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Men isolated
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I'd like to hear from men. I want to know your inner feelings about anything that you feel isolated about. I'd like to know if you feel that the revolution towards equality of the sexes has gone too far to a point whereby you are feeling inferior to women or you feel women are being treated better in any way - just because you are a man.
Emotionally, are you feeling that you get enough support from females? Do you feel women are afraid to hug you to comfort you for any reason? like you'll take advantage of them? Do you have many female friends? Do you feel that women socialize better? What do YOU want socially?
Feel free, talk, let go of your restraints, take advantage of the anonymous environment to let yourself be heard. We can do this and be in error, that our presumptions are ill directed and unfair. It could be our own inapproachability for example that can sway women away from us when we need them most.
Are we misread? I know when I'm in conflict with someone I come across as a little aggressive or arguing in a normal male manner and that can portray someone that is not in need of support but is someone to avoid. NOTHING could be further from the truth.
So that's one gripe. I feel women don't pursue the friendship care far enough. Such limited care results in my feelings of isolation. I think I'm a "giver" apart from my supportive wife no woman supports me anywhere near the level I give to them. Is this an illusion? What do you think?
Two people. One a woman that enters a group, say a hobby group. She sits down and isn't feeling emotionally well. She is asked a question like "how is your day"? She burst into tears. The whole group of 10 ladies stand and hold her hand, hand on her shoulder, comforting and reassurance. She is not alone. They even ring her later and talk at length. The other person a middle aged male enters a motoring clubroom in his local town, his male friends restore cars and share drinks. He sits and realizes he was in no shape to attend. A guy asks him how his restoration is going. He is upset thinking about his car as due to his depression he hasn't been to his shed for weeks. He suddenly starts crying. The men, all of whom start to feel uncomfortable, mention a few things like" you'll get there don't worry". He is worried because he knows that half of the men there actually think he is a softy by crying, to stand clear of him because he has problems, to avoid him as it might upset their own happy day in the sun....
Tony WK
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My wife pointed out last night after I gave her the examples of a male and female being upset, that men dont seek the same "fussing over" support.
She's right. But I think women also get so focussed on their own interwoven support for each other men are on their own
By the time the male gets angry about that, its too late. A man hates asking for help. A bipolar male like me hints woth onvious suggestions, gets no help so then through anger walks away.
Women can be very supportive, warm, soft, wonderful... but there is, from this males viewpoint, a slight imbalance. Maybe more than slight!
Hence the thread.
How do you feel? Do you as a male feel you dont get any attention in your dark hours?
Is this the key why male suicides are much much higher? If you've ever felt suicidal am I on the right track as to how you felt?
Tony WK
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Hello Tony,
I'm so sorry to hear you are feeling isolated and unsupported. I read your original post yesterday and wanted to extend a caring word or two of support, but you said you wanted to hear from men.
Sorry if I am misinterpreting your words.
Your post today says that women are not supportive enough of you or men in your dark hours.
I am positive there are many women on these forums who would jump to try to support you, but do you want to hear from us here or just from men, like you have stated in your posts?
Maybe today would be a good day to open a support thread for yourself? Or do you want this to be your support thread? I hear you that it is hard for you to ask for help, but as you said, this is a safe and anonymous space to, in your words, "feel free, talk, let go of your restraints, take advantage of the anonymous environment to let yourself be heard."
We are all here to support you as well Tony.
🌻birdy
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Hi birdy
Thankyou. The trouble with a journal thread of my own is there is a trap of sorts that one can get so centred on it that the rest of the forum suffers.
I dont feel its right to log on here, go only to my own thread, talk about myself, my woes, get attention from everyone then log off. That would not be fair. Yet I think it has become common.
Yes, here I'm more seeking mens feelings
A better more direct thread, a journal of my own would be
Topic: extremes, triggers that down you, triggers that lift you- beyondblue
Tony WK
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Hello again Tony,
I don't think you would ever use a journal thread to become self-centred, you are too much a part of the very framework of the forums for that to happen.
I think it's important for you to have a space though that you can air your woes and worries so that those that you support so stoically have a means by which they can return the favour.
I am glad to see you do have a support thread as you pointed out.
I hope you get some responses from men on this thread so that you might be able to nut it out together.
Go gently Tony. Many people here care for you and appreciate you.
🌻birdy
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Thanks for your posts. Truly loving and kind.
This thread is for all people. And in case a LGBTIQ member thinks they don’t fit in please discount that. Although I am highlighting mens difficulties and often portraying women in a lesser light this is an elusion. I treat everyone equally. Some of the best relationship and mental health issues advice I’ve ever had was from two transgender women in a male prison in the late 1970’s. They had the ability to experience both sides of the gender gap.
We are here (in this thread) to encourage people to understand men and their emotional issues which are vast. I am here in the capacity of a senior Community Champion that has bipolar2, depression, dysthymia and finally -anxiety that has now been conquered. Therefore my reactions and emotional extremes are just that, not your typical male due to such extremes but an opportunity really because such characteristics are of the extreme of your average man of what they typically endure.
So I will be more open about them, I’ll expose myself and it
wont be easy. It’s a big challenge to spew my heart out and the beneficiaries
will be everyone, not just men.
For women that want to learn to understand men please
contribute or at least read as we go through the “herdy gerdy” (as I call it) of mens emotions. Please remember, we have a huge male
suicide rate annually. I feel for many reasons that I know why this is so. I
feel it, I taste it and have attempted it. Although I pledge to never go down
that selfish path, one that could hurt my family forever ( a path my brother took), I know that the
temptation is often there because my mental challenges to stay afloat seem
unachievable.
So this thread will prove for some, an outlet to express
their deepest secrets without fear. It will be raw, challenging and even embarrassing
to many. I will be writing posts here covering many topics to do with male
emotions. If you want to learn please read. I suspect women will open their
eyes up far beyond what is normal because I have some deep male secrets that
will be shared.
Welcome all to "men isolated".
Tony WK
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THE DIFFERENCES- MEN
AND WOMEN
Its appropriate to begin by acknowledging in an “equal”
world some differences between us. This is dangerous territory, so many people
object to such topics because of the equality push which is great, ideal, but
in some cases idealistic.
Like the example of the pregnant 24 hour man. A concept
dreamt up by a pregnant wife to show her husband what its like to be pregnant
for 24 hours in terms of discomfort. He dons a volleyball for the unborn and
stuffing for breasts and videos his discomfort for a day. Great we think. But aren’t
we built differently? So lets reverse it. The husband gives his non pregnant
wife an axe and instructs her to swing it in a forest for 6 hours in his
forestry duties or asks her to join him at work in a pick and shovel trench for
a Telco.
Such an example was prisons. I was partner to the first
female prison officer in Pentridge jail in 1978. Females were allowed in the
divisions of hardened inmates. The assistance females gave in difficult
situations was amazing. As I/we attended to the physical brute force of
restraining a difficult prisoner (often), our female colleague assisted by
communicating to lower tier staff, supplying restraining equipment and some
physical help. They were great but in reality they were “different” in the
strength stakes. Fact. My point is- we are different. Not better, different.
Not better? But they weren’t as strong! That’s like saying
women are better at carrying an unborn child. They are meant to, built that way
as we are built in a way that enabled us to hunt as cavemen. As we did, we
relied on our women to be the homemaker then, care for the kids and support
other women as one unit. While the men hunted they weren’t interested in the solemn
man that fell in an emotional heap.
These different roles have altered towards equality in only
the recent 2-3 generations. The 1950’s was really the last decade of the
traditional man at work and women as the homemaker roles. So 65 years, less
than 3 generations only for some of us to alter our mentality that was set in
stone since the beginning of the homo sapiens
species.
Since then 1960’s society has focussed heavily on the
emergence of women as equals. That’s good. There is some way to go like equal
pay and other irregularities but by and large men have welcomed this ideal. However
with the massive male suicide rate we have not made advancement towards fixing
mens emotional issues.
Let’s make a difference.
Tony WK
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MEN and CRYING
Bottled up? That’s the best wording that describes it. On the odd occasion it overflows and once started my crying can last for a few hours. Then, like a numb curled up statue I remain numb for quite some time. This is the most horrible embarrassing feeling. Embarassing? Why, often in this state nobody is present! Not even my adorable wife. She would be elsewhere and return home to know just looking at me, red cheeks, water glazed eyes, that I’d collapsed, again and alone.
Then there is the no crying distressed man. This has become more common in recent years (in me) rather than the above. But this state is as equally as distraught, equally desperate but with a level of ideas, planning and thinking of ways to escape, escape from life but on various levels.
As a young man when in this state I’d pack up my motorcycle
and off to the hill/mountains of Victoria I’d go. My initial intention would be
to remain there, eventually dump my bike as I wouldn’t have fuel, use various
tools to hunt, revert to a person with a bare survival instinct…if it worked
all well and good, if it didn’t who cares. Which frankly, the latter is a man
with suicidal thoughts. Each time this happened I returned to the city to pick
up where I left off. It seemed my supply of baked beans wasn’t deep enough and
my hunting skills was wanting.
So this “how would I know you are
unwell” declaration from others meant I had to blurt out my unwell state to
them, something for the first time I’m doing at age 62. So you readers are the
first in my life I’m opening up.
So continuing on, men crying can be happening as you talk to
them. This amazingly efficient mask of our inner emotions is bitter sweet in
that we don’t attract attention which is our preference but we anguish
internally which is self destructing.
I never saw my older brother cry. Yet he took his precious
life at age 26. A teacher, like me an inventor,. Had we known them days in the
60’s and 70’s that all 3 siblings had bipolar someone might have saved him. We disliked each other intensely and when I
got to 15yo, he 19yo we had a fight. For the 1st time I beat him and
the rift got wider. He still didn’t cry yet when he left a note it all came
out, his sadness at being alone, not ever having a girlfriend of someone to
share himself of his inner self. His only visible crying was done in the heavens.
But I cry. Mostly inside. Even during conflict….my next
topic.
Tony WK
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MEN AND THEIR AGGRESSION
I’m not naturally aggressive. I was bullied more than
average as a child. I was larger than many of them. I was 93kg at 17yo and
joined the RAAF where I mixed it with real men.
I learned finally that the only way in a male world to equalise
the playing field is not to report them, not talk about them but to front them
as aggressively more than they showed…like two lions. I began self defense
classes and weightlifting and vowed I’d never get taken down again. That was
the theory. In 1977 I joined the prison service as the youngest prison officer
in Victorian prison history, just over 21. I soon got to use my skills to
defend myself. After 3 years there my brother left this world. In obvious grief
I was challenged by a prisoner and we fought in his cell. I was severely beaten
but not finished off. I asked him why he didn’t go the whole way…”because you didn’t
bring a mate with you”. I’d finally met my match. Welcome to aggression.
I recovered and returned to work and that prisoner gave me
coffees all day long. We respected each other. One day I escorted him to
hospital and was on guard. He cried as he told me of his crime and his hurting
of his victims. Then it was all too much and we cried together. Funny now I
look back, him handcuffed to the bed and I with arms both crying together. Why
am I telling you this? Because we always had 2 officers. The other officer was
sitting watching this go on. I turned and was wanting to know his reactions “bloody
pussy’s, you are a sook Tony”. He 60yo me 24yo. I had to leave that job. The
world of the mancho male, older men that wore their hardness like a medal given
to them from their even harder fathers.
What I learned was that the most fierce man with
immeasurable aggression was crying behind his mask. Pick your moment with men to assist them.
You “sooth” them. This is a time when you cannot question their actions, words, aggression or he’d explode in temper. This is a time when the best thing you can do physically is a hand on the shoulder, maybe a quick joke (“the last time I cried mate, I went through a box of tissues”) . Comments that of which put you alongside the man is best. “I walk with your brother” or “we’ll get through this together mate”. Sometimes its best from a woman to say nothing or “I’m here” with their hand on my forearm. And WAIT!.That's the key- wait. During the storm of sadness and crying there comes patches of bluesky. That’s when you talk.
Tony WK