In there, children cry for their mothers, the elderly wheeze in an unsettling tempo, and grown boys brace the responsibilities of manhood.
Where people often mistake manhood is in places like the hospital. We still ask men not to emote, and treat illness as a sign of debilitating (and ignorable) weakness, whether the person injured is a stranger or a loved one. The perception of what men do in those situations and the actions that make a real man in these situations resembles the gap between many fathers and their sons. While we teach our young boys callousness, we ought to teach them more actionable and empathetic steps towards others, and, when the time is right, each other.
Underneath the glow of many of our young and budding men lies a soul in need of fortification. We shouldn’t measure the strength of real men by the inches of their biceps, the altitude of their leaps, or the depth of their voices. We can, however, do so with the size of their hearts, the depth of the steps they take in life, and the growth they encourage within themselves and others. I don’t require that all men go through hardship to become real men, but these situations inject the marble and granite time tested for the manhood of which I speak.
The soul of a man is a combination of these things, and it speaks to us loudly …
Jose, who is off to ATL tomorrow …