The Daily - ‘Modern Love’: Why Boys and Men Are Floundering, According to Relationship Therapist Terry Real

Episode Date: May 25, 2025

A session with Terry Real, a marriage and family therapist, can get uncomfortable. He’s known to mirror and amplify the emotions of his clients, sometimes cursing and nearly yelling, often in an att...empt to get men in touch with the emotions they’re not used to honoring.Real says men are often pushed to shut off their expression of vulnerability when they’re young as part of the process of becoming a man. That process, he says, can lead to myriad problems in their relationships. He sees it as his job to pull them back into vulnerability and intimacy, reconfiguring their understanding of masculinity in order to build more wholesome and connected families.In this episode, Real explains why vulnerability is so essential to healthy masculinity and why his work with men feels more urgent than ever. He explains why he thinks our current models of masculinity are broken and what it will take to build new ones.This episode was inspired by a New York Times Magazine piece, “How I Learned That the Problem in My Marriage Was Me” by Daniel Oppenheimer.For more Modern Love, search for the show wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes every Wednesday. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, it's Michael. A quick reminder, as we said last weekend, we're going to be changing some things up here on Sundays to bring you something a little bit different, but something we think you're going to appreciate. And that is modern love. Every Sunday for the next few weeks, you're going to hear episodes from our phenomenal colleagues who make that show. If you don't know the show, every week, host Anna Martin and that team
Starting point is 00:00:25 explores the world of our relationships. How we fall in love, how we fall out of love, sex, betrayal, the trouble spots in relationships. They're stories inspired by the long-running NYT column called Modern Love, and we think it helps make sense of this other essential part of our lives. So, we hope you'll spend time with these episodes. They are great. And as always, we'll see you right back here on Monday morning for the daily. Take a listen. Hey, it's Anna.
Starting point is 00:00:56 Just a quick warning, there's a bit more swearing in this episode than usual. So if you're listening with kids, maybe wait until later. Love now and forever. You're falling in love, I love you. Love is stronger than anything you feel. You're the love of love. And I love you more than anything. What is love?
Starting point is 00:01:13 There's still love. Love. From the New York Times, I'm Anna Martin. This is Modern Love. Today, I'm talking to marriage and family therapist, Terry Real. Dan, this is what I think you mean to be saying right now. Fucking bullshit. No matter what I do for you, it's never enough.
Starting point is 00:01:40 This is Terry reenacting one of his marriage counseling sessions. And yeah, he said yeah. Terry has just asked one of his clients, named Daniel, about the feelings he has during what have become typical but explosive arguments with his wife. Terry asks, if the feelings could talk, what would they say? And Daniel says back, kind of meekly, I try really hard. I try to be a good person. But Terry thinks there's a deeper feeling there
Starting point is 00:02:08 that Daniel's not letting onto. So he says it back to him, only stronger. Fucking bullshit. I amplify emotion, particularly in men. They feel them initially very faintly, but the feelings aren't faint. particularly in men, they feel them initially very faintly, but the feelings aren't faint. It's just they're not used to honoring them.
Starting point is 00:02:31 It's a bit unconventional, but this is something Terry does often. He holds up a kind of emotional mirror to the men that he works with, trying to get them in touch with what's underneath. I'm loving Dan and telling the truth to him in the same breath. You deserve better than this. You're a good guy.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Let's get you out of this. Terry is well known for this direct, confrontational, but still quite loving approach. In this conversation, Daniel actually wrote about it for the New York Times Magazine in a piece called, How I Learned That the Problem in My Marriage Was Me. And Daniel learned that because unlike a lot of couples therapists, Terry takes sides, tries to get to the truth of what's going on, what's behind a couple's behavior. I started off, my beat were couples on the brink of divorce that no one has been able to help.
Starting point is 00:03:30 These women would drag these guys in and I would lean in and tell them, she's right, you're wrong, this is what's gonna happen if you don't shape up, this is what you could get if you do. You're a good guy. This is terrible behavior. Let me reach in and help you, man.
Starting point is 00:03:52 I mean, you can do better than this. And the men would say, okay. And the women would just fold over and start to cry. They had dragged this poor sucker. The record so far was eight therapists and not one person backed up the woman and confronted the man, not one. We're taught not to in therapy school.
Starting point is 00:04:18 Not only are we not taught how to, we're actively taught that you don't do that. You don't tell truth to power under patriarchy. Terri's been doing this for more than 40 years. He calls his approach relational life therapy, and he's written several bestselling books about it. And that whole time, he's kept a particular focus on men. Because for Terri, the things he sees men struggle with, from the most mild problems to the most extreme behaviors, it all stems from something fundamentally broken about
Starting point is 00:04:51 the way our culture defines masculinity. So today, Terry Real tells me what he's learned about masculinity that drove him to break the rules of therapy. He'll tell me how his own childhood showed him that our current models of masculinity don't work and what it will take to build new ones. And during our conversation, we talked a lot about what it means to be a man right now, because to Terry, despite his 40 years with hundreds, if not thousands of clients,
Starting point is 00:05:19 he says his mission of reaching men has never felt more urgent. Stay with us. He says his mission of reaching men has never felt more urgent. Stay with us. Thank you. It's wonderful to be here. Terry, you are, I think it's fair to say, an institution in your industry. You've been a marriage and family therapist for how long? For 40 years? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:07 That's a lot of, what's the exact number? Is it 40 exactly? 42. About two years more than my marriage. Okay, 40. Let's not round down. Let's say you've been a marriage and family therapist for 42 years. How do couples end up in front of you? I have to be honest, I don't really feel like a guy would be calling you up and being like, hi, I need help with my marriage. So how do people end up in your office? Yeah, I like to say my books appear under pillows all over America. Here, honey.
Starting point is 00:06:41 If you want a little action tonight, read this book. So yeah, no, a lot of the men that I see are what I call wife mandated referrals. I don't mean to be marginalizing same sex marriages, but the men I see, here's a quote from Terry Real, shame based people have have pain, grandiose-based people have trouble. They're not in pain, the people around them are in pain. And they come to see me when the trouble gets so great that either the people around them are dragging their butts in to CME, or the crisis has
Starting point is 00:07:26 opened up and they're desperately trying to save their relationship. That's mostly how it goes. And as I know from reading your work, shame-based people in a relationship are often women in a relationship, and then the grandiose-based people are often men? Is that right? Often, you know, too out of the, look, here, here's a, maybe more nuanced. And this too is broad generality. So take it with a grain of salt. But women in our culture is changing with feminism, but traditionally women in our culture lead from the one down accommodating shame
Starting point is 00:08:06 position and have covert grandiosity, whereas men lead from the one up superior position and have covert shame. And with women, they're depressed, they're depressed. With men, they're depressed, no they're not, they're drinking. No, they're not. They're drinking. They stuff it down. Yeah. Yeah. And you don't see the pain. You see the flight into medication or grandiosity that avoids the pain. And so many of the difficulties we think of as quote-unquote typically male, the substance abuse, rage, affairs, I'm not saying all of them are fueled by depression, but many of them are.
Starting point is 00:08:53 And underneath the depression is trauma. And the way we traditionally quote-unquote turn in underpaid is we teach them to disconnect, disconnect from vulnerability, disconnect from their feelings, disconnect from others. The toxic individualism. Yeah. Yeah. We call that learning to be independent. And the consequence of a disconnected boy is a disconnected man. We're not invulnerable. We're human. I tell the guys I work with, pretending to escape your own vulnerability is like trying to outrun your rectum. I actually read that line in your book and I was hoping you'd say it out loud because
Starting point is 00:09:38 it's too good. Yeah. Outrun your rectum. Perfect. Put that on a shirt unless you have. It has a way of following. So, no, of course we're all vulnerable, but trying to live up to that superhuman code leads every man vulnerable to anxiety and shame that they then don't admit because that would be weak. So the whole thing is just a mess. And the work I do, I say I feel like a surgeon reattaching nerves. You write about that process in, I think it's your first book, which was about male depression. That book is really fascinating.
Starting point is 00:10:19 You write how male depression, as you describe it, often comes from these unacknowledged feelings and is often the root cause of many problems in marriages and families. I want to talk more about that, but first I want to know more about why you decided to focus a lot of your practice on working with men specifically. And just to start at the beginning, when you were growing up, what did you think it meant to be a man? I thought what it meant to be a man was to be raging and dominating and abusive like
Starting point is 00:10:56 my father. And I wanted to know part of it. My father used to beat me. I mean, he pissed my father off and he'd get out a pretty thick belt and whack the shit out of you. And one of the things I've realized 30 years after the fact was, unfortunately, my vulnerability or sensitivity was a trigger for my father. vulnerability or sensitivity was a trigger for my father. If he saw me being vulnerable or sensitive, he would go into a rage, just when I needed him most. But he was very contemptuous of weakness and vulnerability. So he would never talk about his childhood. I knew it was very difficult.
Starting point is 00:11:40 He lost his mother when he was eight. His father and he and his brother lived through the depression in America. His father was kind of the black sheep of the family. Couldn't find work. They moved in with another relative. The relative was mean to my dad. And I got my dad to tell me, oh gosh, I was close to 30,
Starting point is 00:12:07 that when he was what, 11-ish, his father brought he and his brother, younger brother into the garage and turned on the car and told him to go to sleep. And my father knew that there was something wrong. And he went back and forth with his dad and finally physically fought him. And he says his shoe cracked the window and he and his brother got out. And then he was banished the next day. When he told you this story, did that change anything about how you saw your father?
Starting point is 00:12:54 Did it shift something in your understanding? Did it make you understand something about him? Yes, of course. It softened my heart. And I felt bad for him. And I understood immediately. And he said, my father was a passive man, my father was a weak man. Your father said that about his father. That's right. And so he became the anti of that.
Starting point is 00:13:20 And the anti of that was a macho asshole. But I could understand why he would be contemptuous of what he deemed as weakness. Because it reminded him of his own father? Because his father's weakness threatened to kill him. It was murderous. The way that you opened up space as it were, encouraged your father to share, was that sort of the beginnings of Terry Reel's approach to therapy with men? Like did you seed anything
Starting point is 00:14:03 in that conversation that we now see in your practice today? That's a beautiful question. We don't have to go into a lot of detail, but for two years, Belinda and I and my kids and— Belinda's your wife, yeah. Yeah, a great family therapist in her own right, I want to say. We were followed by a documentarian, and there's a docus-series that's coming out about us, and one of the beginning scenes of the,
Starting point is 00:14:30 astoundingly enough, I was 34 years old, not married yet to Belinda, and my parents came for a week of family therapy with me. Wow, whoa. And we filmed it, And the film survived. And what you see, and I hadn't seen it for 40 years. Were you, was someone doing family therapy on you, your mom and your dad, or were you doing family therapy on the three of you?
Starting point is 00:14:58 No, someone was doing family therapy with us. Gotcha. And what you see is, after 10 minutes, I sidelined the therapist who's pretty irrelevant actually and I move in to my dad and mom. I am doing relational life therapy with my parents at 34. You see it. What are you seeing yourself doing? One of the core principles of RLT is what we call joining through the truth. Confronting people, but in a way that's precise and loving so that they can hear it.
Starting point is 00:15:36 One of the things that therapy school says about grandiose people in general, and men in particular, is, you know, don't tell truth to power. I believe my field colludes with patriarchy and protecting perpetrators. We have done a great job of helping people for 50 years come up from shame, but we've been ridiculously ineffective at helping people come down from grandiosity. And I knew that I had to do that. So there was a moment with my dad, he started crying. I get it, forgive me. He talked about his mother who died.
Starting point is 00:16:21 He talked about his exile. And he started crying. And he said, I haven't felt any of this, I haven't thought about this my hand on his shoulder and I said, �You cry, old man. Every tear you cry is a tear I don't have to.� That was pretty wise, a third or four. Watching yourself say those words now 30 years later, do they have new meaning to you? Yes. Can you tell me about that?
Starting point is 00:17:28 Here's my most famous quote if I it's I had a pretension to quote yourself, but you can do it. Thank you Family pathology family pathology rolls from generation to generation like a fire in the woods taking down everything in its path until one person in one generation has the courage to turn and face the flames. That person brings peace to their ancestors and spares the children to follow. And you were doing that in this moment. You were facing the flames.
Starting point is 00:18:12 Or your father was facing the flames. Or both of you were. We both were. It was a rare moment. We both were. That's a remarkable scene you just shared, and I really appreciate you telling us about it. And it is remarkable.
Starting point is 00:18:31 I mean, you say it's wise for 34. This is the beginning of your practice. You were just starting to develop this approach to working with men. And I find it pretty remarkable that one of the first men you practiced this on or did this with rather was your own father that feels apt and healing and quite difficult. Apt and healing and difficult. I'll tell you this. I am the son of a depressed, angry father.
Starting point is 00:19:06 He was the son of a depressed, angry father. I have two boys, 35, 37. Neither of them say that, and neither will their children. And that is the greatest accomplishment of my life. Mm. Can I ask you, Terry, like, as you developed and honed in on this relational approach to therapy and developed this focus, is it right to call it a focus on men, a specialty? Is it right to call it a focus? Uh, sure. No, I consider myself a relationship expert and an expert on male psychology.
Starting point is 00:19:55 As you developed this focus on male psychology, you've talked a bit about the sort of larger therapeutic community, but how did your colleagues respond? I feel like it's, just speaking for me, I feel like it's easy to look at men, especially white men, and say comparatively, this group of people has way more privilege, as you've noted, than other groups in society. So did anyone say, did you ever get pushback on that focus? That sort of, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:20:24 privileging, as it were, of that experience? Am I mansplaining? Uh... No, I more so just mean, like, did anyone say, like, why focus on this group of people... Oh. ...who already has so much power? Though what I'm hearing you say is,
Starting point is 00:20:40 because this group of people has so much power, that's why I'm interested in focusing on them. Well, yes and no. I mean, power, yes, miserableness also. I think one of the revolutionary things I said, and I really wanna give a shout out to some beautiful early feminist psychologists, the
Starting point is 00:21:07 folks at the Stone Center, Jean Baker Miller, but most of all, Carol Gilligan, my dear friend, who are man loving feminists. And they as well, I was really, and to some degree am, one of the few male voices saying, patriarchy is a system that does damage to everybody. Yes, men are on top and women are on the bottom, but if that's your idea of what's on the top. You know, not to whatever, but there was a I won't say who but there was an expert on you know TV talking about aspirational masculinity and and how all these young men are Looking at the Elon Musk. Yeah, sure richest man in the world to send people to Mars fantastic
Starting point is 00:22:02 You want to be married to that guy? most people don't. And if that's what you want to aspire to, I don't want to get too close to you. Well, you're bringing up something that I wanted to ask you about, which is like, I'm really curious your perspective on what masculinity means right now.
Starting point is 00:22:25 We talked about your early understandings of it, and this is a concept, certainly. I feel like human society has wrestled with since maybe the dawn of human society. It does feel to me, though, that we are at a kind of flashpoint culturally, at least in the United States, where men who hold on to traditional values of masculinity are lashing out, they're reasserting those values, they're ascending to power in some cases. What are you seeing in the year 2025? What is going on with men?
Starting point is 00:23:01 Big question, Terry, but I feel like you're the person to ask this to. You know, not to be grandiose myself, but I want to take ownership. I am the person to ask this to, and I'll tell you why. There are no models. There are no models of healthy relational masculinity. None. Yeah. And, you know, boys and men are floundering. Everybody knows that.
Starting point is 00:23:32 But look, someone described my work as women have had a revolution and now men have to deal with it. The response to the challenge that women are presenting to men in their marriages, in the job market, in education, has largely been blowback, a resurgence of the most traditional and frankly unappealing aspects of traditional patriarchy, just dominance and bullying.
Starting point is 00:24:10 That ain't it. And so I don't want women to stand down from their demands. I want men to stand up and meet them. What women are asking for from men is relationality, is learning to be intimate, is opening up your heart and sharing your feelings, being vulnerable, being soft when your partner is vulnerable, being responsible. These are all wonderful things for guys. Stop whining and let me teach you how to do it." And the conundrum for men is what you learned about what it means to be a strong man as a boy
Starting point is 00:24:56 guarantees you'll be seen as a lousy husband as a man. You cannot be invulnerable and intimate at the same time. So when I help men move into open-heartedness, connection, the expression of feeling, compassion, responsibility, giving, I am explicitly reconfiguring masculinity with them. I mean, you're talking about these models of masculinity, and I'm thinking about the models that are out there right now, especially kind of ascendant ones that are very different from what you're laying out. I'm thinking specifically about the Manosphere, as it's called.
Starting point is 00:25:42 These are podcasts, YouTube channels, online forums, influencers that are really pushing traditional masculinity. Do you ever see that kind of stuff, and what do you feel when you do see it? You want my mature therapeutic self or you want my New Jersey self? You can give me your New Jersey self. I want to throttle them. I want to throttle them. And what would the therapeutic self say? People with simple ideas will not have a hard time getting an audience. These are carnival barkers who are leading our young men down the path of suicide. You know the TV show Adolescents, right? Yeah, it's big right now. And all the press have got... You cannot reassert your masculinity through dominance and bullying and violence.
Starting point is 00:26:49 That is not the answer. It's just not. We're going to take a quick break. When we come back, Terry reels hope for the future and what he thinks it will take for men to get there. I'm curious whether this mission of reaching men feels more urgent to you now than it has before. Oh my God. I mean, I would say the house is burning. That's not a metaphor. Our planet is burning. I started off my last book, Us, with the father of family therapy, the great anthropologist Gregory Bason, Margaret Mead's husband, who is truly the creator of family therapy, Bason
Starting point is 00:28:08 called Western civilization's philosophical error. And that's this, that we stand apart from nature, that's individualism. That's what the word individual means. We stand apart from nature, that's what I call toxic individualism, and we control nature. That's patriarchy. And whether the nature we think we can and should control is our bodies, our marriages, our kids, our country, the planet. The delusion of dominance is suicidal at this point. I mean, you've written before about some of the progress you've seen men make over the
Starting point is 00:28:59 years. You wrote once that millennial men in particular were the most gender progressive generation maybe ever. And given what we've been talking about, the resurgence of traditional masculinity, the Manosphere, I just wonder, like, does that trend feel like it's reversing for you right now? Yes, it does. 100%. It's a backlash.
Starting point is 00:29:22 It's a resurgence. And frankly, I think it's sort of the death, it's the last gasp of a model of power and masculinity that, look, relationality is the card I've got in my back pocket, and that's what we're born for. That's what we're designed for. And that's what will keep us in this planet alive. The dominance model makes for miserable people, miserable marriages, miserable families, and we'll choke the planet Earth. Man, I mean, but it seems like
Starting point is 00:30:06 that is the direction that we're headed. I mean, you said that this is kind of the last... Gas. ...gas, but I don't know. It doesn't feel like a last gas, but it feels like perhaps this approach to the world is gaining steam. Well, it is gaining steam in the moment. I believe that an accurate reflection of reality will prevail. The dysfunctionality of this approach will become more and more clear, and people will
Starting point is 00:30:41 move into something more mature and nuanced. The issue is, you know, how many generations is that gonna take and what kind of shape will we be in? What I work with with the guys I work with is what I call learning to become family men. And what I say is a boy's question of the world is, what do you got for me? It's gratification.
Starting point is 00:31:04 What do you got for me? A man's question of the world is, what do you got for me? It's gratification. What do you got for me? A man's question of the world is, what do you need? What do you need? And being a family man means what's central here is not you and your needs. What's central here is the team and what they need from you. I talked to many of the men I work with about the distinction between gratification and what I call relational joy. And gratification is just what you think it is. It's a short-term hit of pleasure, taking a drink, a smoke and a joint. A pretty girl flirts with you. You make a killing that day in the stock market. Your kid gets an A. Great. I like pleasure in its place. Relational joy, which I have to teach so many of the men I work with, even what it is, relational joy is a deeper down pleasure that comes just from being in the relationship and being connected.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And sometimes it's gratifying, sometimes it's a pain in the neck. You know, I tell a story of my beautiful Alexander, now 35. When he was little, I was giving him a timeout and we didn't have locks. So I was holding his bedroom door shut. I mean, this guy was like maybe two foot three. And that door on the other side trying to get open, I mean it was like poultry. There were, lightning was coming out of that. I mean the earth. You were holding the door shut because he was inside because he needed to be in time
Starting point is 00:32:40 out and you didn't have a lock on the door. I can see the scene. That little guy is trying to get it open and I'm telling you, it's all... So a part of me wanted to just throw them... I'm truly, I talk about normal hatred in families. A part of me wanted to just throw them through the window. I was so mad. Yet a deeper down part was like, you mighty little spirit, you. Wow. You're going to do great. And what so many of the men in our culture don't understand is the simple joy of being and connection.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Terri, I have just a couple more questions for you. Here's a big one. Why should men listen to what you have to say? Men should listen to what I'm saying because it's in your interest to. You will be happier. Your marriage will be happier. You will change the legacy that you pass on to your children. And listen, I know how important that is to you out there, whoever's listening, that guy. The American dream, everybody talks about what is the American. The American dream is the dream that our children
Starting point is 00:33:59 will have it better than we did. When we think about that, we almost always think about that in terms of material success. But I want you to think about your children having a better legacy than you had. I think Mam will listen. You know, the thing is that I'm right. The thing is that I'm right. I love it. I mean, I love it. Yes. Terry, you've mentioned your wife, Belinda, who's also a family therapist. Brilliant, brilliant therapist.
Starting point is 00:34:38 Can I ask you, like, a thing I find really remarkable and frankly soothing about talking to you is you have an answer and usually like a phrase or you've written a book as an answer to so many of my questions. But of course, you know, no one has all of the answers and we are constantly working on ourselves. And I guess really to close, like, what is something that you are working on in yourself and in your marriage to Belinda? Yeah, this is hilarious.
Starting point is 00:35:11 So there, you know, in families, they're famous stories. And here's one that it was true then, and I'm still working on it now. And my kids were teenagers, they're in their 30s now. They both joined hands and kind of bounced up to me and said, Dad, are you aware of the fact that when we confront you with something we're critical about,
Starting point is 00:35:33 that you're dismissive of us? And I looked at them, this is absolutely true, and I looked at them and I said, that's ridiculous. So let's just leave it there. That is so sweet. Terry Real, thank you so much for this conversation. It gave me a lot to think about and I'm grateful. I am very grateful. It's been a blast talking to you. I really appreciate it. Terry Real, everyone. This episode was produced by Davis Land. It was edited by our executive producer, Jen Poyant. Production management by Christina Josa. The Modern Love theme music is by Dan
Starting point is 00:36:20 Powell. Original music in this episode by Diane Wong, Pat McCusker, and Dan Powell. This episode was mixed by Daniel Ramirez with studio support from Maddie Maciello and Nick Pittman. Special thanks to Paula Schumann, Lisa Tobin, Wendy Doar, Emily Lang, Mahima Chablani, and Jeffrey Miranda. And to our video team, Brooke Minters, Felice León, Michael Cordero, and Sawyer Roquet. The Modern Love column is edited by Daniel Jones. Mia Lee is the editor of Modern Love Projects. If you'd like to submit an essay or a tiny love story to the New York Times, we'll have the instructions in our show notes. I'm Anna Martin. Thanks for listening.

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