ManFAQ Friday Three-way!

It’s Friday, and that means answer time! For those of you have have commented with questions from previous ManFAQs, thank you. I’m adding yours to the list of questions women have asked about men over the years, and I will answer them all in turn – to continue to demystify the more malodorous gender for those of the gentler. Actual questions, posed by real women, and answered by a REAL man. What could go wrong?

This week is a three-for-one special, since the topics are so closely related.


Question 1: Do you talk to your friends about what we do in bed? (answer at your own risk).

Answer 1: If the subject comes up at all, you can be assured that we don’t tell the truth. Since we all know that none of us are going to tell the truth on the topic, mostly it doesn’t come up.

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Question 2: Are you glad you got married or do you miss the single life sometimes?

Answer 2: There is a myth that married men don’t have sex as often as single men. This is a myth that married men perpetuate to keep single men from poaching their wives. There are no good reasons to be single.

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Question 3: Why do they always want sex at the most inopportune times? e.g.,…when I’m getting ready for work/appt…etc. He has 12 other hours of the day to want some but only gets horny when I’m getting ready to leave?

Answer 3: If by “inopportune” you mean “when you’re changing clothes,” I suggest you read your question again, tilting your head to the side this time. He doesn’t get horny when you’re leaving; he gets horny when he sees you half naked. So do several other guys – fix your blinds.


Now you know. Please, feel free to comment with any questions you’d like answered!

ManFAQ Friday: It’s all about the hey-hey

It’s Friday, and that means answer time! I’ve kept a list of questions women have asked me about men over the years, and as a public service I will answer them, to help demystify the more malodorous gender for those of the gentler. These will be actual questions, posed by real women, and answered by a REAL man. What could go wrong?


Today’s Question: I would like to know the percentage of times a man gives a woman a compliment because he means it, versus the percentage of times he gives the compliment hoping for hey-hey later.

Answer: It’s actually an inverse relationship to how deserved the compliment is. If you’re ugly, he probably means it. If you cause traffic accidents just by crossing the street, it’s all about the hey-hey.


Now you know. Please, feel free to comment with any questions you’d like answered!

Of Fathers and Sons

My son was born on the first day of summer in the new millennium, 10 years ago today. I know the pedants will tell you the millennium started with 2001, but Y2K had all the zeros and in the end, most of us will remember that as the big one. Today is the second time his birthday has hit on Father’s Day – it happened in 2004, and won’t happen again until I can buy him a beer. You know, legally.

Without further ado, happy birthday to Number One Son!

The buying of beer notwithstanding, I am widely regarded as a good father. I’m involved in the lives of my children, and have been since I cut their umbilical cords when each was born. I do not manage their lives – far from it – but I’m a fairly active dad, dropping them off and sometimes picking them up from school, talking to their teachers, coordinating the occasional play date. I read to them when they were smaller, and while the girls still like to hear me read a story, these days more often than not I just recommend books to them. One of my proudest moments came a few months ago when our eldest finished a book and told me I should read it, since she was sure it was the kind of thing I’d like – and she was dead right. (Cornelia Funke’s Inkheart, for those of you scoring at home.)

And I’m sure I’m doing OK as a dad, because I check in with the kids periodically. “Kid,” I ask them each, “are you having a good childhood?” So far, all three of them have responded with two thumbs up, if not glowing endorsements.

But as a good and involved father, I have to say I had a terrific example. It’s not like I’m making this stuff up on the fly – the specifics, perhaps, just as a good poet will write a good sonnet – but the format of the sonnet I learned. My father taught me many things about being a dad, without really meaning to, I’m sure, just as I’m teaching my kids without laying out a specific course of study. Someone asked me recently if my father was the kind of dad who was “always there for you.” It’s an odd question to me, not one with a yes or no answer. Yes, he was always available to ask a question or solve a problem, as long as the problem in question could wait until he got home.

For the record, I’m giggling a bit as I write this because I know my folks will read it. (Sometimes it’s hard not to shout “Hi Mom and Dad!” when the cameras roll past you…)

One of the most important lessons I learned from him was that you get up and go to work. Now that I’ve been in a professional environment for half my life, I realize that there must have been days when he didn’t feel like going to work, either under the weather or hungover or filled with existential ennui or just having the kind of eye trouble that you get on a nice summer day when you just can’t see going to the office. But he went, and he made it look easy, and if he had a bad day we didn’t see it.

And that’s the other important thing I learned from my father, that I’ll share with you on this Father’s Day – it’s always easier if you’re cheerful and friendly about it. Doesn’t matter what it is, it will be easier if you’re good natured about it. My dad had an epiphany of sorts not too many years ago, and the interesting thing isn’t that he had it; it’s that he’s so used to seeing the good side of everything and everyone that it took more than 50 years for him to see it. Driving with my mother in the car, and both of them thinking quietly for a while, out of the blue he exclaimed, “You know, there’s really a lot a jerks and assholes in the world.”

My mother, not missing a beat, looked him straight in the eye and said, “Your son is going to be so proud of you!”

And I am.

Happy Father’s Day to my father, and to all of yours!

Man FAQ: Answer Friday

It’s Friday, and that means answer time! I’ve kept a list of questions women have asked me about men over the years, and as a public service I will answer them, to help demystify the more malodorous gender for those of the gentler. These will be actual questions, posed by real women, and answered by a REAL man. What could go wrong?


Today’s Question: Why can’t you change the baby’s diaper without me asking you to? You can smell that noxiousness as easily as I can – even commenting “Pee-u, you stink girl” – but not change it?

Answer: Men are from Mars, and you should smell the air there. You’ve noticed that when we tilt cheek, all the guys laugh and all the girls leave? We know she stinks. She smells like we do most of the time. It’s one of the evolutionary traits that reminds us she’s part of our tribe. We don’t change them because it doesn’t bother us until long after it’s bothered you.


Now you know. Please, feel free to comment with any questions you’d like answered!

Acting Locally in a Closed System

So I’ve been thinking and thinking about this, and I finally figured out what bothers me about carbon offsets. It’s a great idea in theory – one group agrees not to pollute and sells their right to do so to someone else. That’s wonderful, locally. Unfortunately, it fails to address the fact that the earth is a closed system – we’re all on the same blue marble, and it doesn’t actually reduce the total problem.

The other thing that bothers me about it is that it reminds me of the old Catholic practice of selling indulgences, whereby you could buy your way out of purgatory if you provided enough wampum to the local sin-fixers. We can eat, drink, and have Mary as long as we want – just be sure to throw in a few extra bucks in the offering next week to cover some gluttony and the hey-hey. My fears of fire and brimstone vanish in a flourish of cold cash. And again, it didn’t actually reduce the total amount of sin in a closed system.

The selling of indulgences went out of vogue hundreds of years ago, and hasn’t really come back – Lindsay Lohan notwithstanding. So how many carbon offset credits will BP have to put in the collection plate to buy itself out of purgatory? I’m not sure there are enough third world countries to go around at the moment.

I hope it’s hot.