Why Im done trying to be man enough Justin Baldoni

As an actor, I get scripts

and it’s my job to stay on script,

to say my lines

and bring to life a character
that someone else wrote.

Over the course of my career,

I’ve had the great honor

playing some of the greatest
male role models ever

represented on television.

You might recognize me
as “Male Escort #1.”

(Laughter)

“Photographer Date Rapist,”

“Shirtless Date Rapist”

from the award-winning
“Spring Break Shark Attack.”

(Laughter)

“Shirtless Medical Student,”

“Shirtless Steroid-Using Con Man”

and, in my most
well-known role, as Rafael.

(Applause)

A brooding, reformed playboy

who falls for, of all things, a virgin,

and who is only occasionally shirtless.

(Laughter)

Now, these roles don’t represent
the kind of man I am in my real life,

but that’s what I love about acting.

I get to live inside characters
very different than myself.

But every time I got
one of these roles, I was surprised,

because most of the men
I play ooze machismo,

charisma and power,

and when I look in the mirror,
that’s just not how I see myself.

But it was how Hollywood saw me,

and over time, I noticed a parallel

between the roles I would play as a man

both on-screen and off.

I’ve been pretending to be
a man that I’m not my entire life.

I’ve been pretending
to be strong when I felt weak,

confident when I felt insecure

and tough when really I was hurting.

I think for the most part
I’ve just been kind of putting on a show,

but I’m tired of performing.

And I can tell you right now

that it is exhausting trying to be
man enough for everyone all the time.

Now – right?

(Laughter)

My brother heard that.

Now, for as long
as I can remember, I’ve been told

the kind of man
that I should grow up to be.

As a boy, all I wanted was to be
accepted and liked by the other boys,

but that acceptance meant I had to acquire

this almost disgusted view
of the feminine,

and since we were told that feminine
is the opposite of masculine,

I either had to reject
embodying any of these qualities

or face rejection myself.

This is the script that we’ve been given.

Right? Girls are weak,
and boys are strong.

This is what’s being
subconsciously communicated

to hundreds of millions of young boys
and girls all over the world,

just like it was with me.

Well, I came here today to say, as a man

that this is wrong, this is toxic,

and it has to end.

(Applause)

Now, I’m not here
to give a history lesson.

We likely all know how we got here, OK?

But I’m just a guy that woke up
after 30 years and realized

that I was living in a state of conflict,

conflict with who I feel I am in my core

and conflict with who the world
tells me as a man I should be.

But I don’t have a desire

to fit into the current
broken definition of masculinity,

because I don’t just want
to be a good man.

I want to be a good human.

And I believe the only way that can happen

is if men learn to not only
embrace the qualities

that we were told
are feminine in ourselves

but to be willing to stand up,

to champion and learn
from the women who embody them.

Now, men –

(Laughter)

I am not saying that everything
we have learned is toxic. OK?

I’m not saying there’s anything
inherently wrong with you or me,

and men, I’m not saying
we have to stop being men.

But we need balance, right?

We need balance,

and the only way things will change
is if we take a real honest look

at the scripts that have been
passed down to us

from generation to generation

and the roles that,
as men, we choose to take on

in our everyday lives.

So speaking of scripts,

the first script I ever got
came from my dad.

My dad is awesome.

He’s loving, he’s kind,
he’s sensitive, he’s nurturing,

he’s here.

(Applause)

He’s crying.

(Laughter)

But, sorry, Dad,
as a kid I resented him for it,

because I blamed him for making me soft,

which wasn’t welcomed
in the small town in Oregon

that we had moved to.

Because being soft
meant that I was bullied.

See, my dad wasn’t
traditionally masculine,

so he didn’t teach me how to use my hands.

He didn’t teach me
how to hunt, how to fight,

you know, man stuff.

Instead he taught me what he knew:

that being a man was about sacrifice

and doing whatever you can

to take care of
and provide for your family.

But there was another role
I learned how to play from my dad,

who, I discovered,
learned it from his dad,

a state senator

who later in life

had to work nights as a janitor
to support his family,

and he never told a soul.

That role was to suffer in secret.

And now three generations later,

I find myself playing that role, too.

So why couldn’t my grandfather
just reach out to another man

and ask for help?

Why does my dad to this day still think
he’s got to do it all on his own?

I know a man who would rather die

than tell another man
that they’re hurting.

But it’s not because we’re just all,
like, strong silent types.

It’s not. A lot of us men are really good
at making friends, and talking,

just not about anything real.

(Laughter)

If it’s about work or sports
or politics or women,

we have no problem sharing our opinions,

but if it’s about
our insecurities or our struggles,

our fear of failure,

then it’s almost like we become paralyzed.

At least, I do.

So some of the ways
that I have been practicing

breaking free of this behavior

are by creating experiences
that force me to be vulnerable.

So if there’s something
I’m experiencing shame around in my life,

I practice diving straight into it,

no matter how scary it is –

and sometimes, even publicly.

Because then in doing so

I take away its power,

and my display of vulnerability

can in some cases give other men
permission to do the same.

As an example, a little while ago

I was wrestling with an issue in my life

that I knew I needed
to talk to my guy friends about,

but I was so paralyzed by fear

that they would judge me
and see me as weak

and I would lose my standing as a leader

that I knew I had to take them
out of town on a three-day guys trip –

(Laughter)

Just to open up. And guess what?

It wasn’t until the end of the third day

that I finally found
the strength to talk to them

about what I was going through.

But when I did,
something amazing happened.

I realized that I wasn’t alone,

because my guys had also been struggling.

And as soon as I found the strength
and the courage to share my shame,

it was gone.

Now, I’ve learned over time

that if I want to practice vulnerability,

then I need to build myself
a system of accountability.

So I’ve been really blessed as an actor.

I’ve built a really wonderful fan base,

really, really sweet and engaged,

and so I decided to use my social platform

as kind of this Trojan horse

wherein I could create a daily practice
of authenticity and vulnerability.

The response has been incredible.

It’s been affirming,
it’s been heartwarming.

I get tons of love and press
and positive messages daily.

But it’s all from a certain demographic:

women.

(Laughter)

This is real.

Why are only women following me?

Where are the men?

(Laughter)

About a year ago, I posted this photo.

Now, afterwards, I was scrolling
through some of the comments,

and I noticed that one of my female fans
had tagged her boyfriend in the picture,

and her boyfriend responded by saying,

“Please stop tagging me in gay shit.

Thx.”

(Laughter)

As if being gay makes you
less of a man, right?

So I took a deep breath,

and I responded.

I said,

very politely, that I was just curious,

because I’m on an exploration
of masculinity,

and I wanted to know
why my love for my wife

qualified as gay shit.

And then I said,
honestly I just wanted to learn.

(Laughter)

Now, he immediately wrote me back.

I thought he was going to go off on me,
but instead he apologized.

He told me how, growing up,

public displays of affection
were looked down on.

He told me that he was wrestling
and struggling with his ego,

and how much he loved his girlfriend

and how thankful he was for her patience.

And then a few weeks later,

he messaged me again.

This time he sent me a photo

of him on one knee proposing.

(Applause)

And all he said was, “Thank you.”

I’ve been this guy.

I get it.

See, publicly,
he was just playing his role,

rejecting the feminine, right?

But secretly he was waiting
for permission to express himself,

to be seen, to be heard,

and all he needed was another man

holding him accountable
and creating a safe space for him to feel,

and the transformation was instant.

I loved this experience,

because it showed me
that transformation is possible,

even over direct messages.

So I wanted to figure out
how I could reach more men,

but of course none of them
were following me.

(Laughter)

So I tried an experiment.

I started posting more
stereotypically masculine things –

(Laughter)

Like my challenging workouts,
my meal plans,

my journey to heal my body
after an injury.

And guess what happened?

Men started to write me.

And then, out of the blue,
for the first time in my entire career,

a male fitness magazine called me,

and they said they wanted to honor me
as one of their game-changers.

(Laughter)

Was that really game-changing?

Or is it just conforming?

And see, that’s the problem.

It’s totally cool for men to follow me

when I talk about guy stuff

and I conform to gender norms.

But if I talk about
how much I love my wife

or my daughter or my 10-day-old son,

how I believe that marriage
is challenging but beautiful,

or how as a man
I struggle with body dysmorphia,

or if I promote gender equality,
then only the women show up.

Where are the men?

So men, men, men,

men!

(Applause)

I understand.

Growing up, we tend
to challenge each other.

We’ve got to be the toughest,

the strongest, the bravest
men that we can be.

And for many of us, myself included,
our identities are wrapped up

in whether or not at the end of the day
we feel like we’re man enough.

But I’ve got a challenge for all the guys,

because men love challenges.

(Laughter)

I challenge you to see
if you can use the same qualities

that you feel make you a man

to go deeper into yourself.

Your strength, your bravery,
your toughness:

Can we redefine what those mean
and use them to explore our hearts?

Are you brave enough

to be vulnerable?

To reach out to another man
when you need help?

To dive headfirst into your shame?

Are you strong enough to be sensitive,

to cry whether you are hurting

or you’re happy,

even if it makes you look weak?

Are you confident enough

to listen to the women in your life?

To hear their ideas and their solutions?

To hold their anguish

and actually believe them,

even if what they’re saying
is against you?

And will you be man enough

to stand up to other men
when you hear “locker room talk,”

when you hear stories
of sexual harassment?

When you hear your boys talking
about grabbing ass or getting her drunk,

will you actually stand up
and do something

so that one day
we don’t have to live in a world

where a woman has to risk everything

and come forward
to say the words “me too?”

(Applause)

This is serious stuff.

I’ve had to take a real, honest look

at the ways that I’ve unconsciously
been hurting the women in my life,

and it’s ugly.

My wife told me that I had been
acting in a certain way that hurt her

and not correcting it.

Basically, sometimes
when she would go to speak,

at home or in public,

I would just cut her off mid-sentence
and finish her thought for her.

It’s awful.

The worst part was that I was completely
unaware when I was doing it.

It was unconscious.

So here I am doing my part,

trying to be a feminist,

amplifying the voices
of women around the world,

and yet at home,

I am using my louder voice
to silence the woman I love the most.

So I had to ask myself a tough question:

am I man enough

to just shut the hell up and listen?

(Laughter)

(Applause)

I’ve got to be honest.
I wish that didn’t get an applause.

(Laughter)

Guys,

this is real.

And I’m just scratching the surface here,

because the deeper we go,
the uglier it gets, I guarantee you.

I don’t have time to get into porn
and violence against women

or the split of domestic duties

or the gender pay gap.

But I believe that as men,

it’s time we start to see
past our privilege

and recognize that we are
not just part of the problem.

Fellas, we are the problem.

The glass ceiling exists
because we put it there,

and if we want to be
a part of the solution,

then words are no longer enough.

There’s a quote that I love that
I grew up with from the Bahá’í writings.

It says that “the world of humanity
is possessed of two wings,

the male and the female.

So long as these two wings
are not equivalent in strength,

the bird will not fly.”

So women,

on behalf of men all over the world

who feel similar to me,

please forgive us

for all the ways that we have not
relied on your strength.

And now I would like
to ask you to formally help us,

because we cannot do this alone.

We are men. We’re going to mess up.

We’re going to say the wrong thing.
We’re going to be tone-deaf.

We’re more than likely, probably,
going to offend you.

But don’t lose hope.

We’re only here because of you,

and like you, as men, we need
to stand up and become your allies

as you fight against

pretty much everything.

We need your help
in celebrating our vulnerability

and being patient with us

as we make this very, very long journey

from our heads to our hearts.

And finally to parents:

instead of teaching our children

to be brave boys or pretty girls,

can we maybe just teach them
how to be good humans?

So back to my dad.

Growing up, yeah, like every boy,
I had my fair share of issues,

but now I realize that it was
even thanks to his sensitivity

and emotional intelligence

that I am able to stand here right now
talking to you in the first place.

The resentment I had for my dad
I now realize had nothing to do with him.

It had everything to do with me
and my longing to be accepted

and to play a role
that was never meant for me.

So while my dad may have not taught me
how to use my hands,

he did teach me how to use my heart,

and to me that makes him
more a man than anything.

Thank you.

(Applause)

作为一名演员,我得到剧本

,而我的工作就是坚持剧本

,说出我的台词

,让别人写的角色栩栩如生

在我的职业生涯中,

我非常荣幸地

扮演了一些曾经在电视上出现过的最伟大的
男性榜样

你可能会认出我
是“男伴游一号”。

(笑声) 获奖的“春假鲨鱼袭击”中的

“摄影师约会强奸犯”、

“赤膊约会强奸犯

”。

(笑声)

“光着膀子的医学生”、

“光着膀子的类固醇骗子”

,以及我最
知名的角色,拉斐尔。

(掌声)

一个沉思的、改造过的花花公子

,他爱上了一个处女

,只是偶尔光着膀子。

(笑声)

现在,这些角色并不代表
我在现实生活中的那种人,

但这就是我喜欢表演的地方。

我可以生活在
与我完全不同的角色中。

但每次我得到
其中一个角色时,我都会感到惊讶,

因为
我扮演的大多数男人都散发着大男子主义、

魅力和力量

,当我照镜子时,
我看到的不是自己。

但这就是好莱坞对我的看法,

随着时间的推移,我注意到

我作为一个男人在银幕内外扮演的角色之间存在相似之处

我一直在
假装自己不是我的整个人生。

当我感到虚弱时,我一直在假装坚强,

当我感到不安全时,我一直在假装自信,当我

真正受伤时,我一直在假装坚强。

我想大部分时间
我只是在表演,

但我厌倦了表演。

我现在可以

告诉你,一直努力成为
足够男人的人是很累的。

现在——对吧?

(笑声)

我哥哥听到了。

现在
,从我记事起,就有人告诉我,我长大后应该

成为什么样的人

作为一个男孩,我想要的只是
被其他男孩接受和喜欢,

但这种接受意味着我必须获得对女性的

这种几乎令人厌恶的看法

,因为我们被告知女性
是男性的对立面,

我要么有 拒绝
体现任何这些品质

或自己面对拒绝。

这是我们得到的脚本。

对? 女孩很弱
,男孩很坚强。

这就是
下意识地传达

给全世界数以亿计的年轻男孩
和女孩的东西,

就像对我一样。

好吧,我今天来这里是要说,作为一个男人

,这是错误的,这是有毒的

,必须结束。

(掌声)

现在,我不是
来上历史课的。

我们可能都知道我们是如何到达这里的,好吗?

但我只是一个
在 30 年后醒来的人,

意识到我生活在一种冲突的状态中,

与我内心深处的自我

存在冲突,与世界
告诉我应该成为什么样的人发生冲突。

但我不想

适应当前
对男子气概的破碎定义,

因为我不只是
想成为一个好人。

我想做一个好人。

而且我相信唯一可能发生的方法

是,如果男人学会不仅
接受

我们被告知
的女性特质,

而且愿意站起来

,支持并
从体现这些特质的女性身上学习。

现在,男人们——

(笑声)

我并不是说
我们学到的一切都是有毒的。 好的?

我不是说
你或我天生就有问题

,男人,我不是说
我们必须停止做男人。

但我们需要平衡,对吧?

我们需要平衡,

而事情会改变的唯一方法
是,如果我们真正诚实地

看待代代相传的剧本

,以及
作为男人,我们选择

在日常生活中扮演的角色 .

所以说到剧本,

我得到的第一个剧本
来自我父亲。

我爸真棒

他爱,他善良,
他敏感,他养育,

他在这里。

(掌声)

他在哭。

(笑声)

但是,对不起,爸爸
,我小时候因此而怨恨他,

因为我责怪他让我变得软弱,


在我们搬到俄勒冈州的小镇上是不受欢迎的

因为柔软
意味着我被欺负了。

看,我父亲在
传统上不是男性化的,

所以他没有教我如何使用我的手。

他没有教我
如何打猎,如何打架,

你知道的,男人的事。

相反,他教会了我他所知道的

:做一个男人就是要牺牲

,尽你所能

来照顾
和养家糊口。

但是
我从父亲那里学到了另一个角色

,我发现
他是从他父亲那里学到的

.

这个角色是暗中受苦的。

而现在三代人之后,

我发现自己也在扮演这个角色。

那么为什么我的祖父
不能直接向另一个

男人寻求帮助呢?

为什么我爸爸直到今天仍然认为
他必须自己做这一切?

我认识一个人,他宁愿死也

不愿告诉另一个
人他们正在受伤。

但这并不是因为我们都是,
像,强大的沉默类型。

不是。 我们很多男人真的很
擅长交朋友和聊天,

只是不谈任何真实的事情。

(笑声)

如果是关于工作、体育
、政治或女性,

我们可以毫无问题地分享我们的意见,

但如果是关于
我们的不安全感或我们的挣扎,

我们对失败的恐惧,

那么我们几乎就像瘫痪了一样。

至少,我愿意。

因此
,我一直在练习

摆脱这种行为的

一些方法是通过
创造迫使我变得脆弱的体验。

因此,如果
我的生活中有什么让我感到羞耻的事情,

我会练习直接投入其中,

无论它有多可怕

——有时甚至是公开的。

因为在这样做时,

我会夺走它的力量,

而在某些情况下,我表现出的脆弱

可以让其他人
允许这样做。

举个例子,不久前,

我正在努力解决生活中的一个问题

,我知道我
需要和我的男性朋友谈谈,

但我

害怕他们会评判我
,认为我很弱

,我会 失去我作为领导者的地位

,我知道我必须
在为期三天的男士旅行中带他们出城——

(笑声)

只是为了敞开心扉。 你猜怎么着?

直到第三天结束时

,我终于找到
了与他们

谈论我正在经历的事情的力量。

但是当我这样做时,
发生了一些惊人的事情。

我意识到我并不孤单,

因为我的队员们也一直在苦苦挣扎。

一旦我找到了
分担耻辱的力量和勇气,

它就消失了。

现在,随着时间的推移,我

了解到,如果我想练习脆弱性,

那么我需要为自己建立
一个问责制。

所以作为演员,我真的很幸运。

我已经建立了一个非常棒的粉丝群,

非常非常可爱和投入

,所以我决定使用我的社交平台

作为这种特洛伊木马,在

其中我可以创建
真实性和脆弱性的日常实践。

反应令人难以置信。

是肯定的
,是感动的。

我每天都会收到大量的爱、新闻
和积极的信息。

但这一切都来自某个特定的人群:

女性。

(笑声)

这是真的。

为什么只有女人跟着我?

男人们在哪里?

(笑声)

大约一年前,我发布了这张照片。

现在,后来,我
浏览了一些评论

,我注意到我的一位女粉丝
在照片中标记了她的男朋友

,她的男朋友回应说:

“请不要再给我贴上同性恋狗屎的标签。

谢谢。”

(笑声)

好像同性恋会让你
不像个男人,对吧?

于是我深吸了一口气,

做出了回应。

非常客气地说,我只是好奇,

因为我正在
探索男性气质

,我想知道
为什么我对妻子的

爱被认为是同性恋。

然后我说,
老实说,我只是想学习。

(笑声)

现在,他马上给我回了信。

我以为他要对我发火,
但他反而道歉了。

他告诉我,从小到大,

公开示爱
是如何被看不起的。

他告诉我,他
正在与自己的自我搏斗和挣扎,他是

多么爱他的女朋友

,他是多么感谢她的耐心。

几周后,

他又给我发了信息。

这次他给我发

了一张他单膝求婚的照片。

(掌声

)他只说:“谢谢。”

我就是这样的人。

我知道了。

看,在公开场合,
他只是在扮演自己的角色,

拒绝女性,对吧?

但在暗地里,他在
等待表达自己

、被看到、被听到的许可,

而他所需要的只是另一个

让他负责
并为他创造一个安全的感受空间的男人,

而转变是瞬间的。

我喜欢这种体验,

因为它向我展示
了转变是可能的,

即使是通过直接消息。

所以我想弄清楚
如何才能接触到更多的男人,

但当然没有
人关注我。

(笑声)

所以我尝试了一个实验。

我开始发布更多
刻板男性化的东西——

(笑声)

就像我富有挑战性的锻炼,
我的饮食计划,

我受伤后治愈身体的旅程

猜猜发生了什么?

男人开始给我写信。

然后,出乎意料的是,
在我的整个职业生涯中,第一次,

一家男性健身杂志给我打电话

,他们说他们想尊重我
作为他们改变游戏规则的人之一。

(笑声)

这真的改变了游戏规则吗?

或者它只是符合?

你看,这就是问题所在。

当我谈论男人的事情

并且我符合性别规范时,男人跟随我是非常酷的。

但如果我谈论
我多么爱我的妻子

、女儿或 10 天大的儿子,

我如何相信婚姻
充满挑战但很美好,

或者作为一个男人
我如何与身体畸形作斗争,

或者我是否提倡性别平等 ,
然后只有女性出现。

男人们在哪里?

所以男人,男人,男人,

男人!

(掌声)

我明白了。

长大后,我们往往
会互相挑战。

我们必须成为最

坚强、最坚强、最勇敢的
人。

对于我们中的许多人,包括我自己来说,
我们的身份最终取决于我们

是否
觉得自己足够男人。

但我对所有男人都有挑战,

因为男人喜欢挑战。

(笑声)

我挑战你,
看看你是否能用

你觉得让你成为男人

的相同品质更深入地了解自己。

你的力量、你的勇敢、
你的坚韧:

我们能否重新定义它们的含义
并用它们来探索我们的内心?

你有足够的勇气

去面对脆弱吗?

当你需要帮助时向另一个男人伸出援手?

一头扎进你的耻辱?

你有足够的力量去敏感

,无论你是受伤

还是快乐都会哭泣,

即使这会让你看起来很虚弱?

你有足够的信心

倾听你生活中的女性吗?

听听他们的想法和解决方案?

忍住他们的痛苦

并真正相信他们,

即使他们说
的对你不利?

当你听到“更衣室谈话”

时,当你听到
性骚扰的故事时,你会足够男人站起来对抗其他男人吗?

当你听到你的男孩
谈论抓屁股或让她喝醉时,

你真的会站
起来做点什么,

这样有一天
我们就不必生活在

一个女人不得不冒着一切风险站

出来说这些话的世界里 “我也是?”

(掌声)

这是严肃的事情。

我必须真实、诚实地看待

我在生活中无意识地伤害女性的方式

,这很丑陋。

我的妻子告诉我,我一直
在以某种伤害她的方式行事

并且没有纠正它。

基本上,有时
当她去演讲时,

无论是在家里还是在公共场合,

我都会把她的话打断
,为她完成她的想法。

太可怕了。

最糟糕的是,
当我这样做时,我完全没有意识到。

这是无意识的。

所以在这里,我正在尽我的本分,

努力成为一名女权主义者,

放大
世界各地女性的声音

,但在家里,

我正在用更大的声音
让我最爱的女人沉默。

所以我不得不问自己一个棘手的问题:

我够男人

闭嘴听吗?

(笑声)

(掌声)

我必须说实话。
我希望那没有得到掌声。

(笑声)

伙计们,

这是真的。

我只是在这里触及表面,

因为我们越深入
,它就越难看,我向你保证。

我没有时间讨论色情
和针对女性的暴力行为

、家务分工

或性别薪酬差距。

但我相信,作为男人

,是时候开始
看到我们的特权

并认识到我们
不仅仅是问题的一部分。

伙计们,我们是问题所在。

玻璃天花板的存在
是因为我们把它放在那里

,如果我们想
成为解决方案的一部分,

那么言语已经不够了。

有一句我喜欢的名言,是
我从巴哈伊著作中长大的。

它说:“
人间有两翼

,一雄一雌。

只要这二翼
的力量不相等

,鸟儿就不会飞。”

所以女性,

代表

全世界和我有相似感受的男性,

请原谅

我们所有没有
依靠你的力量的方式。

现在我
想请你正式帮助我们,

因为我们不能单独做到这一点。

我们是男人。 我们会搞砸的。

我们会说错话。
我们将成为五音不全。

我们很可能
会冒犯你。

但不要失去希望。

我们在这里只是因为你,

和你一样,作为男人,我们
需要站起来成为你的盟友,

因为你几乎可以对抗

一切。

我们需要您的帮助
来庆祝我们的脆弱性,

并在我们从头脑到心灵

进行这段非常非常漫长的旅程时

对我们保持耐心。

最后对父母说:

与其教我们的

孩子成为勇敢的男孩或漂亮的女孩,

我们可以教他们
如何成为好人吗?

所以回到我爸爸身边。

长大了,是的,就像每个男孩一样,
我有很多问题,

但现在我意识到,
甚至多亏了他的敏感

和情商

,我现在才能够
站在这里和你说话。 我现在意识到

我对父亲的怨恨
与他无关。

这与我
以及我渴望被接受

并扮演
一个从来不适合我的角色有关。

因此,虽然我父亲可能没有教我
如何使用我的双手,

但他确实教会了我如何使用我的心

,对我来说,这让他
比任何人都更像一个男人。

谢谢你。

(掌声)