Boys Don't Cry
Boys don't cry.
That's what his father said when he was seven and fell off his bike, when his knee was bleeding through his jeans and the pain was hot and immediate and his face was already contorting in preparation for tears that his father's voice stopped mid-journey from feeling to expression.
"Boys don't cry. Get up from there."
So he got up. Swallowed the tears back down where they came from, let them pool somewhere inside his chest where tears aren't supposed to live but do anyway when they have nowhere else to go. He got up and he learned and he filed that lesson away in the place where boys keep the rules of being boys, the unwritten codes that nobody explains but everyone somehow knows: be tough, be strong, be stone when you want to be water, be unmoved when everything in you is earthquake.
Boys don't cry.
His mother said it differently, softer, when he was nine and his cat died, when he found Nuri stiff and cold in the backyard and the grief was so large it felt like drowning, like his chest was full of ocean and he was going under. She held him but her holding had limits, had a timer, had an expiration point where comfort became concern that he was feeling too much for too long in ways that might make him weak, might make him soft, might make him the kind of boy who becomes the kind of man who can't handle what men are supposed to handle without falling apart.
"I know you're sad, baby. But boys don't cry forever. You have to be strong now."
So he was strong. Or he performed strong, which is the same thing after enough practice, after enough years of pushing feelings down so deep they forget how to surface, after enough time spent building walls inside himself that started as protection and became prison, that were supposed to keep pain out but ended up keeping him in, trapped with all the feelings he's not allowed to express in a body that's become a mausoleum for every grief he's ever swallowed.
Boys don't cry.
His coach yelled it when he was twelve and twisted his ankle during football practice, when the pain shot up his leg like lightning and he gasped and his eyes watered involuntarily, not crying exactly but close enough that coach noticed, close enough that it required correction, required the reminder bellowed across the field so everyone could hear, so everyone could witness the lesson being taught about acceptable ways to experience pain when you're male.
"Walk it off! Boys don't cry! What are you, a girl?"
And there it was. The equation made explicit. Crying equals girl equals weak equals everything a boy is not supposed to be if he wants to be respected, accepted, considered fully human in the specific way men are allowed to be human, which is apparently less human than women, less allowed to feel the full spectrum of emotion, more required to amputate parts of himself that are natural and necessary and will definitely come back to haunt him later when he's twenty-five or thirty-five or forty-five and can't figure out why he's so angry all the time, why he can't connect with people, why he punches walls instead of crying, why he's never learned the vocabulary for feelings beyond fine and angry, why the only emotion he's allowed is rage and even rage has to be controlled, channeled, made productive instead of destructive, turned into ambition or athletics or anything except what it actually is which is all those unshed tears from childhood fermenting into something toxic.
Boys don't cry.
He's twenty now and his first love just broke off her approaching wedding with him, said she needed someone more emotionally available, someone who could talk about feelings, someone who wasn't a wall. And he wanted to cry. God, he wanted to cry. Could feel the tears right there, pressing behind his eyes, in his throat, demanding release. But he was at school the just finished a class and people were watching and boys don't cry, especially not over girls, especially not in public, especially not when you're young and your reputation is the only currency that matters and showing weakness is social suicide.
So he swallowed them. Again. Said "whatever" like he didn't care, like she didn't matter, like his heart wasn't cracking down the middle. Went home and punched his pillow until his knuckles hurt because physical pain is allowed, physical pain is masculine, physical pain doesn't make you weak the way emotional pain does, doesn't threaten your status as a real man the way crying threatens it.
His mother found him later, knuckles red and swollen, and said "do you want to talk about it?" and he said "I'm fine" because boys don't talk about it either, boys don't process feelings through language and connection and vulnerability, boys bottle it up and push it down and pretend it doesn't exist until it explodes sideways into addiction or violence or depression that masquerades as just being stoic, just being strong, just being a man.
Boys don't cry.
He's twenty-three and his best friend died, sudden and stupid and preventable, a car accident that wouldn't have happened if he hadn't been lost in his thoughts if he'd called someone for a ride, if if if. And the grief is annihilating. It's not sadness, it's obliteration. It's waking up every morning and forgetting for one beautiful second and then remembering and having to learn all over again that his friend is gone, that he'll never see him again, that all their plans and inside jokes and shared history just ends, just stops, just becomes memory and eventually even memory will fade and it's not fair, it's not right, it's not something he can fix or fight or make sense of.
At the funeral he stands stone-faced while his friend's mother wails, while his friend's sister collapses, while everyone else cries openly because women are allowed to express the full weight of grief while men are supposed to serve as structural support, supposed to be the strong ones, supposed to hold it together so everyone else can fall apart.
His jaw aches from clenching. His chest feels like it's being compressed. The tears are there, have been there for days, building pressure like a dam about to break. But boys don't cry. Men don't cry. Not here. Not now. Not in front of people. So he stands there, a statue, dead inside in a different way than his friend is dead, wondering if this is what being a man means, if this is the price of masculinity—to feel everything and express nothing, to experience the full spectrum of human emotion but only display a narrow band of acceptable responses, to be strong until strong breaks you.
After the funeral he goes home and sits in his car in the driveway and finally, alone, he cries. Not the gentle tears of movie endings, but the ugly crying of actual grief, the kind that comes from your gut, that makes sounds you've never made before, that physically hurts because you've been holding it in so long that releasing it feels like something breaking, something rupturing, something dying so something else can maybe eventually live.
He cries for five minutes. Then stops. Feels embarrassed even though no one witnessed it. Feels weak even though crying is literally the most natural human response to loss. Feels like he failed some test of masculinity even though the test is rigged, the standards are impossible, the rules were written by people who confused emotional repression with strength, who mistook numbness for resilience, who built a version of manhood so narrow and rigid that most men spend their lives either crushing themselves to fit inside it or breaking themselves trying.
Boys don't cry.
He's thirty now and his father is dying, actually dying, cancer eating through him like he's nothing, like decades of being strong and stoic and a real man matter zero percent to cells that don't care about your masculinity, your toughness, your ability to swallow feelings and call it virtue.
His father looks small in the hospital bed, hooked to machines, finally vulnerable in ways he spent his life avoiding. And his father says, voice weak but urgent, like he's been waiting to say this, like this is important: "I'm sorry."
"For what?"
"For teaching you not to cry. For making you hard when you should have stayed soft, even if little. For passing down the same poison my father gave me, the same rules about being a man that made me lonely even when I was surrounded by people who loved me. For not knowing how to tell you I loved you except by telling you to be strong, to toughen up, to stop feeling so much."
And there it is. Permission. Too late but better than never. His father, dying, finally admitting that the rules were wrong, that boys should cry, that men should feel, that vulnerability isn't weakness but the only real strength, the only honest way to live in a world that will break your heart repeatedly if you let yourself have a heart, and you should let yourself have a heart because the alternative is being alive but not living, breathing but not feeling, existing in a body that's become a tomb for every emotion you were taught to bury alive.
Boys don't cry.
But he does.
He cries for his seven-year-old self with the bleeding knee.
He cries for his nine-year-old self mourning his cat alone.
He cries for his twelve-year-old self learning that pain is shameful if you show it.
He cries for his twenty-year-old self punching pillows instead of processing heartbreak.
He cries for his twenty-three-year-old self at his best friend's funeral, standing stone-faced while dying inside.
He cries for his father who lived his whole life in a cage built from the same rules, who's dying without having really lived, who spent decades being strong when what his family needed was for him to be human, to be vulnerable, to be capable of tenderness instead of just toughness.
He cries and his father cries too, finally, these two men in a hospital room breaking the rule together, too late but not too late, never too late to choose being human over being hard, being honest over being strong, being broken open over being closed off.
Boys don't cry.
Except they do.
They cry alone in cars and bathroom stalls and late at night when no one can witness their weakness, when no one can judge their failure to perform masculinity correctly.
They cry internally, constantly, tears that never reach their eyes but corrode them from the inside, that build up like poison, that eventually become anger or numbness or depression or the thousand other ways emotions express themselves when you refuse to let them out the natural way.
They cry in ways that don't look like crying because they've been trained to convert every feeling into something acceptable, into rage or silence or workaholism or misogyny or toxic exertion of patriarchy or substance abuse or any of the approved masculine coping mechanisms that slowly destroy them while letting them maintain the fiction that they're fine, they're strong, they're men.
Boys don't cry.
That's what we teach them.
That's what breaks them.
That's what we're finally learning to unlearn, too late for generations of men who lived their lives emotionally amputated, who died with all their feelings still inside them unexpressed and unprocessed, who never knew the relief of tears, the healing of honest emotion, the freedom of being fully human instead of carefully masculine.
Boys don't cry.
But they should.
They should cry when they're hurt and when they're sad and when they're overwhelmed and when someone they love dies or leaves or disappoints them.
They should cry because crying is how humans process emotion, how we release what would otherwise poison us, how we stay soft in a world that wants to make us hard, how we remain capable of love and connection and the full range of human experience.
They should cry because the alternative is becoming men who can't feel, can't connect, can't love properly because love requires vulnerability and vulnerability requires being willing to break, to hurt, to feel things fully instead of performing strength constantly.
They should cry because boys who don't cry become men who don't feel become fathers who teach their sons not to cry and the cycle continues, this generational trauma disguised as traditional masculinity, this emotional starvation diet called being a real man.
Boys don't cry.
But this boy does.
This man does.
This human being does.
And he's learning, slowly, painfully, that every tear he was taught to swallow was a small death, a little murder of his humanity, a sacrifice to gods of masculinity that demanded he give up parts of himself to earn the approval of people who mistook his emotional repression for strength.
He's learning that crying doesn't make him less of a man.
It makes him more human.
And human is what he should have been allowed to be all along.
Boys don't cry.
Except when they do,
And when they do, the world doesn't end.
The sky doesn't fall.
They don't become weak or less than or whatever they feared crying would make them.
They just become honest.
Whole.
Free.
Boys don't cry.
But they should.
God, they should.


This is amazing and it hits hard!
Barokallahu fieekum ✨
I have to say, beyond the vital message of this piece, your writing talent is absolutely incredible.
Please never stop. I'm hitting that subscribe button right now.
Allahuma baarik, ma'am.✨