Men are masters at hiding their struggles. I’ve seen it countless times – in friends, family members, and honestly, in myself during my warehouse job days when I felt like my education was wasted and my potential was going down the drain.
We’re taught from a young age that showing weakness isn’t an option. That complaining makes us less of a man. So we bottle it up, put on a brave face, and soldier on.
But here’s the thing: just because someone isn’t vocalizing their struggles doesn’t mean they’re not drowning inside. The signs are there if you know what to look for. They’re subtle, easily missed, but once you recognize them, you can’t unsee them.
Today, I want to share nine subtle signs that reveal when a man is quietly struggling with life, even if he’d never admit it out loud.
1. He’s always “fine” when you ask how he’s doing
You know that automatic response? “I’m good.” “Everything’s fine.” “Can’t complain.”
When a man gives you these responses every single time, without variation, it’s often a shield. Real life has ups and downs, and someone who’s genuinely doing well will occasionally share both.
I spent years perfecting my “I’m fine” response during my anxious twenties, constantly worrying about the future while telling everyone I was doing great. It became such a reflex that I’d say it even to close friends who genuinely wanted to know how I was doing.
The truth? Men who are struggling often feel like they can’t afford to drop the mask, even for a moment. They’ve convinced themselves that admitting struggle equals admitting failure.
2. His sleep schedule is completely off
Watch for the guy who’s always exhausted but claims he “just can’t sleep” or the one who stays up until 3 AM every night scrolling through his phone or playing video games.
Disrupted sleep patterns are often the body’s way of processing stress and anxiety that the mind won’t acknowledge during waking hours. When I was battling my overactive mind, I’d lie awake replaying conversations, worrying about work, and creating catastrophic scenarios that would never happen.
In my book Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, I explore how the mind creates its own suffering through attachment to thoughts. Men struggling with life often experience this most intensely at night when there are no distractions left.
3. He’s withdrawn from hobbies he once loved
Remember when your friend couldn’t stop talking about his weekend basketball games? Or when your brother spent every free moment working on his car?
When men quietly abandon activities that once brought them joy, it’s rarely because they’ve “outgrown” them. More often, they’ve lost the mental energy to engage with things that require emotional investment.
Depression and stress have a way of making everything feel pointless. The things that used to spark joy suddenly feel like too much effort, and it becomes easier to just… not.
4. His humor has gotten darker or more self-deprecating
Pay attention to the jokes. Are they getting sharper, more cynical? Does he constantly make fun of himself in ways that feel less like humor and more like hidden truths?
Dark humor can be a coping mechanism, a way to voice real struggles while maintaining plausible deniability. “Just kidding!” becomes the escape hatch when someone gets too close to the truth.
I’ve been there. Making jokes about being a failure while secretly believing every word. It’s a way to test the waters, to see if anyone notices the pain behind the punchline.
5. He’s always busy but never seems to accomplish anything meaningful
Busyness can be the ultimate hiding place. When you’re constantly moving, nobody questions whether you’re okay. They assume you’re productive, driven, successful.
But there’s a difference between purposeful action and frantic motion. Men who are struggling often fill their schedules with meaningless tasks to avoid confronting the real issues in their lives.
They’ll reorganize their garage for the third time this month but haven’t updated their resume in years. They’ll spend hours researching the perfect workout routine but never make it to the gym.
6. His drinking or other habits have quietly increased
It doesn’t have to be dramatic. Maybe he’s gone from one beer with dinner to three. Maybe he’s gaming until dawn instead of midnight. Maybe he’s buying things he doesn’t need just for the temporary dopamine hit.
These incremental increases in escapist behaviors are often signs that someone is trying to numb themselves to their reality. It’s not always about addiction; sometimes it’s just about finding a few hours of relief from the weight of unspoken struggles.
In Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, I discuss how we often seek external solutions to internal problems. Men struggling with life frequently fall into this trap, looking for anything that might quiet the noise in their heads.
7. He’s become unreliable with plans and commitments
Canceling last minute. Forgetting important dates. Making promises he doesn’t keep.
When someone who used to be dependable starts flaking out, it’s often because they’re barely holding themselves together. Every commitment feels overwhelming when you’re using all your energy just to get through the day.
I remember a period when I’d agree to plans just to end the conversation, knowing full well I’d probably cancel. It wasn’t that I didn’t care about my friends; I just couldn’t imagine having the energy to show up and pretend everything was okay.
8. His physical appearance has subtly declined
Not talking about dramatic weight loss or gain. Look for the small things: wearing the same clothes repeatedly, skipping haircuts, a general sense of not caring about appearance.
When men stop taking care of themselves physically, it often reflects how they feel about themselves internally. If you don’t believe you’re worth the effort, why bother?
This was one of my tells during my lowest points. The less I cared about my future, the less I cared about my appearance. It becomes a vicious cycle where looking worse makes you feel worse, which makes you care even less.
9. He deflects every serious conversation
Try to have a real conversation about feelings, future plans, or concerns, and watch him change the subject, make a joke, or suddenly remember something urgent he needs to do.
Men who are struggling often become masters of deflection. They’ll turn the conversation back to you, bring up sports, or find any way to avoid going deeper than surface level.
This isn’t just avoiding vulnerability; it’s self-protection. When you’re barely holding it together, the last thing you want is someone poking at the cracks in your armor.
Final words
Recognizing these signs isn’t about forcing someone to open up or trying to fix them. Sometimes, the most powerful thing you can do is simply be present, without judgment or expectation.
If you see yourself in these signs, know that struggling doesn’t make you weak. In fact, acknowledging the struggle is often the first step toward finding your way through it.
The principles that saved me during my darkest times became the principles I now share with others. Your mess really can become your message, but first, you have to admit the mess exists.
And if you recognize these signs in someone you care about? Don’t push. Just be there. Sometimes knowing someone sees you, really sees you, is enough to remind a struggling man that he’s not as alone as he thinks.













