Grin (Drink, Gamble, Work) And Bear It

It’s long been assumed that women are more prone to depression than men. The truth, however, maynot be that women are uniquely sensitive and emotional, but that men are unaware of — or unwilling to confront — their feelings. Newsweek goes in-depth on male depression: Six million American men will be diagnosed with depression this […]

Jimmy_1It's long been assumed that women are more prone to depression than men. The truth, however, maynot be that women are uniquely sensitive and emotional, but that men are unaware of -- or unwilling to confront -- their feelings. Newsweek goes in-depth on male depression:

Six million American men will be diagnosed with depression this year. But millions more suffer silently, unaware that their problem has a name or unwilling to seek treatment. In a confessional culture in which Americans are increasingly obsessed with their health, it may seem clichéd—men are from Mars, women from Venus, and all that—to say that men tend not to take care of themselves and are reluctant to own up to mental illness. But the facts suggest that, well, men tend not to take care of themselves and are reluctant to own up to mental illness. Although depression is emotionally crippling and has numerous medical implications—some of them deadly—many men fail to recognize the symptoms. Instead of talking about their feelings, men may mask them with alcohol, drug abuse, gambling, anger or by becoming workaholics. And even when they do realize they have a problem, men often view asking for help as an admission of weakness, a betrayal of their male identities.

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Note: The depression test linked to the article is sponsored by Pfizer.

Men & Depression: Facing Darkness [Newsweek]