Part Two: Observations from a Men’s Group debate session on the making of a man and what it means to think for oneself As the room settled — men now fully present, laughter still lingering lightly in the air — I found myself doing what I often do when a room shifts like that. I stepped back. Not physically. Mentally. Observing. When men move from guarded to open, from silent to engaged, something deeper is always unfolding beneath the surface. And that's when a thought returned — the kind that doesn't ask for attention but refuses to leave. A book I'd read some time ago: Propaganda by Edward L. Bernays. Bernays is not the kind of author you read casually and then move on from. He's the kind you read and then start seeing the world differently. He makes observations that feel obvious once you hear them — and uncomfortable once you understand them. His central argument is that society is not as organic as we like to believe. Beneath what we call "publ...
Part One: Observations from a Men’s Group debate session on the making of a man and what it means to think for oneself They came from everywhere. And I mean that literally — not in the poetic way we reach for when we're trying to make something sound significant. From different estates. Different schedules. Different lives that did not easily make room for a Saturday morning gathering of men. One had traveled the night before. You could see it in his eyes — not exhaustion, exactly, but that quiet heaviness of a man who chose something over sleep. Another walked in still mentally tethered to a project he had just delegated. You know that look: body present, mind running silent calculations in the background, just in case things fell apart without him. A third came on crutches. The pain was visible. His eyes were not. They were here. That alone told me something. Men don't gather like this for nothing — not anymore, not in a world where time is constantly negotiated, an...