Men getting in touch with the softer side
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- DukeUsul
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Men getting in touch with the softer side
So, cl buncha made a comment about wanting to learn to knit. That made me think about the men on this board and if any of us are in touch with our "softer" side.
So does anyone have a hobby or skill that would stereotypically be considered a woman's skill or hobby? And I don't include things like cooking in this.... that hasn't been a stereotypically woman's job since a long time ago, at least not in my house.
Here goes mine. My mother taught me to cross stitch when I was 12. I can still do it, though I haven't in a while. I only cross stitched macho, manly things though, for example the time I did a Blackhawk helicopter.
Anyone else, or am I just setting myself up for ridicule here?
So does anyone have a hobby or skill that would stereotypically be considered a woman's skill or hobby? And I don't include things like cooking in this.... that hasn't been a stereotypically woman's job since a long time ago, at least not in my house.
Here goes mine. My mother taught me to cross stitch when I was 12. I can still do it, though I haven't in a while. I only cross stitched macho, manly things though, for example the time I did a Blackhawk helicopter.
Anyone else, or am I just setting myself up for ridicule here?
-- DukeUsul
- windsor
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
No ridicule. I can do count cross - haven't had time in a while (hmmmm something to do with my hands other than smoke....I see a plan forming)
How come if a guy does a traditionally female thing (knit, sew...etc) it is snicker snicker point point but if I, as a female, can fix a car (I can), do plumbing (that too), use power tools (the chop saw is MINE) its 'cool'.
Didn't former NFLer Rosie Grear (greer?) do needlepoint?
How come if a guy does a traditionally female thing (knit, sew...etc) it is snicker snicker point point but if I, as a female, can fix a car (I can), do plumbing (that too), use power tools (the chop saw is MINE) its 'cool'.
Didn't former NFLer Rosie Grear (greer?) do needlepoint?
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- OZZIE4DUKE
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Yes, he did. Wussy! Just kidding, Rosie, just kidding.windsor wrote:
Didn't former NFLer Rosie Grear (greer?) do needlepoint?
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- Miles
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I can sew, sorta. You know, put on buttons, repair small stitches in sleeves or hems.
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sMiles
Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Sure did...on the Today Show.windsor wrote: Didn't former NFLer Rosie Grear (greer?) do needlepoint?
As for me, my hobbies all involve breaking things and/or lighting them on fire. None of that sissy crap here. ;)
- Rolvix
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I learned to knit once. And promptly forgot how.
Class of 2014
Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I can crochet a little, as well as shoot a rabbit at about 40 yards. lol I am a well rounded kind of guy!
I can write poetry but at the same time hammer a nail into a 2x4 with three whacks of a hammer.
So I guess I am in touch with my "softer" side, it just knows it's place and when to surface and when to stay hidden!
I can write poetry but at the same time hammer a nail into a 2x4 with three whacks of a hammer.
So I guess I am in touch with my "softer" side, it just knows it's place and when to surface and when to stay hidden!
Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I can do a good bit of "handy" stuff, stemming in large part from my years of mission trip experience. If there's another person on site who really knows what they're doing, I'm a great #2. I'm good with all the various calculations & other mathematical things that come up in construction.knights68 wrote:I can crochet a little, as well as shoot a rabbit at about 40 yards. lol I am a well rounded kind of guy!
I can write poetry but at the same time hammer a nail into a 2x4 with three whacks of a hammer.
So I guess I am in touch with my "softer" side, it just knows it's place and when to surface and when to stay hidden!
You all know how I feel about cooking, but I cannot and will not shoot a rabbit, nor anything else with fur. I might would shoot a bird someday, but I've never done it. I'm a decent fisherman.
I'd say I have few "softer" skills. My mother is a master seamstress, so she's always graciously taken care of that for me. I can't really think of what else might qualify as such these days. The one thing like that that I can do really well is iron. In all the years we've known each other, Charleston Girl has always had me iron her dresses and such.
- Lavabe
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
If you can fix my car, you would have saved me $1250 this year.windsor wrote:How come if a guy does a traditionally female thing (knit, sew...etc) it is snicker snicker point point but if I, as a female, can fix a car (I can), do plumbing (that too), use power tools (the chop saw is MINE) its 'cool'.
If you can fix the plumbing around the house, you would have saved me $1480 this year.
If you can repair some furniture using some power tools, you would have saved me $600 this year.
Looking at it using a strictly cost/benefit analysis, I think if you can do all of that, you're not just "cool."
You're WAY cool.
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- OZZIE4DUKE
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I have pretty good touch with my sand wedge. Does that count?
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- cl15876
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
I think this is awesome. Although I typically do the manly kind of things (never enjoyed working on automobiles, because it got my hands greasy and dirty), but I love making things, especially with wood! Never got into metal, iron and the like, but could probably be pretty good at that also.DukeUsul wrote:So, cl buncha made a comment about wanting to learn to knit. That made me think about the men on this board and if any of us are in touch with our "softer" side.
So does anyone have a hobby or skill that would stereotypically be considered a woman's skill or hobby? And I don't include things like cooking in this.... that hasn't been a stereotypically woman's job since a long time ago, at least not in my house.
Here goes mine. My mother taught me to cross stitch when I was 12. I can still do it, though I haven't in a while. I only cross stitched macho, manly things though, for example the time I did a Blackhawk helicopter.
Anyone else, or am I just setting myself up for ridicule here?
Let's see... besides wanting to learn to knit to make afghans (they can be so warm and beautiful), I can sew pretty good with or without a machine! Back in the home-eck days (I made shirts, down vest, football and basketball (stuffed toys) and things like that. Now they have sewing machines you can hook up to your computer (I think) and push a button and walla, you can have all kinds of fancy logos, embroidery and graphics applied to your garments or other apparel. I'd like to get one of those one day.
I am pretty good with my hands and would probably be good at sculpturing or pottery and making things with clay. My X didn't have a lot of any similiar interests and she got into pottery so I got her a wheel and a kiln, but she never let me play with it.
I know this may sound kind of strange, but all the years growing up, my mom would never let me wash clothes, so when I got out on my own, I loved doing my own laundry! It is okay today, but not as exciting the first years on my own, so liberating, but it is great when the last load is dry and all folded up nicely!!!
I'd love to do some quilting one day, that looks like alot of fun and I always remember this very old quilt my grandma made from Whiteville, NC and gave us and I loved that quilt, it was sooo warm!!!!
I used to cross stitch also and latch hook!
I don't think this is gender specific, but anyone remember the string art stuff -- you pound nails into wood and then make things like sail boats and flowers and so on. I used to love to do that.
I used to oil paint (by the numbers NOTHING as brilliant as CB&B) and could free hand draw pretty darn good, guess that is where I got alot of my whiteboarding skills ... I can tear up a whiteboard and love it and love drawing pics of things to communicate processes, messages, themes, approaches, etc.....
I love playing board games and building puzzles.
I love music and I started to learn how to play the trumpet (but a baseball in the lip on 3rd base sort of ruined that start), so then I had a couple of years of piano lessons and wished I would have stuck with it. Basketball and Baseball eventually won over Satuday lessons on the piano.
I enjoy going to musicals/shows like "phantom of the opera" and broadway. Heck, when my lil sis used to dance, I actually got recruited to a drama club during a nutcracker performance and then became a Thesbian! That was a lot of fun acting out plays and doing all of the fund raising, lighting and stage setup! Pretty cool stuff.
That's all I can think of at the moment! Probably more will enter my mind later, but having been pretty self-sufficient and creative as a youngster thru adulthood, I have found that being able to do these things by oneself and/or especially with like minded friends or a partner is a lot of fun also!!!
- TillyGalore
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Did you copy this from a personals ad on the internet?cl15876 wrote:I think this is awesome. Although I typically do the manly kind of things (never enjoyed working on automobiles, because it got my hands greasy and dirty), but I love making things, especially with wood! Never got into metal, iron and the like, but could probably be pretty good at that also.DukeUsul wrote:So, cl buncha made a comment about wanting to learn to knit. That made me think about the men on this board and if any of us are in touch with our "softer" side.
So does anyone have a hobby or skill that would stereotypically be considered a woman's skill or hobby? And I don't include things like cooking in this.... that hasn't been a stereotypically woman's job since a long time ago, at least not in my house.
Here goes mine. My mother taught me to cross stitch when I was 12. I can still do it, though I haven't in a while. I only cross stitched macho, manly things though, for example the time I did a Blackhawk helicopter.
Anyone else, or am I just setting myself up for ridicule here?
Let's see... besides wanting to learn to knit to make afghans (they can be so warm and beautiful), I can sew pretty good with or without a machine! Back in the home-eck days (I made shirts, down vest, football and basketball (stuffed toys) and things like that. Now they have sewing machines you can hook up to your computer (I think) and push a button and walla, you can have all kinds of fancy logos, embroidery and graphics applied to your garments or other apparel. I'd like to get one of those one day.
I am pretty good with my hands and would probably be good at sculpturing or pottery and making things with clay. My X didn't have a lot of any similiar interests and she got into pottery so I got her a wheel and a kiln, but she never let me play with it.
I know this may sound kind of strange, but all the years growing up, my mom would never let me wash clothes, so when I got out on my own, I loved doing my own laundry! It is okay today, but not as exciting the first years on my own, so liberating, but it is great when the last load is dry and all folded up nicely!!!
I'd love to do some quilting one day, that looks like alot of fun and I always remember this very old quilt my grandma made from Whiteville, NC and gave us and I loved that quilt, it was sooo warm!!!!
I used to cross stitch also and latch hook!
I don't think this is gender specific, but anyone remember the string art stuff -- you pound nails into wood and then make things like sail boats and flowers and so on. I used to love to do that.
I used to oil paint (by the numbers NOTHING as brilliant as CB&B) and could free hand draw pretty darn good, guess that is where I got alot of my whiteboarding skills ... I can tear up a whiteboard and love it and love drawing pics of things to communicate processes, messages, themes, approaches, etc.....
I love playing board games and building puzzles.
I love music and I started to learn how to play the trumpet (but a baseball in the lip on 3rd base sort of ruined that start), so then I had a couple of years of piano lessons and wished I would have stuck with it. Basketball and Baseball eventually won over Satuday lessons on the piano.
I enjoy going to musicals/shows like "phantom of the opera" and broadway. Heck, when my lil sis used to dance, I actually got recruited to a drama club during a nutcracker performance and then became a Thesbian! That was a lot of fun acting out plays and doing all of the fund raising, lighting and stage setup! Pretty cool stuff.
That's all I can think of at the moment! Probably more will enter my mind later, but having been pretty self-sufficient and creative as a youngster thru adulthood, I have found that being able to do these things by oneself and/or especially with like minded friends or a partner is a lot of fun also!!!
I kid of course.
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- cl15876
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Let the ridicule begin, that sure didn't take long!!!TillyGalore wrote:Did you copy this from a personals ad on the internet?cl15876 wrote:I think this is awesome. Although I typically do the manly kind of things (never enjoyed working on automobiles, because it got my hands greasy and dirty), but I love making things, especially with wood! Never got into metal, iron and the like, but could probably be pretty good at that also.DukeUsul wrote:So, cl buncha made a comment about wanting to learn to knit. That made me think about the men on this board and if any of us are in touch with our "softer" side.
So does anyone have a hobby or skill that would stereotypically be considered a woman's skill or hobby? And I don't include things like cooking in this.... that hasn't been a stereotypically woman's job since a long time ago, at least not in my house.
Here goes mine. My mother taught me to cross stitch when I was 12. I can still do it, though I haven't in a while. I only cross stitched macho, manly things though, for example the time I did a Blackhawk helicopter.
Anyone else, or am I just setting myself up for ridicule here?
Let's see... besides wanting to learn to knit to make afghans (they can be so warm and beautiful), I can sew pretty good with or without a machine! Back in the home-eck days (I made shirts, down vest, football and basketball (stuffed toys) and things like that. Now they have sewing machines you can hook up to your computer (I think) and push a button and walla, you can have all kinds of fancy logos, embroidery and graphics applied to your garments or other apparel. I'd like to get one of those one day.
I am pretty good with my hands and would probably be good at sculpturing or pottery and making things with clay. My X didn't have a lot of any similiar interests and she got into pottery so I got her a wheel and a kiln, but she never let me play with it.
I know this may sound kind of strange, but all the years growing up, my mom would never let me wash clothes, so when I got out on my own, I loved doing my own laundry! It is okay today, but not as exciting the first years on my own, so liberating, but it is great when the last load is dry and all folded up nicely!!!
I'd love to do some quilting one day, that looks like alot of fun and I always remember this very old quilt my grandma made from Whiteville, NC and gave us and I loved that quilt, it was sooo warm!!!!
I used to cross stitch also and latch hook!
I don't think this is gender specific, but anyone remember the string art stuff -- you pound nails into wood and then make things like sail boats and flowers and so on. I used to love to do that.
I used to oil paint (by the numbers NOTHING as brilliant as CB&B) and could free hand draw pretty darn good, guess that is where I got alot of my whiteboarding skills ... I can tear up a whiteboard and love it and love drawing pics of things to communicate processes, messages, themes, approaches, etc.....
I love playing board games and building puzzles.
I love music and I started to learn how to play the trumpet (but a baseball in the lip on 3rd base sort of ruined that start), so then I had a couple of years of piano lessons and wished I would have stuck with it. Basketball and Baseball eventually won over Satuday lessons on the piano.
I enjoy going to musicals/shows like "phantom of the opera" and broadway. Heck, when my lil sis used to dance, I actually got recruited to a drama club during a nutcracker performance and then became a Thesbian! That was a lot of fun acting out plays and doing all of the fund raising, lighting and stage setup! Pretty cool stuff.
That's all I can think of at the moment! Probably more will enter my mind later, but having been pretty self-sufficient and creative as a youngster thru adulthood, I have found that being able to do these things by oneself and/or especially with like minded friends or a partner is a lot of fun also!!!
I kid of course.
- OZZIE4DUKE
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Next time we get together for dinner here, feel free to do the laundry too!cl15876 wrote:
I know this may sound kind of strange, but all the years growing up, my mom would never let me wash clothes, so when I got out on my own, I loved doing my own laundry! It is okay today, but not as exciting the first years on my own, so liberating, but it is great when the last load is dry and all folded up nicely!!!
Your paradigm of optimism
Go To Hell carolina! Go To Hell!
9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F!
http://ecogreen.greentechaffiliate.com
Go To Hell carolina! Go To Hell!
9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F! 9F!
http://ecogreen.greentechaffiliate.com
- devildeac
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
We'll save a basket of dirty clothes for you, too... :roll:OZZIE4DUKE wrote:Next time we get together for dinner here, feel free to do the laundry too!cl15876 wrote:
I know this may sound kind of strange, but all the years growing up, my mom would never let me wash clothes, so when I got out on my own, I loved doing my own laundry! It is okay today, but not as exciting the first years on my own, so liberating, but it is great when the last load is dry and all folded up nicely!!!
[redacted] them and the horses they rode in on.
- bjornolf
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Nice, , for every "feminine" art you put in there, you included at least one "manly" art form. ;)
Me, I can do some of the manly ones, like fixing things around the house, but I'll stick to the ones actually asked for here:
I can latch hook, but I don't have the patience for it.
I can cross stitch, but I like the ones with the patterns painted on cause I don't have the patience to do all that counting.
I can make a mean sock pot holder with a jersey loop weaving loom. We have tons of them, they hold up well, and they work WAY better than most of the ones you can get at a store. And you can pick the colors. I have some cool Duke colored ones, and I made a VT one for Erica. You have to make sure to get the "bushier" sock loops though. The more "nylony", thin ones just shrink way down and don't keep the heat off very well.
Me, I can do some of the manly ones, like fixing things around the house, but I'll stick to the ones actually asked for here:
I can latch hook, but I don't have the patience for it.
I can cross stitch, but I like the ones with the patterns painted on cause I don't have the patience to do all that counting.
I can make a mean sock pot holder with a jersey loop weaving loom. We have tons of them, they hold up well, and they work WAY better than most of the ones you can get at a store. And you can pick the colors. I have some cool Duke colored ones, and I made a VT one for Erica. You have to make sure to get the "bushier" sock loops though. The more "nylony", thin ones just shrink way down and don't keep the heat off very well.
Qui invidet minor est...
Let's Go Duke!
- devildeac
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
"I cut down trees, I wear high heels, suspenders and a bra..." :oops: :roll:
[redacted] them and the horses they rode in on.
- cl15876
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
LOL - I'll be down this weekend and have some trees to chop up and cut down! Please bring your high heels and suspenders and bra and we'll have fun!!!!devildeac wrote:"I cut down trees, I wear high heels, suspenders and a bra..." :oops: :roll:
- devildeac
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Oh,no, what have I started... :roll:cl15876 wrote:LOL - I'll be down this weekend and have some trees to chop up and cut down! Please bring your high heels and suspenders and bra and we'll have fun!!!!devildeac wrote:"I cut down trees, I wear high heels, suspenders and a bra..." :oops: :roll:
[redacted] them and the horses they rode in on.
- YmoBeThere
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Re: Men getting in touch with the softer side
Did anyone ever check out the softer side of Sears?
*Yes, I remember all kinds of ad campaigns from years past.
*Yes, I remember all kinds of ad campaigns from years past.