Masculinity has been characterized by various traits over the years, from the strength and resilience of a man to his ability to provide and protect.

However, the meaning of masculinity has evolved to include both toxic and divine masculinity. Understanding the difference between these two concepts is vital for nurturing healthy relationships and building healthy communities.
Toxic masculinity has been defined as a narrow and damaging set of attitudes and beliefs that can harm not only men themselves but also everyone around them. It is characterized by traits such as dominance, aggression, competition, and a refusal to express emotions because doing so is perceived as weak. Men are socialized to suppress their feelings and need to put on a tough exterior.
Toxic masculinity norms often dictate that men should exert their dominance over women, rather than collaboratively coexisting. This attitude usually leads to physical, emotional, or psychological violence against women; not forgetting the frequently littered violent deaths due to extreme anger and hatred.
On the other hand, divine masculinity characterizes masculinity with empowered and healing qualities. It aims for men to embrace their own human experience and treat themselves and their environment with empathy and care. It urges or encourages healing of relationships with oneself, loved ones, and community.
Divine masculinity is not undermined by love, empathy or compassion – rather, it uplifts them as values inherent to masculinity. Men who embody divine masculinity understand that raw, aggressive masculinity isn’t the only way to be masculine.
These two types of masculinity demonstrate the stark difference in how men engage with their conscience, others, and themselves. Toxic masculinity models destructive and divisive aggression, while divine masculinity cultivates unity, compassion, respect, and collaborative efforts. Although humanity still holds firm grip of toxic masculinity, it’s never too late to focus on ways to advance divine masculinity attempting to empower, educate, and mentor more young boys and men.
In conclusion, the difference between toxic and divine masculinity is vast. Toxic masculinity models aggressive, domineering, and hyper-masculine traits. It leads to intense reactions that provoke harmful emotions such as hatred, fury, and envy. Divine masculinity, on the other hand, is based on humane and collaborative values such as empathy, compassion, and domesticity. It empowers self-acceptance as well as healing and creating meaningful relationships. It recognizes that by nurturing strengths within ourselves and ultimately those around us, we can build overall mindfulness, security and humanity. Therefore, we need to continue promoting more conversations to conscientiously foster practices that end the widespread culture of toxic masculinity and elevate divine masculinity. It’s never too late to start working towards providing equal, safe, and uplifting opportunities to develop healthy masculinity for men and boys.
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