What Men Want The Most

In Articles, Life Issues, Masculinity by Joe Martin

It’s Not Women, Money or Sex

What’s the one thing every man wants but is afraid to admit he needs?

Guess what? It’s not women, money or sex. Most men aren’t afraid to admit they need those things.

What Every Man Wants

The real answer is, every man desires to have honest and authentic relationships and brotherhood with other men. In other words, we all want a foxhole friend, an “I-got-your-back-brother,” or a “ride-or-die-dude” we can depend on in our greatest hour of need. That “go-to-guy,” who will respect us even when we’re at our worst or weakest.

Just ask any ex-NFL athlete, retired law enforcement officer, military veteran, fraternity member, or even a former gang member.

The truth of the matter is, most of us lack the relational maturity it takes to be in a healthy and authentic relationship with other men. Allow me to explain.

The truth of the matter is, most of us lack the relational maturity it takes to be in a healthy and authentic relationship with other men.

4 Ways To Measure Your Maturity As A Man

If you want to determine your relational maturity as a man, revisit a painful wound in your past and examine yourself in the light of four questions. For me, my wound was the sexual abuse I suffered as a child for three years.

Here are the four ways to measure your maturity:

1. Are you able to talk about it?

For more than 18 years, I didn’t talk about my abuse, and that secret eventually destroyed my 16-year marriage. It’s one of my biggest regrets. The truth was, I was hiding from it because of shame, guilt, and fear.

2. When you talk about it, do you get emotional?

When I was finally able to talk about my abuse with others, I noticed that my voice would change, sometimes tears would fall, and it would make me angry. And there’s nothing wrong with that; it just meant I was no longer hiding from it, but still hurting from it.

3.Are you able to help others through it?

There was a point when the heavy emotions subsided. Then, instead of focusing inwardly on my own pain, I was able to turn my attention outwardly towards helping others. I had finally reached a place where I was healing from it.

4.Can you find the blessing in it?

One of the biggest myths in life is that time heals all wounds. The truth of the matter is that sharing and helping others through their pain heals all wounds. When I was able to help others heal from their abuse, by openly sharing mine, I could see the purpose and plan God had for my pain. This is when you can honestly say you’ve healed from it.

One of the biggest myths in life is that time heals all wounds. The truth of the matter is that sharing and helping others through their pain heals all wounds.

So how relationally mature are you? Are you hiding from the pain of your past? Are you emotionally charged when you talk about it? Are you able to help others through a similar struggle? And can you honestly see the blessing and purpose behind it all?

It’s one thing to say we’re men. But when it comes to our secrets, struggles, and scars, we must be mature enough to share them with other men.

About
Joe Martin
Joe Martin is an author, an award-winning international speaker, and a certified Man Builder. He’s the creator and founder of RealMenConnect.com and the host of the Real Men Connect podcast – the #1-rated podcast on Apple Podcasts for Christian men. He’s also a husband and father of a blended family of two.
Image
Joe Martin
Joe Martin is an author, an award-winning international speaker, and a certified Man Builder. He’s the creator and founder of RealMenConnect.com and the host of the Real Men Connect podcast – the #1-rated podcast on Apple Podcasts for Christian men. He’s also a husband and father of a blended family of two.