Saturday, November 1, 2014

Movember To Support Men's Mental Health (in addition to prostate and testicular cancers)

http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/2d/f3/b8/2df3b86aa54b411b93397e3867553a26.jpg

Okay, first an admission, I wrongly believed that Movember was beard growing, not just mustaches. But that is because I confused it with another men's health meme, part of the same Movember fund-raising effort, No Shave November. There's also Novembeard.

If you can grow it, let it grow! It's for a good cause (or causes).

Movember To Support Men's Mental Health

Trending News: There's A New Reason To Grow A 'Mo' This Movember



© Getty


Joel Balsam | November 1, 2014

Why Is This Important?

Because too many men suffer from mental illness and they could use a helping hand.

Long Story Short

This year, donations from guys who grow out their ‘stache for Movember will go towards fundraising and raising awareness about male mental health in addition to prostate and testicular cancers.

Long Story

The hairy truth is that too many men suffer from mental illness. According to data released on Movember’s website, a total of 38,364 Americans died by suicide in 2010 and over three quarters of them (79%) were men.

To make matters worse, men aren’t talking about it. According to researchers in the UK, almost a third of men are too embarrassed to seek help for a mental problem and less than a quarter talk to their doctor if they felt down for more than two weeks in comparison to a third of women.

Justin Coughlan, the Australian co-founder of Movember told the BBC that this is a huge issue men need to combat. “It’s the last piece of the puzzle,” he said. “It’s just so big and there’s such a need for it.”

For the 11 years since it began in 2003, the month-long campaign has asked men to grow out their moustaches for charity and awareness about prostate cancer and then testicular cancer. This year, men’s mental illness will be added to the list.

It’s hard to think of too many other annual charity campaigns that have caught on as well as Movember. Every year, millions of “Mos” can be found on street corners and in offices worldwide and the charity’s success is undeniable. Well over four million Mo Bros and Mo Sistas have registered to fundraise since the charity began and $559 million has been raised. Immeasurable is the amount of conversations people have had about men’s mental health and in the case of prostate cancer, how many have gotten checked. According to Movember, 75% of those who participate were more aware of the health risks they face and 50% told someone they should take action to improve their health.

If you haven’t done Movember before, all you need to do is have a fresh shave at the beginning of the month (you’re a little late, but today will do) and sign up for an account. Then, try and get funds to support your Mo and talk about men’s health. Easy peasy.

The stigma about mental illness, especially for men is something that absolutely needs to go, and if Movember can help take it down it will be doing a great service to men everywhere.

Own The Conversation

  • Ask The Big Question: Will you be growing your mustache out for Movember this year?
  • Disrupt Your Feed: Are there more worthy causes that Movember could be supporting?
  • Drop This Fact: Around 15 million American adults are diagnosed with depression each year.
Expand Your Expertise
  • Movember founder: Men can end up 'mentally broken' [BBC]
  • A Spectator's Guide to Movember and No Shave November [Boston.com]
More Conversation Ammo On AskMen

No comments: