Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital
Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

The Man Who Cannot Cry — Alexithymia and Indian Masculinity | Bharosa

His father died in February. Nine months later, he still has not cried. Not at the funeral. Not at the cremation. Not at the thirteenth-day ceremony. Not in the car after. Not in the shower. Not in any of the moments when he expected the grief to finally find him. His sister wept for weeks. His mother still cries some evenings. He sat with both of them, held them, arranged everything, paid for everything — and felt nothing. Or rather, he felt something, but he could not say what it was. A pressure in his chest. A heaviness that was not sadness and not peace. A fog that he could not describe in any language he knew. He has started to wonder if there is something wrong with him. He is forty-one years old, and this is the first time he has ever seriously considered asking a doctor about what is happening inside him.

If this sounds like you or a man you love, this article is for you. What he is experiencing has a name. It is called alexithymia, and it is one of the most under-recognised presentations in Indian men's mental health. At Bharosa, we treat men with alexithymia regularly in our LB Nagar outpatient department, and we want to say clearly that this is not a character flaw, a sign of a cold heart, or a failure of love. It is a recognised clinical pattern, and for Indian men specifically, it is often the legacy of a lifetime of being told that feelings are unmanly.

What Alexithymia Actually Is

Alexithymia is a term coined in the 1970s from Greek roots meaning, roughly, "without words for emotion". It describes a clinical pattern in which a person has difficulty identifying their own emotions, difficulty describing those emotions to others, and a tendency to focus on the external and concrete rather than the internal and subjective. The American Psychological Association, the leading professional body of psychologists in the United States, recognises alexithymia as a measurable trait associated with several mental health conditions including depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), autism spectrum disorders, and substance use disorders. It is not itself a formal psychiatric diagnosis, but it is a well-documented clinical feature that significantly affects mental health.

Research consistently shows that alexithymia is more common in men than women, and that it correlates with higher rates of somatic symptoms — physical pain, gastrointestinal trouble, fatigue, chest tightness — that do not have a clear medical cause. Harvard Medical School, one of the most respected medical institutions in the world, has published research on the gut-brain axis and on the link between suppressed emotional expression and physical health. The World Health Organization recognises mental health and physical health as deeply interconnected, and alexithymia sits at exactly this intersection. The body does not get the memo that the mind is unavailable. It holds the emotions regardless, and eventually it sends them back in the only language it knows — symptoms.

Why This Is Particularly Common in Indian Men

Indian masculinity has been constructed for centuries around a specific code. Men provide. Men do not complain. Men do not cry. Men do not discuss their inner lives. Men handle things. The boy who learns to perform this code at age seven grows into the man who cannot access his emotions at age forty. He has not lost them. They are still there, under years of careful suppression. He has simply never been given permission to look at them, and without permission, the brain develops other ways of dealing with the emotional load. Physical symptoms. Overwork. Alcohol. Anger that comes out sideways. A quiet flatness that everyone else has learned not to ask about.

The cost of this pattern is enormous and invisible. Indian men die younger than Indian women. They have higher rates of suicide, alcohol dependence, and untreated depression. They are less likely to seek psychiatric help for themselves and more likely to arrive at a hospital only after a crisis. Their relationships suffer because their partners cannot reach them emotionally. Their children grow up without a clear model of male emotional life. None of this is because Indian men are broken. It is because they were taught, very early and very thoroughly, that the only acceptable emotion for a man was strength. Everything else had to go underground.

The Specific Symptoms to Watch For

Difficulty naming what you feel beyond basic labels like fine, tired, or angry. Frequent physical symptoms — chest tightness, gastrointestinal trouble, headaches, back pain — without clear medical cause. Emotional flatness that does not lift even in situations that should produce strong feelings. Difficulty crying, even when crying would be appropriate. Tendency to describe problems in practical or external terms rather than emotional ones. Reliance on alcohol or overwork to manage the pressure inside. Partners or family members saying they cannot reach you emotionally. Increasing isolation from close relationships even when they are physically intact. Difficulty responding to other people's emotions because you cannot locate the equivalent in yourself. If three or more of these are present, you are looking at a clinical pattern that is real, widely studied, and responsive to treatment.

How Bharosa Helps Men Reconnect With Themselves

At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat alexithymia with care and without judgement. We understand that a man who has spent forty years not talking about his feelings is not going to start pouring them out in the first session. The work begins slowly. The first task is usually to build a basic vocabulary for emotional experience — to teach the patient to notice what is happening in his body, to distinguish between different kinds of discomfort, to learn the difference between sadness, anger, fear, and exhaustion. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is highly effective for this work. Where underlying depression, anxiety, or post-traumatic stress has been hiding underneath the alexithymia, we treat those directly.

Many male patients tell us, weeks or months into treatment, that for the first time in their adult lives they have started noticing what they feel before it becomes a physical symptom. The chest tightness eases. The gastrointestinal trouble improves. The marriage starts feeling closer. The children say their father seems different. The work is not about turning stoic men into emotional performers. It is about giving them access to a part of themselves that was taken away in childhood. Most of them find, to their surprise, that they like being able to feel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is not being able to cry really a disorder?

A: Not by itself, but it is a recognised clinical feature that often overlaps with depression and PTSD.

Q: Will therapy make me less masculine?

A: No. It will make you more present to your own life.

Q: Is medication needed?

A: Only if depression or anxiety is present. The core work is therapy.

Q: Can older men benefit from this too?

A: Yes. Alexithymia is treatable at any age.

Q: Does Bharosa treat men's mental health in Hyderabad?

A: Yes. Men's mental health care is available at our LB Nagar facility.

Being unable to name what you feel is not strength. It is exhaustion. Speak to Bharosa in confidence in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.



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Delaying treatment can extend suffering, but taking action now can bring relief and clarity.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.

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