When Men Feel Numb, Not Broken

Not all struggling looks like falling apart.

Sometimes it looks like feeling nothing.

Not happy. Not devastated. Not angry in any obvious way. Just flat.

Disconnected. Distant. Hard to reach. Hard to move. Hard to explain.

A lot of men describe this as numbness.

They are still functioning. Still working. Still doing what needs doing. Still answering messages. Still showing up.

But something inside feels switched off.

This can be confusing because many people expect emotional pain to look dramatic.

Tears. Panic. Breakdown. Crisis.

But emotional overwhelm does not always look like that.

Sometimes, when too much has happened, the system protects itself by turning the volume down.

If you have carried grief, stress, pressure, shame, relationship difficulties, family tension, or years of feeling unseen, numbness can become a kind of armour.

Not chosen. Not deliberate. Not weakness.

Protection.

The problem is that armour does not only block pain.

It can also block joy. Connection. Desire. Closeness. Motivation. Hope.

You may find yourself thinking:

“I should care more. I should feel more. Why am I like this? What is wrong with me?”

But numbness is not always a sign that you are broken.

Sometimes it is a sign that you have been carrying too much without enough space to process it.

For many men, emotional numbness also links to how they were taught to cope.

Be strong. Move on. Don’t cry. Don’t dwell. Don’t talk about it. Other people have it worse.

Over time, feelings do not disappear.

They go underground.

And when they stay underground for too long, life can start to feel distant.

Like you are watching yourself rather than living.

If this sounds familiar, the answer is not to force yourself to “snap out of it.”

The first step may be gentler than that.

Notice it. Name it. Be curious about it. Ask what your numbness might have been protecting you from.

You may not be broken.

You may be tired. You may be grieving. You may be overwhelmed. You may have learned to survive by switching parts of yourself off.

And if that is true, there may also be a way back.

Not all at once.

Stuart Walker

Integrative counsellor and psychotherapist based in Manchester and online, specialising in men's mental health, grief and bereavement, fatherhood, and neurodivergent adults.

https://www.meintime.co.uk
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