
Jamie Reidy’s fear of needles is getting better, but he’s still taking it a step at a time.

How does a non-creepy guy overcome the presumption that he’s a creep… without sounding like even more of a creep? Oliver Lee Bateman has an idea.

Sex-advice guru Dan Savage on being a gay dad, bad advice, Ashton Kutcher, why he dislikes Dr. Drew, the mistake he regrets the most, and whether he’s good in bed.

The national conversation Savage sparked gives voice and a permanent resource to closeted and openly gay youth—and the people who care for them.

Glee’s Kurt Hummel is not the first homosexual or gender-bending gay teen on TV, but the show’s popularity allows his character to ignite more conversations about sexual identity than any of his ancestors.

Developmental psychologist Ritch Savin-Williams argues that most gay teens are not in peril, and that the well-intentioned It Gets Better campaign nonetheless promotes a false “suffering suicidal script.”

Our president joins the chorus of voices—of famous people and regular folks—reminding kids that “it gets better.” And of course, it does get better.

If you want a surefire way to know who the closet cases are, boys or men, just listen for the guy making the “fag” jokes—or supporting anti-gay legislation.

Jamie Reidy is shocked by the jury’s decision to convict lacrosse player George Huguely V only of second degree murder in the slaying of his former girlfriend, Yeardley Love.

Food blogger Justin Cascio wants men to eat better, and the first step is in learning to cook.

Mark McCormack: “We do no-one any favors if we only fight prejudice that is, for some, yesterday’s battle.”

Jamie Reidy encourages single twentysomethings to hold out for Ms. Right, not settle for Ms. Not Too Bad

Men are leading Rick Santorum’s mad charge for the White House. Tom Matlack wants to know why.

NPR reports on the use of Ketamine to treat acute depression.

“This issue of how to reduce the reactivity on our political discourse is central to my thinking of late.”

This comment was from Spidaman3 on the post Headscarves and Men Holding Hands: Coming Out as a Cultural Relativist

When I was a sophomore in college, I realized I was unhappy, both with the school I had chosen and the major I was pursuing.

1) The stories will surprise you. 2) The conversation is important. 3) It sure beats a hammer or a tie. Want more reasons to buy The Good Men Project Book? Here you go…

One of our great myths about men is that lust invariably cancels out the empathy.
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“When I was in a men’s group in 1972, I distinctly remember feeling edgy when we would hug.”
“My son and daughter keep reminding me that things are changing.” The times they are a changin’ (comment and Marco Magnani video cover of Bob Dylan song.)