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The concept that men's behavior can be explained by an 'inner dog' that drives them towards greed, power, and sex. The author argues that this 'Dog' can lead men to mistreat women and cause damage to themselves and their communities. The document offers insights into why men struggle with lust and provides solutions for how men can take responsibility for and correct the problem.
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Why must I feel that? Why must I chase the cat? Nothing but the dog in me! —GEORGE CLINTON, “ATOMIC DOG”
almost didn’t write this book. While I was on the promotional tour for my previous book, The Hollywood Commandments , I decided I was going to take a break from writing for a while. I love writing, but I thought it was time to give it a breather and focus on other aspects of my career. But then one conversation changed everything. Maria Shriver was interviewing me for her Facebook show Architects of Change as part of my tour. After the cameras stopped roll- ing, I was talking with her and her staff. This was in the fall of 2017, right around the time the news of Harvey Weinstein’s sexual assault scandal broke. Inevitably, we started talking about this and I said to her, off the cuff, “I’ve always wanted to write a book called Are Men Really Dogs? ” I went on to tell her why I believe men behave badly—why so many men seem to chase after money and power and sex,
ARE MEN REALLY DOGS? 3
WHAT’S REALLY GOING ON?
In his song “Against All Odds,” the late Tupac Shakur, argu- ably one of the greatest rappers in history, spoke a famous line: “This be the realest sh*t I ever wrote.” That line resonates with me because it expresses exactly how I feel about this book. Of all the books I’ve written, this is the most timely, relevant, ur- gent, and personal. I’m a Hollywood producer and a preacher, and people often ask me why men act the way they do. Those questions didn’t start with the tsunami of sexual harassment allegations we started hearing about in the news in late 2017; however, they have intensified since the news about Harvey Weinstein sparked and encouraged legions of women to come forward about the way men have mistreated and/or abused them. I realized that in order to really uncover the issue and the root of men’s behavior, I needed to start by looking at my own life and family history. I was raised in Oakland, California, by my mother, my grandmother, and my grandmother’s seven sisters—my great- aunts. Because I was raised predominantly by women and spent so much time with them, I saw firsthand the pain that the many men in their lives caused them, primarily due to infidelity. As a young kid I was so perplexed by this that I asked them, “Can a man be faithful?” They responded unanimously, saying, “No. Ninety-nine percent of all men cheat.” What?! No way , I thought. I was devastated. It sounded like they were citing a fundamental law of the universe.
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Growing up, I heard (and still hear even now) the following refrain:
All men cheat. Men can’t be faithful. Men can’t keep it in their pants. Men love power. Men are greedy. Men are dogs.
I became fascinated by the question “Are men really dogs?” It was a personal question for me, because my father, Don- ald Ray Franklin, wasn’t around much when my brothers and I were growing up. He struggled with alcoholism our entire lives, and when he was just thirty-six (I was nine at the time) he died of a heart attack. Years after his passing, when I was a teenager, I was at one of my cousin’s houses and found a photo of my dad sitting on a bed next to a female family member. My mother was sitting on the same bed, but on the opposite side. Strangely, my dad and this family member were smiling, while my mother looked distraught. I asked someone else in the family, “Do you know why my mother looks so upset in this photo?” This person told me a truth that rocked me to my core, one I’ve never expressed publicly until now: My dad had cheated on my mom with another woman in my family. Damn.
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consume them, and eventually destroy their lives?” How could countless men throughout history until this very day have such a difficult time remaining faithful? It seemed beyond explanation. These questions are not meant to be shots fired, point fin- gers, or be expressions of self-righteous indignation. They are part of an honest, anguished search for answers about what really haunts men no matter our age, race, or position in society. I ask questions like this about my own life:
It’s important that I make something clear: There’s a dif- ference between being a harasser and having difficulty controlling urges that could lead to infidelity. I’m not trying to put these things in the same category or paint them with the same broad brush, because the physical assault and violation of women is indefensible. Most men have issues managing their urges, but most of those same men would never think of sexually or physi- cally assaulting a woman. I don’t smoke weed and I’m a not proponent of it; how- ever, I’m told there are many different materials that can be derived from the Cannabis sativa plant. Hemp stalk is a strong natural fiber, with no hallucinogenic properties, that can be
ARE MEN REALLY DOGS? 7
used to make clothing and other materials, while marijuana comes from the flowers of the plant. Hemp seeds are high in protein, amino acids, and essential fatty acids and vitamins, and are sometimes considered a superfood. They all have different purposes and properties, but hemp stalk, hemp seeds, and mari- juana all come from the same plant. The same goes for men’s issues—they can take many forms, yet I believe they all stem from the same root.
THE LUST PROBLEM
The Me Too Movement actually predates the hashtag that gained popularity in late 2017. It was started in 2006 by Tarana Burke, who founded the movement “to help survivors of sexual violence, particularly young women of color from low wealth communities, find pathways to healing.... the me too. move- ment was ultimately created to ensure survivors know they’re not alone in their journey.” Then it was adopted widely in the wake of the sexual harassment scandals, and it became a way for women who have been victims of sexual harassment and assault to speak out about their abuse—many for the first time. In December 2017, the #MeToo “Silence Breakers” were named Time ’s Person of the Year. According to #MeToo, 17,700, women have reported a sexual assault since 1998—and that’s just those who have reported it. Time’s Up is a crusade against sexual harassment that started in January 2018 by a group of three hundred women in Hollywood.
ARE MEN REALLY DOGS? 9
Our society is in a state of emergency because of unman- aged lust running rampant in men. As a result, men are causing untold damage to women, themselves, their families, and our communities.
DOG TRAINING
The most important benefit of training your dog is safety: your safety, the safety of others, and his own safety... a trained dog is a free dog. —JACK & WENDY VOLHARD, DOG TRAINING FOR DUMMIES
Have you ever owned a dog that wasn’t trained? What hap- pened when you left it alone all day? Do you remember coming home to find torn-up couch cushions, shredded shoes, and ev- erything in chaos? Now imagine that house is your life. If men don’t train the Dog within, what kind of destruction will con- tinue to happen to their relationships, careers, and reputations? The Dog hungers for vice, women, money, power, and pos- sessions. It covets success. It looks for any kind of instant grati- fication. The Dog hates monogamy, restraint, and patience. But what makes the Dog really dangerous is that it is never satis- fied. You can feed it vice until you think it’s full, but its appetite only grows. The Dog wants what it wants when it wants it. None of this is meant to excuse infidelity or bad behavior. Recognizing that the Dog exists is not the same as approving of it. Instead, it’s recognition of a stark reality:
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If the man doesn’t master the Dog, the Dog will master the man. When men cheat on their girlfriends or wives, the Dog is in control. When men lie, cheat, or steal to get ahead in life, the Dog is in control. Men all around the world, from all eras and all stations in life, from priests and ministers to poets and presidents, have struggled with the Dog. Even in the Scrip- tures, we find accounts of men, from King David to Samson to the apostle Paul, who confessed to having trouble dealing with the Dog within them. From Julius Caesar to Caligula, history is filled with stories of men who had trouble with the Dog. And while it isn’t exactly clear when society started referring to men as “dogs,” in many traditions (including Islam and Rabbinic Judaism) dogs have historically been associated with violence, uncleanliness, and sexual promiscuity. In an article on when Muslims began to have a negative perception of dogs for Quartz India , Alan Mikhail writes, “This idea taps into a long tradition that considers even the mere sight of a dog during prayer to have the power to nullify a pious Muslim’s supplications.” Every man has lust in him. Every man has the Dog in him. That’s the bad news. The good news? Every man also has love in him. I call this love the Master. Every dog has a master. Every man has a Dog and every man has a Master within. The cure for the problem of the Dog is Mastery. The Master represents the love in a man—the love of self, love of family, love of the woman in his life, the love of com- munity. There’s enough love in a man to counteract the lust in
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rarely employ. How do men master the Dog? By committing to training it. Training is everything, and it’s the key to success. Noted dog trainers Jack and Wendy Volhard say this about training: “After all, a well-trained dog is a happy dog, and happy dogs have happy owners. However, you can’t expect a dog to do what you want him to do (or don’t want to do) unless you show him what your expectations are. And your dog won’t learn properly or be willing to heed your commands unless you use effective training methods.”
THE TRUTH ABOUT MEN: WHAT MEN AND WOMEN NEED TO KNOW
It’s time for us as men to do our work, because we are the prob- lem. For too long we have placed the responsibility of our poor behavior at the feet of women. It’s time for men to “man up” and allow the buck to stop with us. However, we generally don’t like to do our work. We’re stubborn and resistant to looking in the mirror and acknowl- edging that we have to change. A 2015 clip of DJ Khaled’s appearance on Power 105’s The Breakfast Club went viral because of his views on gender roles. He said, “You gotta understand, I’m the don. I’m the king... It’s different rules for men. We the king so there’s some things y’all might not wanna do, [but] it gotta get done. I just can’t do what you want me to do. I just can’t.”
ARE MEN REALLY DOGS? 13
I’m a fan of DJ Khaled’s work, and it’s unclear whether his thinking has changed since this interview. However, the attitude he displays here isn’t unique. The belief that there are different rules for men and women is a stubborn ideology, and when men (and women) buy into this thinking, change becomes elusive and nearly impossible. There aren’t different rules for men and women. And we shouldn’t buy into an idea that somehow women are subordinate because these fictitious rules imply that men are superior. If we believe in a double standard, in a set of rules that implies the superiority of men just because they are male, this double standard belief can con- tinue to perpetuate the various kinds of abuse (psychological, physical, spiritual, and emotional) that women have experi- enced and continue to experience at the hands of men. Many men have bought into a false idea of what it means to be a man. This false idea leads to feelings of entitlement, and that contributes to chauvinistic behavior that is detrimental to men, and especially to women. I wrote this book to help men and women understand how this all goes back to the Dog, and to help men learn how to master it. It may seem strange that I also wrote this book for women, but I did because they are on the receiving end of much of the damage the Dog does, and I want them to understand how to deal with the Dog too. Ladies, we are all in this together, and I wish I could tell you that every man in your life is going to do the work and is automatically going to get it together, but that’s just not true. I pray this book will motivate and inspire them to become better, but while that process is under way, I don’t want
ARE MEN REALLY DOGS? 15
to take responsibility for their actions. More than once, I’ve been asked, “DeVon, when are men going to step up?” Even though Maria Shriver’s prompting was compelling, I finally decided to write this book because I was tired of seeing the hurt in women’s eyes when they talk about the pain, anger, hu- miliation, and devastation men have caused them because so many men haven’t or won’t commit to the process of controlling their lust. I realized it was time to write this book when I saw that there are men out there who are legitimately struggling with how to become better men, yet have almost no guidance on how to do so. I don’t write this from a perspective of some self-righteous master. I’m no exception to any of the difficult truths I tackle in this book. Even though I’m a faithfully and happily married man for six years now, I have a Dog within me, too. If I try to act like my standing as a man of faith and a man in Hollywood makes me immune to my own lust, I am setting myself up for destruction, and I increase the chances that I will one day see the hurt in my wife’s eyes. Every single day I have to work at accepting, training, and mastering the Dog so that it doesn’t get the best of me. It’s some of the hardest yet most rewarding work I’ve ever done. All men are vulnerable to the Dog. If I act like I’m not, pride will make me its victim. It’s not just me, either. All over the world, good, well- intentioned men have the potential to be ruined by the Dog. Why? Because the Dog that remains unacknowledged, undisci- plined, and untrained is dangerous. Training the Dog is not easy, but it can be done. Academy Award winner Jamie Foxx tells a story about how the Dog
16 THE TRUTH ABOUT MEN
within him was out of control before the Oscars in 2005 when he was up for Best Actor for playing Ray Charles in Ray. In an interview with Howard Stern on May 23, 2017, he said, “I’m having such a good time, and I’m not knowing I’m fking up, I mean I’m drinking, I’m doing every fking thing you could possibly imagine or not and then I get a call.” The call was from none other than Oprah Winfrey, and she was not pleased. In the interview with Stern, Foxx said that Oprah told him, “You’re blowing it, Jamie Foxx. All of this gal- livanting and all this kind of sh*t, that’s not what you want to do. I want to take you somewhere. Make you understand the significance of what you’re doing.” He said that Oprah took him to a gathering at Quincy Jones’s home in the Hollywood Hills, where some of the top black actors from the 1960s and ’70s were waiting to do some- thing like an intervention. Among them was the legendary actor Sidney Poitier, who said to Jamie, “I want to give you one thing. I want to give you responsibility. When I saw your per- formance, it made me grow two inches.” The message they were sending was clear: You have an op- portunity, but also a responsibility. Don’t screw it up. Foxx says he was so moved, and so ashamed, that he wept. He told Stern, “To this day, it’s the most significant time in my life.” Oprah and those great men did something that is the key to getting the Dog under control: they appealed to the Master, and they succeeded in helping Foxx tame the Dog.
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communication. We have to start by first having honest conver- sations. Honesty isn’t a sign of weakness but of strength. When we can admit we don’t have it all together, that we’re struggling to figure out how to deal with one another better and that we need help in the process, this is when positive change can take place. Communication is one of the main keys to effecting change. Communication is also one of the key tools of effective training. I utilize the dog-training metaphor throughout the book not as a way to vilify or demonize men, but because I think of the metaphor as a transformational framework to introduce practical tips and tools that can lead to true freedom and personal success. In my own life I’ve seen the power of what training can do, and I know it can do the same for any man who has the courage to try it and any woman who has the desire to listen. So, are men really dogs? No. But it’s time we learn to stop acting like we are.
I’m a dog, I’m a dog, I’m a dog, I’m a dog Every dog has its day man, every dog. —GUCCI MANE, “I’M A DOG”
Considering the natural lust of power so inherent in man, I fear the thirst of power will prevail to oppress the people. —GEORGE MASON, FROM HIS SPEECH AT THE VIRGINIA RATIFYING CONVENTION, JUNE 4, 1788
t’s time to come out of the dark. We can’t relegate this issue to the sidelines any longer. I want you to be aware. We’ve all seen those signs that say “Beware of Dog.” My grandfather had one to warn neighbors about the two hunting dogs in his backyard. But I don’t just want you to be ware of the Dog any longer, I want you to become a ware of it. Becoming aware of the problem is the crucial first step toward fixing it. I want you to know exactly what the Dog is and what can be done about it, so throughout this book, I will function as your “Dog whisperer.” I will use the dog-training metaphor