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These Are His Confessions: The Ways Black Men Avoid Feeling

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How do men usually avoid feeling?  Pain hurts. So men have lots of ways we escape. To not feel. Some men get obsessed with making or spending money. Some men work extra hard to seem tough, to thug their feelings out of them. I used to use women. Not sex so much, just the attention and affection of women.

Alcohol and weed are probably the most popular things Black men use to avoid feeling. They are designed to numb your emotions. Weed and alcohol are like the stuff doctors and dentists give before surgery (anesthesia), so the patient doesn’t feel anything.

Imagine for moment, you are training a young boxer. You want him to be the best fighter in the world, so y’all jog, lift weights, work on his hooks, uppercuts, and footwork. But you don’t want him to get hurt. So you give him medicine to numb his body while he trains. This way, he can get jabbed in the jaw 20 times and never feel any pain. But he needs to feel the pain.

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You are crippling him by numbing him, not helping him. Getting hit and feeling pain is the best way he’ll learn to move faster or defend himself. When it’s time for the real fight he won’t be ready. Just like a lot of men who use weed and alcohol to numb their emotions.

The next time you see a guy getting drunk or high, you should think, “I wonder if he’s trying to not feel right now.” And if he’s your friend, maybe you should ask him.

MUST READ: “Uncle” Comes Clean To Steve Harvey About The Women Who Saved Him From Drugs

Okay, so I won’t avoid my emotions anymore. Now what am I supposed to do with them? Some emotions are like the green light on a traffic signal. When you feel happy, excited, or peaceful, that means GO. Keep doing whatever you were doing. And enjoy the feeling.

Emotions like fear, sadness and anger are like a yellow light. SLOW DOWN. Figure out what needs to change. You might even want to STOP. Especially if something gets you so angry that you feel like you might lose control. Don’t just keep going, business as usual, like everything’s okay.

Sometimes, though, your actions will have to keep moving on. You will still have to go to work and school, and still have to take care of your kids. But even then, your brain should slow down, and pay closer attention to how you’re feeling and what might need to change. A lot of times our bodies know what we feel before our minds do.

Everybody’s body works differently, but there are several areas you should pay attention to. Your temperature. If you start to feel warm, it might mean you’re nervous or angry about something. And your heartbeat might get faster if you’re nervous or excited. Your whole body might respond to sadness—you’ll have low energy and feel slow, like you’re carrying extra weight.

For me, my stomach is the place I feel a lot of my emotions. I can be in the middle of a normal conversation, everything is fine, then I’ll feel a quick, sharp, tight pain in the middle of my stomach. Then in my mind I say, “Hmm, that’s interesting; something doesn’t feel right. Am I nervous? I wonder why…” And since my stomach is such an important place for my emotional signals, I have to be careful what I put in there. If I fill it up with crappy food and drink, then I won’t get as clear a signal. That’s why people fast (like Ramadan or Lent) when they want extra clarity. Your diet, physical health and emotional health are all connected.

This is an except from Lady’s Man: Conversations for Young Black Men About Relationships and Manhood. To purchase, click here.

 

obari cartman

Dr. Cartman is a father, son, brother, uncle, thinker, writer, therapist, photographer, and drummer. He is a Chicago native, where his cultural and educational foundations were firmly planted by several African-centered institutions and communities. He received his undergraduate degree from Hampton University and a PH.D in clinical & community psychology from Georgia State University. Currently Dr. Cartman works as a restorative justice coach for Chicago Public Schools and is the author the book and mixtape “Lady’s Man: Conversations for Young Black Men About Relationships and Manhood.” To learn more, visit www.DrObariCartman.com

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