FERAL BIO
The "Alpha Male" wolf Myth DebunkedIt was never true, and we've never needed to realize that more than we do now. By Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez I will not pretend I have always made good choices in romantic partners. Being raised by not one but two narcissists left me unable, for far too long, to distinguish between love and domination. Confusion became my native language. Chaos felt like home. But one choice stands out above the rest, a kind of cautionary tale carved into bone. The cowboy. We met fourteen years ago on a dating site, both of us drifting in the wake of our own wrecks. When I saw his photos, I briefly assumed they were fake. No one looks like that in real life, I thought. Except, he did. He’d been scouted years earlier in a feed store in Colorado, by a television crew casting cowboys for a Super Bowl commercial about herding cats. A classic bit of Americana absurdity. He’d turned down a Marlboro Man contract, he told me, and instead modeled for Western catalogs when it suited him. Six foot four, six-six with his boots and hat on, strong, all denim and dust, all square jaw and ice blue eyes, living alone on a 17,000-acre ranch in the Hondo Valley. The kind of widescreen landscape where you can hear your own heartbeat. There was physical chemistry. I was newly divorced and wounded, and he was attentive in ways that felt like protection at first. We disagreed on politics: he was a rural libertarian. I was a progressive from the city. My ex-husband had shared my politics yet still managed to cheat, lie, steal, and manipulate. So I tried, then, to be open-minded. Maybe, I thought, ideology wasn’t destiny. Maybe tolerance could bridge a gulf. Maybe a conservative guy would be a better boyfriend. Spoiler alert: He wasn’t, and I’m lucky to be alive. The cowboy believed, with religious fervor, in “alpha males.” He believed nature itself ran on a brutal logic of winners and losers — eat or be eaten, kill or be killed, strike fear into the hearts of others, or be afraid. He believed a man was only worthy if he dominated everything around him. Including, as it happened, me. It began with small attempts at control but quickly escalated: what I was allowed to talk about, who I could speak to, what I could write, what I should wear. I resisted because I am a grown woman, not livestock. But to him, resistance was challenge, and challenge required punishment. Sometimes that punishment was the silent treatment, for days, or weeks. Sometimes it was a cutting remark, “those pants are not your friend.” But towards the end, it was pure violence. Once, disliking something I’d said, he pinned me to the wall, calmly, smiled and said, “Watch your mouth, Valdes. You have no idea what I’m capable of.” His calm was the worst part. He didn’t rage. He calculated. One afternoon, as we drove across the ranch, he told me in the same tone you’d use to read a grocery list that he could drown me in one of the ranch’s “drinkers.” Animals fall in all the time, he said. City girls too, probably. It wouldn’t be far-fetched. He said he’d once run his business partner off a snowy mountain road into an icy river. He said, after one of his dogs was gored by a longhorn bull, he shot the bull in the lung so it would die slowly. He described all of this without heat, as if narrating the correct method for mending a fence. That was the day I jumped out of a moving truck. We were going maybe twenty-five miles an hour down a rutted dirt road, but the jump still slammed into me like a freight train. My shoulder dislocated. Skin tore. I didn’t care. I grabbed my dog from the truck bed and we ran. Sixteen miles across gullies and canyons until I reached my car, which I always left parked near a neighboring ranch. I knew his old football injuries would keep him from chasing me. It was the last time I ever saw him. I tell this story because it ties directly to something most people don’t realize: the very idea of the “alpha male” is based on scientific error. A myth with a body count. A fantasy that some men cling to like scripture, without ever learning where it came from or why it was wrong. The term first entered the American bloodstream in 1970 with biologist L. David Mech’s book The Wolf: Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species. Mech described “alpha” and “beta” wolves based on observations of unrelated wolves forced together in captivity — wolves that fought because confinement is not nature. Years later, after studying wolves in their natural habitat, Mech realized the entire framework had been wrong. Wild wolf packs do not resemble gladiator pits. They are families: a breeding pair and their offspring. There is no throne. No violent competition for control. The male holds no more power than the female. They are equal partners who love their kids. Simple as that. As Mech put it in 1999, “Calling a wolf an alpha is usually no more appropriate than referring to a human parent as an ‘alpha.’” It was humans, not wolves, who projected patriarchal fantasies onto the animals. Mech publicly asked publishers to stop using his outdated terminology, even releasing a video with the International Wolf Center to explain that wild wolves do not behave this way. It gets worse — or better, depending on how you feel about the death of bad metaphors. The ubiquitous “lone wolf” trope is just as false. Wolves are profoundly social; their entire evolutionary strategy is cooperation. The only time a wolf is ever alone for more than a day or two is during dispersal — the brief period when a young adult leaves its family to find a mate and start a new pack. Even Mech pointed this out: “A dispersing wolf is not a ‘lone wolf’ in the romantic sense. It is simply between families.” Not an icon of rugged independence. More like a teenager moving out and apartment-hunting. The American imagination turned this brief biological errand into a whole personality type. Yet these myths — the alpha, the lone wolf — became cultural currency, because they mirror the values patriarchy wants to believe are natural (they aren’t). The manosphere built an entire worldview out of them, claiming their dominance fantasies were grounded in “nature.” They never bothered to read past Chapter One. The truth, across species, is that social mammals survive through cooperation, not tyranny. In many Native American cosmologies, including among the puebloan people of New Mexico, wolves are seen as representing the power of kindness, sharing and family, probably because those cultures did not come to wolves already poisoned by patriarchy, and observed wolves in the wild. Primatologist Frans de Waal, who spent decades studying chimpanzees and bonobos, learned this too. Though he once used the term “alpha” himself, his long-term research showed that the most effective leaders among primates often maintained power not through violence but through reassurance and coalition-building. In Our Inner Ape, de Waal writes, “We would much rather blame nature for what we don’t like in ourselves than credit it for what we do like.” Even among chimpanzees, an aggressive alpha often loses power quickly, because fear alone can’t hold a group together. And among bonobos, leadership frequently rests with older females who arbitrate disputes with social savvy rather than force. The biology is clear: empathy and altruism are foundational strategies for survival. The manosphere, however, clings to the outdated version because it flatters their worldview. It dresses insecurity in the costume of destiny. It offers a script for domination with “science” stapled to it. But that science has been revised, corrected, replaced. These men are basing their identity on a myth invented by wolves who weren’t even wolves — just prisoners in a cage. The irony is almost too on the nose. The cowboy believed he was a lone wolf and an alpha male at once, the sovereign predator of his domain. But he was neither. He was simply a former abused kid, raised by an autoritarian stepdad, who never learned how to love, be loved, or be in a family, so he mistook isolation for independence and brutality for strength. He thought domination made him powerful. In truth, it made him fragile. And dangerous. And weak. And small. That’s why the drift from personal nightmare to national peril feels so natural — when certain men and women in power adopt the same “alpha male” dominance mythology I once lived. Right now, the United States is being steered — at the top — by men and women who believe leadership is about brute force and fear, not empathy, compassion and decency. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth embraced a posture of “maximum lethality” and declared an end to what he calls “woke garbage,” telling the Pentagon to refocus on raw martial strength. The speech he gave alongside President Trump at Marine Corps Base Quantico in September 2025 called for stricter, more “male-level” standards and signaled a willingness to recast U.S. cities as domestic “training grounds.” That kind of talk does more than rebrand military policy — it normalizes impulsive aggression as a virtue, subordination as order, and absolute dominance as policy. It’s not just Hegseth. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has repeatedly embraced similarly brutal rhetoric and policies. Given that she bragged about shooting a family dog for not being obedient enough, she appears to have been raised by someone a lot like the cowboy. Her public stances cast dissent and vulnerability as threats; in doing so, she reinforces the idea that strength means suppression, that protection is imposed through violence, not care. When deeply psychologically sick people like Trump, Hegseth and Noem hold the reins of a diverse society, democracy, empathy, and pluralism are imperiled. They are unnatural beings, living an unnatural ethos, with the full conviction that such depravity is natural and Godly. The cowboy almost killed me because he believed a lie about nature. The people now making decisions at the highest levels of our government are using that same lie to justify policies that risk more than one life. I saved myself because I stopped believing it. We — the people — must refuse to believe it too. Because nature is clear: real strength and leadership among mammals do not come from blind, bombastic displays of masculine dominance. They come from connection, empathy, sharing and care. REPRINTED FROM "ALISA WRITES" ON SUBSTACK https://alisav.substack.com/p/the-alpha-male-myth-debunked A Wolf Shall Devour the SunEdinburgh Festival Fringe, August 2025 Respected by ancient cultures but the archetypal villain in European fairy tales, wolves were hunted to extinction in Scotland by the eighteenth century. Ancient myth, mesmeric imagery and dreamlike soundscapes open a liminal space where Norse gods, Irish shapeshifters and Siberian wolf-children traverse Scottish moors and Transylvanian mountains. Live music stirs the soul. Shadow puppetry and animation portray terror and playfulness. Stories about our oldest ally ask: in the absence of the wolf, what is lost?
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