🐱 Galentine’s Day has become a thing. Why hasn’t Malentine’s Day?

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On Feb. 13, women will celebrate Galentine’s Day, a holiday trumpeting the joys of female friendships.
The holiday can trace its origins to a 2010 episode of “Parks and Rec,” in which the main character, Leslie Knope, decides that the day before Valentine’s Day should be an opportunity to celebrate the platonic love among women, ideally with booze and breakfast food.
In the years since the episode aired, the fictional holiday has caught on in the real world.
But why hasn’t there been a male equivalent?
But it seems that a set of cultural pressures prevent a holiday like “Malentine’s Day” from catching on.
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For one, men have more difficulty making and keeping friends as they age.
This could be due to the fact that male friendships are often activity-based, with men often bonding while participating in shared social activities, whether it’s playing cards or watching sports. But as men enter the workforce, their availability for clubs, sports teams and social groups ebbs. As they find themselves increasingly focusing on their careers and families, it virtually disappears.
Whatever the reason, men report that the number of close friends they have shrinks dramatically during middle age.
The really bad news for men is that their friendship networks rarely strengthen after the kids are out of the house and they retire.
And a reversal of fortune in men’s friendships seems unlikely. In fact, men seem to be getting more socially isolated over time. Men report having fewer friends in 2004 than they did in 1985.
Even for men that do have a big group of male friends, there seem to be some cultural barriers that prevent the full-throated, public celebration of male affinity and companionship.
One is the cultural expectation that “real men” aren’t supposed to be emotional — something that’s hammered into boys from a young age. So even when men have close male friend groups, a public celebration might be seen as sappy and antithetical to real manhood.
Even men who try to break the mold of gender stereotypes or show that they are in touch with their feminine sides still feel pressured to demonstrate their manhood to others. For example, men can be supportive and caring, but still feel compelled to prove that they are the breadwinners for their families.
This doesn’t mean that men’s relationships are doomed to be shallow. Men often prefer actions over words to signal that they care about someone, and these performances – particularly ones involving friendship and love – tend to be understated. Men might show friends they care by helping them move furniture, or show partners affection by running errands or doing chores around the house.
In other words, the ways men form and celebrate friendship don’t lend themselves well to boozy group breakfasts that can be photographed and liked on social media.
 
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OK, now that you've come to a very important realization about how most men work, can you tell your idiot journo-thot friends to quit pushing some weird fujo fantasy idea of how male bonding should be
They won't. It's like incels who fap to lesbian porn. Journo-thots know they can't get a man, so they have to fantasize about men having gay sex.
 
Since I've never heard of it..... I'm going to say ..... it's something only fat lesbians with dyed hair care about, or FAKE NEWS, but I repeat myself.....
 
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I thought the title was a typo at first.
I thought this article was a typo.

Reality is often stranger and more tragic than fiction.

She says that like it's a bad thing.
She says it like that compulsion isn't reinforced by society, especially by women-- regardless of their level of financial dependence.

For a long fucking time now that's basically been considered the measure of an actual, grown-up man - his ability to go out there and provide for a family. This isn't something the "patriarchy" cooked up and supported all on its own.
That's just it-- so many women talk about the things that they want as things they don't want or don't care about, but then still operate as if they're not doubletalking. It's either because they don't know what goes into that personality trait, they want to look good/high-minded/humble in front of their peers, they don't understand the true value of what they allege they don't want, or they've duped themselves into thinking they don't want the thing they're actually looking for. Some people identify this as wanting the "simp" and the "chad" at the same time.

...I identify it as schizophrenia and ignorance of the self and other.
 
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Even for men that do have a big group of male friends, there seem to be some cultural barriers that prevent the full-throated, public celebration of male affinity and companionship.
Yeah, we aren't attention whore faggots who can afford to laze around for a fucking day jerking each other cocks.

We got shit to do, so Jim can have a beer and shut the fuck up while I fix this goddamn carb.
 
I always thought Pratchet joked about handling a Loaded Pun and Pun-Control, but now I see them under a new light as a serious suggestion.
 
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Yeah, we aren't attention whore faggots who can afford to laze around for a fucking day jerking each other cocks.

We got shit to do, so Jim can have a beer and shut the fuck up while I fix this goddamn carb.
90% of the camaraderie I've ever felt outside of my family has been from guys.

I have found that it literally doesn't matter where you're from. I've probably laughed and cried over beers with the boys and random acquaintances. Guys spend time talking and trying to focus on things together. I've seen women befriend each other, but they also seem to have a dozen or so hidden knives.


ie

2 guys that were only good acquaintances see each other after a while: They start talking about catching up and getting a beer.
2 girls in the same situation: a social media post, and then silently calling each other a bitch.
 
Of course it's some idiot pop culture reference, like Valentine's isn't already hollow.
 
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