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Article 9

Boys will be Boys


Developmental research has been focused on girls; now its their brothers turn.
Boys need help, too, but first they need to be understood.

BY BARBARA KANTROWITZ AND CLAUDIA KALB

I T WAS A CLASSIC MARS-VENUS EN-


COUNTER. Only in this case, the woman
gather observations for her doctoral dis-
sertation on human development. His
much more boy-savvy, Chu has a differ-
ent interpretation: the gunplay wasnt
was from Harvard and the manwell, greeting was startling: he held up his fin- hostileit was just a way for him to say
boywas a 4-year-old at a suburban Bos- ger as if it were a gun and pretended to hello. They dont mean it to have harsh
ton nursery school. Graduate student Judy shoot her. I felt bad, Chu recalls. I felt consequences. Its a way for them to con-
Chu was in his classroom last fall to as if he didnt like me. Months later and nect.

SOURCES: DR. MICHAEL THOMPSON, BARNEY BRAWER. RESEARCH BY BILL VOURVOULIASNEWSWEEK

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Article 9. Boys will be Boys

Researchers like Chu are discovering even essential to survival. If Huck Finn or awfully different. I think were awaken-
new meaning in lots of things boys have Tom Sawyer were alive today, says ing to the biological realities and the socio-
done for ages. In fact, theyre dissecting Michael Gurian, author of The Wonder of logical realities.
just about every aspect of the developing Boys, wed say they had ADD or a con- But what exactly is the essential nature
male psyche and creating a hot new field of duct disorder. He says one of the new in- of boys? Even as infants, boys and girls be-
inquiry: the study of boys. Theyre also sights were gaining about boys is a very have differently. A recent study at Chil-
producing a slew of books with titles like old one: boys will be boys. They are who drens Hospital in Boston found that boy
Real Boys: Rescuing Our Sons From the they are, says Gurian, and we need to babies are more emotionally expressive;
Myths of Boyhood and Raising Cain: love them for who they are. Lets not try to girls are more reflective. (That means boy
Protecting the Emotional Life of Boys rewire them. babies tend to cry when theyre unhappy;
that will hit the stores in the next few Indirectly, boys are benefiting from all girl babies suck their thumbs.) This could
months. the research done on girls, especially the indicate that girls are innately more able to
What some researchers are finding is landmark work by Harvard Universitys control their emotions. Boys have higher
that boys and girls really are from two dif- Carol Gilligan. Her 1982 book, In a Dif- levels of testosterone and lower levels of
ferent planets. But since the two sexes ferent Voice: Psychological Theory and the neurotransmitter serotonin, which in-
have to live together here on Earth, they Womens Development, inspired Take hibits aggression and impulsivity. That
should be raised with special consideration Our Daughters to Work Day, along with may help explain why more males than fe-
for their distinct needs. Boys and girls have best-selling spinoffs like Mary Piphers males carry through with suicide, become
different crisis points, experts say, Reviving Ophelia. The traditional, uni- alcoholics and are diagnosed with ADD.
stages in their emotional and social devel- sex way of looking at child development The developmental research on the im-
opment where things can go very wrong. was profoundly flawed, Gilligan says: It pact of these physiological differences is
Until recently, girls got all the attention. was like having a one-dimensional per- still in the embryonic stage, but psycholo-
But boys need help, too. Theyre much spective on a two-dimensional scene. At gists are drawing some interesting compar-
more likely than girls to have discipline Harvard, where she chairs the gender-stud- isons between girls and boys (chart). For
problems at school and to be diagnosed ies department, Gilligan is now supervis- girls, the first crisis point often comes in
with attention deficit disorder (ADD). ing work on males, including Chus early adolescence. Until then, Gilligan and
Boys far outnumber girls in special-educa- project. Other researchers are studying others found, girls have an enormous ca-
tion classes. Theyre also more likely to mental illness and violence in boys. pacity for establishing relationships and
commit violent crimes and end up in jail. While girls horizons have been ex- interpreting emotions. But in their early
Consider the headlines: Jonesboro, Ark.; panding, boys have narrowed, confined to teens, girls clamp down, squash their emo-
Paducah, Ky.; Pearl, Miss. In all these rigid ideas of acceptable male behavior no tions, blunt their insight. Their self-esteem
school shootings, the perpetrators were matter how hard their parents tried to avoid plummets. The first crisis point for boys
young adolescent boys. stereotypes. The macho ideal still rules. comes much earlier, researchers now say.
Even normal boy behavior has come to We gave boys dolls and they used them as Theres an outbreak of symptoms at age
be considered pathological in the wake of guns, says Gurian. For 15 years, all we 5, 6, 7, just like you see in girls at 11, 12,
the feminist movement. An abundance of heard was that [gender differences] were 13, says Gilligan. Problems at this age in-
physical energy and the urge to conquer all about socialization. Parents who raised clude bed-wetting and separation anxiety.
these are normal male characteristics, and their kids through that period said in the They dont have the language or experi-
in an earlier age they were good things, end, Thats not true. Boys and girls can be ence to articulate it fully, she says, but

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ANNUAL EDITIONS

the feelings are no less intense. Thats chiatry at Harvard Medical School. But tion against everything from smoking to
why Gilligans student Chu is studying we havent done that as much with men. suicide.
preschoolers. For girls at this age, Chu Were afraid that if theyre too soft, thats For San Francisco Chronicle columnist
says, hugging a parent goodbye is almost all they can be. Adnir Lara, that message sank in when she
a nonissue. But little boys, who display a And the demands placed on boys in the was traveling to New York a few years ago
great deal of tenderness, soon begin to early years of elementary school can in- with her son, then 15. She sat next to a
bury it with big boy behavior to avoid crease their overall stress levels. Scientists woman who told her that until recently she
being called sissies. When their parents have known for years that boys and girls would have had to change seats because
drop them off, they want to be close and develop physically and intellectually at she would not have been able to bear the
want to be held, but not in front of other very different rates (time-line). Boys fine pain of seeing a teenage son and mother to-
people, says Chu. Even as early as 4, motor skillsthe ability to hold a pencil, gether. The womans son was 17 when his
theyre already aware of those masculine for exampleare usually considerably be- girlfriend dumped him; he went into the
stereotypes and are negotiating their way hind girls. They often learn to read later. At garage and killed himself. This story
around them. the same time, theyre much more active made me aware that with a boy especially,
Its a phenomenon that parents, espe- not the best combination for academic ad- you have to keep talking because they
cially mothers, know well. One morning vancement. Boys feel like school is a dont come and talk to you, she says.
last month, Lori Dube, a 37-year-old game rigged against them, says Michael Laras son is now 17; she also has a 19-
mother of three from Evanston, Ill., visited Thompson, coauthor with Kindlon of year-old daughter. My daughter stalked
her oldest son, Abe, almost 5, at his nurs- Raising Cain. The things at which they me. She followed me from room to room.
ery school, where he was having lunch excelgross motor skills, visual and spa- She was yelling, but she was in touch.
with his friends. She kissed him, prompt- tial skills, their exuberancedo not find as Boys dont do that. They leave the room
ing another boy to comment scornfully: good a reception in school as the things and you dont know what theyre feeling.
Do you know what your mom just did? girls excel at. Boys (and girls) are also in Her son is now 6 feet 3. Hes a man. There
She kissed you! Dube acknowledges, academic programs at much younger ages are barriers. You have to reach through
with some sadness, that shell have to be than they used to be, increasing the that and remember to ruffle his hair.
more sensitive to Abes new reactions to chances that males will be forced to sit still With the high rate of divorce, many
future public displays of affection. Even before they are ready. The result, for many boys are growing up without any adult men
if he loves it, hes getting these messages boys, is frustration, says Thompson: By in their lives at all. Don Elium, coauthor of
that its not good. fourth grade, theyre saying the teachers the best-selling 1992 book Raising a
Theres a strugglea desire and need like girls better. Son, says that with troubled boys, theres
for warmth on the one hand and a pull to- A second crisis point for boys occurs often a common theme: distant, unin-
ward independence on the other. Boys like around the same time their sisters are stum- volved fathers, and mothers who have
Abe are going through what psychologists bling, in early adolescence. By then, say taken on more responsibility to fill the gap.
long ago declared an integral part of grow- Thompson and Kindlon, boys go one step That was the case with Raymundo Infante
ing up: individualization and disconnec- further in their drive to be real guys. They Jr., a 16-year-old high-school junior, who
tion from parents, especially mothers. But partake in a culture of cruelty, enforcing lives with his mother, Mildred, 38, a hospi-
now some researchers think that process is male stereotypes on one another. Any- tal administrative assistant in Chicago, and
too abrupt. When boys repress normal feel- thing tender, anything compassionate or his sister, Vanessa, 19. His parents di-
ings like love because of social pressure, too artistic is labeled gay, says Thompson. vorced when he was a baby and he had lit-
says William Pollack, head of the Center The homophobia of boys in the 11, 12, 13 tle contact with his father until a year ago.
for Men at Bostons McLean Hospital and range is a stronger force than gravity. The hurt built upin sixth grade,
author of the forthcoming Real Boys, Boys who refuse to fit the mold suffer. Raymundo was so depressed that he told a
theyve lost contact with the genuine na- Glo Wellman of the California Parenting classmate he wanted to kill himself. The
ture of who they are and what they feel. Institute in Santa Rosa has three sons, 22, classmate told the teacher, who told a
Boys are in a silent crisis. The only time 19 and 12. One of her boys, she says, is a counselor, and Raymundo saw a psychia-
we notice it is when they pull the trigger. nontypical boy: hes very sensitive and trist for a year. I felt that I just wasnt
No one is saying that acting like Rambo caring and creative and artistic. Not sur- good enough, or he just didnt want me,
in nursery school leads directly to trage- prisingly, he had the most difficulty grow- Raymundo says. Last year Raymundo fi-
dies like Jonesboro. But researchers do ing up, she says. Weve got a long way to nally confronted his dad, who works two
think that boys who are forced to shut go to help boys to have a sense that they jobsin an office and on a construction
down positive emotions are left with only can be anything they want to be. crewand accused him of caring more
one socially acceptable outlet: anger. The In later adolescence, the once affection- about work than about his son. Now the
cultural ideals boys are exposed to in mov- ate toddler has been replaced by a sulky two spend time together on weekends and
ies and on TV still emphasize traditional stranger who often acts as though torture sometimes go shopping, but there is still a
masculine roleswarrior, rogue, adven- would be preferable to a brief exchange of huge gap of lost years.
turerwith heavy doses of violence. For words with Mom or Dad. Parents have to Black boys are especially vulnerable,
every Mr. Mom, there are a dozen Termi- try even harder to keep in touch. Boys want since they are more likely than whites to
nators. The feminist movement has done and need the attention, but often just dont grow up in homes without fathers. Theyre
a great job of convincing people that a know how to ask for it. In a recent national often on their own much sooner than
woman can be nurturing and a mother and poll, teenagers named their parents as their whites. Black leaders are looking for alter-
a tough trial lawyer at the same time, says No. 1 heroes. Researchers say a strong pa- natives. In Atlanta, the Rev. Tim Mc-
Dan Kindlon, an assistant professor of psy- rental bond is the most important protec- Donalds First Iconium Baptist Church

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Article 9. Boys will be Boys

just chartered a Boy Scout troop. Gangs nati-area psychologist, hears her 8- and 10- ually amazed by the relentless energy of
are so prevalent because guys want to be- year-old boys talking about finishing her sons, Roger Lloyd, 12, and Chris, 9.
long to something, says McDonald. somebody, she knows she has mistakenly You accept the fact that theyre going to
Weve got to give them something posi- rented a violent videogame. She pulls the involve themselves in risky behavior, like
tive to belong to. Black educators like plug and tells them: In our house, killing skateboarding down a flight of stairs. As a
Chicagoan Jawanza Kunjufu think mentor- people is not entertainment, even if its just girl, I certainly wasnt skateboarding down
ing programs will overcome the bias pretend. a flight of stairs. Just last week, she got a
against academic success as too white. Parents can also teach by example. New phone call from school telling her that
Some cities are also experimenting with Yorkers Dana and Frank Minaya say Roger Lloyd was in the emergency room
all-boy classrooms in predominantly black theyve never disciplined their 16-year-old because he had fallen backward while
schools. son Walter in anger. They insist on resolv- playing basketball and school officials
Researchers hope that in the next few ing all disputes calmly and reasonably, thought he might have a concussion. Hes
years, theyll come up with strategies that without yelling. If there is a problem, they fine now, but shes prepared for the next
will help boys the way the work of Gilligan call an official family meeting and we emergency: I have a cell phone so I can be
and others helped girls. In the meantime, never leave without a big hug, says Frank. on alert. Boys will be boys. And we have
experts say, there are some guidelines. Par- Walter tries to be open with his parents. I to let them.
ents can channel their sons energy into dont want to miss out on any advice, he With KAREN SPRINGEN in Chicago,
constructive activities, like team sports. says. PATRICIA KING in San Francisco, PAT
They should also look for teachable mo- Most of all, wise parents of boys should WINGERT in Washington, VERN E.
ments to encourage qualities such as go with the flow. Cindy Lang, 36, a full- SMITH in Atlanta and ELIZABETH
empathy. When Diane Fisher, a Cincin- time mother in Woodside, Calif., is contin- ANGELL in New York

From Newsweek, May 11, 1998, pp. 5460. 1998 by Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission.

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