Crying Like a Woman, Crying Clubs+ "Weaker Sex" No More




                I did something unexpected this morning. I cried. For awhile. My morning was pretty much shot. I am still annoyed. I had a plan for the day, a sacred list of "all-that-must-be-done today," and crying was on the other list:








The daily news is enough to make the most stoic among us weep. And I often pray, cry, seethe, worry and some combination of all of them upon hearing it. But today, it is not that. Nor is it the storms that knocked us over this week.






Nor the fact that I lost a tooth a few days ago. Broken clean off at the gum.  Or that I'm trying to cut out my dear friend, Lovely White Sugar (which is depressing.)




This is the worst part: I'm not even sure of the source of the spillage. I have my suspicions (hormones?)
 It's tempting to be frustrated and angry at my body, my female-ness. When I was a girl, I wanted to be a boy. I was a good boy: I was tough, strong, I made fun of girly-girls (who made fun of me) and I seldom cried. 




But I'm smarter now. I do know that some amount of tears bring a purging, a catharsis. Researchers tell us that emotional tears contain a natural painkiller that's released when the body's under stress. Numerous studies have shown that crying really does relieve stress. Which led me to this thought: Perhaps I should start a Crying Club. 




Japan already has them. They're called "Rui- Katsu" (tear-seeking). Takashi Saga started them in 2011. “Crying does not have a good image in Japan,” says Saga. “People believe you should not cry in front of people, that it is weak.” But he cites Japanese research that concluded that stress relief from crying can last as long as a week. Why waste good science? So people gather, hankies in hand, to watch sad movies, read sad poetry and cry together. Most of the criers are men. (Women don't usually need classes in this.) 





I find this a bit sad. (But not pathetic enough for tears.). That some people have to learn how to cry again. That it must be contained and confined to certain hours and places. That a professional must run it. All of this makes it more appealing to men, I suppose, who cry far less than women. (Boys and girls cry equally until age 12. By age 18, women cry four times as much as men. Here are the Top Ten Things that Make Women Cry.)




And this is when I ponder that age-old belief that women are weaker than men---because they cry. When Hilary Clinton teared up at a campaign event in 2008, it made international news, leading many to publicly wonder if she had the stuff to lead a nation. One minute tears, the next---who knows! Nuclear warfare during a menopausal hot flash? 

But we are not weak because we weep. Even if we cannot always name what melts us. Even when besieged by hormones that unseat us. Still, we are strong enough to dare to feel. And If we stagger at times, we stagger under the weights we are given. We carry the beautiful weight of our children in our own bodies, then in our arms. Then we shoulder their growings, their grievings and then  finally their leavings. We lift the weight of parents still with us or fading or lost or long gone but never gone . . . . We feel the blessed weight of spouses, sometimes limping through unequal courses. We carry siblings whom we love stumbling under their own breaking loads. We carry friends in prison, cancer-ridden, refugees . . . And through all of this, we carry  monthly tides that course through our own rivers, rising and falling.





Yes, we bleed, we weep, we melt, we leak, we feel. 

And so we are alive.

None of this is faulty biology, female or otherwise. Our bodies take us somewhere. In all of it: menstruation, pregnancy, adoption, nursing, nurturing, menopause, we ride saltwater waves that are meant to sweep us near to God, who too, bore children, who wept and bled. Who births and bears us still. 





I am at peace with  my tears, however they come. I only ask this:


Dearest men, When you see us tearing, 

don't call us weak. 

Call us instead fully alive. 

Call us Courageous enough to feel,

Call us Brave----and happy 

to laugh and weep with you,

just as you need.

But most of all, 

        call us Women.


And let all of us be glad.


















23 comments:

  1. My husband informed me that he hates it when I cry in front of him. So, I haven't really cried for years. The last time I wept in his vicinity was when my brother died, almost 3 years ago. Since I made the decision NOT to cry, it's amazing how the urge has left me. I think this makes me a little sad.

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    1. That makes me sad too . .. Yes, men are uncomfortable with women's tears---but they can grow in this area! It is more natural to learn to accept tears than it is to suppress them . .. . Hoping for you . ...

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  2. For so long I was so locked up emotionally, I never cried...I couldn’t cry when it would had been healthy to cry... my husband on the other hand has always been tender... cries at movies... and still every time he addresses the athletes at his school... he is an athletic director at a christian college... he cries... I am so thankful to say... the Lord did a lot of healing in my heart and tears come easy now... and we are a pretty weepy couple now:) Tears are not a sign of weakness... a man who cries because he has allowed his heart to remain tender is not weak...it is probably more of a sign of true strength ... and the same goes with women... tenderness is a gift... very close to the heart of God!!!

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    1. Ro---yes indeed it's not good when we're unable to cry. I reached the point a number of times in my life when I lost the ability to cry--because I had stopped feeling. I am grateful to say the same----that God has restored that tenderness and openness. I believe He can do the same for all. But it's always a risk to open ourselves up this way. I am sad for those who do not feel safe enough yet to do this … .

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  3. Thinking these days about Romans 8. Aren't our tears part of the "groaning" -- expressing what "cannot be uttered," and helping us to deal with the "futility" until we are delivered?

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  4. I so agree Michele. No matter what we all carry this hollowness that will not be fully filled until we are fully redeemed, along with all of creation. Yes, meanwhile we groan and cry. Thank you!!

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  5. Hey Leslie, guess what? I cried while reading your post on crying! It was so affirming. . .Truthfully, I cry a lot and find that it is one of the best ways for me to release stress. In defense of those men who are comfortable with tears: my husband tells me that he wishes he could connect with his emotions as easily as I do. He encourages me to cry when I am stressed because he sees how beneficial it is. FYI: for most of my life, I believed that I was not emotional and rarely cried - or felt much of anything. But, then God brought me healing and I reconnected with a whole range of emotions, including the blessing of tears. Thanks. This was a fun post - even about crying!

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    1. Heather!! The highest compliment! (touched by your tears!) Glad this was fun. (That was my challenge. WHo wants to read about crying??) Isn't it strange that frequent tears come as the result of healing?? But so it is. When we are healed and safe in our Father's arms, we are then safe enough to weep--for ourselves, for others. IT seems God has done this for many---including me. And I hope and pray for others who are not yet there ….

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  6. So beautifully said!! Today I have been crying for a dear sweet friend of mine; ONLY 35 years of age. He was told that he only has 18 months to live; colon cancer. I hate that life is not fair and tired of bad things happening to good people!! I get so angry with GOD because he see and hears how many people have been praying for a miracle for my friend. GOD could have already instantaneously heal him, but hasn't. I'm just so sad! On the bright side, you writings inspire me and give me hope. Thank you!!!

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    1. Oh Sandra, I am praying this morning that you might find the grieving heart of God in this so difficult news, and that redemption and beauty might come from this hard-hard-hard in ways that it never would have otherwise. The same God who is saying no to this healing also said no to his only son's begging for the cup to be taken from him. May this become a holy place.

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    2. Sandra, ohhhh, this is sad news indeed. I have a friend it he prime of life, a single parent, who just fought this same exact battle---and lost this last year. I wonder if we asked my friend now---if we could interrupt her while with Jesus and with her son who died 10 years before---would she go back? Would she take any of it back? I think she would say no. She would never take back the incredible things God did with her and for her and for all of us who were watching. I pray your friend finds a nearness to God in the midst of this walk that overcomes sorrow and fear. I don't mean this lightly and blithely, I really don't. Sandra---here is a link to an amazing piece by Kara Tippett, who, at 36, is dying of breast cancer. She has 4 young children. Her story has gone out around the world. HEre is what she says about dying:http://www.aholyexperience.com/2014/10/dear-brittany-why-we-dont-have-to-be-so-afraid-of-dying-suffering-that-we-choose-suicide/

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    3. Leslie and Amy, thank you for your kind words. Although a very sad situation, I have to tell you that my friend, David, is so close to GOD. He said in his announcement that he prays him going through this will bring people to GOD! David has such a huge love for GOD and huge faith. He says he still believes in miracles, but said he wants whatever happens to be God's will. I just cried and cried, because I feel I have huge faith, but OMG, it does not come close to what David has. I also remember praying for my kids one afternoon, reflecting back on my kids childhoods asking GOD why stuff happened to my kids, and where in the hell was he? I asked him, "why why why my children." God replied, "why my son?" That pretty much put everything into perspective. I realized that nothing what we go through, will EVER come close to what Jesus went through for us. However, we are still human with human emotions and I KNOW that GOD understands our anguish and he goes through that anguish with us. I just wish life were perfect, but it's not. If it were perfect. . . . what would we be grateful for?

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    4. SO grateful and glad to hear this, Sandra, about your friend. He desires to give God glory through this--and I know this is what will happen, even in ways we don't see. Glad too that you know it's okay to be human, and to give voice to these questions and sorrows. I thank God for you Sandra. And I know He will use you too as an encouragement in David's life as he walks toward God. . . ..

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  7. I read a study a while ago which "verified" that men are actually physically repulsed by crying women. A man's natural reaction to a crying woman is to do anything to make her (tears) stop. It went into a lengthy explanation on the "whys" of all this, now lost on me. Anyway, men may be the more stoic gender, but women are strong. Tears and all...Winn

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    1. Yes, I read a number of those studies, Winn, and can attest to that in real life!! Some men get angry (and forbid our tears as a response---read the comment from a reader above.) Some rush to our aid. Some turn away, so uncomfortable they feel only their discomfort rather than empathy. And a few will join us in our tears!! I do believe that men get more tender as they age. WHich is a word of hope for many women!! Thanks for reading, Winn!

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  8. Great stuff, Leslie! Wish I could be a fly on the wall for a crying club session in Japan. If the tears didn't heal, I think laughter would--I'm sure a lot of the tears end up in laughter.

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    1. Hi Tracy! Yes, in fact, the head of the club says that people leave with smiles on their faces! I think accessing our sorrow does indeed also allow us to feel joy as well. The two are so intertwined. (As I think about it, our HIWW was both a crying and laughing club!! That's why we all felt so alive!!)

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  9. This seems to echo Jesus's words, "Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted." We work so hard to pretend that we don't live east of Eden, but we do, and there is much to be grieved over, so very much brokenness. I think it is a sign of maturity for one--whether male or female--to be grieved over what is, and what is not. I think this is a place where we can touch a very tender part of our triune God's heart, as he grieves over what is, and what is not. The grief becomes a place of fellowship that couldn't be had any other way.

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  10. Amy---indeed!! "Blessed are those who mourn." ( I would have gone there, but I've done that in other posts before, so wanted to end somewhere else this time. ) I wouldn't take away a single tear---because yes, it drives me to God, the empty vessel leaning and longing for the only fountain. If we are not crying, ever, we're missing the true state of the world, and we are not longing for what is coming---Jesus. Completion. Perfection. Restoration. I want that! Crying until that comes, Leslie

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  11. Oh, amen! One of the lovelier things about getting older with a much-loved partner is seeing how much more easily he cries now. It's a gift of old age for him - one I'm quite used to since. . . forever! Thanks for this.

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  12. Diane---I agree. It's lovely to see men grow and soften this way. It's easy to credit the decline of testosterone, but I prefer to see it as the increase of love.

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  13. The last church I was in my Pastor and his wife said I did not have the JOY of the Lord because of my crying, and depression in church. I guess he had a hard time with my tears and did not know how to handle it. JOY does not mean happiness but a solid faith in a unseen God. I'm so glad we have a God in heaven that see our tears of sadness and of joy. That he hold us close to His heart.

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    1. Oh my!! I did not know that joy could not include tears!! For the first six months after moving to my present church, I cried huge long tears every week during singing---SO thankful for be in a place of such grace and love. I'm so glad you're no longer in that church. How strange to require an outward expression of "joy"as proof of one's faith!! God counts your tears as precious, and He is readying to wipe them away----soon!

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