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Men Are Struggling. Can an App Help Them? 

I was napping on a grey Toronto spring day when the worst panic attack of my life crept up on me. I’d been sick for days, stuck at home when my mind got snagged on a bad train of thinking. Negative thoughts swirled. Feelings of worthlessness bubbled forth faster than I could process them. It felt like my mind was a gun about to blast. 

Not a day has gone by since that panic attack in March 2023 that I haven’t worried about when, or if, another episode will strike. My world shrank as I stayed away from places of discomfort. I waited months before asking for help. I felt weak acknowledging that I even needed it.

If I had failed myself before, how could I ever trust myself again?

Men have a strained relationship with mental health services. While guys represent the overwhelming majority of suicide victims, they go to therapy considerably less than women. They exhibit more addictive behaviors, from drug and alcohol to gambling and gaming addictions, all of which contribute, in part, to shorter lives. Men are also plagued by greater social isolation.

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