Men Under Attack

‘Man Talk’ columnist Oyunga Pala hosts masculinity discussion forum

‘Man Talk’ columnist Oyunga Pala and Storymoja Productions last evening hosted a discussion forum seeking to define masculinity in the Kenyan context. The event took place at Dass Ethiopian Restaurant between 6 and 8 p.m.

Some of the questions that had been set out before the event were:

-What does it mean to be a good man?

-Can you be a modern man without abandoning all tradition?

-Why is sex a ‘performance’ and how can we keep up?

-We want to be real men but on our terms

-How can we do this when there are varying demands from our women, parents, kids, bosses and even our mates?

Oyunga Pala said that he felt that men are always under attack. “We never seem to meet your expectations,” he said.

His main question hence was, “In the Kenyan context, what is the definition of masculinity?”

Beyond that, a Kenyan man’s role as the provider, protector and pleaser, what do you get? Women apparently want substance/essence not just looks, position in society and money.

The most contentious issue being sex, Oyunga admitted to watching pornography to learn sexual skills since there are no ‘aunties’ to teach sexual skills. He then invited other men to explain what sexuality meant to them.

One 32 year old newly married man (relatively) said that his views on sexuality have evolved compared to when he was eight years old. He explained that he grew up in a rural area where there really was no dating and all you had to do was ask, ‘Can we?’, then procede to doing it in the nappier grass and with as many girls as possible. Urbanization, he said, has made sex more mystical.

Another Ugandan man in the audience surprised us when he said that back home (Uganda) boys between the ages of eight and eleven used to be taken to their ‘aunties’ to learn how to do it. Leading to this:-‘Kenyan men have never been taught what sexuality is, how then can they define it themselves? What is the function of sex precisely? Can’t men be judged not by their manhood but their essence?’

And to the women was paused the question:

‘What do you wish guys would understand about sex with the modern woman?’

“Today’s woman is not like your mother or grandmother. She wants to ‘please’ herself and still be supported. Cut the traditional stuff,” one woman offered.

Another man in the audience shared his experience; “I was close to my dad for a long time and I thought we shared everything. In late primary school though, I found myself in a situation (sex) but I was clueless. I became very disillusioned (about sex) after that. The only way out is to find the answers for yourself. And even if you don’t get the answers, the search itself is fulfilling,” he explained. Pretty good advice, don’t you think?

It was rightly observed that in the modern world we have clearly removed the traditional stereotype but not redefined masculinity. We have left a gap.

The challenge therefore remains for guys to curve out a new definition of what it means to be a man (masculinity) for themselves.

But how? I was left wondering.

Oyunga Pala has been doing the ‘Man Talk’ column (Nation Newspaper) for about ten years now and is currently working on a book along these lines.

TELL ME WHAT YOU LIKE-An Alison Kaine Mystery

Crime fiction with bits of lesbian sex

Crime fiction with bits of lesbian sex

A mystery with lesbian sex bits

Author: Kate Allen
Genre: Crime Fiction

As with most crime fiction mystery novels, Tell me what you like is the kind of book that’s hard to put down until you are done. It’s not even easy to pick out parts and point them out as the best.

The first in Kate Allen’s Alison Kaine’s mystery series, she manages to capture and keep first time readers with her well-developed believable characters, humorous dialogue and fast-paced plot. Alison Kaine is a police officer/cop who is supposed to be on vacation. Her plans to be out of town during this time are cancelled and she ends up at the park to pass time. There she meets Stacy, who plays as a goalkeeper in the lesbian soccer team. Alison and Stacy hit it off until Alison discovers (Thanks to her snoopy nature) that Stacy makes a living as a dominatrix giving women their S & M fantasies. The mystery centers around the everyday lives of these lesbian women in a community where religious fundamentalists appear at every corner even in the lesbian night clubs, to ‘straighten’ them out with the word of God.

Two lesbians are murdered in cold-blood in the background of Alison’s new relationship and an ex-girlfriend welcoming herself back into the cop’s house. Once a cop, always a cop, they say and Alison Kaine pokes her nose into the mysterious murders time and again; an aspect that gets her fellow male officers officially on the case thoroughly pissed-off overlooking the fact that being in this community, she has better chances of solving the murder. Inspite of warnings to keep off the case, Alison dives deeper into the detective work, with the help of her fellow lesbian neighbours Michelle and Janka doing some undercover work.

The author manages to keep you going over the suspects subconsciously trying to figure out who the murderer might be.
Stacy, the detectives’ own lover also tops the suspects’ lists, along with Dominique, who’s in the same business and-both of the dead women were clients of theirs. Carla, who Alison saves after an attack is the only one who confuses the cop because there’s just no motive or link; until she realizes (towards the end of the book) that it was her (Alisoni) the murderer was after and that the only reason she wasn’t attacked was because they’d exchanged sweaters in the basement while having a quickie earlier on.

The murderer is brought to light in slow bits; a young man, Mark, friend of Stacy’s and brought up by four lesbian women because his birth mother abandoned him for sometime until she became ‘straight’ and came to reclaim him. Mark saw his own mother burn to death and might even have been responsible for her death. Mark is also the kind of man who takes matters into his own hands to ensure the women in his life changed.
At the end of the day, we find out that it is the religious fundamentalists, whom Mark is a part of, that lead to committing the sin.

The sex bits are so explicit they might be offensive to some readers. However, if erotica and images created by role-playing make you squirm in your seat, then you’d love this books exciting, informing and witty combination.