un Lozada's testimony before the
Senate on the NBN-ZTE kickback scandal was punctuated with episodes of
uncontrolled tearful emotions. The insensitive, callous, impertinent, and
arrogant lawyer of President Gloria Arroyo, Atty. Sergio Apostol, made a racist
remark against the star witness, denigrating him as a "crying boy," and
sarcastically stating that this "probinsyanong intsik should be deported to
China for being a trouble-maker."
Should men cry? Or should this act be a sole monopoly of
women, babies and little boys, as the convention seems to suggest?
A heartless, cold, and brutal man, like Apostol, for
instance, who apparently enjoys swimming with the sharks and prides himself to
be in the safe company of corrupt public officials, seems to have lost his soul,
and, obviously does not cry "because he is a man." Or is he?
Scientifically speaking, men do cry, whenever the situation
or his emotion demands this natural act, because he is a normal human being. He
has feelings, compassion, and tenderness, just like a normal woman or a child.
Yes, men do cry all over the world. And some animals do too.
A survey in London says "British men are abandoning their
stiff upper lip but still do not wear their hearts on their sleeves like
Americans.When it comes to raw emotion, the once buttoned-up Brits are now happy
to shed tears quite openly - but Italians can still 'out-sob' them." French and
Greeks also express their emotions freely, without misplaced, artificial,
unnecessary and terribly unhealthy constraint.
In a survey of 2,000 people, very few had seen their father
cry, compared to twice as many today. Seventy-five percent of men polled
considered crying in public acceptable. Ron Bracey, clinical psychologist
concurred with the survey results.
There is no question that a repressed emotion is not good for
the human being, and that it leads to one degree of depression or another, not
to mention the other adverse psychological impact it has on the individual.
Yes, men do cry. Only real men do, those with the balls, the
guts, the courage, and the confidence in their masculinity cry.
Which men would not shed a tear hearing a dying mother saying
goodbye to her young children, or seeing an innocent child with an incurable
disease, languishing in pain, or witnessing a helpless crippled old lady quietly
crying and hugging her mortally wounded husband on the street following a
hit-and-run?
And who among us men would not get misty when we learn that
the tumor in the body of a loved one was not cancer but a benign one after all?
Or, after winning a sports tournament, a big contest, or after your wife or
daughter safely delivered a healthy baby following a high-risk pregnancy? Or
when your loyal pet, an old good friend, is being put to sleep to end his
misery? Or when you think of the misery of the poor, the neglected, and the
homeless, clothed in rugs and sleeping with empty stomach, victims of the
massive graft and corruption and grave social injustice perpetrated by the
crooked politicians, the elite scum of the earth?
I don't know about you guys out there, but more than three
decades ago, something inside overpowered me and my eyes welled (as my wife
Farida said, competed with the Niagara Falls) as we left our eldest child,
Sheillah, at the Indiana University student dorm in Indianapolis for her
freshman pre-med year. And I was even more than misty at her wedding. During my
welcome remarks as father of the bride, I said I cried in church because I
thought of the anticipated huge bill from the Chicago Hilton for the reception
that evening, and also, that I suddenly remembered we had three more daughters
to go. Even in this particular situation, we see a man fumbling for a humorous
excuse, as if one were needed, to explain his fatherly feelings.
Anyway, I also could not help but allow a tear or two to fall
when I watched It's a Wonderful Life, Schindler's List, The Notebook,
Awakenings, Forrest Gump, Freedom Writers, and some other touching stories. But
two most uncontrollable emotions I had was when my Dad died, 46 years ago at age
46, and when my close friend, Dr. Feliciano Jimenez, passed away a year ago.
Holding the tears back on those occasions hurt; I had to let go.
As someone by the name Stew Frimer said, "Crying is a healthy
response, not an emotional meltdown. It is not something to apologize for.
Crying is a breakthrough, not a breakdown."
Society has unfortunately instilled in us, from early
childhood, that it is inappropriate for big boys and men to cry, only sissies
cry, and that we males must always "stand up like a man." Young boys were
indoctrinated early on to accept pressures and pains "like a man" and to
suppress their emotions, and to project masculinity, confidence and strength,
"no matter what," otherwise we risk our "macho" image and forever ostracized as
a weakling or gay.
There is actually a biological difference between men and
women, which could explain why their tear gland-thresholds vary. Men have less
prolactin, a hormone produced by the pituitary gland, which controls emotional
tears and breast milk. Young males and females have the same amount of this
hormone until about the age of 12. The level in boys then goes down as the level
of testosterone goes up. The corpus callosum of the brain links emotion with
words. Among males, the connection appears to be slower than in women. It takes
men longer to process emotions than women. Hence, women tend to be relatively
more emotional than men.
In his book, "Real Boys," William Pollack, Ph.D. suggests we
adopt a new "boy code"...a code that respects emotions in boys and men, that is
based on honesty rather than fear, communication rather than repression, and
connection rather than disconnection."
Today, modern values require (demand) men to "get in touch"
with their emotions, and for them to be more sensitive and yet masculine and
tough.
As far as crying is concerned, it takes a truly strong man to
be able to cry, especially in public. Boys don't cry, but real men do.
As for Jun Lozada, I fervently pray that his tears would
someday soon cleanse our government of crooks and plunderers, and help save our
people, who are languishing in abject poverty.
With the sad state of our nation today, every decent Filipino anywhere around
the world has every reason to shed tears.