For the second time in a month I have now watched a devastated mother bury a son. These men were not old – they were at the point of full-stride in their life. They were both once full of promise and had that room-filling energy and charisma that the very few are touched with, often so early in life. But they died very different men: alone and tormented – the victims of an insidious enemy that comes from the darkness within and drags them down from view. Their mothers were beyond words in their despair. I watched scenes of the ordinary tragedy of life, cast in extraordinary circumstances of unbearable pain.
These men were not soldiers, although we grieved for two more of them last week as well. The similarity is that the battles of these men were with enemies every bit as treacherous and fugitive as an unseen terrorist, and every bit as deadly.
Depression, anxiety and the self-harm or self-neglect that attends these conditions are still more prevalent among women than men. But the common experience of many Australian families, and the cold reality according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, is that men are increasingly prone to these conditions, with dangerous, often-fatal consequences. Men are much less likely to talk about their problems or to seek help, and in the past 30 years the suicide rate for males aged 15 to 24 years has tripled.
One of the most alarming conclusions is that a single man is at much higher risk of developing these conditions and of an early death. Both the men whose funerals I attended were no longer in a relationship.
There is something going on with our men, with our boys. The talk at schools, in the HR department at work, in the media is all “feelings this” and “Beyond Blue that”, but for so many men that’s just a lot of rarefied bullshit that can’t really be trusted, and that won’t be of any use to quell the rising wave of panic they feel.
When a man is drowning, the last thing he will do is tell you, and that’s a dangerous silence. Instead, again according to the ABS, a man will commonly take refuge in alcohol or drugs, and that self-medication will often lead to the conditions that end a man’s life prematurely.