It was the part of the worship service where prayers are offered for friends of the recently deceased. Two of the departed were listed.
Every church offers such rituals. But I was startled by words directly below: "…feel free to use the crying room under the Narthex" the program read.
New to Woodmont Christian Church, I was impressed. "What a sensitive thing. This church offers a grieving space!" Feeling sad, I imagined immediate use.
Speed reading has a drawback. The sentence began: "If your infant becomes upset during service,…"
Infants only. Darn it!
There are private places for tears, of course. But is no supportive invitation or ritual protection (except Jerusalem's "Wailing Wall.")
Men are terrible at tears. Evolutionary? Hard for Neanderthal males to fend off Sabertooth Tigers while bawling.
The message comes early. "No crying. Be a big boy!"
Amid anger or depression, I am often told by women, "It's okay to cry. Go ahead."
Instead, tears avoid my eyes. Unshed, they burn my throat. It is a Socratic syllogism. Male=Strength. Tears=weakness. Since I am male, no crying.
The women's baseball film, A League of Their Own, reinforces this. When a team member (Madonna) cries, the coach (Tom Hanks) shouts, "There's no crying in baseball!"
Right. Baseball is for men.
Yes. Tears can be out of place. Surgeons are barred from fear-tears mid-surgery. So are other caregivers if crying disturbs performance.
Tears would be helpful from professionals as sympathy with a loss. That is rare.
Men can cry at funerals, right? After his middle daughter's sudden death at thirty-six, my physician father-in-law cried his eyes out. It was disgusting to overhear a fellow male mutter, "Gee. Dr. Lokvam is losing it." No one said that about his wife or other daughters.
My father-in-law had not "lost it." He had found it. The mourner highlighted his weakness not Dr. Lokvam's.
Do men need a crying room? I am not holding my breath. This problem will remain until we honor tears regardless of sex.
Meanwhile, I may volunteer to comfort infants in the crying room.
-Erie Chapman
Screen Shot from "A League of Their Own"
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