Gypsy
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2005
- Messages
- 40,434
So, a friend of mine's boyfriend just killed himself. It was a shock.
And then someone I know said, well middle aged men have one of the highest suicide rates and so i looked it up and HOLY COW! The suicide rate for men is 4x that one women in some age ranges.
Per google (and I checked a few sites myself):
It shocked me but... I started thinking about resilience.
Resilience is built through problem solving and adaptation dealing failure. It involves breaking down complex situations and focusing on manageable steps. "How do you eat an elephant." Then pushing through the struggle builds confidence and perseverance. It teaches you how to avoid becoming too overwhelmed. And then having overcome adversity, viewing the past struggles as opportunities that allowed you to grow and to develop skills you have earned and can rely on. It builds a healthy perspective instead of trapping you in a feeling of failure without any silver lining.
And so when looking at those statistics I wonder: is it a lack of emotional resilience in our men that is causing this high suicide rate.
And then I thought about all the ways we, as women, are taught to protect men from their feelings, from failure, from distress. To "decode" and "interpret" and their actions into feelings. To help them regulate their emotions and process struggle and problem solve and buffer them. And I wonder if, like helicopter parents, we are overprotecting our men to the point that they are overwhelmed when life inevitably lets them down and there is no one around to help them. And then not knowing HOW to find people to help them: therapy is still seen as weakness among middle aged men. Toxic masculinity tells them to just push through. Many lack meaningful emotional connections to other men and have no community for fall back on (or they don't know how to find one). And the lack of emotional regulation skills causes them to be overwhelmed and hopeless because they view adversity as personal failure instead of an opportunity to grow.
I know that when I was struggling it was the community of women I found that helped me (as well as my own post traumatic growth: thanks mom and rapists!). And 12 years of therapy to fall back on. And knowing that I WOULD get through, it was just a matter of figuring out HOW. Because I had gotten through struggles before.
I am interested in your thoughts.
And then someone I know said, well middle aged men have one of the highest suicide rates and so i looked it up and HOLY COW! The suicide rate for men is 4x that one women in some age ranges.
Per google (and I checked a few sites myself):
- Most recent full-year data (2022): The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that among males, the suicide rate was highest for those aged 75 and older, at 43.9 per 100,000. However, the next highest rates were in the middle-aged population. For men aged 45–64, the suicide rate was 23.0 per 100,000.
- 2023 provisional data: Provisional figures for 2023 indicated a slight increase in the suicide rate for men aged 55–64 (0.11% increase) and for men aged 35–44 (2.6% increase) compared to 2022.
- 2024 estimates: Early estimates from one source suggest the national age-adjusted suicide rate could climb to 14.7 per 100,000 for 2024. The same source notes that middle-aged adults (35–54) and the elderly show the highest suicide rates across age groups."
It shocked me but... I started thinking about resilience.
Resilience is built through problem solving and adaptation dealing failure. It involves breaking down complex situations and focusing on manageable steps. "How do you eat an elephant." Then pushing through the struggle builds confidence and perseverance. It teaches you how to avoid becoming too overwhelmed. And then having overcome adversity, viewing the past struggles as opportunities that allowed you to grow and to develop skills you have earned and can rely on. It builds a healthy perspective instead of trapping you in a feeling of failure without any silver lining.
And so when looking at those statistics I wonder: is it a lack of emotional resilience in our men that is causing this high suicide rate.
And then I thought about all the ways we, as women, are taught to protect men from their feelings, from failure, from distress. To "decode" and "interpret" and their actions into feelings. To help them regulate their emotions and process struggle and problem solve and buffer them. And I wonder if, like helicopter parents, we are overprotecting our men to the point that they are overwhelmed when life inevitably lets them down and there is no one around to help them. And then not knowing HOW to find people to help them: therapy is still seen as weakness among middle aged men. Toxic masculinity tells them to just push through. Many lack meaningful emotional connections to other men and have no community for fall back on (or they don't know how to find one). And the lack of emotional regulation skills causes them to be overwhelmed and hopeless because they view adversity as personal failure instead of an opportunity to grow.
I know that when I was struggling it was the community of women I found that helped me (as well as my own post traumatic growth: thanks mom and rapists!). And 12 years of therapy to fall back on. And knowing that I WOULD get through, it was just a matter of figuring out HOW. Because I had gotten through struggles before.
I am interested in your thoughts.
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