She has trouble getting out of bed, perhaps confides in a few close
friends, and is likely to seek professional help. He gets irritable and
nasty, bottles up his feelings inside, and the last thing he wants to do
is talk to a counsellor. Both are depressed, but, at least in its early
stages, female and male depression look very different.
Male depression is also far more likely to be deadly, as recent
headlines sadly demonstrate:
German billionaire Adolf Merckle killed himself by lying down in front
of a train near his home, despondent over money problems.
Former South Korean President Roo Myo-hun hurled himself off a cliff
near his home, tortured by allegations of corruption.
Gay Men's Health Crisis founder and author Rodger Mc-Farlane was found
dead, leaving a suicide note citing debilitating back and heart
problems.
A new study from researchers at the University of Montreal gives some
insight into why so many men try to "tough out" their depression. Aline
Drapeau and colleagues remind us that, in Canada at least, "women are
more likely than men to use mental health services when they face light
or moderate mental health problems."
They note that one impediment to men seeking help is the strong stigma
that men attach to professional care of any kind. However, our roles in
society may also be a factor. Women are responsible for caring for a
sick child or spouse more often than men. When they take time off from
work, co-workers tend to understand, and forgive the imposition. On the
other hand, one study found that "male workers who took some time off
were rated as less performing than those who did not." In his
aptly-titled book I Don't Want to Talk About It -- Overcoming the Secret
Legacy of Male Depression (Scribner, $17.50) Harvard psychotherapist
Terrence Real calls chronic depression a "silent epidemic in men."
He notes the "problems that we think of as typically male --difficulty
with intimacy, workaholism, alcoholism, abusive behaviour, and rage --
are really attempts to escape depression."
Real explains that "women tend to internalize pain, while "boys, and
later men, tend to externalize pain: they are more likely to feel
victimized by others and to discharge distress through action." Hence
the statistics, which show that women attempt suicide more often than
men, yet males actually kill themselves at a rate three to four times
higher than females.
Analyzing this phenomenon, Dr. George E. Murphy of Washington University
writes in Comprehensive Psychiatry that "women process their experiences
with friends," and "are much more likely to tell a physician how they
feel and co-operate in the prescribed treatment. As a result, women get
better treatment for their depression."
So how can we help men and boys out of the pit of depression?
One of the best analysts of the male psyche, in my opinion, is William
Pollack, author of Real Boys and several other perceptive guidebooks.
His main premise is that "males are shame-o-phobic." Doesn't that ring
true every time you see a guy do something dumb just to avoid being
shamed in front of his friends?
Admitting to being depressed is the ultimate shame for many men because,
as Real notes, "depression carries, to many, a double stain --the stigma
of mental illness and also the stigma of 'feminine' emotionality."
There is a third path, but it's not really open for individuals to
choose. As a society, we can admit the reality, and the normality, of
male depression, and try to detoxify the feelings around it.
Source : Canwest News Service