COUNSELING FOR MEN
Millions of men in the U.S. experience mental illness such as depression or anxiety every year
We’re Here For You
While data from the National Institute on Mental Health (NIMH) shows that men tend to experience mental illness at a lower prevalence than women, millions of American men do experience mental illness such as depression or anxiety every year. And sadly, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has found that men are more likely to die by suicide than women.
With there already being such a stigma for getting help when you feel you’re depressed, anxious, or need help processing trauma, it’s important that both men and women are aware of the symptoms of mental illness in men, which can often differ from the symptoms experienced by women.
Do You Have These Symptoms?
Most men who seek out counseling often do so because they’ve been encouraged to do so by a doctor, spouse or partner, or friend who has noticed the following types of symptoms:
- Increased stress, especially if it is identified by a doctor as a contributing factor to a comorbid heart condition. Increased stress can make these types of comorbid conditions fatal.
- Difficulties with anger management.
- Changes in sleep or appetite.
- Trouble concentrating or feeling a general sense of restlessness.
- Unusual thinking behaviors, especially if they concern friends or family members or interfere with a man’s family, work, or social life
Mental Illness Symptoms
Most people think that a person experiencing depression will feel sad or withdrawn and that a person with anxiety will be worried and fearful. Unfortunately, men don’t always show these telltale mental illness symptoms. While underneath all these symptoms there is usually sadness or fear, our society is biased against people seeking help for mental illness. When you combine that bias with the pressures placed on men to be “tough” and unemotional, it means several men who could benefit from counseling don’t seek out our services.