Why True Strength in Boys Begins With Connection, Not Toughness
What if emotional strength in boys has nothing to do with toughening them up?
What if it begins with helping them stay connected to themselves?
In this conversation on Advisor with Stacey Chillemi, I sit down with Lisa Urbanski to explore a pattern that has shaped generations of boys—and the men they become.
This is not just a parenting conversation.
It is a cultural one.
Because when boys are taught to suppress emotion, they do not become stronger. They become disconnected—from themselves, from others, and from the relationships that sustain them.
In this episode, we explore:
- Why boys are often taught, directly and indirectly, to suppress emotion
- How emotional disconnection shows up later in relationships, conflict, and communication
- What true emotional strength actually looks like
- How parents can begin building emotional vocabulary at home
- Why fathers and male role models play such a critical role
- What to do if you feel like you have already made mistakes
We also talk about what this looks like in real life.
A boy who is only allowed to express anger grows into a man with a very limited emotional language.
A child who is told “you’re fine” instead of being comforted learns to question his own experience.
And a home that is always busy, distracted, or focused on logistics can unintentionally lose the very connection children need most.
Emotions are not meant to isolate us.
They are meant to connect us.
And when we begin to treat them that way, everything changes—how boys grow, how men relate, and how families function.
If you have ever wondered how to support a boy, or a man, in becoming more emotionally connected, this conversation offers a place to begin.
🎧 Watch the full episode:
Advisor – Full Episode
For more reflections on boys’ emotional development, parenting, and cultural patterns, explore articles on Psychology Today and research from Greater Good Science Center.
If you are raising a boy, supporting a partner, or noticing emotional patterns in yourself that you want to understand more deeply, therapy can help. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional connection, resilience, and growth.
Warmly,
Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst



