A Brotherhood for Husbands and Fathers in Beijing

We talk a lot about women’s mental health resources. And that’s a good thing, especially after so many generations of stigmatizing and marginalizing women’s health in general.  But we rarely talk about how men can find support.  And that’s causing some pretty serious social and cultural issues, as well as putting strain on families. According to the NIH, women are 1.7 times more likely to experience depression during their lifetime, but women who suffer from mental health issues are also far more likely to receive support.  As a society, we encourage women to talk to their friends and family about their feelings and to seek out professional help as well as social connections and support at work and through clubs or activities.

But men are taught to remain strong and silent, and not to burden others with their issues. Grischa Grunau of Married Men Mental Health Club (3MH) put it this way: “In general, men’s mental health is not a big discussion because it is not supposed to be a big issue. This is how we were brought up. If you have a problem, a difficulty, you just resolve it, that is what a real man does. This is what our fathers did and their fathers before them. ‘A real man’ can resolve every problem on their own, and of course this mindset very quickly leads to ‘if there is a problem I cannot resolve on my own I better hide it, hide my feelings about it, lest people think I am not a real man.’” Because of this ingrained cultural message, men are twice as likely to try and manage their emotions by binge drinking or drugs, are more likely to die from suicide than women, and have much higher rates of violent altercations and outbursts according to MindWise, a non-profit mental health initiative based in Massachusetts.

While women are often encouraged to reach out and connect, especially after major life changes like marriages or births, men are taught to be stoic and deal with their stresses and pain silently. And that is where 3MH is trying to make a difference. The group was founded in 2000 by a psychologist and some of his friends who wanted to create a space where men could talk about the issues they were facing on a deep and honest level but in a casual, no-pressure environment. Grunau explained that men tend to neglect their own social needs because they get distracted by work and family life. Statistically, they are far more likely to retire and live out their final years as loners which is a large contributing factor to why men tend to die years earlier than their female counterparts. He told me: “We are working on breaking the cycle of the ‘loner-male,’ and through mutual support and self-reflection become happier, healthier, more fulfilled, more productive, less aggressive and more balanced men. This doesn’t only benefit us, but also indirectly our partners and families, our work lives and our other personal relationships.”

It’s even more difficult for expat men. They often leave behind their existing support networks and the high-stress jobs that bring them to China leave barely any time to build relationships outside of the family unit. “I wouldn’t trade even a minute I spend with my family.” Grunau said, “However there are certain social needs, a need for fraternity and ‘brotherhood’ that cannot be adequately met just with family time. Especially in a country where you often know no one, isolation can develop and become quite severe.”

There's more to this story! This article was originally published on our sister site, Jingkids International.

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READ: Consult This List for Mental Health Resources in Beijing

Images: Canva, 3MH

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Giovanni Martini wrote:

Because of this ingrained cultural message, men are twice as likely to try and manage their emotions by binge drinking or drugs, are more likely to die from suicide than women, and have much higher rates of violent altercations and outbursts according to MindWise, a non-profit mental health initiative based in Massachusetts. (unquote)

You're writing a logic textbook, right? This is as shining an example of post-hoc reasoning as I have seen. Men have a higher rate of successful suicide than women, true. But to claim this is BECAUSE of traditional mores is quite a leap. Meantime, I was just looking at an article that claime femal suicide attempts outnumber male attempts 3 to 1. (https://save.org › about-suicide › suicide-statistics). Using your brand of unreasoning reason, can we conclude that women's greater willingness to seek help and admit to pain causes their epidemic-level of suicide attempts? Correlation means cause, it seems, in Grischa "No Credentials Mentioned" Grunau's world.

Look, I know the agenda is to clinicalize ALL human behavion and to control in the name of "help." But to lapse into such blatant agenda pushing strikes "we few, we happy few" as a bit condescending.

Reason schmeason, I can manage my emotions quite dandifully well with a wee bit of a liquor tear. Suicide ain't now, ain't never been anywhere near the table of options. I'm afraid I am here untill the bitter end. I don't really need a doctor, surely don't need a psychiatrist.

I am Doktor Aethelwise Snapdragoon.

Married Men Health Club??? This tells you everything. No wonder it is not Single Men Health Club. But this Giovanni dude said it nicely: "Teaching men to act like women gets you...um, the present-day U.S., the deplorable furtive creatures European males have become. much West of, say, Bratislava."

Thankfully I'm Eastern European (technically I'm from south central Europe) so we do not have this simp mentality.