Michael Gurian, a
therapist and founder of INMEN, is author of
The Prince and the King and Mothers,
Sons, and Lovers. Seattle
M.E.N. Magazine editor recently interviewed him by
phone.
Bert: You
have been inspiring to many men as a workshop
presenter and author of The Prince and the
King. Now you’re turning to men and their
mothers, in Mothers, Sons and Lovers. How
did you move from men, fathers and sons to men,
mothers and lovers?
Michael: One of
the problems in mother work is the subtlety of the
mother-son wound, in comparison to the father-son
wound. The father-son wound, at least to all
appearances, is more obvious. Your father was
absent, or was abusive. It was very clear. If you
wanted to be a man, he was your model, but if he
was gone you didn’t have a model. If he was around
he was alcoholic or abusive. So you grew up to
become this dysfunctional model of a man. That, in
a nutshell, was the way the public understood the
father work.
So my experience has
been that when I was doing the father work, it was
pretty easy for the general public to get behind
it. I don’t mean that it was easy for men to do
the work, but it was easy for the public to grasp.
As I was starting to develop the mother-son book,
the only book in print on the mother-son
relationship written by a male, I was hitting up
against the cultural stuff that said"you can’t
speak ill of Mom." Mothers and apple pie. Men are
really at fault for all the problems, so attacking
Dad is fine, but why are you talking about Mom?
She’s the one who’s been so loyal.
I need to say at the
outset that none of my work is about bashing Mom.
It’s about treating Mom as a responsible human
being who was involved in actions and behaviors
with her son that impacted the son.
I also believe that one
of the reason we are having so many mother-son
problems is because Moms aren’t getting cultural
and extended family support in raising kids. This
isn’t about Moms doing a bad job. This is about
the whole social system having placed the whole
child-care burden on Mom. It is not a burden that
one individual was meant to do, to the extent that
Moms are being asked to do it today.
Bert: Do you
think that men doing Men’s Work are more reluctant
to examine the role of mother, women, and mother
wounds than do Father work?
Michael: Across
the board, in the public world and in our small
groups, we have been more reluctant to look at
this. Many men who had fathers who were difficult,
or absent, or abusive, clung to Mom or the image
of Mom. The discovery that there’s work to do
around Mom is like a big earthquake. It shakes the
whole family structure. Men have nothing to hang
onto.
The subtlety of the
wound is such that you have to go way, way down
into other feelings besides grief. You have to get
really deep into rage, into entanglement. You have
to get deep into your present relationship with
spouses and lovers, to explore the mother wound.
That’s a lot to ask men to do.
That’s one of the
reasons I think the public wasn’t into mother
work, and why men, privately, weren’t into it.
However, I will say that the book’s been out a
while, and I’m getting constant fan mail from men
who are saying, "I simply never understood. I
always thought it was Dad. Now I understand how
much of it was me and Mom." So the work is really
getting done. I think it’s a Pandora’s Box, that
men are just getting the guts to open up.
A lot of men have been
doing this Mother work for a long time, but I
think more and more, the last year or year and a
half, men are getting into it. I know my book has
been inspiring to many people. It’s been selling
very well. I also know that John Lee is still
writing Stepping Into the Mystery, and as
he’s traveling around the country to talk about
it, he’s inspiring many men. The Minnesota Men’s
Conference that Robert Bly facilitated this summer
was specifically on mother work. I think something
is going on.
Bert: Sam Keen
has a new book out, Hymns to an Unknown
God. He says "worse yet, I notice that I
repeat certain self-destructive games, scripts,
emotional patterns. In many respects I first
married a girl who was suspiciously like the girl
who married dear old Dad. I looked at my new wife
through Mother-colored glasses."
Michael: That’s
been coming up for a long time. We’ve got to be
honest about this. Women have been saying that men
have unresolved issues around their mothers, and
they’re bringing these issues to their wives.
Women have been saying this for decades.
Absolutely, that’s a truth.
In the same way, women
have unresolved issues around their fathers, and
bring them to their husbands. That’s an absolute
truth, too.
In our society boys are
not brought up in the way they need to be brought
up, with a lot of extended family and a lot of
mentoring. Boys and their mothers form a singular
bond which is unlike most societies on the face of
this Earth. There is very little other emotional
input that’s as powerful.
Our society amplifies
normal Oedipal stuff. Most of us who are middle
aged were brought up in nuclear families where Dad
was gone. That loss of father is going to amplify
our internal dependency with Mom. We’ve been
brought up in a society that has very little
initiation, very little adult-making experience
for us in the second decade of life. We remain yet
again entangled with Mom.
So what we’re looking
at is that at least half the men out there are
going through co-dependencies, boundary issues and
push-pull issues with spouses. Those are directly
related to issues with Mom. I feel very confident
in saying that. Not just in my personal
experience, but there’s a lot of research out
there to support it. The pure logic of systems
theory suggests that if Dad is absent, the system
has a problem, and part of that problem is going
to be the son’s relationship with Mom. It’s a
systemic thing.
What men are finally
doing, I believe, is waking up as men and getting
the support from men like Robert Bly, John Lee and
myself, to explore what women have been asking men
for years to explore. But we’re exploring it in
our own way, and not being told what to do by
women.
Bert: How, does
a man know, when he’s done his father work, that
there’s work to do around mother?
Michael: In my
book I provide a list of 20 statements. One way is
to read these and say, "Oops! That’s me!" If any
of those apply to a man, than he’s ready to get
into the subtlety of this wound. For example, one
of them is, "Do you get a knot in your stomach
when your mother comes to visit?" That indicates
that your body knows that there’s still a
lot of entanglement with Mom. If there is, you can
bet there’s entanglement with lovers and spouses.
What I’ll add is that
if he has established that he has work around his
father, then 100% of the time, he will have work
around his mother, because he was brought up in a
family system.
It’s a myth we have,
and I see it in clients all the time, to say, "OK,
I’ve done my father work, I’m done." I’ll ask
about mother, and they’ll say "There’s nothing
around Mom. She was the rock. She was fine."
Psychologically, that does not make sense. That is
impossible. It is an illusion.
If a man was brought up
in a family system in which the father was absent
or distant, then the mother compensated for that.
One of the ways she compensated was by creating
entanglements and enmeshments with her son, to try
to get from him what her husband wasn’t giving.
That’s just one way in
which this is a systemic problem. If the father
was abusive, and the son was not well-enough
protected by his mother, he has profound issues
around that. If the father was alcoholic, the same
thing. No matter what you do around the father,
you’re going to find the reverberations in the
son’s relationship with his mother.
Bert: How does
this unresolved mother work manifest in a man’s
life?
Michael: The
most obvious way is going to be interrelationships
with close, intimate partners. One of the things
that happens is push-pull intimacy, which is when
a man is close to a woman partner, things are
going well, then she does something to trigger
him. He doesn’t realize it’s triggering him, nor
that it’s just like what his Mom used to do. She
doesn’t realize it, either. But he pulls away, for
a week or a month, or he becomes really hard on
her.
A second manifestation
is the man who punishes his spouse for being like
his mother. He actually abuses her, either
verbally or physically, for being like Mom. It’s
all unconscious and he doesn’t realize it, but
he’s punishing her for Mom’s sins. This is behind
a large portion of domestic violence. It’s like
the man who said that the last thing he saw,
before he pushed the knife into his spouse, was
his mother’s face. Experts like Lenore Walker and
Peter Neidig describe men who are beating wives
instead of beating their mothers.
You will also find men
who are living out their mothers’ dreams. The men
are enmeshed, living their mother’s mythology.
Their mother had certain expectations of them, and
they’re still living those out. The son works in
the "outer world" to prove himself to Mom, and to
gain her approval.
A fourth way in which
it manifests is in men being unable to navigate
boundaries with women, thus ending up complying
with women’s visions of who they should be and how
they should act.
Bert: How does
this get started? What are some of the things that
happen in the first decade of a boy’s life that
set the pattern for what follows?
Michael: Both
male and female readers of Fathers, Sons &
Lovers have told me that one thing that’s been
essential to them in understanding the mother-son
relationship is the concept of "impingement." We
get this term from attachment theorists, who study
the first two years of life. What they’ve
discovered is that a lot of moms, rather than
letting the son develop his core self by
constantly mirroring back to the son the core
self, force the son to develop a false self based
on her own insecurities. She’s trying to get the
son to be what she wants him to be, rather than
letting the son become himself.
The term for that is
"impingement." That, of course, can go on
throughout the son’s development, all the way into
his adulthood.
We don’t educate moms
very well in how to raise kids, especially how to
raise boys. Moms weren’t brought up in male
cultures, and don’t have male bodies, so that’s
even harder for them. We don’t educate them about
how active these little boys are, how testosterone
affects them. Moms then get confused about boys,
then bring their own issues to boys. The boys will
act up in ways that don’t make sense to them. The
moms will come down hard on them.
A clear example is a
boy’s penchant for rough-and-tumble play. Males,
of course, are testosterone- dominated, so even at
early ages you’ll see them much more involved than
females in rough-and-tumble play. Many moms will
think that that is anti-social, and will come down
on that.
Another example is
hyper-activity and Attention Deficit Disorder. A
lot of boys are hyperactive, or have attention
deficit. What they need, in both those cases, is
good structure and more open space. Little males
need a lot more open space to play in than little
females. This is brain-related. The spatial
feature is the dominant feature in the male brain.
What moms who don’t
know this will do is think that the boys are
taking up too much space. They’ll try to get them
to play in really small spaces. If they’re
hyperactive, rather than providing them with the
discipline and structure that they need, moms too
often beat the kids. Moms are much more likely to
physically abuse the kids than fathers. The
Handbook on Family Violence is a good place
to get that statistic. The Bureau of Justice
Statistics data also show that. Moms are more
likely to kill their infant sons than father are.
The point I’m making
here isn’t to bash moms, but to simply say that
moms are very confused. Very often they’re not
getting a lot of support. Dad’s gone. She’s got
very little extended family. So Mom is trying to
raise this hyper kid, and she doesn’t know what to
do. And if she’s a single mom, she’s getting
almost no support. What she does often is beat the
kid, or hit the kid on the face, or try to get him
to stop.
What’s happening to him
is impingement. He is not being allowed to develop
as a male creature. His core self, which is male,
is not able to develop. What he’s going to do,
over a period of years, is create a false self.
Any child does this with a mother, to a certain
extent, and any child does this with a father. But
it gets amplified in our culture. Then, when the
boy grows up and he hits the age of 40, he
suddenly realizes, "I’ve lived a false self ever
since infancy. I have never known what my core
self was. I haven’t even known what my core
personality was. I’m an introvert, but I’ve
been trying to be an extrovert."
A lot of this is being
set in the mother-son relationship, because that
is the most profoundly influential relationship in
a kid’s life. The son starts to develop a false
self to please her. Then he discovers that Dad
wasn’t feeding Mom emotionally the way Mom wanted
to be fed, so he tries to become a surrogate Dad.
Then he discovers that Mom in the culture is being
treated shabbily. He tries to redeem her. In other
words he starts living the dream she wants to
live, so she won’t be a second-class citizen. As
you add all these things up, you can see the
accumulation of the false self. That’s one of the
reasons we have so many men who wake up at 30, 40
or 50 and realize they have a false self. That’s a
big doorway into the mother work. That’s scary for
men, because they have to say, "Oh my lord! I
do have a false self. Who am I, really?"
Bert: Then what
happens in the second decade of life?
Michael: One of
the big areas where mothers and sons both have
questions is in the area of separation. Mothers
often feel guilty when they separate from sons,
and sons often feel guilty and angry.
There is a cultural
argument out there right now, as in Olga
Silverstein’s The Courage to Raise Good
Men, that says patriarchy and abuse of women
stems from mothers psychologically separating from
sons. The solution to our problems in our culture,
they would say, is to get rid of the kind of
mother- son separation masculine culture seems to
work for.
My belief is that, in
fact, it’s the lack of separation between
mother and son that is causing many sons to take
revenge on women. So much domestic violence, so
much anger towards women, happens because men are
not taught how to separate, how to find
themselves, how to individuate, how to enter into
masculine culture, and how to say to Mom, "You are
my mother, but I am not put on Earth to take care
of you." If they don’t separate, what they do is
grow up unconsciously trying to separate through
their relationships with women.
Take, for example, what
some men do with female authority figures. If a
man hasn’t fully separated from Mom, and he has a
female boss, he’s going to have a higher
likelihood of working out his issues on her.
My point is that it’s
essential that males get involved in breaking away
from Mom. Honor Mom, respect Mom, love Mom, but at
the same time, say to Mom that it’s time for you
to be a man, and she can’t teach you to do that.
That’s the
philosophical foundation of a lot of what must
happen in the first decade of a boy’s life, but
that’s easier said than done. Because what the
mother is usually experiencing when she’s letting
go of the son is terrible guilt. In my book I try
to help mothers come in contact with that, so they
can move through it themselves and not burden
their sons with it.
They’re feeling a lot
of guilt because sons are starting to separate, to
individuate, and the Mom is saying, "What did I do
wrong? Why is he verbally abusive to me? Why
doesn’t he want to see me?" He’s following his
instincts, and trying to separate, and she’s
feeling very guilty.
She’s also feeling very
fearful. For herself, because her substitute
husband may be leaving her emotionally. For her
son, because her son is about to enter masculine
culture, which seems very dangerous to her. To
women, male culture seems like football, murder,
and all of that. She’s also going to feel a lot of
abandonment as he does move away.
Bert: Separation
is one of the things we talk about in the
mythopoetic men’s movement. We talk about
initiation, and as Joseph Campbell told us, this
involves separation, initiation and return. We’ve
certainly been doing the first two. When I
interviewed Sam Osherson, author of Finding our
Fathers and Wrestling with Love, he
said that perhaps the "return" is problematic. The
question has been raised from several directions,
that we have the separation and initiation down
pat, but what about the return? As Clarissa
Pinkola Estés said in my interview with her, "No
mythopoetic men have been knocking on my door.
When will they return?"
You seem to be
suggesting that the way to return is to do the
mother work as well as the father work. When we
resolve our mother work, we can get rid of the
mother image in our mind, and relate to our spouse
as a person, rather than a Super-mother or an
archetype.
Michael: Yes,
that’s where I think we are going. Men still need
to separate to do this mother work. The problem is
that women are trying to tell men how to do the
work, and men are just pulling further away from
women.
Women need to let go,
to let men do this. Men need to take the
responsibility to do it. They need to separate,
and to be given space by women. In my book I ask
men to take a year. And I’m asking women not to
expect, during this one-year period, for your
relationship to be perfect. Because the man is
going to be going through a lot. You, as women,
need to get out of whatever neediness you may be
operating from, and to detach and let go for a
while. That’s very hard for any of us to do as
couples.
I think we still need
separation, and for the mother work we still need
men to be initiating men, which is how initiation
and separation from mother would work in a tribal
culture. This should have been done in the second
decade of life.
The issues that men
have are issues around boundaries. If I had to get
my thesis down to one word, it would be
boundaries. It’s the mother work that helps men
find their boundaries.
Bert: So we need
to separate from each other to establish the
boundaries. You can’t establish the boundaries
when you’re in the thick of it.
Michael: Yes,
this is the thing that we have to get women to
understand. We have to convince women to let men
go for a while, so that they can find their own
boundaries, and find themselves, and then form
relationships with them. But the pattern we’re
living in is the pattern in which men are told how
to act emotionally by women. Men attempt to act
emotionally the way women want them to. Sexual
biology teaches men to do that, because men are
competing to mate with women. That’s hard-wired
into us. But it’s been amplified by our society so
that at this point, in 1995, if a man wants to
know how to be a man, unless he has the advantage
of being involved in a men’s group or something
that’s feeding masculinity, what he’s going to do
is turn to women and say, "teach me how to be a
man." This will work for women for a year or two,
but then they’re going to get sick of it. He is
not really connecting with her in the way that
will feed her.
Bert: There are
some responses of women to Robert Bly and the
mythopoetic movement that, it seems, might be
coming from this guilt that you’re talking about.
A lot of women react tro the scene in the Bill
Moyers video On Being a Man where Robert
tells of going over to see his parents, and
instead of going into the kitchen and talking to
Mom, like he usually did, he sat in silence with
his father in the living room. Many women saw this
as avoiding Mom in the kitchen, and a rejection of
Mom.
Michael: Here’s
what happens to women, and it’s something that
culture forces on them. Women have to be the
perfect Mom. They have to be the most wonderful.
Mom. If anything goes wrong with the son, it’s
Mom’s fault. So to be a Mom is to be guilt-ridden
from the very beginning, while the kid’s in your
womb.
I think that that’s an
unfair burden. Many women are operating out of
that, and what these women want because they carry
that guilt, is a lot of taking care of. When Bly
enters the room with Mom, women want him to attend
to her. A lot of what women are saying
unconsciously is, "Look, I’ve carried this burden
so that I could raise you. What I want back from
you is for you to be taking care of me in the way
I want to be taking care of."
Obviously I’m creating
a generalization. This is not true of all women,
but many women do this, without even realizing it.
What the men are saying
is, "Wait a minute. Mom, you and I had a great
relationship. When we need each other we’re there
for each other. But the guy I need to be with
right now is Dad. And the way I communicate with
Dad is in silence, through sports, and through
hunting. That’s what I need. When you try to make
me feel guilty for needing that, you’re trying to
force me into false self again. You’re trying to
make me take care of you, and that’s not my
job.Right now, at age 40 or 50, I need more of Dad
than I need of you. It doesn’t mean I will abandon
you, or not be there for you, if you need me for
things, but my boundaries are that I’m an adult
male and I need to do what I need to do."
Bert: One of the
themes that I hear is that men will sometimes
neglect their own emotional needs, or get into
their emotional work in a way they think will be
most pleasing to their spouse or significant
other.
Michael: Yes,
both men and women do this to each other. Women
are constantly saying that they gave up their
emotional life. What I think we need to look at
is, yes, that’s going on, but also look at the
fact that men do that, too. Men in their own way
are "hard-wired" to sacrifice their own emotional
needs to take care of women and kids. One of the
things they’ll do is put off doing their own
emotional work until they think that things are
going fine for their spouse.
The problem with all
that is that that doesn’t work anymore. We have
become, as couples, so romantically dependent on
each other that it doesn’t work for a man to say,
"OK, let me see if she has her emotional needs
taken care of before I take care of mine." Her
emotional needs often times depend on him taking
care of his emotional needs. It’s not like
it was 200 years ago, with arranged marriages
between people who had low emotional expectations
of each other.
So now we have to
realize that the health of our families, the
health of our spouses, and our own health all
depend on our doing this work. But, yes, men are
inclined not to do that. They have their own fears
of their own work. They certainly have their own
fears about dealing with Mom. I can say, pretty
much across the board, that if you ask a man in a
men’s group who he is more afraid of dealing with,
father or mother, he’ll say his mother. That’s
another thing that men are going to have to go
beyond, and that’s one of the reasons I wrote
Mothers, Sons and Lovers. One of the great
life challenges for men is the mother work, and if
a man goes through the mother work he will be more
confident, more productive, more creative, and
more archetypally a King than he can ever be if he
avoids the mother work. She’s the Medusa, she’s
the Great Goddess. He has to go
there