Notes on Being a Man
Notes on Being a Man
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Notes on Being a Man
Boys and men are in crisis. Rarely has a cohort fallen further and faster than young men living in Western democracies. Boys are less likely to graduate from high school or college than girls. One in seven men reports having no friends, and men account for three of every four deaths of despair in America. Even worse, the lack of attention to these problems has created a vacuum filled by voices espousing misogyny, the demonization of others, and a toxic vision of masculinity. But this is not just a male issue: Women and children can’t flourish if men aren’t doing well. And as we know from spates of violence, there is nothing more dangerous than a lonely, broke young man.
Scott Galloway has been sounding the alarm on this issue for years. In Notes on Being a Man, Galloway explores what it means to be a man in modern America. He promotes the importance of healthy masculinity and mental strength. He shares his own story from boyhood to manhood, exploring his parents’ difficult divorce, his issues with anger and depression, his attempts to earn money, and his life raising two boys. He shares the sometimes funny, often painful lessons he learned along the way, some of which include:
• Get out of the house. Action absorbs anxiety.
• Take risks and be willing to feel like an imposter. Don’t let rejection stop you.
• Be kind. That’s the secret to success in relationships.
• Find what you’re good at; follow your talent.
• Acknowledge your blessings—and create opportunities for others. Be of surplus value.
• Being a good dad means being good to the mother of your children.
• Life isn’t about what happens to you—it’s about how you respond to it.
With unflinching honesty, Scott Galloway maps out an enriching, inspiring operator’s manual for being a man today.

All and all I really enjoyed the book. I bought a copy for each of my young-adult sons, so we'll see if they feel the same!
I have focused on some negatives here because they affect others. There is much that is good and great in this book. I felt saddened at the loss of his mother because he dearly loved her. Many of us love our mothers, no matter what. I cried after I read the letter to his sons. This book is- he states, his own thoughts and not a road map. Even so, he is advising young men. Words have an impact. May I suggest to the author- weigh every word with care. In your next book, do better still. It is too bad that you did not have a daughter. You would have written a different book.
Men must learn and truly understand that women are fellow human beings of equal value.
Great book, I recommend this book for everyone for their son especially graduated from high school about to go to college. I think this is a really good book.
First off, I enjoy Scott Galloway as a podcaster and talk show host. He is informative, intelligent, and frequently blunt in his views. But in reading his book, I equated myself as a hungry man in search of a food morsel, and his book as a bin filled with styrofoam peanuts, but also a few tasty marshmallows. The book does share some good advice on being a father , and a man, but too much of the book comes across as a ��Hey, look at me!�� account of Scott's enormously successful career.
If you like Galloway and his thoughts on life and kids a must read.