
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The Masculinity We Inherited… And Why It Stops Working
Most men didn't choose their model of masculinity. We absorbed it—through family, culture, locker rooms, workplaces, and silence.
This episode was sparked by a long conversation between Andrew Huberman and therapist/author Terry Real about masculinity, emotional health, and relationships. What stood out wasn't a new, flashy idea—it was language. Language for something most men feel but don't always know how to name.
This isn't a lecture. It's not political. It's three men thinking out loud about what works, what doesn't, and what might actually help.
At AMG, the goal isn't perfection—it's practice. And we lead with curiosity over defensiveness.
The Masculinity Model We InheritedMost of us were taught a version of masculinity that prizes:
Stoicism
Self-reliance
Emotional restraint
Vulnerability was framed—explicitly or implicitly—as weakness.
The message wasn't always spoken, but it was clear: Handle it. Don't need too much. Don't feel too much.
As Terry Real puts it (paraphrased): Avoiding vulnerability doesn't eliminate it—it follows you.
What That Feels Like InternallyFor many men, this shows up physically before it shows up emotionally:
A tight chest
A clenched jaw
Emotional narrowing
And when emotions do surface, the vocabulary is limited. Most men were handed four options: fine, tired, stressed, or pissed.
An AMG PracticeInstead of defaulting to "I'm fine," practice naming what's actually there—even if it's clumsy at first.
Reflection: What emotions felt unsafe or unwelcome growing up?
The Cost No One Warned Us AboutThe inherited model works—until it doesn't.
Performance-based worth can drive achievement. But achievement delivers pleasure, not relational joy.
Many men reach a confusing place where they are:
Competent but disconnected
Successful but quietly lonely
Calm on the surface, angry underneath
Anger often becomes the only "allowed" emotion because it still feels powerful.
This isn't about becoming soft. It's about becoming more effective and more connected.
At AMG, we don't just name behavior—we name cost.
Reflection:
Where has this model worked for you?
Where has it quietly failed you?
What if vulnerability isn't a collapse—but a skill?
Strength isn't the absence of discomfort. Strength is the capacity to stay present with it.
This includes:
Expressing needs clearly instead of controlling outcomes
Naming truth without blame
Allowing discomfort without shutting down
Terry Real (paraphrased): Strength includes the capacity to identify and name our needs respectfully.
Important DistinctionsOversharing vs. clean honesty
Presence vs. emotional flooding
Vulnerability vs. losing regulation
Many men confuse control with strength—when in reality, control is often fear in disguise.
Reflection: Where do you confuse control with strength?
Relational Mindfulness & Healthy DistanceRelational maturity isn't about reacting better—it's about noticing sooner.
This means:
Recognizing internal reactions before acting
Taking space to regulate, not punish
Returning to the relationship clean instead of armored
Sometimes "I need space" quietly turns into a two-day blackout. That's not regulation—that's avoidance.
At AMG, the practice is simple and demanding: Rest. Regulate. Return.
When done well, you'll notice:
A settling nervous system
Reduced reactivity
More honest connection
This week, notice one moment when you want to shut down or get defensive.
Stay present 10 seconds longer than you normally would.
No fixing. No explaining. Just presence.
Reflection QuestionsWhat masculinity model did you inherit?
Where is it costing you connection?
What would strength-as-presence look like this week?
In Episode 2, we'll explore:
Ownership vs. self-blame
Coping vs. numbing
Brotherhood as a legitimate mental health strategy
Because men don't heal in isolation—and they never have.
By Authentic Men's Group5
66 ratings
The Masculinity We Inherited… And Why It Stops Working
Most men didn't choose their model of masculinity. We absorbed it—through family, culture, locker rooms, workplaces, and silence.
This episode was sparked by a long conversation between Andrew Huberman and therapist/author Terry Real about masculinity, emotional health, and relationships. What stood out wasn't a new, flashy idea—it was language. Language for something most men feel but don't always know how to name.
This isn't a lecture. It's not political. It's three men thinking out loud about what works, what doesn't, and what might actually help.
At AMG, the goal isn't perfection—it's practice. And we lead with curiosity over defensiveness.
The Masculinity Model We InheritedMost of us were taught a version of masculinity that prizes:
Stoicism
Self-reliance
Emotional restraint
Vulnerability was framed—explicitly or implicitly—as weakness.
The message wasn't always spoken, but it was clear: Handle it. Don't need too much. Don't feel too much.
As Terry Real puts it (paraphrased): Avoiding vulnerability doesn't eliminate it—it follows you.
What That Feels Like InternallyFor many men, this shows up physically before it shows up emotionally:
A tight chest
A clenched jaw
Emotional narrowing
And when emotions do surface, the vocabulary is limited. Most men were handed four options: fine, tired, stressed, or pissed.
An AMG PracticeInstead of defaulting to "I'm fine," practice naming what's actually there—even if it's clumsy at first.
Reflection: What emotions felt unsafe or unwelcome growing up?
The Cost No One Warned Us AboutThe inherited model works—until it doesn't.
Performance-based worth can drive achievement. But achievement delivers pleasure, not relational joy.
Many men reach a confusing place where they are:
Competent but disconnected
Successful but quietly lonely
Calm on the surface, angry underneath
Anger often becomes the only "allowed" emotion because it still feels powerful.
This isn't about becoming soft. It's about becoming more effective and more connected.
At AMG, we don't just name behavior—we name cost.
Reflection:
Where has this model worked for you?
Where has it quietly failed you?
What if vulnerability isn't a collapse—but a skill?
Strength isn't the absence of discomfort. Strength is the capacity to stay present with it.
This includes:
Expressing needs clearly instead of controlling outcomes
Naming truth without blame
Allowing discomfort without shutting down
Terry Real (paraphrased): Strength includes the capacity to identify and name our needs respectfully.
Important DistinctionsOversharing vs. clean honesty
Presence vs. emotional flooding
Vulnerability vs. losing regulation
Many men confuse control with strength—when in reality, control is often fear in disguise.
Reflection: Where do you confuse control with strength?
Relational Mindfulness & Healthy DistanceRelational maturity isn't about reacting better—it's about noticing sooner.
This means:
Recognizing internal reactions before acting
Taking space to regulate, not punish
Returning to the relationship clean instead of armored
Sometimes "I need space" quietly turns into a two-day blackout. That's not regulation—that's avoidance.
At AMG, the practice is simple and demanding: Rest. Regulate. Return.
When done well, you'll notice:
A settling nervous system
Reduced reactivity
More honest connection
This week, notice one moment when you want to shut down or get defensive.
Stay present 10 seconds longer than you normally would.
No fixing. No explaining. Just presence.
Reflection QuestionsWhat masculinity model did you inherit?
Where is it costing you connection?
What would strength-as-presence look like this week?
In Episode 2, we'll explore:
Ownership vs. self-blame
Coping vs. numbing
Brotherhood as a legitimate mental health strategy
Because men don't heal in isolation—and they never have.