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How I unlearned dangerous lessons about masculinity

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    Big boys don't cry.
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    Suck it up.
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    Shut up and rub some dirt on it.
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    Stop crying before I give you
    something to cry about.
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    These are just a few of the phrases that
    contribute to a disease in our society,
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    and more specifically in our men.
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    It's a disease that has come
    to be known as "toxic masculinity."
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    It's one I suffered a chronic case of,
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    so much so that I spent 24 years
    of a life sentence in prison
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    for kidnapping, robbery,
    and attempted murder.
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    Yet I'm here to tell you today that
    there's a solution for this epidemic.
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    I know for a fact the solution works,
    because I was a part of human trials.
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    The solution is a mixture of elements.
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    It begins with the willingness
    to look at your belief system
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    and how out of alignment it is
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    and how your actions negatively impact not
    just yourself but the people around you.
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    The next ingredient is the willingness
    to be vulnerable with people
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    who would not just support you
    but hold you accountable.
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    But before I tell you about this,
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    I need to let you know
    that in order to share this,
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    I have to bare my soul in full.
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    And as I stand here,
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    with so many eyes fixed on me,
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    I feel raw and naked.
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    When this feeling is present,
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    I am confident that the next phase
    of healing is on the horizon,
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    and that allows me
    to share my story in full.
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    For all appearances sake,
    I was born into the ideal family dynamic:
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    mother, father, sister, brother.
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    Bertha, Eldra Jr.,
    ??, and Eldra III.
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    That's me.
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    My father was a Vietnam veteran
    who earned a Purple Heart
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    and made it home to find love,
    marry, and begin his own ??.
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    So how did I wind up serving life
    in the California prison system?
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    Keeping secrets,
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    believing the mantra
    that big boys don't cry,
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    not knowing how to display any emotion
    confidently other than anger,
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    participating in athletics and learning
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    that the greater
    the performance on the field,
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    the less the need to worry
    about the rules off it.
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    It's hard to pin down
    any one specific ingredient
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    of the many symptoms that ailed me.
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    Growing up as a young black male
    in Sacramento, California in the 1980s,
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    there were two groups
    I identified as having respect:
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    athletes and gangsters.
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    I excelled in sports,
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    that is until a friend and I chose to take
    his mom's care for a joyride and wreck it.
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    With my parents having to split
    the cost of a totaled vehicle,
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    I was relegated to a summer
    of household chores and no sports.
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    No sports meant no respect.
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    No respect equaled no power.
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    Power was vital to feed my illness.
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    It was at that point the decision
    to transition from athlete to gangster
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    was made and done so easily.
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    Early life experiences had set the stage
    for me to be well-suited
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    to objectify others,
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    act in a socially detached manner,
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    and above all else,
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    seek to be viewed
    as in a position of power.
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    A sense of power
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    equaled strength in my environment,
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    but more importantly,
    it did so in my mind.
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    My mind dictated my choices.
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    My subsequent choices put me
    on the fast track to prison life.
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    And even once in prison,
    I continued my history
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    of running over the rights of others,
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    even knowing that that
    was the place that I would die.
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    Once again, I wound up
    in solitary confinement
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    for stabbing another prisoner
    nearly 30 times.
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    I had gotten to a place where
    I didn't care how I lived or if I died.
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    But then things changed.
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    One of the best things that happened
    in my life to that point
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    was being sent to New Folsom Prison.
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    Once there, I was approached
    to join a group called Inside Circle.
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    Initially, I was hesitant to join a group
    referred to around the yard
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    as "hug-a-thug."
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    (Laughter)
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    Initially, that was, yeah,
    that was a little much,
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    but eventually I overcame my hesitancy.
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    As it turned out, the circle was
    the vision of a man named Patrick Nolan,
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    who was also serving life
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    and who had grown sick and tired
    of being sick and tired
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    of watching us kill one another
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    over skin color,
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    rag color,
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    being from Northern
    or Southern California,
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    or just plain breathing
    in the wrong direction on a windy day.
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    Circle time is men sitting with men
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    and cutting through the bullshit,
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    challenging structural ways of thinking.
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    I think the way that I think
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    and I act the way that I act
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    because I hadn't questioned that.
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    Like, who said I should see a woman
    walking down the street,
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    turn around and check out her backside?
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    Where did that come from?
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    If I don't question that,
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    I'll just go along with the crowd.
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    The locker room talk.
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    In circle, we sit and
    we question these things.
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    Why do I think the way that I think?
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    Why do I act the way that I act?
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    Because when I get down to it,
    I'm not thinking,
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    I'm not being an individual,
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    I'm not taking responsibility
    for who I am and what it is
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    I put into this world.
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    It was in a circle session
    that my life took a turn.
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    I remember being asked who I was,
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    and I didn't have an answer,
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    at least not one that felt honest
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    in a room full of men
    who were seeking truth.
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    It would have been easy to say,
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    "I'm a Blood,"
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    or, "My name is Vegas,"
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    or any number of facades
    I had manufactured to hide behind.
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    It was in that moment and in that venue
    that the jig was up.
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    I realized that as sharp
    as I believed I was,
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    I didn't even know who I was
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    or why I acted the way that I acted.
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    I couldn't stand in a room full of men
    who were seeking to serve and support
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    and present an authentic me.
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    It was in that moment
    that I graduated to a place within
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    that was ready for transformation.
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    For decades,
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    I kept being the victim of molestation
    at the hands of a babysitter a secret.
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    I submitted to this under the threat
    of my younger sister being harmed.
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    I was seven, she was three.
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    I believed it was my
    responsibility to keep her safe.
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    It was in that instant
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    that the seeds were sown
    for a long career of hurting others,
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    be it physical, mental, or emotional.
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    I developed in that instant,
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    at seven years old,
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    the belief that going forward in life
    if a situation presented itself
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    where someone was going to get hurt,
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    I would be the one doing the hurting.
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    I also formulated the belief that loving
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    put me in harm's way.
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    I also learned that caring about
    another person made me weak.
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    So not caring, that must equal strength.
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    The greatest way to mask
    a shaky sense of self
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    is to hide behind a false air of respect.
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    Sitting in circle resembles
    sitting in a fire.
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    It is a crucible that can and does break.
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    It broke my old sense of self,
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    diseased value system,
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    and way of looking at others.
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    My old stale modes of thinking
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    were invited into the open
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    to see if this is who
    I wanted to be in life.
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    I was accompanied by skilled facilitators
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    on a journey into the depths of myself
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    to find those wounded parts
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    that not only festered
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    but seeped out to create
    unsafe space for others.
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    At times, it resembled an exorcism,
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    and in essence, it was.
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    There was an extraction
    of old diseased ways of thinking,
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    being, and reacting,
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    and an infusion of purpose.
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    Sitting in those circles saved my life.
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    I stand here today as a testament
    to the fact of the power of the work.
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    I was paroled in June 2014,
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    following my third hearing before a panel
    of former law enforcement officials
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    who were tasked with determining
    my current threat level to society.
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    I stand here today for the first time
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    since I was 14 years old
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    not under any form of state supervision.
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    I'm married to a tremendous
    woman named Holly,
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    and together we are raising two sons
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    who I encourage to experience
    emotions in a safe way.
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    I let them hold me when I cry.
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    They get to witness me
    not have all the answers.
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    My desire is for them to understand
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    that being a man is not
    some machismo caricature,
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    and that characteristics
    usually defined as weaknesses
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    are parts of the whole healthy man.
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    So today I continue to work
    not just on myself
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    but in support of young males
    in my community.
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    The challenge is to eradicate the cycle
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    of emotional illiteracy and groupthink
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    that allows our males to continue
    to victimize others as well as themselves.
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    As a result of this,
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    they develop new ways
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    of how they want to show up in the world
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    and how they expect this world
    to show up on their behalf.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How I unlearned dangerous lessons about masculinity
Speaker:
Eldra Jackson
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:21

English subtitles

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