I Couldn’t Be Who I Wanted to Be: Boys and Stress

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Breaking the Boy Code

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Stress wound its way into Michael’s life throughout his preteen years, growing in size until it overwhelmed him in his first year of high school. “It took over my life,” he told me. “I’d come home and do four hours of homework. This took a toll on my social life, and my physical health. I began to develop an eating disorder, which I still have to battle to this day. I lost a lot of weight. I became more of an unhappy person. I wasn’t fun to be around. I didn’t enjoy being around other people. I just felt like my life was a mess.”“It was painful, to see my life almost crumbling. Because of schoolwork, or my friends, or just something that was stressing me out so much I couldn’t be who I wanted to be. It was really just—it’s painful to think about now, it was painful to go through then. I’m still going through it.”Things came to a head when Michael broke his leg and missed several weeks of school. He did his best to keep up with schoolwork in his absence, but the pressure he felt when he returned to school started building up. “I felt like I wasn’t strong, like I was a failure,” he told me, “and because of that I lost a lot of self-esteem.” His mind felt scattered and unable to focus. More and more work accumulated.Michael came home from school one day and went straight to his room. He didn’t leave all evening. He didn’t sleep all night. Emotions flowed out of him as he yelled at himself, cried, and realized he’d been holding back his feelings for years.“After that,” he said, “I knew I had to change something.”Continue reading on MediumFurther ReadingAs well as being a middle school counsellor, Phyllis Fagell is a writer and columnist in The Washington Post. Check out her blog or follow her on Facebook or Twitter.Visit the Project Pneuma website to support about Damion Cooper’s program for boys and young men in Baltimore. Visit The Baltimore Sun’s Baltimore Homicides page to learn more about the statistics I cited in the episode.SourcesWilliam Pollack, Real Boys: Rescuing Our Sons from the Myths of Boyhood →Niobe Way and Jessica Cressen, ‘It Might Be Nice to Be a Girl…Then You Wouldn’t Have to Be Emotionless:’ Boys’ Resistance to Norms of Masculinity During Adolescence →Andrew Reiner, Boy Talk: Breaking Masculine Stereotypes →Wide Angle Youth Productions, Project Pneuma →Luke Broadwater, From anger to forgiveness: How one man’s shooting led to a new program for Baltimore boys →LinksIf you thought this episode was worthwhile, support it on Patreon.Email breakingtheboycode@gmail.com to get in touch. Connect with @boypodcast on all mainstream social media. Follow the publication on Medium for more writing and the blog on Tumblr for more masculinity research and occasional podcast-related updates.Audio excerpts from VOA News and WBAL Radio. Supported by Next Gen Men.