Since we’re generalizing anyway, I feel safe in posting this.
I think some of you are focusing on the wrong points here.
I cried when my grandmother died. Quietly, with my mother.
I cried when my father was diagnosed with prostate cancer, and had no other option besides prostate-removal surgery, and it might have already metastasized (he’s apparently fine, now, BTW, but I was really scared for a while). Quietly, by myself.
I object to the idea that it is okay for grown men to cry in public over the slightest provocation (i.e. “That bad man was MEAN to me.”)
It’s just not a natural reaction for me, or any of the guys I know personally. If I am the victim of a personal transgression I get indignant or angry. If I suffer and emotional blow I express regret or sorrow.
It never occurs to me to cry.
I thing it’s wrong to indoctrinate little boys into an “it’s okay for men to cry like girls do” mindset, when it’s not really their natural inclination. When you see a little boy with tears running down his red little face, he is really angry, not “crying.” Trust me on this.
Generalizing again, adult men and women do react differently, emotionally and physiologically, to the same stimuli.
The same applies to children, and we need to recognize that to have a worthwhile discussion.
It boils down to the “males and females are equal, therefore we must be identical” fallacy.
Men and women are equal in worth, but equality is not the same thing as identity.