I’ve been thinking about two words recently.
Two tiny words.
Two words that have probably done more damage to men than we would ever care to admit.
Man up.
Simple, right?
Harmless, even.
Just a phrase.
Except it isn’t.
It’s a command.
An order.
A warning.
A lesson many of us were taught long before we were old enough to understand what it meant.
You fell over and hurt yourself?
Man up.
Heart broken?
Man up.
Scared?
Man up.
Depressed?
Man up.
Anxious?
Man up.
Struggling to carry the weight of the world on your shoulders?
You guessed it.
Man up.
Somewhere along the way, many of us learned that being a man meant being silent.
We learned that tears were weakness.
That vulnerability was dangerous.
That asking for help was somehow failure.
So we became experts at hiding.
We hid behind humour.
Behind work.
Behind alcohol.
Behind anger.
Behind “I’m fine.”
Especially behind “I’m fine.”
Because that’s the magic trick, isn’t it?
The greatest performance most men ever give.
Standing there with a smile on their face while their world burns quietly behind their eyes.
The trouble is, pain doesn’t disappear just because you refuse to acknowledge it.
It doesn’t pack its bags and leave.
It moves in.
Unpacks.
Makes itself comfortable.
What starts as sadness becomes exhaustion.
Exhaustion becomes frustration.
Frustration becomes anger.
Anger becomes isolation.
And isolation becomes a place far darker than most people realise.
I’ve known men who could rebuild engines.
Men who could run businesses.
Men who could walk into burning buildings.
Men who would give the shirt off their back to help a stranger.
Yet those same men couldn’t say three simple words.
“I need help.”
Not because they were weak.
Because they’d spent decades being taught that strength meant suffering in silence.
What a cruel lie that is.
Real strength isn’t pretending you’re invincible.
Real strength isn’t bottling everything up until the pressure becomes unbearable.
Real strength is honesty.
It’s having the courage to say:
“I’m struggling.”
“I’m tired.”
“I’m not okay.”
And perhaps most importantly:
“I can’t do this alone.”
The strongest men I’ve ever met weren’t fearless.
They weren’t emotionless.
They weren’t made of stone.
They were human.
Beautifully, imperfectly human.
They cried when life hurt.
They talked when things became too heavy.
They reached out when they needed support.
And because of that, they survived storms that silence would never have allowed them to survive.
The reality is that men’s mental health isn’t a men’s issue.
It’s everyone’s issue.
Every husband.
Every father.
Every brother.
Every son.
Every friend sitting quietly at the end of the table laughing at the jokes while fighting battles nobody can see.
We lose far too many good men because they believed they had to carry everything alone.
Because they believed asking for help made them less of a man.
Because somebody, somewhere, taught them that “man up” was the answer.
Maybe it’s time we retired the phrase.
Maybe instead of telling men to man up, we should tell them to speak up.
To open up.
To reach out.
To show up exactly as they are.
Not as society expects them to be.
Not as some impossible version of masculinity demands.
Just as themselves.
Because there is nothing brave about suffering in silence.
And there is nothing weak about asking for help.
If you’re reading this and things feel heavy right now, I want you to know something.
You don’t have to carry it all today.
You don’t have to win every battle before breakfast.
You don’t have to have all the answers.
And you certainly don’t have to pretend.
Talk to someone.
A friend.
A partner.
A family member.
A professional.
Anyone.
Just don’t sit alone in the darkness convincing yourself that silence is strength.
It isn’t.
Never was.
The bravest thing some men will ever do is speak.
And maybe that’s what being a man should have meant all along.
Stay safe.
BC