Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWhat We Don't Tell Boys: How Emotional Suppression Shapes the Men They Become | Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst
Description
What if the boy who "never cried" wasn't strong? What if he was just trained not to? This episode of Healthy Mind, Healthy Life explores one of the quietest crises in mental health today: the emotional shutdown of boys, and how it follows them all the way into manhood.
Host Avik sits down with Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst, a licensed psychologist with over 30 years of experience, to unpack the science and the story. Together they walk through why boys are born with a broader emotional range than girls, how early micro-reactions from caregivers begin narrowing that range in infancy, and what men living in that emotional desert can start doing today to find their way back.
About the Guest:
Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst is a licensed psychologist based in Chevy Chase, Maryland, with over 30 years of clinical experience working with preschoolers through adults. She has dedicated much of her career to understanding how culture restricts the emotional development of boys and men, often leaving them disconnected from the feelings that build healthy relationships. She is the author of Read, Reflect, Respond: The 3 Rs of Growth and Change, a Bronze Medal winner at the Global Book Awards.
Key Takeaways:
- Boys are born with a broader emotional range than girls, but culture begins narrowing that range as early as infancy, through subtle micro-reactions from caregivers that teach boys which feelings are "safe" to express.
- What gets labeled as misbehavior in boys, restlessness, aggression, acting out, is often misunderstood emotion that has nowhere healthy to go. Recognizing this early changes how we respond to boys in pain.
- The "emotional desert" many men live in is not a personality trait. It is a learned survival strategy. The feelings are not gone; they are buried, and with the right support, accessible again.
- Women often say they want emotionally open men, but research and clinical experience show that many women have also been conditioned not to receive male emotion. Both sides need education and practice.
- Building a feeling vocabulary is one of the most practical first steps for emotional recovery. Dr. Vanderhorst offers a free downloadable feelings sheet on her website that parents can print, post in the home, and use with children and themselves.
- Men struggling to name what they feel are not broken. They are normal. The path back begins with curiosity, not pressure. A journal, a feelings sheet, or a trusted therapist can all be gentle entry points.
Connect With the Guest
Website: https://www.drvanderhorst.com/
Book: Read, Reflect, Respond: The 3 Rs of Growth and Change (available on Amazon)
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