Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Diamond offers counseling to men, women, and couples in his office in California
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According to ABC News, Joe Stack, age 53, topped off his single engine Piper
Cherokee with fuel before crashing into the IRS offices in a kamikaze mission
designed to punish the government he believed wronged him. There are millions
more men like Joe who are angry and depressed and would rather murder and
die than to live without respect. We ignore these men at our peril.
If you're reading this, you're no doubt asking yourself, "Why did this have to happen?"
The simple truth is that it is complicated and has been coming for a long time. The
writing process, started many months ago, was intended to be therapy in the face of the
looming realization that there isn't enough therapy in the world that can fix what is really
broken.
Stack writes at length about the state of the economy and claims the government has
stolen from the middle class. He writes that, "I know I'm hardly the first one to decide I
have had all I can stand."
Stack concludes:
“I saw it written once that the definition of insanity is repeating the same process over
and over and expecting the outcome to suddenly be different. I am finally ready to stop
this insanity. Well, Mr. Big Brother IRS man, let's try something different; take my pound
of flesh and sleep well.”
Not only did Stack express is anger towards himself and those connected to
the IRS, but it seems it was extended to his wife and family. Investigators
believe Stack set fire to his house near Parmer and Metric in Northwest Austin
thirty minutes before he crashed his single-engine jet into an IRS building
Thursday morning.
Stack's wife, Sheryl, taught piano lessons from the home. Neighbors say Mrs.
Stack and her daughter were friendly and more outgoing than Andrew Joseph
Stack. Many in this neighborhood were shocked to learn the fire could be
connected to the plane crash.
"As the pieces started fitting together, it became a thing that was difficult to
understand. How could this happen, and how could someone be so troubled by
life that they would take their own life and put other people's lives in danger as
well," neighbor Elbert Hutchins said.
There are millions of men in America who could be the next Joe Stack. If we
are going to prevent further tragedy, we need to better understand what is going
on with these men. To do that, we need to understand more about the Irritable
Male Syndrome.
In order to get a clear understanding of IMS it helps to know the story. When
writing my book, Male Menopause, I discovered how significant hormonal
changes were in the lives of these men. Though mid-life men are still reluctant to
recognize how much of their lives are influenced by hormonal shifts, women
immediately “got it.” “I knew there was something ‘hormonal’ about his behavior,”
many women told me in talking about their mates. Now, a lot of his behavior
makes sense.”
Another thing that became evident was how similar mid-life male changes
were to the changes that young men go through between 15 and 25 as they
make the transition from childhood to adulthood. Both groups of males are
experiencing significant hormonal changes. Both groups went through marked
emotional ups and downs. Both were sorting out and dealing with developing a
new identity.
I saw much stress these men were under, much of it beyond and outside their
awareness. They expressed their stress in different ways. Some drank, others
became depressed. Some became aggressive, others withdrew and hid. Some
had heart attacks, others had nervous breakdowns.
After studying IMS for nearly 10 year now, I have a pretty clear picture of what
we are dealing with. Here’s how I define Irritable Male Syndrome:
Working with males (and those who live with them) that are experiencing IMS,
I have found there are four core symptoms that underlie many others.
The first is hypersensitivity. The women who live these men say things
like the following:
One concept I have found helpful is the notion that many of us are
“emotionally sunburned,” but others don’t know it. We might think of a man who
is extremely sunburned and gets a loving hug from his wife. He cries out in
anger and pain. He assumes she knows he’s sunburned so if she “grabs” him
she must be trying to hurt him. She has no idea he is sunburned and can’t
understand why he reacts angrily to her loving touch. You can see how this can
lead a couple down a road of escalating confusion.
IMS men feel blocked in attaining what they want and need in life. They often
don’t even know what they need. When they do know, they often feel there’s no
way they can get it. They often feel defeated in the things they try and do to
improve their lives. The men feel frustrated in their relationships with family,
friends, and on the job. The world is changing and they don’t know where, how,
or if they fit in.
Author Susan Faludi captures this frustration in her book Stiffed: The
Betrayal of the American Man. The frustration is expressed in the question that
is at the center of her study of American males. “If, as men are so often told,
they are the dominant sex, why do so many of them feel dominated, done in by
the world?” The frustration, that is often hidden and unrecognized, is a key
element of IMS.
For many men, anger is the only emotion they have learned to express.
Growing up male we are taught to avoid anything that is seen as the least bit
feminine. We are taught that men “do” while women “feel.” As a result men are
taught to keep all emotions under wrap. We cannot show we are hurt, afraid,
worried, or panicked. The only feeling that is sometimes allowed many men is
anger. When men begin going through IMS, it is often anger that is the primary
emotion.
“Shame,” says author Merle Fossum, “is feeling alone in the pit of
unworthiness. “Shame is not just a low reading on the thermometer of self
esteem. Shame is something like cancer—it grows on its own momentum.” Both
shame and guilt are ways in which people experience feeling bad. Yet the two
are quite different. Guilt involves feeling bad about what we do or fail to do.
Shame is feeling bad about who we are, about our very being. The shame that
men experience is a kind of soul murder, undermining the foundations of our
masculine selves.
Shame and Violence
James Gilligan, M.D. has spent his professional career working in prisons with
the most violent offenders. In his long career he has studied the underlying
causes of violence and has come to a startling conclusion. “I have yet to see a
serious act of violence that was not provoked by the experience of feeling
shamed and humiliated, disrespected and ridiculed,” he tells us, “and that did not
represent the attempt to prevent or undo this ‘loss of face’—no matter how
severe the punishment, even if it includes death.”
The feeling of shame occurs inside us and can occur when we are alone, but
it most strongly felt before an audience, an external judge in whose eyes (and by
comparison with whom) we appear weak, failed, foolish, incompetent, ridiculous,
rejected, inferior, contemptible—in short shameful.
When Gilligan asked inmates why they had assaulted someone, he heard the
same answer over and over again. It was because he “disrespected me.” The
word “disrespect is so central in the vocabulary, moral value system, and
psychodynamics of chronically violent men, Gilligan tells us, that they have
abbreviated it into the slang term, “he dis’ed me.”
As one man told Gilligan, “I may be in prison, but I still have to have my pride,
dignity, and self-esteem. And I’ll kill every mother-fucker in that cell block if I
have to in order to get it.” Our prisons are full of men who would do anything,
even kill or be killed, in order to avoid the shame they feel when they are
disrespected.
This is exactly the kind of shame that Joseph Stack voices in his suicide note.
It’s exactly the kind of shame millions of other men feel when they see that a life-
time of effort doesn’t allow them to have a decent job and know that their
government cares about them.