Irritable
Male
Syndrome
 

Japanese Boys “Act Out” Their Anger and “Act In” Their Pain


He was known only as the boy in the kitchen. His mother, Yoshiko, wouldn't say his name, fearful that neighbors in the Tokyo suburb where they lived might discover her secret. Her son is 17 years old. Three years ago he was unhappy in school and began to play truant. Then a classmate taunted him with anonymous hate letters and scrawled abusive graffiti about him in the schoolyard.

One day, he walked into the family's kitchen, shut the door and refused to leave. Since then, he hasn't left the room or allowed anyone in. The phenomenon of social withdrawal, or hikikomori was first drawn to the attention of the Japanese public following a series of highly publicized crimes. In 2000, a 17 year old hikikomori sufferer left his isolation and hijacked a bus, killing a passenger. Another kidnapped a girl and held her captive in his bedroom for nine years. A fear of hikikomori dominated newspaper headlines. Though most of these young men are not violent, the frustration that many sufferers experience--the desire to live a normal life but the inability to do so--often expresses itself in anger and aggression towards those around them. The trigger is usually an event such as bullying, an exam failure or a broken romance.

These seem to be the same kinds of issues that young males face all over the world. When these pressures become too much to handle, as increasingly they are, some kind of breakdown occurs. For some it is acted out violently. Others withdraw and turn their aggression on themselves. It’s interesting that the Japanese have become aware of these kinds of social phenomena. In the 1970s they identified deaths that occurred as a result of overwork. They called it karoshi.

With our networked society, what occurs in one part of the world usually reflects issues that are going on elsewhere. It’s important that we ask ourselves about the hidden pain that so many young males experience in our own society. Boys are unlikely to talk directly about these issues. We need to spend time with them, do things together, look for clues in behavior. It’s important to listen to the words that are not spoken.

There are no easy answers. One thing we do know is that there is a strong relationship between the “acting out” that males do as we express our anger towards others and the “acting in” that we do as we focus our unhappiness on ourselves. As was true of the Japanese young males who are suffering from hikikomori, we may alternate between outward and inward focus. Outward focused irritability and anger is often a sign of male type depression.

©2010 Jed Diamond

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Jed Diamond is the internationally best-selling author of seven books including Male Menopause, now translated into 17 foreign languages and his latest book, The Irritable Male Syndrome: Managing. The 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression. For over 38 years he has been a leader in the field of men's health. He is a member of the International Scientific Board of the World Congress on Men’s Health and has been on the Board of Advisors of the Men’s Health Network since its founding in 1992. His work has been featured in major newspapers throughout the United States including the New York Times, Boston Globe, Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, and USA Today. He has been featured on more than 1,000 radio and T.V. programs including The View with Barbara Walters, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, CBS, NBC, and Fox News, To Tell the Truth, Extra, Leeza, Geraldo, and Joan Rivers. He also did a nationally televised special on Male Menopause for PBS. He looks forward to your feedback. E-Mail. You can visit his website at www.menalive.com



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