch for who in the audience is checked out or looking uncomfortable. I have a prayer group I ask to pray for the hearts of the men when I’m assigned to teach and to check my ego at the door and go after them like a Lion. One of my favorite titles for Christ is Lion of Judah. When I finally let Him in, He ignited me in ways I didn’t expect, and He invites us to be the same in battling for the hearts of other men and our families.

  • @NamiNoKanki
    @NamiNoKanki ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I figured out pretty early that I didn’t want to have anything to do with marrying in the church so I deliberately and prayerfully dated outside the church. I ended up marrying a “Stealth Mormon”. He was inactive and we were engaged before I found out that he was a member. Our mothers knew each other from Relief Society. He has been active in the church and a masculine leader of our family since the moment he was outed. Our 26th anniversary is next month.

    • @lauries.nicewaner3876
      @lauries.nicewaner3876 ปีที่แล้ว

      Gloom Flower, happy anniversary!!! What a beautiful love story! 😄 Thank you for sharing.

  • @98layton
    @98layton ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Not sure of the solutions you present here, but I agree with the diagnosis. Adventure trips and sports aren't a great fit for all (or even most men) that I know. So it still misses the mark a bit, but this is such an important topic that I hope you keep talking about it. Ultimately men need to know that they are filling an important role and that they are needed-- which they are.

    • @joscelynpease6656
      @joscelynpease6656 ปีที่แล้ว

      Exactly!

    • @parkcityprimarychoosetheright
      @parkcityprimarychoosetheright ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree @98layton.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว

      Very true one size does not fit all. What would be ideal for you 88layton?

    • @zionssuburb
      @zionssuburb ปีที่แล้ว +4

      It's not about the activity, necessarily, though those are great, it's about the hallway conversations, the conversations on the bench or the hike, it's the conversation in the ride to and from, or over the cars in the parking lot after.

    • @tsmithson1
      @tsmithson1 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@zionssuburb Wow, this is 100% correct. Study after study and study show that as men age, they become increasingly islolated, they lack real connection in their lives, and this leads to all sorts of remedies to cope.

  • @TheKandidKate
    @TheKandidKate ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Guys, thanks for being real. You presented a lot of wisdom here.

  • @rbrinks5
    @rbrinks5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is a very important conversation. Outside of an annual golf outing, which only has between 15-20 men, we’ve done nothing as an Elders Quorum in 4 years. As I am typing this, my wife is at her monthly relief society get together.
    Elders Quorum is on life support.

  • @ivanjones6529
    @ivanjones6529 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Ive heard the same principal expressed as: Something to do , Something to hope for, and someone to Love.

  • @vickiejacobsen8497
    @vickiejacobsen8497 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    My husband and I are watching and we love all of your topics ! My husband said the men in the church have had some important things taken away ….. like the Scouting Program ……. And a lot of activities that the church had for the youth when he was young like basketball and softball ! Another thing that has changed through the years is we don’t see the leaders stepping up and being strong with what is going on in the world today ……. They are very quit ……. Geez 🙄 and your right where are the men and where are the leaders in the church ! To much milk toast …… We love the Gospel and the church but we feel like masculinity in the church and society is disappearing !!

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yep.

    • @devincenatiempo2238
      @devincenatiempo2238 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Personally, I'm happy the scout program is gone. Too many people doing it because they were supposed to, not because they wanted (on leader and boy side)
      We are going camping tonight with young men - we don't need scouts for that!

  • @MrSongsword
    @MrSongsword ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I've found elders' quorum very fulfilling. It's not 100%, but I've had wonderful lessons in elders' quorum where the key has been being open to asking hard questions and honest reflection.
    I'm talking about people telling about their struggles: ways they've had to repent (not typically specifics, but their feelings going through it), the sorrow of family becoming estranged from the gospel and church, and then sharing how different men have come at it in different ways. Granted, there is still much to work on.

    • @returnedfrompanama
      @returnedfrompanama ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That sounds too much like Relief Society. I don’t want to share my feelings with other men, and I don’t want to hear about theirs. We should go back to teaching lessons and leave group therapy for the therapists.

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Lot of hurt in some men’s lives drives them into solidarity (speaking from experience), anger, and resentment.
      Christ accepts me how I am now and always invites me to a better place. Being able to be authentic with other men is scary, but man what a better life.

  • @brettneff7900
    @brettneff7900 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Just one word to add: Courage - courage to face the lord and plead for forgiveness, courage to seek the truth and not just assume it, courage to stand up to the narcissists and self-righteousness and judgmentalism that creeps in, and courage to find our own purpose and identity with guidance directly from God. Be courageous, brothers!

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Well said!

    • @h.peace.
      @h.peace. ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Love this!

    • @tylerforbush5862
      @tylerforbush5862 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Bravo, excellent discussion brethren. I hope we can wake up and have some zeal in life . Move forward with purpose and be who we were born to be. I m guilty of the nice guy syndrome I hope I can change. I feel like we can do good and be good by being real . I can see the Lord needs the real us. Not Mr nice guy. That being said we still make good choices.

  • @danielpulsipher301
    @danielpulsipher301 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I appreciate the comments. I have felt that for a longtime that the main issue with the development of our young men is that the prime example of how to be a man is absent. This I believe is multifactorial but the primary reason is the absentee father. Many of these fathers believe that they are doing their best managing all of the different hats that they wear but the priority of which hat they wear is often misguided. Husband, Father, Minister, EQP, Seminary teacher, Bishop ect. They are often gone magnifying their callings forgetting that their duty, priority, and focus should be #1 Husband, Father and then the other things in their life. While the men are at meetings or magnifying their callings, the Mothers are left to raise and model the behavior of these young men. The young men need Men to model the behavior and what it means to be a Man.

  • @benb5512
    @benb5512 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    The world teaches that all masculinity is “toxic.” We’re witnessing the fallout of that nefarious ideology.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Let's all push back. Jesus was masculine. His love and charity were masculine. His adventure was masculine. His mission was masculine.

    • @LDS_Truth_Seeker
      @LDS_Truth_Seeker ปีที่แล้ว +5

      If you stand up for what you think is correct you get called passive aggressive 😔 families are failing throughout the world because of the teachings from the great and spacious building.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว +1

      We don't have to listen to what the world teaches.

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@LDS_Truth_Seeker Tell them in a straightforward and steadfast way--Gordon B. Hinkley comes to mind.

  • @johngreene7790
    @johngreene7790 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I don’t exactly know what you are seeing, or not seeing, in Elders Quorum. I love being in Elders Quorum and am often impressed with the goodness and the strength and the wisdom of the men around me. As to myself, more and more over the years I have been led to ponder the kind of man the Lord expects me to be: lips that they may never speak guile; hands that are strong in wielding the sword of justice in defense of truth and virtue. This is very challenging, especially in a time of exceedingly great mists of darkness. The daily pursuit of these virtues, all the while remembering the patience, the magnanimity, the example of the Savior is, to me, the essence of real masculinity. This has been my battle - and my adventure - for years.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว

      One sees what one desires to see. What one experiences in any given moment is a reflection of the state of their heart. Boredom, unhappiness, loneliness are all choices each individual gets to make. I love your tendency towards self-introspection and self-improvement rather than seeking outside solutions to the problem. This is what true masculinity looks like to me! And thank you for calling it an adventure! True masculinity indeed!

  • @SynnJynn
    @SynnJynn ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I love my husband's toxic masculinity ^-^😂😂😂

    • @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth
      @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth ปีที่แล้ว

      One day I too will enjoy this

    • @brianwaller7383
      @brianwaller7383 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Well I used to be a simp but now I’m more stern so I’ve been called toxic masculinity because I called women out for not accepting accountability.

    • @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth
      @tinacarvalhoBodyandHealth ปีที่แล้ว

      @brianwaller7383 respectfully keep teaching with each discussion

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@brianwaller7383 You're not doing it right. Watch some Gregory Peck.

  • @Crochet_bro
    @Crochet_bro ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Another thing I don't like is when church leaders and society at large joke about the wife always being right or being the "better half". Too many women, even in the church, are internalizing that messaging and always want to get their way. Usually I'm happy to let my wife get the things she wants but every once in a while I need her to listen to me when I need to speak up about something.

    • @digdudemoose2536
      @digdudemoose2536 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Amen brother! This idea of "happy wife, happy life," doesn't work if everything is deferred just to pacify one side of a marriage. Marriage is supposed to be a union of being equally yoked to pull together in the work of family. If happy wife, happy life is the rule, then pretty soon she's likely to feel entitled and he's likely to feel used. That's not a recipe for happiness or growth.

    • @andrewwood6285
      @andrewwood6285 ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree I have heard this attitude expressed so often at church it make it difficult to hear it at church then from every corner of society.

  • @jasonmears4393
    @jasonmears4393 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great discussion, greg. This was excellent 👏 👌 👍. We need to hear more of this. Excellent content!!

  • @rockingrogershomestead
    @rockingrogershomestead ปีที่แล้ว +3

    As a porn addict, 30:58 hits hard for me. I always feel I am just hanging on. I am slowly cutting my triggers, and now I coming to realize that youtube is becoming a trigger. And I now have to cut things from yt or cut it completely.
    Thank you, Cwic, for this faith filled video. I have not finished it yet, but I will.

  • @andrewmaples6755
    @andrewmaples6755 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Great discussion I enjoyed it and am motivated by it. I agree with Kurt's pinned comment though too. I just sent this to a friend of mine and explained to him that this reminds me of what I'll refer to as the zone conference effect. I remember as a missionary getting pumped up from a zone conference but transferring that motivation to real work in the field was difficult. I'm motivated by this but I'm still going to struggle with the now what.

  • @TheYgds
    @TheYgds ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I honestly think this problem could be improved if missions had far less hand-holding. If missions once again became a rite-of-passage, as well as an ecclesiastical priesthood duty, requiring physical and mental rigours, that you did not have relief from in any way. I always noticed how boys came back from dangerous foreign missions as men, while those of us who served closer to home, or in the Euro-Anglosphere more broadly, often return untempered and less formidable. If the Church would cause those from North America to serve abroad, and those abroad to serve in North America, it would serve a two-fold purpose. It would force maturity upon our pampered North American men, and educate missionaries from developing nations on how to operate the Church. Both segments of the Church have some real problems. We have become apathetic, pampered and lacking in formidable male leadership, they have issues of apostate practice and membership retention. The stuff I've heard from guys who served in Zimbabwe, Mexico, the Philippines and Bolivia, from alcoholic Bishops to serially adulterating Elder's Quorum Presidents to taking "loans" from the day's tithing donations. All done with impunity and being shocked the American missionaries had a problem with it. The culture of the Church needs to be re-entrenched internationally. Those outside the bubble need to come in and see that it is possible to have a functioning, relatively repentant and obedient Church population, and those inside need to get out into the dangerous wide world and bring back maturity so we don't die out due to a demographic catastrophe. Both parts can learn from the other, and I think they were for the earlier part of the Church's history, but since we started sending people on missions to their "own lands", we've lost something important.
    Not enough of our young men are serving missions anyhow. We have about the same number of missionaries now, as we did in the 1980s iirc, despite the Church being many times larger now than it was then in terms of on-the-record membership. If boys are not tried in fire, they don't become men, and we've been turning down the heat far too much recently.

    • @tacotuesday1960
      @tacotuesday1960 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I would say the mission is still very much a rite of passage. The reason there are less missionaries is because there are less active young men. The church/life long members might not realize it but asking people to serve for two years away from everything they know is a HUGE sacrifice. If the young men don’t have testimonies they aren’t going to be willing to make that sacrifice and they don’t care what the church says about it. Also I think the missionaries we have now are overall better quality. My mission had half the missionaries it used to have compared to before COVID and was still just as effective(in terms of numbers). If you’re an active member I would say that the expectation to go is still just as strong especially with recent conferences. I don’t know when you served but I definitely felt the pressure to serve still. It was both a good and terrible experience that I would never do again but I’m glad I went. Also I don’t necessarily agree on sending lots of missionaries more foreign(I served in Latin America btw) the ideal is to have a mission more of people that know the culture, language and the people. And I assure you just because you go state side doesn’t mean that you have an easy mission, I’ve heard plenty of stories. The real test of a mission is more the spiritual side and especially when you get home applying the things to your own life.

    • @LT72884
      @LT72884 ปีที่แล้ว

      North Americans, especially utahns are very pampered regardless of the church. TIK-TOK, youtube, facebook, instagram, twitter, telegraph, have made americans a bunch of whiny ass sissies. I work at a treatment center for youth with drug, alcohol, and sex addiction and the first thing we do... cut ALL social media out. They do not have access to smart phones or laptops. These boys have had everything handed to them in life.
      Social media has done so much damage to society because it allows me to say whatever the hell i want without any repercussions. Social media has ruined both male and female roles in the world. social media has caused more depression, suicides, and mental illness than we give it credit.

    • @tsmithson1
      @tsmithson1 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I don't think much of what you stated is either true or helpful. We don't need to re-entrench culture. Our culture is part of the problem, not the solution.

    • @LT72884
      @LT72884 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tsmithson1 agreed.

  • @colleencurtis3031
    @colleencurtis3031 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    My dad came back to church mainly because of all the years he had played softball, basketball, and volleyball

  • @jeffbarnes8117
    @jeffbarnes8117 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I was called to the EQ Presidency right when the HPQ and the EQ were combined, and when I was asked to share my testimony at the first Quorum meeting, I started by saying how excited I was that we just doubled our budget. The Stake President didn’t laugh. He made a comment like, “well, we’ll have to talk about that…”
    Then we started an annual Shot Guns and Sushi event at the gun range. Best attended EQ event ever.

    • @TheBenJiles
      @TheBenJiles ปีที่แล้ว

      😂

    • @peteraferguson88
      @peteraferguson88 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Sign me up! Definitely going to have a shotgun sushi night in tucson!

    • @tsmithson1
      @tsmithson1 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's about community. Community is Com (shared) unity, this IS what the ancient translation in both Aramaic and Hebrew means. Alaha and Eloah, which we usually here as Elohim. The IM makes the noun plural, as in Seraph(im) and Cherib(im). Elohim means unity, meaning more than one thing functioning as one.
      We spend so much time attending to our loyalty and assent to truth propositions, that we have neglected often to LIVE the gospel by sharing life, baring burdens, and really creating connections (relationships) that are strong enough to transcend death.

    • @jeffbarnes8117
      @jeffbarnes8117 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@peteraferguson88 not everyone likes sushi. So, we’ve done Shotguns and Salsa as well😂 great activity!!

  • @bwolsey
    @bwolsey ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I feel the only thing missing from this is the discussion of the scouting program
    and the great impact it had upon us as men growing up. It was a sad day when we stepped away from our partnership from BSOA but I know It needed to be done as our common values distanced. I’m just surprised it hasn’t been replaced with something similar (maybe I’m out of the loop since I don’t work with the youth) but I just know the impact it had on me and my masculine journey. Great video, I shared it with lots of friends, including women, that can help push this call to masculinity again.

    • @davidfrey5654
      @davidfrey5654 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I thought it was going to be replaced with something similar. But nothing. With all the talents and skills we have in this church, surely we could have come up with something similar. Perhaps there are more aspects to the situation we don't know about. But it's left a big hole.

  • @lynaryoung7903
    @lynaryoung7903 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Very good discussion. I really needed this! Thanks so much!!

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @chrissybutterfield6670
    @chrissybutterfield6670 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Also, my understanding was that they decreased the number of extra-curricular church sponsored activities because people’s lives were being consumed by church activities and people were neglecting their families.

  • @cognitiveresonance339
    @cognitiveresonance339 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    One massive problem I've noticed in the church is that men and women with red personalities truly believe that everybody with non-red personalities is just going about life all wrong. People need to understand that every personality type has its strengths, and God did not place them by mistake.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Agreed. But that doesn't take away from the fact that righteous masculinity is seeping through the cracks.

    • @cognitiveresonance339
      @cognitiveresonance339 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      @@CwicShow Correct. The way I see it; toxicity and masculinity are mutually exclusive. The moment a man exhibits toxic behavior, his behavior ceases to be masculine. "Toxic masculinity" is an oxymoron. And toxicity can manifest as being shiftless and unmotivated. Something in our culture is attacking productive men.

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@cognitiveresonance339 Without question.

    • @Latterdaysaintcrunchymom
      @Latterdaysaintcrunchymom ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yeah my hubs is a blue. He is meek but man he is my strength and we all fall apart without him.

    • @theephraimite
      @theephraimite ปีที่แล้ว

      What’s even worse is that blue keeps accusing red of many things blue is guilty of doing most of the time.

  • @jum5238
    @jum5238 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Recently went out with my ministering partner for the first time since being assigned together 8+ months ago. It was sunday, I showed up at his house not having changed from church and he was casually dressed. His wife told him to get dressed up to go. He complained about going out, saying that things were supposed to have changed, right? We can text, etc. He was looking for rules, and I kept trying to explain it's not about rules, it's about reaching out and loving people. Not showing up on the last day of a month and giving a small lesson. We both work from home, and yes, feel more comfortable there, but we're missing the need to go out and visit with others.. and with each other. I don't know how to get people to better understand how to be a friend to others. This is at the crux of why our society is falling apart - no love for one another (and no, I'm not talking about sex). Honest caring for one another, yes, at the risk of being hurt or inconvenienced. I have my struggles with this as well, with a wife that keeps trying to find reasons for me not to serve others, but to let other people help themselves. She's had two prior husbands who have left or betrayed her, and I am dealing with her worry about being abandoned. And meanwhile she's pushing me away with the controlling.

  • @TheBensMeister
    @TheBensMeister ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Best EQ activity I attended was a shooting night at a brother's house who built a gun range under his back yard, with a BBQ above ground. A few years later I was now EQ president and held a similar activity. Mine wasn't as great, but still lots of fun. Expensive, but fun. If I were to do it again I would plan a lot better and make sure the potluck wasn't all just bags of chips. We had a lot of chips, but not much else other than the burgers. lol

  • @roughout
    @roughout ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Traditional men activities: helping each other with branding cattle (roping and dragging cattle to the fire), getting together to help each other with harvest, hunting or fishing trip, recreational roping, softball or basketball games, wood cutting. Instead of these kind of activities we are expected to tolerate femishness to do nothing but talk platitudes.

  • @geraldfigueira4393
    @geraldfigueira4393 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow! I saw myself in this discussion. Worthy of my further consideration. Thank you.

  • @celindahearld1328
    @celindahearld1328 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You 2 men are great examples if REAL MEN! Thank you for saying these things that NEED to be said . Women need to understand they need to support, encourage their husbands to be real men.

  • @keyyanarshad7321
    @keyyanarshad7321 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great stuff Greg! My fellow men. Please step it up!
    We need stronger men in the Church that honor God and themselves as His strong sons! The values of confidence, honor, hard work, strength and not being so soft - are JUST as necessary to pursue - as Christlike attributes and virtues.
    I love this episode!

    • @CwicShow
      @CwicShow  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for the feedback!

    • @joscelynpease6656
      @joscelynpease6656 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, truly great Christlike attributes!

  • @AVTRCuddy
    @AVTRCuddy ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Spent the last four years of trying to rid myself of nice guy behavior portrayed by some church leaders and mainstream media. Women I date now LOVE it and comment all the time how they finally feel like they can relax and feel feminine for a change. That’s why James Bond is so popular- bold, daring, strong, passionate, disciplined and in control of himself and his emotional center.

    • @joshuafusselman3323
      @joshuafusselman3323 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Could you give some specific examples of nice guy behavior that you have tried to rid yourself of?

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      Men need to be potentially dangerous as warriors--but bridled.

    • @FebbieG
      @FebbieG ปีที่แล้ว

      I love that my husband is more disagreeable than I'm usually comfortable with. His loud complaining at the NICU got our baby the X-ray for his arm that he needed, (10 lbs. didn't need the NICU, but they put him there because he was born at home), and his further loud complaining got us discharged without an overnight stay. The midwife said that was the fastest she had ever seen a baby with something similar be discharged. I was cringing the whole time he was complaining, but in the end so grateful to be going home to rest with our baby.

  • @ashjohstoneaux7615
    @ashjohstoneaux7615 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I left the LDS church three years ago. I experienced the effects of becoming the submissive Mr. Nice Guy. Part of which included heightened anxiety and insecurity in my relationships (which is not attractive). On the other side of my journey in my post-Mormon world many of the criticisms include highlighting and deconstructing hierarchy, patriarchy, and toxic masculinity. Thus providing insight to me that it's useful to not take any virtue or concept to extremes. I also grew up with a father who didn't have a father, who didn't know how to father - he found his identity in Mormonism and is kind and submissive before anything else. Kindness is a wonderful trait and so is courage, strength, assertiveness, and standing for values of dignity, respect, love, safety, protection, and family. I've been attempting to carve out my balancing point with masculinity. I used to float day by day in my perceived role as a man (i.e. Mr. Nice Guy) whereas now I take ownership of my finances, my fitness, my education and critical thinking, and my relationships. Rather than have my first move be to defer I now utilize dialogue and consider what I want and what others want. I aim for collaborative and connected - and I don't hit the bullseye every time and that's okay. I do take it upon myself to learn how to improve. As Kurt points out, connection leads to developing insights related to mental and emotional wellness that can be used daily to provide, protect, and connect. I believe many men in the LDS church and out of the LDS church are looking to find relationships that are supportive of a fulfilling life.

    • @psychlops924
      @psychlops924 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nearly all men in the Western world struggle with that lack of meaning. That’s why Jordan Peterson is selling out arenas in hundreds of cities across the globe- just to listen to him speak. That’s why John Vervaeke, professor of Psychology and a cognitive neuroscientist at the U of Toronto, has a 50 part series here on TH-cam called “The Meaning Crisis”, that has millions of views. Those of us in the church need to do better at discussing this, both with our fellow brethren as well as those not of our faith. The truth about meaning is that it comes as we pursue worthwhile goals - the adventure of our life - and as we build genuine human connections.

    • @StThomasAquantus
      @StThomasAquantus ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What were you submissive to? Hope you don't mind me asking. I ask because being submissive to "the church" or other men will become a nightmare over time. Submitting to God, on the other hand, is entirely different and is a spiritual act, not a social act. If you submit to God, you will actually end up being more secure, happy, at peace, courageous, wise, fearless, kind, humble, and even powerful. Why? Because God has every good quality to the highest degree, and He will grant you some of His power. But He can't do it unless you submit.

  • @sandrawaltz7035
    @sandrawaltz7035 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Men need to have male friends to do things with( go to a ball game, hunting or fishing trip, golfing), etc as much as women need women friends to go shopping, lunch, a chick flick with. I miss the days when there were bball games and leagues in the church.
    I miss the "strong" masculine men who want to be the protector and provider.

  • @richhaubrich6967
    @richhaubrich6967 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    So true. Thanks for the discussion. I feel that Jesus is my hero; that kind of thinking would help. You are right on. A good strong man in the church and the family helps.
    What should the church and EQ and Young Men’s group be teaching; how should the church be dealing with this extremely relevant issue.
    Loved the whole discussion. I. Know we can do better.

  • @bradman1984
    @bradman1984 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have to make one more comment and share an experience I had in 2019. My counselors and I planned a fathers and sons campout. The question came up if we should make it fathers and kids. I said no. We won't turn away or discourage fathers that want to bring their daughters, and single dads, and dads with no sons are strongly wanted there and we gave specific assignments for them to fulfill so they had to be there, but this campout is specifically for men and boys. I got some kickback for saying it is only for men and boys from some men and women in the ward and from our ward council. We had everyone bring their own dinner, and we had the young men make some chicken and rolls for people coming late from work that couldn't get or make dinner. After dinner we sat around a fire and had a fireside about what the priesthood is and what it means to be a holder of the priesthood. We had a dutch oven dessert and marshmallows and the boys played. night games. We had breakfast together, cleaned up, and went home. Long story short, at the end of the campout I had several young men and several dads (not father and son talking to me together) tell me that this was the best activity they have had in the Church. It is not the Church's responsibility to fix everything that is happening with men and boys, but it is small and simple things like that, if done over time, that will make a great impact for good. It was really an eye opening experience for me.

    • @TheArtOfNurturingHearts
      @TheArtOfNurturingHearts ปีที่แล้ว

      Love seeing individuals take action, realizing that it is not the Church's responsibiility to fix everything. Thank you for your efforts! Our ward has a yearly Priesthood Commemoration campout, that replaced the father's and son campout, which is similar to the one you described. Keep up the good work!

    • @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096
      @silbannacusofoxyrhynchus6096 ปีที่แล้ว

      This is a problem--turning every male activity into a mixed activity. It is a great loss. This has been progressing for decades. Feminism was good until it became radical.

  • @drmarcdavis
    @drmarcdavis ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great podcast! Helps me to be okay having healthy fun. Listened to it while driving my sports car on twisty roads! 😊❤

  • @barbarabailey6833
    @barbarabailey6833 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Niceness makes me want to throw up! It is definitely not a virtue! I know kindness is a virtue but that word has become another throw up word for me! I don’t know when kindness became accepting of anything that others say is right! I feel this has put us on the slippery slope of destruction!
    I love that someone, men like both of you, have seen the need for some realistic bonding and challenging ideas and activities for men to be men! As a woman I see the extreme need for masculine men!💖

  • @alexmunro2640
    @alexmunro2640 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Another quate that goes with this topics "Happy Wife happy life" this adds to the issue of men staying home and shinking.
    I have seen in my own life and others where to keep the wife happy they don't do things or go "out with the boys " and it leading to the issues discussed and other mental health issues.
    You are correct in that budgets are screwed toward the youth and then to Relief society. And elders a lot of time get the left overs which in my history was maybe 100 or 200 dollars a year.
    Currently the ward i am in has a game night every few months for the Elders but I agree more can be done to encourage and promote these attributes in men and for some more masculine activities done. The next thing would need to get them to come.

  • @emjm9383
    @emjm9383 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    love the talk- thank you! for the 30 years of my adult life, i bristled to my core when i've been told that i wasn't nice enough or polished enough. immediately i'd think, "screw you and your judgement". i'm good at some stuff that you're not good at, and vice versa. i sat in a bishopric meeting once where someone said that they were worried that there wasn't a calling for brother so-and-so because he wasn't nice enough. i couldn't help but say, "well go tell Jesus that there's no place for that brother in His church". "The false traditions of our fathers".