🐱 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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I love a good breakfast as well as anyone, but I'm not sharing my fucking breakfast with any of my friends, they can purchase their own. As far as drinking goes, that ship sailed years ago.

I have no problem discussing furniture building, firearms, and dogs with my fellow man. However, men getting together with other men and talking about their "feelings" is straight faggorty unless it's court ordered, just saying..
 
I love a good breakfast as well as anyone, but I'm not sharing my fucking breakfast with any of my friends, they can purchase their own. As far as drinking goes, that ship sailed years ago.

I have no problem discussing furniture building, firearms, and dogs with my fellow man. However, men getting together with other men and talking about their "feelings" is straight faggorty unless it's court ordered, just saying..
Treating guy friends as a therapy group is something I'd expect a woman to do so

I'd say most guys are fine with giving advice but that's a bit different
 
yeah thats not a think because you fuckers made sure that we cant go and watch football right now...

34 days of male bonding taken away this year... watching at home is just not the same as in the freezing cold...
 
Valentine's day is and always will be a holiday done exclusively for women, which is totally fine. There is no need for you to pressure men into enjoying a holiday that isn't catered towards your interests, and saying that there's something wrong with you for not enjoying it is the type of abusive bullshit women constantly engage in.
 
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Reactions: AnotherPleb
Men aren't allowed to talk about their feelings and women are more sensitive to rejection like that so they try to wallow themselves in chocolate with their other rejected friends in order to feel a sense of appreciation
 
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Reactions: fuzzyrodent85
Men aren't allowed to talk about their feelings and women are more sensitive to rejection like that so they try to wallow themselves in chocolate with their other rejected friends in order to feel a sense of appreciation
men are allowed to talk about their feelings if they'll accept that men will call them gay for it to their faces and women will call them gay for it behind their backs
 
The title makes no sense. Mal- is a prefix that means bad, such as malcontent or malicious. "Male-ntine's Day" makes no sense phonetically because there is no solitary n sound in our alphabet. I suppose it would be pronounced "Male-Entine's Day", but that's not how it's spelled and there is no way to spell it other than how I just did.

Moving on. The entire first part of the article about men having no friends when they age makes the second part of the article irrelevant. There's no reason for you to bitch and whine about how men don't show their feelings when they just don't have any friends to begin with. Stop your feminist crying, that box of wine you bought isn't going to guzzle itself.
 
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Reactions: Toolbox and Vatred
Life is too short. If you care to show your friends how you feel, then show them. If you don't care, then don't care. Don't bother putting a new label on it like "Galentine's" or "Malentine's" so you can buy more junk at the store.
 
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