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Article · 7 min read

When grief shows up as numbness

Men often don't cry — they go quiet. Here's what that means.

DR
Daniel Regan
12 June 2026

Men often don't cry — they go quiet. Here's what that means.

When bereavement starts to weigh on you, the instinct for a lot of men is to push through and say nothing — which usually deepens the problem rather than solving it. Here's a plainer way to look at it, and a few things that genuinely help.

Why bereavement is worth taking seriously

It's easy to treat bereavement as background noise — the cost of being busy, of getting older, of just being a bloke. But the things we ignore rarely stay quiet. They leak into sleep, into patience, into the people we care about. Naming what's going on is the first move, and it's a bigger one than it looks.

You don't have to have the words for it yet. You just have to be willing to start.

A few things that actually hold

Steady beats dramatic. You don't need a perfect system — you need a couple of reliable anchors your week can lean on:

  • Pick one small thing you can repeat, and do it whether or not you feel like it.
  • Notice the moment it starts — the tightening, the shortening fuse, the pull to check out — and name it.
  • Tell one person the honest version. Not everyone. One.

When to talk to someone

If bereavement has been hanging around for weeks rather than days, that's worth taking seriously — and worth saying out loud to someone who gets it. Therapy isn't a last resort; it's somewhere to think clearly with another person in the room. When you're ready, the therapists here work with exactly this.

DR
Written by
Daniel Regan
Psychotherapist · writes for MTH on sleep & anxiety
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