Lone wolves
A man who lives his life without other men exists in an emotional vacuum. Since he has no back-up, he is forced to second guess every important decision he makes. He fears and mistrusts other men. His relationships with women fail because his solitary status automatically forces a woman to be his entire universe, a burden no woman can carry for long.
I was a lone wolf until forty, until the pain of that isolation forced me to dig deep into my psyche and figure out my problem. I managed to work through this painful issue by working with other like minded men in a men’s group I began eighteen years ago.
I wasn’t the only lone wolf in that group, and I’ve learned from talking with hundreds of men that this condition is pervasive and common. When asked why they have no friends, nearly all respond that they don’t know why, and wish they knew how to connect with other men as friends.
In my group, the lone wolves had nearly universal bad relationships with their fathers. Since a boy learns trust from his father at an early age, he can also learn not to trust men at an early age.
The issue of being a loner is fairly simple to work through with the help of other men who are willing to listen and share their own experiences. No man has to spend his life alone. He can leave his island anytime he chooses to. His lifeline is other like minded men who have learned the value of what I term collective male wisdom. Eight, forty year old men have over 300 years of collective male wisdom to share with each other.
Stop standing on the sidelines and get into the game.

