This one might be uncomfortable.
Not because it’s harsh…
but because it’s been normalized for so long that we rarely question it.
And when something goes unexamined for generations… it doesn’t disappear.
It multiplies.
Boys are not born emotionally absent.
They are taught, directly and indirectly, to disconnect from themselves.
And the earlier this happens…
the deeper the impact.
Let that sit.
No boy enters this world unable to feel.
They feel deeply.
They express freely.
They cry without shame.
They reach for connection without hesitation.
But somewhere along the way… that changes.
“Stop crying.”
“Be strong.”
“Man up.”
“That’s not how boys behave.”
And just like that,
emotion begins to feel like something to suppress…
instead of something to understand.
So, what does he do?
He adapts.
He learns to silence what he feels…
before he ever learns how to process it.
He replaces expression with control.
Vulnerability with distance.
Honesty with performance.
And over time…
he becomes someone who looks composed on the outside, but is disconnected on the inside.
Not because he chose to be.
But because that was what was reinforced.When a boy is not taught emotional awareness…
he does not stop feeling.
He just loses the language for it.
So instead of saying:
“I feel hurt,”
it comes out as anger.
Instead of saying:
“I feel rejected,”
it becomes withdrawal.
Instead of saying:
“I don’t understand what I’m feeling,”
it becomes silence.
And because no one corrects this early…
He grows into a man who struggles to:
Communicate clearly
Connect deeply
Lead emotionally
Love responsibly
Not because he lacks capacity…
but because he was never taught how.
And then we expect him to show up in relationships,
in leadership,
in fatherhood…
with skills he was never guided to develop.
This is where the disconnect begins.
We tell boys to be strong…
but we don’t teach them what strength actually is.
Strength is not suppression.
Strength is awareness.
Strength is the ability to sit with what you feel
without letting it control you…
and without pretending it does not exist.
But if a boy is taught to abandon himself early…
he will spend years trying to perform strengthinstead of becoming it.
This is how we get men who:
Struggle to express emotions
But react strongly when overwhelmed
Avoid difficult conversations
But feel deeply misunderstood
Seek connection
But don’t know how to sustain it
Desire respect
But have not built emotional clarity within themselves
And again, this is not blame.
This is awareness.
Because many of these patterns are inherited.
Passed down from generations
where emotional expression was never modeled…
only survival was.
So, what we are seeing today
is not just behavior.
It is a continuation of what was never addressed.
And if we do not interrupt it…
it will continue.
So, the question becomes:
What do we do now?
We start earlier.
We teach boys that:
Emotions are not weaknesses
They are signals
Expression is not a flaw
It is clarity
Vulnerability is not something to hide
It is something to understand
We create environments where:
They can speak without being shut down
Feel without being shamed
Ask without being dismissed
Because the goal is not to make them “soft.”
The goal is to make them aware.
Because an emotionally aware boy becomes:
A grounded man
A present father
A responsible partner
A leader who understands people, not just outcomes
And that is what this generation needs.
Not just men who can provide…
but men who can process.
Not just men who can lead externally…
but men who are aligned internally.
So, let’s sit with this:
What was I taught about emotions growing up?
What did I learn to suppress… instead of understanding?
How do I respond when I feel overwhelmed, do I express, avoid, or react?
And for those raising or influencing boys:
Are we teaching them how to be strong…
or just how to appear strong?
Because one builds capacity.
The other builds pressure.
And pressure, over time…
always finds a way out.
The question is, how?
xoxo, Stay Thoughtful 💜✨
