Bridging Evolutionary and Social Constructionist Approaches to Masculinity and Help-Seeking Reluctance: Applications to First Responder Mental Health Interventions

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Abstract

First responders exhibit elevated rates of mental health difficulties yet underutilize mental health services—a pattern that characterizes men more broadly. Traditional masculine norms, particularly those emphasizing self-reliance, stoicism, and toughness, have been implicated in this reluctance, but why masculinity takes this particular form and why it impedes help-seeking remain underexplored. This paper offers a biosocial synthesis of evolutionary and social constructionist perspectives. Men define masculinity in opposition to femininity (the antifemininity principle), which centers traits exhibiting prominent sex differences as “attractor traits” for masculine identity: biological predispositions that cultures amplify into standards of manhood. Because formidability-linked traits evince particularly large sex differences and vary substantially among men, defining masculinity on their basis renders it an honest signal of formidability—the capacity to prevail in physical confrontation—that partially structures social rank among men without requiring direct conflict. This motivates men to embody and enact these traits while stigmatizing anything that signals vulnerability, including help-seeking, because humans are fundamentally motivated to avoid inferiority. Help-seeking threatens social standing because it signals vulnerability, contradicting the formidability that masculine norms advertise. Understanding the evolutionary and cultural origins of these norms does not suggest we can or should eliminate them, but it may illuminate tractable targets for intervention—the points at which change is possible without generating backlash or undermining functional features.

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