When i sold fresh herbs to “the better restaurants”
on mid-Vancouver Island, chefs used to buy heavily the week before
Mother's Day1.
Several said it was their biggest business day of the year. Not some time
in the High Tourist Season?not Christmas party time or even New Year's Eve—Mother's
Day was the day the most people come into those restaurants and spent the
most money!
It was a good day for a single father and his son to go fishing at the popular
spots—so many of the other guys were stuck doing Mother's Day ritual
and not out scaring the fish and tangling up lines with each other.
Men whose mothers are truly worthy of respect, don't need the suggestions
that follow. They can “do the regular Mother's Day stuff” or perhaps
do something that is special to their particular family—for instance,
the heavy work to help a 7x year old mother get in her garden. Even married
men with children, whose mothers weren't very good, but whose wives are, have
plenty to celebrate1.
This message is for “the losers and the rejects”—for men
and large boys who don't have a decent reason to celebrate Mother's Day. After
decades of easy divorce, sects of Feminism that hate men (and sometimes accuse
any man who disagrees with one of them of hating women—something Freud
once called “projection”), and even a minority of mothers who
significantly abused their own sons; there are many, many more such men than
there were two or even one generation ago. If you're lucky enough to have
mothers in your life to celebrate, you probably know at least one man, probably
half a dozen or more, who don't.
Men whose mothers were not great and loving can find Mother's Day stressful,
because of all the pressure to show how much they love someone who hasn't
been half as lovable as a good dog. So can men whose wives have deserted them
or been unfaithful, and taken away their children. If they “do the regular
Mother's Day stuff” they are pressured by convention to feel inadequate,
insincere, even guilty—and to take the blame for what women in their
lives have done to them. (When this happened to women in the latter 20th Century,
Feminists called it “blaming the victim”. Men can be blamed victims
also. Part of the message of this 'text', is that women can be abusive, men
can be victims, and men deserve support when we suffer, as much as women do
when they suffer.)
Abuse victims tend to be called “losers” and “rejects”—perhaps
especially if they are male. This is not entirely false: Being abused is a
kind of loss—not deserved, but a loss—and abuse usually entails
some degree of rejection. The problem with those words is that they condemn
men for having been mistreated, when what those men deserve is fellowship
and support.
To admit a man is logically a loser or a reject, is one thing. To reject
him even further because someone abused him already, is evil. We can do better.
Here, me-thinks, is a way to do better for men and boys who Mother's Day reminds,
that they didn't get the love that naturally belongs to children and fathers.
Most of these men who have no reason to joyfully celebrate Mother's Day, do
have good things about them to celebrate instead.
So let's get men together and—to repeat a theme—do something
honest this Mother's Day, and something fun if we honestly can, which most
of us can in the right company. There are two “dont's” implied
by that criterion: Don't go to a restaurant, because Mother's Day will dominate
the scene there and interfere with having fun if Mother's Day is a feel-bad
day for you; ; and Don't imagine you have any duty to lie!
While we're at it, let's confront those words “rejects and losers”:
There are some fine, indeed excellent men and boys who have been rejected
and have suffered loss. Nelson Mandela was put in prison for years for seeking
racial equality. Oscar Romero and Martin Luther King were murdered. Dietrich
Bonhoeffer and Louis Riel were executed. Does not the Bible itself say that
Jesus was “despised and rejected” (and didn't Easter Weekend just
remind us of that?) If you do not have a mother you can honestly honour—find
some friends in the same situation, who you can.
Call it “Orphans' Day”, maybe.
It will help if the weather's good. Not very many mothers choose early-May
barbecues or picnics or fishing trips as their celebration—so those
are promising alternatives for abused and rejected men—and for boys
who have mothers they can't honestly celebrate (and who are free not to tell
Nice lies.)
Sharing Food is a good idea: Cooking and eating together is a good way to
get acquainted and make friends. If you were a Boy Scout, or a backpacker,
or did training excursions in the military, you know this already. And if
you're going to spend more than an hour or two together, guys are going to
get hungry. So my default plan for a first-Orphans'-Day Celebration is a barbecue,
with some sports and games, maybe a sing-along—and somewhere to get
together under a roof if there's rain.
Since we can't control the weather and the Weather Office can't predict
it extremely well even three days in advance, i do suggest you have a rainy-day
alternative planned. What that means at the minimum, is a building with a
roof and a little heat2,
a cookstove and a table and enough chairs, that will hold the group if the
Great Outdoors isn't great for weather. (If you're all the hardy type, a big
tent might do. Just be sure you're really the hardy type.)
Since cooking is a hobby of mine, i'll write a few paragraphs on food:
If you want to have steak, and you can afford it, fine. Most men like steak,
most boys like steak, and if you do have good weather it's especially good
cooked over a hardwood fire: Alder, cherry, maple, even oak. (Poplar wood
will do in a pinch if you peel off the bark, and so will birch. Their bark
tends to give meat a bad taste, though. Alder and pin-cherry are the most
available barbecue-smoke woods in Canada; maple and oak are good where you
can get them, some can make good results with spruce [e.g “Black Forest
ham”]; and if you do use poplar or birch—take off that bark.)
Pork chops, pork ribs, lamb or mutton chops—and salmon if you're in
BC and have some left in the freezer—also go well on the grill. The
best trick i know with salmon (or big trout if you live in lake-trout country)
is to filet and put the skin side down. When a milky colour, whitish but not
paper-white, forms on top and dries, the fish is done. Big filets are usually
mighty expensive unless you can get them from a fisherman, or are one.
Chicken legs barbecue well, white chicken meat [and white fish] doesn't
have enough fat. Have some pork, chicken legs, sausages, and-or fish for those
who don't happen to think steak is wonderful. (You probably won't need very
much: Most men—and boys—really do like steak.)
If money's a concern, steak is not a necessity. Here in Atlantic Canada,
ground beef is not that much cheaper than steak if you find a sale on round
or sirloin. (Round is sometimes tough; i often marinate it.) Pork chops, or
a pork loin roast cut into steaks, are often cheaper than ground beef around
here. (To cut a roast into steaks easily and well, put it into the freezer
until it is quite stiff but not yet frozen hard. Then a good heavy cook's
knife will be able to make accurate parallel slices. Slice across the grain,
i suggest 2-3 cm [about an inch] thick for barbecuing. Chicken legs sometimes
“come on special” for less than pork chops—but remember,
they tend to have more bone, and therefore less meat, per weight.
In other regions, the price patterns might not be the same. I lived in BC
in 1990-2005, and there i could usually get much better prices on chicken,
salmon, and regular ground beef, than i have ever found here.
“Hot dogs” are often the cheapest meat you can find. Myself,
i wouldn't pay more than $2 per pound for them, and lately have bought them
at $1 or bought something else. They do taste better grilled than not—and
they can be tasty in navy bean soup—but so can a smaller amount of bacon
or smoked-soy imitation.
Beans and lentils can be the bulk-high-protein food if you want to be really
careful about the cost, or a backup if you want to have a little steak or
porkchops but not buy a whole pound per man. I have three recipes for beans
that can be made from scratch (starting by soaking overnight in savory-water)
and require no meat at all: Chili sin carne3,
black beans with bay and onion, Navy bean soup with hot-dogs or bacon. Curried
lentils also are easy to cook and reliably good, and split-pea soup is another
possibility. I can send recipes if you don't already have recipes you know
and trust, but they probably won't arrive in time for Orphans Day. (Use them
for Father's Day?)
May is not a good month for potatoes; so for the grain-food i suggest a
pasta salad with fresh chives, rice with homemade salsa, and toasted bread
with garlic margarine [or butter, but good margarine will do].
Fresh vegetables are not in season in Canada in early May. By Fathers' Day
we may have our own lettuce, but not May 13th. Broccoli will be a stretch
even in mid-June. My garden so far has one fresh 'produce'—chives. They
are as early as asparagus, or a little earlier. So unless you have free access
to an asparagus patch, you get to choose between imported, home sprouted mung
beans, and cold-cellar.
Lettuce and tomato salad is never a bad idea, but it will have to be imported
and therefore won't be as good as your own will be starting with those first
outdoor tomatoes in late July. Add a little chive or green onion if you make
one. It needs no dressing, but tolerates dressings for those who want them.
Corn on the cob is like strawberries—has to be imported this time
of year, and if you compared the imports with what you can home-grow in summer,
you'd flunk the imports.
I personally would recommend coleslaw and a carrot-raisin salad, both of
which you can make yourself using a grater of “salad-master”,
with steamed cabbage with caraway seed, steamed carrots, or frozen spinach
or broccoli for hot vegetables. If you know how to “grow” bean
sprouts, they are good steamed until they brighten, then dressed with oil,
chive-blossom vinegar, and a touch of sugar. (Mix before adding the sprouts.
If you don't make chive-blossom vinegar, about as much soy-sauce as oil will
also make a good dressing, and a little soy-sauce is always good with bean
sprouts.)
For dessert—the goodies you really like, whatever those are, plus
apples, and bananas or oranges.
What you do in addition to feasting, could include sports (for instance,
baseball, dodge-ball, Frisbee, horseshoes, touch football, soccer, tug-of-war,
badminton or volleyball if you can put up a net—but basketball, golf
and tennis tend to require too much infrastructure for a barbecue or an outing.)
You might have a fiddler, guitar or accordion player, maybe even a bass and
a drummer, and do a sing-along. You might have some storytelling—i'd
suggest there be at least three different storytellers unless you have a very
good one to feature.
Consider serious discussion, but don't insist on it if a right-feeling pattern
won't emerge. I'd suggest at least two topics (from a list that need not be
limited to: Abortion, abstinence, co-housing, co-operative farming and manufacturing,
custody, infidelity, law and legal [dis]advantages, lying, marriage, sexual
harassment [including women harassing men], STDs [and note the order is alphabetic,
the intent being not to recommend some of the list before others].) With two
or more topics, preferably at least three, if discussion becomes strained
or stalled, it is easy to say “OK, let's consider ___ for a while and
maybe come back to this after it's had a rest.”)
(If by Thursday or Friday the weather looks quite sure to be rainless on
Sunday, then you might consider committing the group to an outdoor, human-powered
“trip” by bicycle, canoe and kayak, or perhaps even foot-hiking.
If you choose a “trip”, make the destination something special
(such as a scenic wonder that does not have car access, a campground or lodge,
a place known for good fishing, or possibly, a work-party at a place you'll
return to later on. Whatever destination you choose, be sure no other group
is going there that day.) Don't make the distance too long: Five miles each
way should be maximum for bicycling, two or three miles for canoe or kayak,
and one or two on foot. Some boys and old men can't move full speed, and you
want plenty of time to enjoy the destination!)
If you're Christian, and don't want to simply stay home from the kinds of
sermons that assume all mothers are angelic4,
you could even organize a church service around texts like Psalm 27, Matthew
10:34-36, Luke 12:49-53, 14:26; which recognize that not all kin are always
good to us. Mother's Day always comes on a Sunday, and if you don't have a
sympathetic clergyman to lead the service, then remember what Luther wrote
about the priesthood of all believers, and team up with one to five other
men to hold the service at home—or maybe, at a camp that hasn't started
up for the summer, or a picnic ground near a good fishing spot, if the weather
be good. You can even arrange so that the Christians in a general group have
their service while others get the barbecue fire going or if indoors, watch
TV or listen to music.
What i've just written is a general outline for a first get-together of
men and boys who don't fit in with Mother's Day. Readers may have improvements,
refinements, and additional activities to suggest.
Mother's Day is less than a week away. To help men interested in having
“Orphans' Day”, or whatever you might want to call the alternative
activities in your area, to find one another, a local men's-group or website
is a big help. If not, think about Scouts and search-and-rescue phone trees.
Finally, don't dump on men who feel they have to tell the Nice Social Lies,
or are afraid of some of the women in their lives, and say they can't come
for Orphans' Day. Not this year anyway, and not next year. There was decades
ago, and still is, Feminist kvetching and hand-wringing about women who stay
in abusive relationships. Men belong to the same species. It will take time
for support networks to develop and for many trapped men to find, recognize,
and learn to claim their freedom.
I did write, last year, that although Canada has become a “women's
world” whose opportunity structure is biased against men, we can still
hear the opposite said on the radio. “Orphans' Day barbecues”
and bike-hikes and sports and even serious discussions, are part of the process
of making the truth public knowledge, and very possibly, of fixing the biases
and repairing the damage.
There is nothing wrong with enjoying the process! Most men—and most
boys—are good company.
Endnotes:
1The worst thing that can happen to men with
really good mothers and wives, is if they or one of their children have a
birthday that falls on or next-to Mother's Day. Such birthdays wind up in
the shadow of the Biggest Day of the Year, and seldom get lively celebration?one
of my own sons, and my friend Greg in Tofino, had that bad luck. They seem
to be surviving it.
2Readers from the southern USA, the northern
half of Australia, the Mediterranean region, ... may not need to worry about
heating. In Canada, we do.
3“.. without meat”, written
in Spanish.
4Not all sermons do—but in my experience,
at least a quarter and perhaps more than three-quarters, have praised motherhood
as if there were no exceptions. One preacher who dared to be a little critical,
chided some overly-self-righteous women in his Methodist church who actually
requested he re-write two hymns and substitute “Mother” for “Jesus”.
“Only One there is who has not sinned,” Pastor Don said, “and
He was not a mother. He had a good mother, better than the ones who suggested
this little blasphemy ...” [paraphrased from memory]