One of the questions I find myself asking men in therapy is surprisingly simple:
“Who do you talk to when you’re struggling?”
The answer is often some version of:
“Nobody.”
Or maybe:
“My wife.”
And while there’s nothing wrong with talking to your spouse, what I often find is that many men have very few places where they feel comfortable being completely honest about what they’re carrying.
They have people around them: coworkers, friends, family members, and people they see every week. But very few people who truly know how they’re doing.
As I’ve thought about Men’s Mental Health Month, that’s the thing that keeps coming to mind.
Not feelings of depression.
Not feelings of anxiety.
Not diagnoses.
Connection.
Or more accurately, the lack of it.
Because one of the things I’ve learned as a therapist is that people can carry an incredible amount of pain when they feel connected. The same burden becomes much heavier when they feel alone.
Men Are Often Taught to Carry More Than They Were Meant To
I don’t know many men who were directly told, “Don’t have feelings.”
What I do know is a lot of men who learned, through experience, that certain feelings weren’t welcome.
Fear.
Sadness.
Shame.
Self doubt.
Loneliness.
So instead of talking about them, they learned to manage them. Or avoid them. Or bury them.
Many became incredibly capable. They built careers, supported families, and became dependable, responsible, and strong.
But underneath that strength is often a quiet belief:
“I should be able to handle this myself.”
For a while, that belief can seem helpful. It helps us push through difficult situations and do what needs to be done.
The problem is that eventually life hands us something that’s too heavy to carry alone.
A struggling marriage.
A health diagnosis.
A child who’s hurting.
Feelings of anxiety that won’t go away.
Sadness that doesn’t respond to willpower.
Grief.
Loss.
Stress that keeps building with no clear place to put it.
And suddenly, the strategy that’s worked for years—keep moving and don’t talk about it—stops working.
The Cost of Isolation
One of the challenges I see for many men isn’t that they’re unwilling to work hard. It’s that they’re trying to solve emotional problems the same way they solve practical ones.
When the sink leaks, you fix it.
When the car breaks down, you repair it.
When work gets busy, you put in more effort.
But emotional pain doesn’t always work that way.
You can’t outwork loneliness.
You can’t logic your way out of grief.
You can’t simply decide not to feel overwhelmed.
When those experiences show up, many men do what they’ve always done: they keep moving.
From the outside, they look fine. They’re going to work, showing up for their families, and handling their responsibilities. But internally, they may feel disconnected from themselves, disconnected from others, and disconnected from the things that once brought meaning to their lives.
I’ve found that disconnection is often at the heart of many of the struggles people face. Not because connection solves every problem, but because we were never meant to carry life’s burdens alone.
What If Mental Health Isn’t About Fixing Yourself?
One of the reasons I think some men avoid therapy is because they assume it’s about sitting on a couch talking endlessly about feelings or trying to figure out what’s wrong with them.
That’s not how I see it.
Most of the men I work with aren’t broken.
They’re exhausted.
They’re overwhelmed.
They’re disconnected.
They’re carrying things they were never meant to carry by themselves.
Therapy isn’t about fixing who you are. It’s about creating space to slow down long enough to understand what’s happening, reconnect with yourself, and decide how you want to move forward.
Sometimes that means learning new ways to handle stress.
Sometimes it means improving relationships.
Sometimes it means processing grief, shame, or disappointment.
Sometimes it simply means having a place where you don’t have to pretend you’re okay.
Connection Is Part of the Solution
If you’ve read any of my blogs before, you’ve probably noticed I talk about connection a lot.
That’s because I believe connection is one of the most important parts of being human.
Connection with other people.
Connection with ourselves.
Connection with the things that matter most.
Our motto is, “Reconnect with what matters most.”
For me, it’s more than a tagline. It’s the foundation of how I think about growth, healing, and mental health.
For many men, healing begins when they stop trying to carry everything alone.
It begins when they have a conversation they’ve been avoiding.
When they tell a friend what’s really going on.
When they let their spouse see what’s happening beneath the surface.
When they ask for support instead of trying to figure it all out themselves.
Those moments may seem small, but they matter.
Because connection creates room for healing.
A Question Worth Asking
As Men’s Mental Health Month comes to a close, I want to leave you with a simple question:
Who knows how you’re actually doing?
Not who sees you.
Not who follows you on social media.
Not who works next to you.
Who genuinely knows what’s happening beneath the surface?
If that question is difficult to answer, you’re not alone.
But you don’t have to stay there.
Reach out to a friend.
Talk with your spouse.
Join a community.
Connect with a therapist.
Take one small step toward letting someone else into your world.
Because strength isn’t carrying everything by yourself.
Strength is being willing to let someone sit beside you while you carry it.
And sometimes, that’s where healing begins.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If you’ve been carrying stress, anxiety, relationship challenges, burnout, or simply feeling disconnected, therapy can provide a space to slow down, gain clarity, and reconnect with what matters most.
At Cascade Counseling, we offer free 15-minute consultations to help you find a therapist who feels like a good fit.
You don’t have to carry it alone.











