Guest Episode
November 07, 2024
Episode 166:
The Evolution of Masculinity and the Modern Relationship
Listen or watch on your favorite platforms
Kristal is a licensed marriage and family therapist based in Austin, Texas, and she is known for her expertise in relationships, trauma work, and sex therapy.
With a focus on supporting first-responder couples and addressing men's issues, Kristal offers a unique therapeutic approach rooted in understanding male psychology and the challenges faced by men in contemporary society.
Her development of The STRONG model of Relational Therapy, which blends trauma-informed and attachment-based methods, has earned her a reputation as a leading authority in the domain. Her recent book, "STRONG: A Relationship Field Guide for the Modern Man," offers practical guidance for navigating contemporary relationships.
Kristal's dedication to advancing men's mental health advocacy extends beyond her clinical practice. As a trainer, consultant, author, and public speaker, she actively promotes awareness and education on the importance of men's mental health and wellness, as well as the impact of trauma on relationships.
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hello everybody and welcome to True Hope cast the official podcast of true hope Canada where we take a deep dive into
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docomomo Dan crystal is a licensed marriage and family therapist based in Austin Texas
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known for her expertise in relationships trauma work and Sex Therapy with a focus on supporting first responder couples
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and addressing men's issues Crystal offers a unique therapeutic approach rooted in understanding male psychology
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and the challenges faced by men in contemporary Society her development of the strong model of relational therapy
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which blends trauma informed and attachment-based methods has learned her reputation as a leading Authority in the
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domain her recent book strong a relationship Field Guide for the Modern Man offers practical guidance for
1:09
navigating contemporary relationships Crystal's dedication to advancing men's mental health advocacy extends Beyond
1:16
her clinical practice as a trainer consultant author and public speaker she actively promotes awareness and
1:22
education on the importance of men's mental health and wellness as well as the impact of trauma on relationships
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today we're going to be discussing the evolution of masculinity and the modern relationship enjoy the show okay welcome
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to the show Crystal thank you so much for being with me for being with us today how are you what is going well I
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am doing well it is um nice and hot here in Austin Texas so you know Endless
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Summer benefits of living in Texas I guess so that's wonderful well we're
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going to be discussing the evolution of masculinity and the modern relationship ship today but before we jump into that
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topic would you mind just sharing with us a little bit about who you are and what it is that you do sure so I'm I'm
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Crystal and I'm a licensed marriage and family therapist here in Austin um I'm
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also an author I wrote a book called strong the relationship Field Guide for the Modern Man and yeah um that's that's
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what I do I'm a therapist and author um and then who I am is I'm someone who
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loves cooking and I have two little dogs and one big cat and I'm married and I'm
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also a bonus mom so yeah that's me what a bonus mom
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uh my husband had a child with a previous uh marriage and so I've been a bonus parent wonderful that's cool I've
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never heard that term before but that's that's lovely thanks for sharing yeah um right let's kick off talking about m
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masculinity like what does that mean in 2024 I think that's the big question
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yeah right um yeah and so that's really where I'm you know I specialize in
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working with couples and particularly with men and Trauma um I really was
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fascinated with the impact of trauma on relationships um and so I've I've gotten
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some specialized training working with trauma and then part of that is I
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started working with a lot of veterans and First Responders and then their families so you know I worked around a
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lot of kind of self identified masculine men um in some ways even like hyper
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masculine right they're I mean I'm in Texas too right it's very like masculine men who are protectors they are
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firefighters they're cops they're veterans um and there was some kind of
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confusion about you know what does that mean when it comes to being a man in a
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relationship or in the world um because there has been such a change around what
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it means to be a man um and what masculinity is is it healthy is it toxic
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um in today's culture and I think we're still right in the middle of that conversation as a
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society yeah it's interesting that you you name a bunch of those occupations firefighter police serving in the arm
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the Armed Forces um obviously primarily like masculine jobs um and then then
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obviously a lot of specific traits are necessary to be successful with that type of a job but
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how do people or do people successfully separate those roles um and
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those personality traits that people take into their job you know most days of the week most days of the year and
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then come home and separate themselves from that job and that role and then coming into being a partner coming into
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being a father like how do people do you think navigate that well and I think
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that's really what the question is right because for many years um for a long
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time men identified kind of who they are by what they
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do that's fair right and so I think it's most obvious when you talk to you know
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police officers or firefighters or military members right it's like I'm a I'm a cop I'm a fire Fighter um but then
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when you come home who are you right and so again same thing with any profession so as I started to look into it it's
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like well I'm a you know I'm an accountant I'm a banker I'm an engineer it's like okay yes but who are you as a
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person who that's what you do that's what you know that's your production value but who are you as a human who are
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you at home and so that is where I've seen a lot of men I mean that's really the conversation right is are men more
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than just objects of production um are they they able to be human at home do we
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make space for them to be human at home or are men only valued for their ability to provide financially or protect um
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through these jobs yeah I find I found just just my own perspective in my own
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life I found that I'm such a better parent and partner when I have a
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specific routine and transition between like being in my office space which is
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which is at home and then going from work mode to parent mode if I like if my
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kids are home at 4 o'clock and I'm doing stuff till 3:59 I'm a I'm a worse parent than I am
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if I stop 15 minutes beforehand and I like go outside perhaps and breathe have sun exposure and just
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like take that time stretching actually is really good for me to take that time to come out of like my work mode which
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if you think about it biochemically I'm using very different parts of my brain I'm producing very different
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biochemicals and different hormones stress usually stress hormones usually and then I'm going into my pet going
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into my parent mode where I want to be like you know producing dopamine and serotonin and oxytocin all these
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completely different chemicals which will come from different parts of my brain being engaged and you can be like
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an incredibly Zen individual but like to be able to like switch one off and then turn the other one on like there's going
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to be some like you know some some overlap yeah so I find that incredibly
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helpful for me and I notice like when I'm being a not being the best parent I could possibly be I say to my partner I
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listen I just need 10 minutes here to just like recalibrate how yeah how have you seen in your therapy sessions working with
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working with men and I guess with women as well like who work and then transition into the home how have you
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seen transitions work for people you know I think that's really where I'm a fan of the buffer right is like having
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the buffer between work and home and it has gotten much more complicated because like you said a lot of people now their
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work is at home right and so you do have to intentionally create that buffer time whereas before maybe it was the drive
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home you would have 20 minutes to kind of decompress kind of put your work self away so that when you got out of the out
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of the car and walked into the house you were dad right um and so just really
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intentionally having those buffer times of like I'm turning off my work self I'm turning on my my partner self my parents
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self um which is much much harder with the modern couple because your phone is always there your computer might be in
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the next room um and so having these like buffer zones or buffer times um
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that allow you to transition into I'm I'm now being present with my family is
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so crucial yeah it's a huge point and um I just wanted to ask you about before we
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kind of move on a little bit here about the the points we're talking about when we're talking about primarily Mass
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masculine roles of like firefighters police officers armed services that's that's like a stressful
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job anyway but like inevitably at some point with all of those professions there's going to be like exposure to
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traumatic events and obviously like we can talk about trauma all day but you know the worst thing that you see or
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experience is going to be different to other people so like the worst thing that's happened to you is the worst thing that's happened to you right so
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whether that's like I get into a mild car crash or I'm in a car crash and like you know somebody dies you know like
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those two different people like that's like their that's their like their height I guess so when these individuals
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in these roles already in a stressful environment anyway having to be hyper alert As A Firefighter as a police
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officer Etc and then we have these experiences these traumas that happen where we are like we have all this
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training for sure to be able to like physically physically deal with these things and I don't know I'm not I'm not
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a police officer I've never gone through like the academy or Through Fire firefight training but I don't know if
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they help people train themselves not just with the physical aspect but to deal with the psychological emotional
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aspect that comes with like you know trying to save people and put out fires and deal with violence I'm sure there
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has to be a huge element of that now coming into practice but when you are
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coming home to your home environment and you have the added stress of just like that job anyway but then you've got like
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the traumas on top of that how do you see and how do you work with people who do have those like let's just say added
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extra stressful layers when they're coming home yeah and that is something that you
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know it it is such a hard shift especially because our modern world
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again like yes the firefighters First Responders um they do get exposed to trauma and so in order to be good at
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that job there is a level of distance that you do have to have and and
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compartmentalization right um and so that's kind of you know on a broad scale like trauma rewires your brain from
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seeking connection to seeking protection right so you got to protect yourself uh
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from connecting to all of the trauma that you see that would just be overwhelming right and so in order to
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come home and be open to connection there is a process of integration that
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has to happen right and so if you again like maybe on a regular day coming home from shift it's not that hard you get to
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just kind of okay let me you know process what I experienced today and then come back into my connection mode
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but on a day that it's you know much harder you had a traumatic event you had a very stressful event again kind of
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like you said our recognizing how much our bodies hold that stress and keep us
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in kind of a bracing mode right we're in kind of a protected Place uh because we
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just walk through something really dangerous really scary um and that's something also again there's the first
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responder and the you know physical danger community but it is really interesting in people that have I guess
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more like regular jobs the amount of stress in a desk job in a you know job
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that you wouldn't be exposed to physical danger can be just as high because our
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bodies don't differentiate between oh this is this kind of danger and oh this is this kind of danger our bodies just
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go into fight ORF flight mode we get the adrenaline dump and so regardless of what kind of job you have really kind of
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checking in with yourself am I bringing all of this stress and dumping it into my home or am I able to
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process regulate my body before I enter the home so I'm going from kind of pro
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protection mode where I'm all tense and I'm all buned up to opening back up
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being open to connection because that's really who I want to be in my home right
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beautifully said yeah and I would argue that perhaps those individuals who do work in an office space and who are
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there desk constantly um don't have the advantages of like the phys the benefits
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the mental health benefits that come with like physical activity training um you know that's you know exercising and
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being in the gym and training is like is a part of the job when you're a firefighter when you're basement Etc and you have that physical outlet that we
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know is so so beneficial and um you are kind of optimizing your body physically
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to to let's just say yeah work optimally whether you rather than you're just like in a in an office space inside not in a
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really physical position to be like you know really genetically optimizing yourself from a cellular level um so
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that's an interesting thing to think about as well and I was just thinking about um I often think about like out
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when we were you know hundreds of thousands of years ago when we were in small communities small cultures trauma is obviously not a new thing in 20124 we
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have been experiencing um trauma and Ma and that male role of like fighting Wars
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and hunting and you know being isolated and um you know losing loved ones would
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have been incredibly more frequent and common you know 100 thousand years ago so like trauma is not a new thing um and
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I wonder like what do what did what don't we have now that we would have had
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then uh to help us deal with those traumatic things that would have inevitably happened
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Community right because again like if you went out to a hunting trip um or you
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went out to war like you had a community you would process it right and so even
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for example like okay when the stakes are high and you need to you know get that animal to bring home to your family
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because you know your family's hungry and you missed that shot like that can be a very painful experience right the
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stakes can be so high but if you have a group of other Hunters who are like hey man it's okay we're not going to let
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your family starve like you know we got you we have the community we can talk about it I mean you look at indigenous
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cultures when the Warriors would come home there would be whole rituals yeah around telling the story you know a
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narrative talking about it what happened how did you you know because also
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narrative um therapy as a treatment for trauma is so like so powerful and
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impactful right and so that's the thing that we're missing is being able to talk
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about trauma in a way that is supportive and productive that's gone I mean well
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it's it's here in the Therapeutic Community right in men's groups in support groups in trauma processing
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groups um but just as a kind of function of what we provide as a society that's
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missing yeah that that Brotherhood I think um I think maybe we'll talk about
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toxic masculinity and kind of like that means shortly but um I remember when I
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was probably about 20 29 and I was going on um I was just hanging out with a
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bunch of my buddies back in the UK and a couple and a couple of them wouldn't show up to like the the normal type of
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events that we would hold kind of annually and it's because these people were like kind of like up sad and
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depressed and I remember one of my buddies saying to me that we're talking about like the the ever growing
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depression within like our not just our friend group but like within men in general and it was something that we
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didn't notice 10 years ago um when I was 20 so you know that's 20 years ago and I
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remember my friend saying to me that like for men's mental health they kind of just need to go on like one or two
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like stag parties a year and like just like really I don't want to use the word bro out but I'm going to use it because
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it's like relevant like group I do it when I go play golfing with my buddies we get silly say silly things like we're
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egging each other on we're kind of being like kind of being like silly guys but it's really a massive like outlet for a
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lot of people and I guess like when we're talking about hunter gatherers going out in in in groups of groups of
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men to go and hunt it would have been that communal factor that would have gotten through incredibly Harsh Times
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and I don't know if we have um a positive um let me
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say a positive influence to to kind of do those things anymore I'm not sure I don't know what what that from your
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perspective what do you think you know it's really interesting because women never lost that right women have always
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like had their women's groups and their book clubs and their you know community and you know girls have wine night and
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girls go on girls trips and so I think the biggest thing that's changed is and
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well you know it's interesting because what you're saying is absolutely like guys trips are so important guys having
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big groups of male friends but unfortunately what I think think and again this you know just I don't know I
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can't pull up a research study on this but what I've seen is sometimes maybe
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the um like it becomes very surface level so then it becomes un like
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unhealthy right and so it's not groups of men sitting around and like actually talking about like hey man I made it
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here I'm actually really depressed like I'm struggling with my marriage it becomes we come together and we drink to
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forget yeah um and then we make bad choices and then our wives are like you're never going on that again and
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then we lose our community you know um and so that's the that's the piece of that that I think is like you know
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absolutely men's like having male friendships and groups of men that that can actually show up for and support
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each other and not just only focus on the fun and the and the silliness
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because in our culture too I think well in a lot of cultures is the part of the
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issue is the hyperfocused on just the positive right it's like we don't want to talk about the the negative we don't
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want to talk about the hard stuff let's just focus on the good let's just focus on the high so then what happens when
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people are like I'm not feeling like that so I guess I just won't go right and those are the people that need
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Community the most but it feels even worse when you're the only one who's like does anyone want to have a deeper
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conversation and and nobody does right yeah no that's that's that's so important and I think that just thinking
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about my own experience again I think so I'm I'm 40 now and then when my the same groups of friends that I had I've got
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kind of got six key key friends back in the UK when we get together it's a lot less frequent now because I live in live
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in Canada and people are a bit more spaced out but when we do meet up like now like we actually get we get silly We
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Get Ridiculous like we did when we were 18 but we also like have much deeper in-depth conversations about like how we
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are what we're doing and about our family and obviously that comes with maturity and and age and I think going
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transitioning from being being single to being married to being a parent maybe even being a a grandparent like these
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are huge huge big um rights of Passage um in our lives and yeah the
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conversations we would have when we were 30 wouldn't really have that deep meaningful conversation that's like a little a little bit a little bit deeper
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but we have that now and I think that um with age and I think with um the kind of
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temperature of 2024 around men's mental health we're going into a bit more of a positive route around that so rather
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than these silly boy strips just being that they and not just a an outlet for
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that extra testosterone and extra energy that we do have that absolutely has to be like let loose otherwise the problems
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are going to happen but also to actually get a little bit deeper with our with our with our brothers you know um I
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think that's huge and I've moved from the UK to Europe to America back to Europe and to Canada and I've seen
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people try and move to different countries and starting fresh and without
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a team sport I've noticed people don't do that they I've I've got three friends who I can think of who have tried to
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move like to different countries and they've always gone back home very quickly none of those people had a team
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sport that they could very quickly go and Google and go Stockholm soccer club
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and then very quickly find a football club go meet up with 20 other guys and
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train with them get to know a few people slowly and then start like playing for a team I've done that everywhere I've gone
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and I've immediately like made like 18 19 buddies and then three four really
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good friends yeah without question that's the reason how I've successfully
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been able to move from place to place with with' got knowing absolutely nobody
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very quickly putting myself into like a communal Brotherhood of of sport and
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that's why I think like team sports is a really really good good thing to be involved in so yeah what do you think
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about that absolutely Lely 100% because again like that's such a um like that's
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something that in this modern world right people don't grow up Live and Die in their same towns with their same
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communities anymore right and so the you know the positive is like you do have
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the freedom to go anywhere and live anywhere like you've lived in how many different countries right um but the
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downside of that is it is difficult to create a community from scratch as an adult so having an in like that I mean
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that is so smart and this is also something that I love about the first responder and the veteran Community is
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you could be in anywhere in the world my husband will like he's a veteran and a first responder literally anywhere in
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the world he'll be like I think that guy is also a first responder and they can sit down and have a conversation and
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I'll be like you know how does this happen but but that Brotherhood that community that you know sense of um
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belonging is so crucial especially again for everybody but especially for men um
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where it is sometimes a little bit more difficult to like where do I even start to make the first move and find a community it's like having something
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that you're like I enjoy this and I know there will be other guys who enjoy it and I can meet those guys and maybe we
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can be friends yeah so crucial yeah it's an absolutely huge positive part of like
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you know our hierarchy of needs as males and having that Community having that group having that solidarity that
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relationship and um you also see it with like with with gang C like the reason
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gang culture is so prevalent and huge literally in every country on the planet is because it offers that in a NE in a
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negative way um but you can see how people especially young people are drawn to that a quite unique special age
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between like you know 13 and like 18 I'm sure we see the induction of um
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individuals into gang cultures like we see that increase significantly during during that time so it's obviously a
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clear phenomena that can be um that can be wrapped up positively with like kind
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of the right conversations and and the right I guess education from from Young
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ages and Role Models Etc um but I want to chat about masculinity a little bit
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kind of bring that back uh and what do you think some of the more common misconceptions about masculinity what
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are they you know it's interesting what immediately popped up for me is that Mas
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it is something that you do not something who you
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are and I think that's a big misconception right that you can perform
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masculinity whereas masculinity is inh like having like being a masculine
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person is inherent it's not performative it's
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innate it's inate right and yet so many of the markers of masculinity that we've
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kind of um attributed to well what is a man oh he's a guy with you know that
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he's physically looks like this or he financially looks like that or that's a real man a guy that can blink um and so
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it becomes this kind of performative masculinity which again like just from a psychology perspective is like the
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internal locus of control right I am powerful I am who I am my identity
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Belongs to Me versus it's external which other people get to Define like who I am
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as the man do I have value as a man and that's where I see a lot of um like the
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damaging messaging about masculinity um is like it is something that you do not not who you are if that
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makes sense oh for sure and it's like when you look at it like like that which I think a lot of people do and our
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culture breeds is that you you are either masculine or not which is which
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is kind of silly because you know like it's certainly on a scale like you know you can you know I people have masculine
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traits and they have feminine traits right like it's it's not like you have it or you don't so yeah I completely
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agree with you um let's jump into toxic masculinity like what what what is that
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and has that has that whole conversation because this new like there's no way we would have spoken about this 10 years
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ago like what does that mean where do it come from and you know is it is it a
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positive thing like this new term you know I feel
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like it it it's tough because on one hand the
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benefit is that it brought it like right front and center into the into the conversation right is like having such
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an like inflammatory title like brought a lot of eyes on it um but the downside
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is that it really I think the message got lost in the delivery
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there right is that people now are conflating masculinity with
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toxicity right whereas their like masculinity in and of itself is not
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toxic maybe there is an expression of masculinity that can be toxic but masculinity in and of itself is not
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toxic and I think that Nuance got lost in that label a little bit yeah it makes
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sense to me that there would be traits of just being a human being that would
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like Teeter over into just being like a not very good person whether that's like egotistical or angry or judgmental or
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something like that but like I don't see the difference between that being just like negative personality traits and
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masculinity I don't really see the I don't really see the blend of the two I feel like they're quite separate um I've
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never really dived heavily into like the the origin of this new term and but I
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just feel like throwing those two words together you can't like not create
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negativity around just the masculinity when there's toxic right there totally totally and I think where it got lost
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was we didn't have the counterbalance of what is healthy masculinity right right so all that got
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put out there was toxic masculinity toxic masculinity which you know like
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you said of course then people kind of Blended these two things together like oh that's the same thing but um no toxic
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is the descriptor yeah and I feel like if you were to look at it would be
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like masculinity toxic masculinity femininity
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and and toxic femininity is there is there such a term as that like it can't be this simple linear path to no totally
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and again like okay so for example um again just like you said are these human
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traits yes and then when we you know uh people so for example being assertive
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versus being aggressive right being confident versus being
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arrogant right and so the reason why maybe it's put into the masculine bucket is that when you say like is confidence
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a masculine or a feminine trait right and like what what is it and again these
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are so kind of like you know arbitrary in some ways right is courage a
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masculine or a feminine trait I mean it's a human trait for sure it's
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arrogance of masculine or but I think that's part of the you know um some of the some of the traits that people want
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to claim as masculine um and then the extreme uh expression of that or the
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extreme negative expression of that which would be the same for femininity right so like being nurturing right it's
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like yeah that's a feminine trait right well what is toxic femininity well being so nurturing to others that you neglect
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yourself okay right yeah well we love to put things in boxes and categorize and put
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ourselves in this reductionist thought pattern where we can EAS easily like create graphs and write on a chalk board
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or a whiteboard um that yeah you could just like write masculinity femininity
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and just like write all the characteristics when it clearly just doesn't work like that when we've just got like infinite personalities that
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live in the world um and it's obviously a lot more complex than that so yeah it's our reductionist thinking and I'm
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sure like a lot of philosophers and psychologists have worked very hard at writing books to create graphs to um to
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make a visual of this but it clearly it just doesn't work like that yeah and it is really interesting right because this
30:33
is kind of where you know I I like to talk about like the spectrum of rigidity and Chaos right it's like one step from
30:41
either end is you know structure and creativity right but sometimes we get
30:48
too rigid with our structures become so rigid then sometimes with creativity it feels like chaos so then we want to kind
30:55
of Veer back to the other side and um because you know I mean I wrote a book that is very
31:01
structured I tried to put things into categories you know for efficiency's sake um but again you know with that
31:09
it's not the be all end all it's here's a structure to help guide you through this like very wide and wild forest of
31:20
relationships right yeah and you have to create you have to create that that system in order
31:26
for people to have thought-provoking ideas and kind of come to their own conclusion about these things like I
31:32
think that's that's vital that that we do that and we have these conversations and people obviously heavily differ in
31:39
their opinions about literally everything and it' be incredibly boring place if we if we didn't have that but I
31:46
just wonder like this whole toxic masculinity piece which is like everywhere and I'm sure if I wrote toxic
31:51
masculinity books into Amazon there'd be thousands of books like written about it um and podcasts and all this but like do
31:58
you think that this whole new conversation let's call it I don't know five five seven eight years old at a
32:05
stretch uh do you think this is actually breeding a culture of um emasculated
32:10
men um again I don't like know because
32:18
masculinity is like who you are right and so if anything what I like to I
32:24
don't really I don't personally like to use the term toxic masculinity because it you know gets so you know uh
32:31
confusing is like immature versus mature masculinity like that's kind of how I
32:38
like to think about it right and so you can't emasculate a man who is secure in
32:44
his masculinity like just you nobody can take that away from him sure right because that is who he is and so I think
32:53
that is maybe where U where where maybe there are more immature people people
32:58
immature men who are trying to perform masculinity feel like their masculinity their avenues for performing masculinity
33:05
are being styed because they can't perform it in the way that you know they
33:11
want to um whereas a really secure masculine mature man is like nobody can
33:16
take this away from me because it is who I am sure you know so yeah and it's not something you just like learn in a
33:23
seminar or in a book or something like that as we said like it's it's something in with within our biology and certainly
33:30
within our culture whether like we like it or not yeah yeah and I I I talk about
33:37
this often on the podcast but we don't have what we would have traditionally had is these rights of Passage as as
33:44
like young adults like 13 14 15 16 whatever like where these individuals
33:49
would go out into the forests or the jungle and they'd be out there for days or weeks and they'd have to use all the
33:55
skills that they'd learned and to come back when they come back they're they're a man and there's a ceremony that's a huge big thing they actually have it in
34:02
like Jewish cultures and certainly some like um other cultures as well still around the world but Western culture we
34:08
don't have that that's why we have these 30y old men still playing video games in their parents' basement because these
34:13
individuals have yet to become adults and they have yet to I want to say cultivate their masculinity because kind
34:21
of everything up until let's say 30 35 until you get married and have kids you're very much especially as a man and
34:27
you are like super selfish like I think like what do you think about that so
34:33
it's interesting because I was looking at this of like what is the Western Mal's induction into manhood
34:40
traditionally it's been War beautiful yeah you know and so that is also something that I would say is
34:47
kind of where you know in indigenous cultures or in the Jewish culture it's like you celebrate a man becoming a man
34:54
as like now you are going to mature into the father into the leader into the
34:59
member of the community that you know is going to be supported and loved whereas
35:04
in the western culture it's like congratulations you're a man here's a gun go get some trauma in you and then
35:10
come back you know and so that is something that yes we do have rights of Passage for young men in the western
35:16
culture and it's it's throwing them into trauma um and so that needs to change
35:22
and like yeah what do you think about the difference between throwing them into like wartime and then actually like
35:28
because there used to have been like mandated and there still is in many countri not not many countries at all in
35:34
a few countries they still have like mandated military time I know um in some European countries like you have to do
35:41
it at a certain age and you spend N9 months to 12 months away from home at
35:46
like 17 18 years of age in like you know not necessarily in war but you're going into an environment that is completely
35:53
new you are learning very quickly that you are not the center of the universe where we have like most men feel like
36:00
that for a very long periods of time and they're learning like these these survival skills and they're becoming
36:06
part of a group and I think there's also some countries where you kind of have to do the your
36:12
year before you're 25 for example but I think that I think that there's a some
36:18
many positives that can come from like going not necessarily going into actual
36:23
War but like going into like a let's just say heavy disciplined environment
36:29
where you would come back with a unique set of skills and you've actually been
36:35
pushed out of your comfort zone whether you like it or not um and you've had to
36:41
become part of something which a lot of people never really get the opportunity
36:47
to do unless they like you know find the right partner and they have kids because
36:52
if you have kids in in the right circumstances you your priority list you
36:57
go you go from number one to like down at the bottom if you're a responsible parent in my opinion and that's a huge
37:05
huge right of passage I was very I think for myself when I was 30 years old I was
37:10
I I I went through that when I like realized what I wanted to do I wanted to study nutrition and I wanted to help
37:16
people and then I studied nutrition and then I got married and then I had kids and I grew up properly between 30 and
37:23
like 33 that's when I grew up and everything kind of before that was it was amazing it was fun but I was just
37:29
like I was just like this innately selfish person not like I was like going around being an a-hole but like it was
37:36
just it was kind of like me against the world I guess um yeah what do you think about that I've just said a lot of stuff
37:42
sorry no absolutely and you know I think this is where um you know I wish right
37:49
in a in a perfect world it would be yes that um you know 18yar olds teenagers
37:55
whatever would have the opportunity to be part of something bigger than themselves so whether that's going to
38:02
you know sign up for the National Guard or going through Boot Camp or again this
38:07
is part of the difficulty in the conversation of like you know so okay well men just have to go to war and then
38:13
they just always have to be sacrificing themselves it's like well you know so you know equality and that but also you
38:20
know being some being part of something bigger than yourself so maybe it's a year of volunteer work maybe it's a year
38:26
of being you know being a park ranger maybe it's a year of volunteering with the Peace Corp maybe it's a year of yeah
38:33
you know building schools volunteering Habitat for Humanity again just connecting like you said because it
38:39
really is you know especially in the west such an individualistic culture right so there's nothing wrong with
38:45
putting yourself first because like literally that's your job right because nobody else is telling you what to do so
38:51
you better figure it out but then making that shift like you said and I talk about it in the very last chapter of my
38:56
book of you know that's the hardest shift I see in modern couples is navigating the shift from I am at the
39:03
Center of My Universe to now we are co-creating something that always has to be bigger than us yeah that's so hard
39:11
especially when you're raised in such an individualistic way and so I totally agree with you of having giving
39:16
teenagers or you know whatever age the opportunity to say and now you're going to learn to be part of something bigger
39:23
than yourself so that when you do go out into the world and start looking for a marriage partner you know how to put
39:29
something above yourself right not the other person but your marriage your family what's going to actually help
39:35
them Thrive um because it does have to be bigger than both of you yeah we we
39:40
don't do brilliantly as a culture now of like dealing with significant change
39:46
very well whether that's like becoming married and moving in or having having a child like I think that it's difficult I
39:53
think a lot of people kind of get through it but a lot of people like do and they self- sabotage with like
39:59
cheating or drinking or like a lot of these other things are just coping mechanisms to deal with the fact that I
40:06
we're I'm stepping into a phase of my life that is unfamiliar it is uncommon it is unnatural for me because my past
40:13
is not my my my future is not my past where it's predictable and and
40:18
comfortable I'm having to step into this new role and yeah it's it's a very it could be a very tricky and and dark
40:25
place for a lot of people yeah and this is where I always want to emphasize
40:30
especially to men right is you know you can be a good man and not have the
40:36
skills to be a good partner and that doesn't make you a bad man it makes you
40:42
it means that you have some learning to do and so that is something else that I've I've found a lot of men have
40:49
struggled with like I'm not making my wife happy I don't know how to parent very well I feel like you know am I a
40:56
good man it's like yes you can be a great person and not have the skills to be a great partner and that's okay
41:02
because you can learn skills to be a great partner being a good person is
41:07
Baseline like what we all strive for being a good partner is next level
41:13
skill absolutely and when you do find that like right partner I know that my
41:18
my wife has taught me so much about trust and openness and vulnerability and generosity like I think that that
41:24
finding that partner to balance yourself out I think that a a key evolutionary process that we've had like throughout
41:30
the whole of human existence that has helped young men turn into adults to
41:36
change their um change their perception of you know egotistical nature I guess
41:41
and becoming part of becoming part of something that's bigger than themselves and getting through that like that kind
41:47
of dangerous Forest of navigating that that that inevitable change um yeah it's
41:53
a wonderful thing to have to do that with a partner and you know you balance each other out and you yeah you go
41:58
through it together it's it's actually quite it's a beautiful thing um I could talk to you for hours about so many
42:04
different things when I know we're on a little bit of a time schedule here and I we've got to talk about your book um
42:09
strong a relationship Field Guide for the modern man which addresses the unique challenges faced by men in
42:15
today's society can you talk us through a little bit about that like why did you write the book and who it's for yeah so
42:21
I wrote the book um so strong is the six pillars of a healthy relationship you know again and I wanted to distill
42:28
things down into a simple kind of structure that I could use with my couples um and the reason I wrote the
42:34
book for men is because there's a lot of books out there already for women a lot of therapy is already directed towards
42:40
women speaking women's language I wanted to write a book for men so that they could feel a little bit more empowered
42:45
that again these are skills you can learn these are tools there are tips um that you know can give you something
42:52
that you can kind of hold on to in practice so yeah that's why I wrote the book for men and yeah beautiful yeah I I
43:01
I have to kind of touch on the um the aspect that's huge when it comes to
43:06
stress or anxiety or depression or mental health within men um I've know
43:12
I've experienced it but like it's very common for a lot of people to become like chronically nutrient deficient and
43:19
when you are chronically nutrient deficient your brain is seriously struggling to manufacture the necessary
43:26
chemicals to make you feel good and give you energy into all of these things the brain and the body can only like produce
43:34
uh the materials for those like certain neurotransmitters depending on like the nutrition and food that you give it so
43:40
I've seen within my own personal experience and having the the honor to work with true hope Canada and be a part
43:47
of their like micronutrient team the fact that so many men who end up like
43:52
laying down their egotistical ways and saying like they actually want to address things going on for them that's
44:00
happening internally but seriously affecting their external world with their Partners relationships job Etc and
44:08
when individuals start actually providing their stressed bodies with the right nutrition it's quite remarkable
44:15
how quickly we see like in sometimes in days how people's brains start to shift a little bit they start um coming out of
44:22
that sympathetic neurological pathway into more of a rest and digest and they can
44:28
sit and listen and be with their partners and they can get down and play with their children rather than the
44:33
anxiety of like what's going on and money and work like coming on it gives giving people the capacity and that
44:40
space to be able to like think differently feel differently and and have different behaviors so yeah I have
44:46
to kind of like throw that piece in there like you know we have we have the world world's most researched
44:52
micronutrient product available to to people and we see such phenomenal things happen with um with men's mental health
44:59
and there's an incredible um Network here um in Canada of people using these
45:06
products with with their psychiatrists with their counselors and and getting getting better very quickly and giving
45:13
people the space to do all the other things that we know is so important for mental health whether that's exercise uh
45:19
being within communities rather than isolating yourself and cooking good foods Etc yeah absolutely I have a a and
45:27
you bring up a really important Point too is that that's kind of in the first chapter of my book about being stable
45:34
within yourself right what do you need to be at your best operating self like are you drinking enough water are you
45:39
sleeping enough are you taking care of your mental health are you taking your macronutrients your micronutrients um
45:45
and then at the very end of the book I have what's what I call the pizza of Wellness I have like these eight different slices of you know where are
45:54
you taking care of yourself in all these different are areas and you know again just it's not just oh I go to the gym
46:00
you know three times a week it's like great and there are so many other ways that you can take care of yourself so
46:06
that you are operating at your highest capacity because again also I see this a lot with so many men where they're like
46:12
yeah I would set myself on fire to keep my family warm and it's like yeah but you also are a person who is deserving
46:19
of care and nurturing and you know all of the good things that you want to give
46:24
to others you know you have to give that to yourself first yeah there's so many things we can
46:29
do that are like cheap easy foundational whether it's food nutrition supplementation breath exercise cold
46:37
water exposure there's so many options for people that like are not that expensive and very easy to just throw
46:42
into your daily routine we just need to be able to learn what those things are create the space speak to your spouse
46:49
speak to your kids about creating the environment for you to be able to do these things because you're GNA be a better partner you're gonna be a better
46:55
person you're gonna be a better dad and um yeah it's it's hugely hugely vital to take care of that foundational
47:01
piece before you can start building the the house that will create the person I
47:07
guess you want to become absolutely yeah beautiful well Crystal this has been amazing thank you so much for coming on
47:14
to the show and talk I had so many other questions but all every time the best podcasts we have we just like go all
47:20
over the place and we have these really like organic conversations and that's that's kind of what we really want here
47:25
on on this podcast so thank you so much for coming on can you just let us know where people can learn more about you
47:32
maybe order the book and yeah and connect yeah so um if you want to find me online I'm on Instagram at ATX
47:39
therapist so Austin Texas ATX therapist um and then you can order my book on
47:45
Amazon it's on Audible as well I always want to make things accessible um and then my website is just strong.
47:53
love love it that's awesome Crystal again thank you so much for coming to the show and spending your time with us
47:59
and your beautiful thoughts I really appreciate it yeah thank you so much this is wonderful wonderful well that is
48:06
it for this episode of True Hope cast the official podcast of true hope Canada if you want to connect with Crystal or
48:12
get a hold of a b or learn more about her work I'll leave links in the show notes for you to easily navigate that
48:17
you can leave us a review on iTunes if you're fancy it or you can also give us a star review on Spotify it certainly
48:22
helps but that's it for this week we'll see you soon
48:28
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