Toxic masculinity and depression in men: A schema therapy perspective.


  Vol. 47 (3) 2026 Neuro endocrinology letters Journal Article   2026; 47(3): 140-158 PubMed PMID:  42249857    Citation

BACKGROUND: Toxic masculinity has increasingly been discussed as a significant psychosocial factor affecting men's mental health, particularly in relation to depression, self-stigma, and low rates of help-seeking. In clinical practice, however, the concept remains ambiguous and may be applied in a reductive or pathologizing manner. This article aims to provide a clinically sensitive understanding of toxic masculinity within the framework of schema therapy. AIM: The aim of this article is to explore the relationship between toxic masculinity, early maladaptive schemas, and depressive symptomatology in men, and to demonstrate how schema therapy can facilitate long-term change without pathologizing male identity. METHOD: This paper is a narrative review complemented by systematized clinical experience of schema therapists. Four composite heuristic vignettes are presented. These vignettes do not represent individual patients but are composite cases reflecting common clinical patterns. Each vignette includes schema-therapeutic conceptualization, a discussion of transgenerational transmission of masculine norms, and examples of therapeutic interventions. CLINICAL ILLUSTRATIONS: Toxic masculinity is clinically expressed through specific early maladaptive schemas (e.g., emotional deprivation, unrelenting standards, emotional inhibition) and protective schema modes (Detached Protector, Overcontroller, Punitive/Demanding Critic). Depression in men often manifests through masked, externalizing, or somatic forms. Schema therapeutic interventions-including limited reparenting, imagery rescripting, chairwork, therapeutic letters, and transgenerational re-scripting-enable gradual access to unmet emotional needs and the strengthening of the Healthy Adult mode. CONCLUSION: Toxic masculinity is conceptualized as a learned and modifiable pattern embedded in early maladaptive schemas and schema modes rather than as a stable personality trait. Schema therapy provides an integrative clinical framework that links gendered social norms with early maladaptive schemas and schema modes, and offers clinically applicable strategies for promoting sustainable change without pathologizing male identity.


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