The #MeToo Movement has raised our awareness about sexual harassment and abuse, but it has also triggered conflict and fears between men and women. In our current political climate, women are afraid that the strides made on behalf of sex and gender equality will be lost. Men are afraid that maleness itself is being seen
I’ve been doing men’s work for fifty years now. My business card says Jed Diamond, Ph.D., Helping men and the women who love them since 1969. Two things happened that year. First, my son, Jemal, came into the world. When he was handed to me shortly after his birth, I made a promise to be
The men’s movement began for me in 1969 when my first son, Jemal, was born. When I held him for the first time, I made a vow that I would be a different kind of father than my father was able to be for me and I would do everything I could to change the
My wife and I met in college. When we talked about getting married and having kids we decided we should have a child and then adopt a child. We were both socially conscious young people who reasoned that we would want to have our own, biologically, created child. But given how many people are on
In 1969 my son, Jemal, was born. When I held him for the first time, I made a vow that I would be a different kind of father than my father was able to be for me and I would help make the world a better place where men were fully healed and deeply connected
We live at a time when most men desperately want to please the woman in their lives. We are also living at a time when men feel like failures. Women want more and men wonder whether they can ever live up to their expectations. Finally, it isn’t clear to men what women really want and
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