Irritable
Male
Syndrome
 

Anger, Sex, Emotional Expression, and Irritable Male Syndrome (IMS)


Many men combine their anger with their desire for sex which also limits their expression and likelihood of getting a positive response. This often makes us more irritable, angry, and negative. “When we are in a positive mood, people like us better, and friendship, love, and coalitions are more likely to cement,” says Seligman. Men suffering from IMS find that their negative mood undermines their friendships and love relationships. But even men who are not suffering from IMS are often emotionally inept. We know that social connection is one of the key factors that determine health and longevity. Men’s failure to express ourselves emotionally may account for the fact that we die nearly 7 years sooner than women.

Thinking back on the way I was raised helps me understand why so many of us guys are limited emotionally. I learned early that “big boys don’t cry.” Later playing highschool basketball I learned to “play hurt and not complain.” I also learned that feelings were for females and boys learned to express themselves intellectually rather than emotionally. Figuring things out was what males did; sniveling over every little thing is what girls did—or at least that’s what I thought growing up.

Emotions are what we experience during gaps in our thinking. If there are no gaps, there is no emotion. Men often mistake emotions for thoughts. I recently had a man in my office who was obviously feeling a mixture of emotions: anger, hurt, fear, confusion, worry, sadness.

He had been injured on the job and had been referred to me by his wife because he was becoming increasingly depressed. He hadn’t been able to work for the last six months and the medical procedures he had undergone weren’t working. After getting some history I asked him how he was feeling. “I feel like I want to get back to work.”

“I know you want to get back to work, but how are you feeling?” I asked.

He thought for a moment and replied. “I feel like I need to do something, but I don’t know what to do.”

When I kept pressing for his feelings, he just looked at me and was obviously mystified. It took many sessions to begin to help him tune into to the sensations going on in his body, to recognize the feelings that went with the sensations, and to put a word on the feeling. He finally exploded with feelings and said, “I’m really, really pissed off.” I cheered and we both laughed.

“Both men and women feel an incredible variety of emotions,” says Dr. Helen Fisher. “Both feel them with piercing intensity and dogged regularity. Yet the ability to express these emotions is the special trait of women.” This is not to say that all men are unable to express their emotions or that all women are emotionally literate. I know many men that are much more expressive than many women. But generally there is a significant difference between males and females.

I suspect that this difference is built into our genetic heritage. For millions of years of human history, it was women who took the major responsibility for nurturing young children. An ability to read and respond to a baby’s emotions would have been a great advantage. Men, on the other hand, were the ones who had to leave their wives and children and go out for days on end hunting for wild animals. An ability to suppress their feelings would have made it easier for them to leave and easier for them to kill.

The men who allowed their feelings for their wife and children to come to the surface, the men who broke down when their children called, “Daddy, daddy, don’t leave,” the men who couldn’t make themselves “be strong”, were the men who didn’t hunt and didn’t bring home food for the family. In the long run, the children of these men were not as successful. These men didn’t pass on a whole lot of their genes to the next generation. We are descended from the men who submerged their feelings and went off with the other men.

As men become more nurturing and are required to be away from their families less, we are learning to allow our feelings to be expressed more easily. But millions of years of evolutionary history continue to have an impact on the differences in emotional expression between men and women. This seems to be true everywhere in the world. After Gallup pollsters asked people in twenty-two societies which sex was more emotional, they concluded “More than any other trait, this one elicits the greatest consensus around the world as more applicable to women than men. Eighty-eight percent of Americans think women are more emotional, as do 79 percent of the French, 74 percent of the Japanese, and 72 percent of the Chinese.

This evolutionary difference may have a hormonal basis. Prior to puberty both sexes express their emotions fairly equally. However, as boys mature and their testosterone levels increase, they become skilled at masking feelings of vulnerability, weakness, fear. It usually is during adolescence that teen-age boys refuse to discuss their feelings. “They become fluent at ‘joke-speak,’” says Helen Fisher, “all of the quips and gags and seemingly offhand remarks that boys and men employ to mask their emotions.”

When men do tap into their feelings, especially into powerful ones such as fear, anger, sadness, or anxiety, they are more likely than women to be swamped by these emotions, a condition that psychologist John Gottman calls “emotional flooding.” The fact that guys often close down and refuse to talk to their partner isn’t because we are being stubborn or emotionally stingy, it may be that we are overwhelmed by our emotions.

©2010 Jed Diamond

See Books, IssuesSuicide

*    *    *

Wealth can't buy health, but health can buy wealth. - Henry David Thoreau

 

Jed Diamond is the internationally best-selling author of nine books including Male Menopause, The Irritable Male Syndrome: Managing. The 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression. and Mr. Mean: Saving Your Relationship from the Irritable Male Syndrome. His upcoming book, Tapping Power: A Man’s Guide to Eliminating Pain, Stress, Anger, Depression and Other Ills Using the Revolutionary Tools of Energy Psychology will be available next year. For over 38 years he has been a leader in the field of men's health. He is a member of the International Scientific Board of the World Congress on Men’s Health and has been on the Board of Advisors of the Men’s Health Network since its founding in 1992. His work has been featured in major newspapers throughout the United States including the New York Times, Boston Globe, Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, and USA Today. He has been featured on more than 1,000 radio and T.V. programs including The View with Barbara Walters, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, CBS, NBC, and Fox News, To Tell the Truth, Extra, Leeza, Geraldo, and Joan Rivers. He also did a nationally televised special on Male Menopause for PBS. He looks forward to your feedback. E-Mail. You can visit his website at www.menalive.com



Contact Us | Disclaimer | Privacy Statement
Menstuff® Directory
Menstuff® is a registered trademark of Gordon Clay
©1996-2023, Gordon Clay