Yesterday I was at the mall changing my daughter in the Men's room, baby talking to her, being very affectionate, etc. Particularly when alone with the baby, I love to embrace the chance to "mother" her as much as possible...
Anyway, these two guys get done at the urinals, and walk past me... They are a bit, ahem... rustic. Redneck-y would be the less polite term for it... The older one (who I soon realize is the father of the younger one) points at me and says "see, THAT'S a real man, son." While intended as a compliment, it still made me uncomfortable, particularly when the Dad started telling me how his obviously teenage son had his own child on the way.
My first thought was "if you only knew, dude..." But then I got to thinking about how I've been told that "it's ok for a guy to be the way you are." My mom is the queen of this, trying to argue that I should try harder to be happy as a sensitive, emotional, affectionate man.
It's so hard to get across to people that even though you CAN live "successfully" as a man, that doesn't mean you want to, or that it would make you happy. For brief moments, there's sometimes a part of me that thinks "you could be a good male role model for your children, because you are not a typical guy."
But it always comes back to this: I'm not happy as a man. I slog through the days, I function, but I'm not happy. I'm beginning to come around to the idea that my children deserve a happy parent, even if it means both parents end up as girls.