So my eye was drawn to a paragraph in the May 2006 issue of First Things in which Richard Neuhaus reports that Marian Saltzman, coiner of the descriptive tag for cosmopolitan men "Metrosexual" (which is so last year), has come up with a term for this year's man: "Ubersexual". Hold your horses -- repellent as the associations with that term might be, the definition is pretty attractive:
Ubersexuals are “men who embrace the positive aspects of their masculinity, such as confidence, leadership, passion, and compassion.” But they do so “without giving in to negative neanderthal stereotypes.” “The ubersexual has a passion for principles. The metrosexual has a passion for fashion,” and so forth. The ubersexual does not “turn up his nose at any cultural pursuit that doesn’t involve sports, beer, or burgers.”
Well, I had no interest at all in Last Year's Man with his "passion for fashion" -- actually, I had little notion that he was Last Year's Man -- but I very much like and respect men with "confidence, leadership, passion and compassion."
If this definition helps men like this be identified and distinguished from the herd, all the better. I have some wonderful daughters and delightful single friends who would like to meet you.
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P.S. Therése once identified another characteristic of admirable men, in a backward sort of way. "Men who go to daily Mass are studly." Eloquently put.
* Jerry Hairston, Chicago White Sox, 4/15/83
3 comments:
Did Therese really say that???? Where can I find the entire quote? I was under the impression from her writings that she was so in love with Jesus she didn't notice men. I love to hear the more causual, human quotes of the saints. I wish more of them talked about the toils of a bad hair day, an extra 15lbs, or PMS.
Oh wait, Therese is the blog author. I thought you were quoting St. Therese. Sorry, I'm so embarassed!! Well, if you do become a saint please write about relateable matters, not only will you be holy, but you'll relateable!
No, I'm the (hardly) Little Flower of this blog.
I do believe that St. Therese is the one who said that she found praying the Rosary at times like "slogging through a lake of liquid lead."
THAT's relatable!
Sorry for my silence, guys. I'll be around soon.
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