Feb. 5, 2025

Why Every Man Should Consider Therapy Now

Why Every Man Should Consider Therapy Now

Are you struggling with the weight of trying to handle everything alone as a man? Many men today face a crisis of loneliness and disconnection, often waiting until divorce, job loss, or addiction forces them to seek help. But there's a better way...

Are you struggling with the weight of trying to handle everything alone as a man?

Many men today face a crisis of loneliness and disconnection, often waiting until divorce, job loss, or addiction forces them to seek help. But there's a better way forward.

In this episode, you'll discover what healthy masculinity really means, why therapy specifically designed for men is different and more effective, and understand practical steps to break free from isolation and build meaningful connections with other men.

Our guest, Marc Azoulay from Men's Therapy Online reveals the four pillars of authentic masculinity and shares how men can proactively take charge of their mental health before crisis strikes.

Topics Discussed:

  • Common barriers preventing men from seeking mental health support
  • The current masculinity crisis and finding middle ground between traditional and modern views
  • Four pillars of healthy masculinity: strength, courage, mastery, and honor
  • How to combat loneliness and build meaningful male friendships as an adult
  • Why many traditional therapy approaches fail men
  • The importance of having male therapists who understand men's experiences
  • Practical steps for getting started with therapy
  • How community and group support aid in healing
  • The value of proactive vs. reactive mental health care
  • Breaking free from the "fix it yourself" mindset

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Transcript
1
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So I want to just kind of get, you know, a lay of the land.

2
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Like, what are some of the common barriers you see that guys are facing getting the mental
health that they need?

3
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Because, you know, we're in so many positions of power, and yet when it comes to mental
health, we are lagging far behind.

4
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Far behind, right?

5
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I mean, I get too many of the stats, but I can just rouse them off.

6
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It's like men commit suicide three times more than women, right?

7
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Like one in four men say that they are deeply alone in the fact that nobody would help
them in the event of an emergency.

8
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You know, we are really struggling with mental health and there's a loneliness epidemic
that the Surgeon General published about a couple of years ago, uh, targeted specifically

9
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at men and how we don't connect, right?

10
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And we are at risk for things like substance use, suicide, domestic violence, things like
that.

11
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So.

12
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Yeah, the main issue and this is a shame with men.

13
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If I can get one thing across to the guys listening is like come in proactively because
what brings guys to therapy is usually a crisis.

14
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know, number one that brings them to me is divorce.

15
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You know, a guy kind of like getting his losing his family, losing his kids, people losing
their job.

16
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Number two would be like a big addiction incident, you know, like a binge or relapse.

17
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But I think for a lot of men, it takes that like really strong like smack in the face
before we even start to think about.

18
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prioritizing our mental health.

19
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And it's hard at that point.

20
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Yeah.

21
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we suffer from thinking we can fix everything and it just gets to a point where we
realize, okay, it's too far, this load is too heavy, I can't do it.

22
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Is that the reason?

23
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Yeah.

24
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of men feel like they have the weight of the world on their shoulders and that they are
competing with other guys everywhere.

25
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So asking for help is like weak, makes you a pussy, right?

26
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And I think also like, and there is value to this, but I think a lot of men do anything
else before talking to a therapist, right?

27
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They'll try a new diet, they'll try a new exercise, they'll start getting massages,
they'll take a new supplement.

28
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And I'm all for physical health, but I think guys will do all of that for years before
even considering talking to a therapist or.

29
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I've talked to a lot of guys that say things like, I don't need some stranger to figure
out what's going on.

30
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And I think it's quite the opposite.

31
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think a stranger is sometimes the best mirror to be held up to show that this is what I
hear when you say these things, rather than your mom or your best friend who knows you and

32
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all of the stories that you also believe about yourself and can feed into that, right?

33
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Absolutely.

34
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mean, one, we're trained, right?

35
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So like any therapist is going to have a master's degree minimum.

36
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Many of us have PhDs and we don't have an agenda, right?

37
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Like your parents, your friends, your partner, right?

38
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They have an agenda.

39
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They want the conversation to go a certain way.

40
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They want, you know, an outcome that benefits them, even if they're not conscious of that.

41
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But with a stranger, it's like, I don't have an investment.

42
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I'm on your side.

43
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You know, my investment is helping you be more stable and be happier.

44
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Yeah, yeah.

45
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So I want to talk about one of the key issues you mentioned already, loneliness.

46
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Mostly just selfishly, this is something that I struggle with.

47
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I recently, I always say recently, it's been almost four years now, I moved to a new town
and a new country where I knew nobody.

48
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And you know, started working from home.

49
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So a lot of those automatic, you know, work friends, not really a thing.

50
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The after work dinner thing, the party at Bob's house from accounting or whatever, those
things don't happen, right?

51
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So loneliness is definitely something that I know I struggle from right now.

52
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making friends as an adult, very challenging.

53
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So where does someone start to unpack and deal with loneliness, particularly as an adult?

54
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Yeah, so I think the first thing to think about is what do you want out of other male
relationships?

55
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A lot of guys don't even take the time to do that, right?

56
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And for a lot of us, it's actually not conversation.

57
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You know, if you think of like women, they just love chatting.

58
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They love, you know, being in touch.

59
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They love texting each other all the time.

60
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For most masculine dudes, we don't really want that.

61
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What we want is companions and camaraderie.

62
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You know, so I think like finding a common goal and a common community is critical.

63
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You know, so I know you talk about fitness a lot.

64
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You know, I moved to a small mountain town and I

65
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I joined a CrossFit gym and I made a ton of friends that way, right?

66
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Because we're kind of, one, we're forced to be together because we work out every day.

67
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And two, there's like a common goal there.

68
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I think getting involved in volunteer work, nonprofit work can be really great if you work
from home or you're a solo entrepreneur.

69
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There's a great app that we have in my area called Nextdoor, where some people talk a lot
of shit on that, but also lot of people ask for help in the mountains.

70
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So like me and my wife, try, was a couple of times a month, it was like go and offer help.

71
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We scroll down that and people were like, hey, I need help.

72
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With my driveway or I need food or I need child care or like, and we'll just do some of
those things just to get into the community a little bit more.

73
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Yeah, sounds like it's really tapping into, if you have any, your interests and trying to
find other people that are already participating in them.

74
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Absolutely.

75
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Yeah, like take classes, go to courses, go to conferences even, right?

76
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See speakers, like just go where other people that are interested in what you are, you
know, are around and just make them that way.

77
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Because yeah, I think men, we bond through a third activity.

78
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We don't do a lot of back and forth talking.

79
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We like being, you know, on the same team working towards a

80
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Yeah, yeah, You mentioned a term that I think is loaded for some people, masculinity.

81
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What does that even mean anymore from your perspective?

82
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Yeah, I that could be the whole show, man.

83
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think, right?

84
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will say masculinity, think, is in a crisis right now.

85
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I think there's a lot of really polarized opinions come from all sides of the political
spectrum about what masculinity is.

86
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But I think when I look at most guys on the ground, a lot of us are just confused.

87
00:06:52,039 --> 00:06:59,839
We're told to kind of do what's called toxic masculinity, which I don't believe in toxic
masculinity, but maybe we'll call it traditional masculinity, which is like, be stoic,

88
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don't be a pussy, don't show your emotions, just be kind of like a hard rock.

89
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And then kind of this new wave masculinity, which is like, be sensitive, cry, like be open
with your emotions, like let people in.

90
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And guys hate being that too.

91
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Right.

92
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So I think like both of those kind of suck.

93
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the way that we define it is somewhere in the middle.

94
00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:20,451
and really we anchor it around an honor code, right?

95
00:07:20,451 --> 00:07:27,375
So if we look at kind of traditional masculine entities, like the armed forces or the
Knights of the round table or samurai, right?

96
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There was always this honor code and the code that we use at men's therapy online is
strength.

97
00:07:32,027 --> 00:07:33,947
courage, mastery and honor.

98
00:07:33,947 --> 00:07:36,427
And I can go through those in detail if you're interested.

99
00:07:36,427 --> 00:07:37,127
Sure.

100
00:07:37,287 --> 00:07:39,627
So, so strength, I'll run through them really quick.

101
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Strength is both physical strength.

102
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I think it's important.

103
00:07:42,247 --> 00:07:48,967
I think guys feel masculine when they are physically strong, whether that be, you know,
being a strength athlete, an endurance athlete, a yoga, whatever, right?

104
00:07:48,967 --> 00:07:50,527
But also emotional strength, right?

105
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The idea that you can hold heavy emotions or spiritual strength, right?

106
00:07:54,427 --> 00:07:57,527
That you can go through really difficult things and keep a spiritual core.

107
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You know, I use the example of the idea of being at a funeral.

108
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Right.

109
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And like being able to give a eulogy that's powerful is an example of emotional strength.

110
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You know, not being shut down in the corner, not being overwhelmed by the feelings that
are going on there.

111
00:08:11,500 --> 00:08:13,902
So building strength, I think is very masculine.

112
00:08:13,902 --> 00:08:15,894
The next one is courage, right?

113
00:08:15,894 --> 00:08:19,587
Pretty self-explanatory, but courage basically is like doing shit that makes that you're
afraid of.

114
00:08:19,587 --> 00:08:19,847
Right.

115
00:08:19,847 --> 00:08:22,860
And again, physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, all of that.

116
00:08:22,860 --> 00:08:29,085
There's a great Jocko Willink quote where he talks about Navy SEALs and he says, it's not
that Navy SEALs are not afraid.

117
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It's that they're able to operate while they are afraid.

118
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And I think that's the masculine core.

119
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Right.

120
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And again, you look at a guy who's courageous and we're like, that's a man.

121
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Right.

122
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Next one is mastery.

123
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Cat crawling around the back.

124
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The next one is mastery, which is the idea of like getting good at something.

125
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And if you notice how I'm talking about these, they're kind of like abstract themes.

126
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It's not about what you're good at.

127
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think traditional masculinity, it's like, you've got to be good at like sports or home
improvement or weightlifting.

128
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Where it's like, look, if you're a really masterful baker or even a masterful like
crocheter and you're like an artisan, I think that's still masculine, right?

129
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The idea of just becoming a master at something, learning, growing, being very technically
proficient, you know, just being really good at whatever it is that you want to be good

130
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at.

131
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know, even if it's a traditionally feminine activity, I think pursuing mastery is the
masculine part of it.

132
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And then the last one is honor.

133
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And that's the one I feel like is lacking a lot in our country, unfortunately, but it's
the idea of

134
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being ethical, doing the right thing, being a servant leader, treating people right, being
honest, having a real honor code and the idea of wanting, kind of the golden rule,

135
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treating people how you want to be treated, having that moral core that I think, again, is
really lacking.

136
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And I think a lot of men, when they are acting from a place of honor, they feel really
good about themselves.

137
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They feel like they're the superhero of the story.

138
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For sure.

139
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Developing a framework that this takes years and typically some sort of an experience that
sent you down this path.

140
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So I know you had some issues with the rough childhood, some addiction issues.

141
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me a little bit about what got you down this path into helping others.

142
00:10:00,946 --> 00:10:01,826
Yeah, for sure.

143
00:10:01,826 --> 00:10:09,546
I mean, there's a bunch of story there, but I'll focus it on the addiction because a lot
of guys struggle with that, you know, and the cause of my addiction wasn't that I just

144
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wanted to get high, right?

145
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It wasn't seeking fun.

146
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It was kind of like a slow suicide.

147
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You know, I was really lost in college.

148
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I didn't know what it meant to be an adult, let alone a man.

149
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I felt like I was really floundering.

150
00:10:20,746 --> 00:10:24,326
So I pursued mastery in the forms of getting really good doing drugs.

151
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You know, I was selling drugs.

152
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It's easy.

153
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It turns out, right?

154
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It's pretty low barrier to entry.

155
00:10:29,795 --> 00:10:31,676
so, you know, I was a party guy, right?

156
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I was selling drugs.

157
00:10:32,677 --> 00:10:35,750
I felt kind of like pie pie because I was like, had the hookup or whatever, you know?

158
00:10:35,750 --> 00:10:44,716
but really it was because I wasn't confident in myself and I was trying to do what I
thought, you know, as a college kid, what being a man was, but I was compromising my

159
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honor.

160
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You know, I was compromising my courage because really I was a coward underneath all that.

161
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If I'm being honest with myself, you know, I wasn't building strength because I was using
things like drugs to short circuit, you know, certain things like talking to women for

162
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instance, right.

163
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Or.

164
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being confident in social situation with if I wasn't intoxicated, I was just kind of like
a weird loser.

165
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know, I need those things to kind of like pump me up.

166
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So I use it to short circuit a lot of stuff.

167
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And it wasn't until I got sober, as well as doing a lot of therapy work, I realized, this
work is a lot deeper.

168
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It's a lot slower than I wanted it to be, you know, and then I really hadn't thought about
what it meant to be a man.

169
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I really hadn't thought about what it meant to be an adult, what it meant to grow up.

170
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So it wasn't until I really started working on those things.

171
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you know, intentionally that I start to be happy, you know, and not just feel empty all
the time.

172
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It's definitely the harder route.

173
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I know I still struggle with whether or not I ever had an alcoholic tendency.

174
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I come from a long line of proud alcoholics, but I don't know that I ever struggled with
it in that way.

175
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But I definitely use it as a coping mechanism.

176
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When the feelings were too much, pour some beer on it and all of sudden the problem went
away for a few hours.

177
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A lifetime of that, when you suddenly realize there's a better way, probably, so I hear.

178
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you start exploring it is it's much harder, it takes much longer, but it's so much more
rewarding because I feel like the demons that you're basically drowning, you start to

179
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actually remove them from your life more efficiently.

180
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Absolutely.

181
00:12:08,670 --> 00:12:08,910
Yeah.

182
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mean, it's kind of the comparison between eating a bunch of candy, which I think is like
the drug and alcohol way, versus like a slow cooked home cooked meal.

183
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You know, it takes a long time, but it's much more nourishing for you.

184
00:12:20,770 --> 00:12:25,630
I'm curious for you, like what made you want to change?

185
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Was there like a rock bottom moment or was there something where you're like, oh, this
path isn't working?

186
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Because I think a lot of guys like stay stuck in that for decades, you know?

187
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I definitely was there for a very long time.

188
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was mine was a weird.

189
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mean, rock bottom is a weird term for it because I was actually already on a path to
better.

190
00:12:41,905 --> 00:12:46,910
I had I had a really ridiculous knee injury that I started trying to recover from by
riding a bike.

191
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So I became a bike commuter and in the process started realizing like how much better I
felt by exercising.

192
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And I actually went to my wife at that point because I was not only was I just physically
feeling better.

193
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But mentally, having to be so present in the moment of riding a bike through city streets,
I was like, God, how do I bring more of this to my life?

194
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And so I remember asking my wife, like, you know, this, this is feeling great.

195
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What should I do?

196
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And she's like, I don't know, talk to a therapist.

197
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And so I did.

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And that therapist was very much, on a tended toward Buddhism and taught me about pred
meditation and just being present in the moment and all the analogies and all the great

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stories.

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And so it just was, it was one of these, like, I had this knee injury and it just.

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It helped me feel a little better when I started doing one thing, which gave me an idea to
try another thing, which gave me an idea to try three more things.

202
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And all of a sudden it started compiling to where, at work, when you'd walk by the tray
where there's the junk food that everybody brings in from home that they don't want to

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eat, that I used to grab a handful of, I couldn't even register it as food anymore.

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was just like, that might as well have been a bag of rocks.

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It didn't look like food anymore.

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And then I, you know, always looking for a way to get out of work.

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was like, there's a gym downstairs.

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So even though I rode to work today, I'm going to go down to the gym for my lunch break
and go do that.

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And so it just like, it snowballed, right?

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Like once I found the one thing I liked, was, I made me get more curious.

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And that's really what I think opened up the door to a lifetime of still ongoing change
and trying to grow.

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I like that.

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I like that it's like, it's gradual too.

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Cause you know, I'm recording this near the new year and a lot of people just try to like
change everything all at once and it just fails.

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Right?

216
00:14:17,864 --> 00:14:20,784
So I like that you're like, it's like one layer at a time.

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And that's the idea of mastery.

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It sounds like you like mastered a certain layer and then only at that point, then you're
ready to go master the next one and the next one, the next one.

219
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And before long you're in that kind of like flywheel of self-improvement.

220
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So good for you, man.

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a lot of help too, right?

222
00:14:33,476 --> 00:14:40,620
Like it's reaching out because we, again, I think as guys, we feel like I have to have the
skills inherent in me to solve all of life's problems.

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And ain't no way I'm asking anybody for help because that's what some wuss would do and
that's not me.

224
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But then once you realize, I can literally just ask somebody a question and save like five
years of education on this, cool, let's go.

225
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I I know.

226
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it's like, that's what I think the failing of the older generation is that older men is
that they presented complete pictures to us, right?

227
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Like either they were the men that we idolized and had everything figured out, or they
were the complete loser that were like, I just don't want to be that guy.

228
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And I think about this dude, right?

229
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But like, we didn't get the work in progress.

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So I think it's cool that you're telling your story of like being a work in progress,
because like, I think that's what young men need.

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I like, yeah, you you know, some things you don't know everything, but like we're trending
up and that's, that's kind of what it's all important, you know.

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think that's, mean, you not to make this about me because you're the guest here, but I
mean, that's really what this mission has been about is like, we didn't see the finished

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product.

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We kind of have been running from the mess of, you know, the bad example.

235
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And so when you're doing that, you tend to find the guy on top of the hill that's finished
the journey.

236
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And it's so discouraging because you're like, I don't even know, I can't see the path.

237
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How do I even get there?

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So.

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We and I think a lot of guys out there are trying to just be the person around the trail,
around the corner on the trail saying, hey, come this way.

240
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I see a way up.

241
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And that's what we need.

242
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We just need more help from each other, whether it is that therapist holding up a mirror
when you tell them your story and they reflect back to you what they hear and try to help

243
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you find that path forward.

244
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Yeah, I like that metaphor.

245
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I'm in Colorado, so I love trail and hiking metaphors.

246
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And I just want to underline that, you know, again, for listeners out there of like, think
a lot of men feel like they're competing with all other men, or it's like them versus the

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world.

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I think a lot of our media and social media and influencers like really do accentuate
that.

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But I love your example, because I think there are many men that want to bring you up with
them.

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You know, like we're not all fighting each other all the time.

251
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And for me, that was a big part of my story was like coming off that kind of like

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war mentality and just kind of like an entitlement version to it as well of like, it's
just me and I gotta fight, you I gotta make it all work.

253
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And being like, no, I can ask for help and not only can ask for help, it's like, that's
how I make friends.

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You know, that's how we connect with other people, specifically men is by like learning
from them.

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But I think as a young man, I thought that asking for help means I would be submissive to
them, right?

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They would be dominating me or they would be better than me or smarter than me or they
would shame me in some way.

257
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There are certainly men that do that, but not all of us.

258
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When you went down this path and started taking better care of yourself, to circle back to
what we talked about at the beginning with loneliness, did you find it to be a lonely

259
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journey?

260
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Uh, it was, I think in the beginning it was when I, when I made loneliness, you know, I
think one of the great things that the recovery community does, you know, I was in AA for

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about five years is like, kind of healed in a group, you know, I healed with a group of
people and I, you know, I'm now in men's groups that I do long-term and I also run, you

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know, so being in community has always been a big part of my journey and just feeling not
so alone and also not so weird.

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Like it's so nice to hear another guy talk about something and like, Oh yeah, like, like I
know something about that.

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I've been there.

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Yeah.

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And not just feel like I'm the most wretched thing on planet Earth.

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think a lot of people feel that way.

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00:17:49,454 --> 00:17:55,093
Yeah, you know, and it's like, again, that humility piece of like, you know, we're all
beautiful snowflakes of problems, right?

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Like, I think our problems are unique, the kind of the constellation, but each individual
problem has probably already been solved by somebody else.

270
00:18:02,333 --> 00:18:03,735
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.

271
00:18:03,735 --> 00:18:09,100
Cool, so tell me a little bit more about your program and what people can do to take part
in it.

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Sure.

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Yeah.

274
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So everything is on menstherapy.online.

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You know, we're a community focused program building emotional intelligence with guys.

276
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We have kind of three things.

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have individual counseling, which is exactly what you think it is.

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We're all male therapists.

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So I think it's important for guys because as men, we want to talk about some of the more
brutal experiences that we have.

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You know, I'm talking about sexuality.

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I'm talking about like inner violence that we can have the kind of hunter mentality.

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You know, our emotions can be very violent and intense.

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And I think

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Oftentimes women counselors don't get that part of us.

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They don't get how savage we actually are inside and a lot of men hold back.

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So that therapy is not effective if you're holding back from your therapist, right?

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So we got that.

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We got groups.

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We have general men's groups as well as divorced dad specific men's groups because that is
a big population that ends up contacting us.

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And the last thing we do is we do retreats.

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So we do wellness backpacking retreats in Colorado and traditional men's retreats in
Boulder.

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So we're kind of wraparound services that way.

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I want to touch on what you mentioned there about one of the ways that therapy can fail
men.

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Are there other ways that guys, especially if somebody is hesitant, that they're listening
to this thinking like, don't know this is for me, let me see what this podcast has to say

295
00:19:18,832 --> 00:19:19,632
about it.

296
00:19:19,632 --> 00:19:25,588
What other sort of red flags should a guy look for before they head into that therapist's
office for the first time?

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A couple right?

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00:19:26,301 --> 00:19:32,627
mean the one question if you're going to ask only one question ask your therapist if
they've done their own therapy and for how long and if it's less

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is surprising.

300
00:19:33,678 --> 00:19:40,200
I have therapist friends and my therapist when they say I when I talk to my therapist like
the first time I heard that from a therapist, it blew my mind.

301
00:19:40,200 --> 00:19:42,169
I was like, no, you're supposed to have this figured out.

302
00:19:42,169 --> 00:19:43,991
Why do you have a therapist?

303
00:19:46,114 --> 00:19:47,011
Right now?

304
00:19:47,011 --> 00:19:48,322
You want them to be experiencing it.

305
00:19:48,322 --> 00:19:49,722
You want them to know what it's like to be a client.

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You want them to have done their own personal work.

307
00:19:51,433 --> 00:19:53,396
So I say like minimum five years.

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If you ask a therapist how long and they're like, I just started or that's not for me.

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That's something I do for you people.

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00:19:59,339 --> 00:20:02,962
That level of separation is going to create a real entitled therapist, right?

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00:20:02,962 --> 00:20:08,417
The other one, and I think it was more female therapists, is what I call validation
therapy, right?

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00:20:08,417 --> 00:20:10,100
Of like you come in as a client,

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You're talking about your pain of the week and the therapist is just like, my God, that's
so bad.

314
00:20:14,256 --> 00:20:15,398
That's so hard for you.

315
00:20:15,398 --> 00:20:16,610
Like it's so tough.

316
00:20:16,610 --> 00:20:20,716
That doesn't work for men because we end up feeling like victims and we don't want to be a
victim.

317
00:20:20,716 --> 00:20:23,212
We don't want some, we don't want a pity party, you know?

318
00:20:23,212 --> 00:20:27,861
about the other side of that of, yeah, you and most people, it's common what you're going
through.

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00:20:27,861 --> 00:20:29,489
there value in that?

320
00:20:29,489 --> 00:20:31,050
Yeah, I think that helps a little bit, right?

321
00:20:31,050 --> 00:20:32,231
I mean, it's an art form.

322
00:20:32,231 --> 00:20:36,543
in my work, tend to, want to validate a little bit, but men also want solutions, right?

323
00:20:36,543 --> 00:20:39,054
They want like, okay, you like told me what's wrong.

324
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I understand it.

325
00:20:39,845 --> 00:20:40,675
I grok it.

326
00:20:40,675 --> 00:20:42,116
I get that from my childhood.

327
00:20:42,116 --> 00:20:43,156
Now what?

328
00:20:43,156 --> 00:20:43,736
Right.

329
00:20:43,736 --> 00:20:49,880
So, you know, longer term therapy, what we do is we have doing kind of like mission based
therapy of like, Hey, this is your objective.

330
00:20:49,880 --> 00:20:54,672
Go out, have that conversation with your spouse, come back, report to me, and we're just
going to keep strategizing.

331
00:20:54,672 --> 00:20:56,402
So it turns more into coaching.

332
00:20:56,773 --> 00:20:57,707
because again,

333
00:20:57,707 --> 00:21:00,145
Men want to feel like heroes, not like victims.

334
00:21:00,456 --> 00:21:01,288
Yeah, yeah.

335
00:21:01,288 --> 00:21:05,117
And for a lot of us, the example growing up was the victim.

336
00:21:05,117 --> 00:21:09,637
And so we either mirror it or try to desperately run the other way.

337
00:21:09,637 --> 00:21:14,883
Yeah, there's a great AA setting saying which is, a hundred degrees of sick is still sick.

338
00:21:14,883 --> 00:21:15,783
Right.

339
00:21:16,084 --> 00:21:20,007
So, and I have that in my own life, like trying to just like be anti stuff.

340
00:21:20,568 --> 00:21:22,795
It's still fucked up in its own way, you know?

341
00:21:22,795 --> 00:21:26,038
and it's hard because when you're running from something, you don't know what you're
running to.

342
00:21:26,038 --> 00:21:27,619
often, it's just the fear.

343
00:21:27,619 --> 00:21:31,002
You're just in that flight mode your whole life.

344
00:21:31,002 --> 00:21:31,662
Great stuff.

345
00:21:31,662 --> 00:21:35,325
Anything important here that we did not touch on that you want to make sure we mention to
folks?

346
00:21:35,700 --> 00:21:37,301
I think we covered, think it was a great survey.

347
00:21:37,301 --> 00:21:39,210
Again, check out men's therapy down online.

348
00:21:39,210 --> 00:21:42,985
There's a lot of good stuff there, a lot of podcasts, blogs, all kinds of free stuff to
give away.

349
00:21:42,985 --> 00:21:47,191
So yeah, if you're on the fence, reach out and talk, you know.

350
00:21:47,191 --> 00:21:48,322
In general, that's a good rule.

351
00:21:48,322 --> 00:21:49,794
you're not sure, just give it a shot.

352
00:21:49,794 --> 00:21:50,634
not?

353
00:21:50,635 --> 00:21:51,816
Yeah, that's right.

354
00:21:51,816 --> 00:21:52,154
Cool.

355
00:21:52,154 --> 00:21:53,045
Mark, thanks so much for your time.

356
00:21:53,045 --> 00:21:55,367
We'll make sure those links are in the show description here for this episode.

357
00:21:55,367 --> 00:21:56,328
Really appreciate your time today.

358
00:21:56,328 --> 00:21:56,749
Thanks so much.

359
00:21:56,749 --> 00:21:57,730
Thank

Marc Azoulay Profile Photo

Marc Azoulay

Founder, Men's Therapy Online

Marc Azoulay LPC, LAC, CGP, ACS is the founder of Men’s Therapy Online, a community and healing hub for men who want to get back on their feet or take their lives to the next level. With the help of his team of licensed clinicians he provides ongoing men’s groups, individual counseling, and powerful wilderness retreats to his members. With a background in psychoanalysis, neuroscience, and Buddhism, Marc is able to help men uncover and destroy the unconscious barriers that hold them back. His mission is to help men become the best versions of themselves and truly show up for their lives, relationships, and community.