Reach Out.
Whether you're looking for support, want to share your story, or need someone to listen — a real person reads every message.
ARGENTINA
Therapy Capital of the World and Men Are Still Dying Inside.
Men in Argentina are settling. Elder X has been through bipolar, psych wards, religious trauma, and came out the other side. He gives personal advice — not therapy — for $250/week. Elder X speaks English. Submit your message in your language. He will respond to every person. We will use translation tools to communicate.
Argentina has more psychologists per capita than any country in the world
Male suicide rate is approximately 3.5x the female rate
Economic crises have erased middle-class male purchasing power multiple times per generation
Over 60% of fútbol-related violence involves young men in barras bravas
Male alcoholism rates have increased significantly during economic downturns
The Passionate Intellectual: Argentine masculinity is uniquely cerebral — Buenos Aires has more psychoanalysts per capita than any city on earth, and men are expected to be passionate, opinionated, and emotionally intelligent in theory. But this intellectual engagement with emotion doesn't translate to genuine vulnerability. Men discuss Lacan over wine but can't tell their sons they're struggling. The porteño man is a philosopher of feelings who can't access his own.
Argentina presents a paradox that no other country replicates: a culture that genuinely embraces psychotherapy — where having a therapist is as normal as having a dentist — and yet still produces devastating rates of male suicide and suffering. The answer lies in the gap between intellectual engagement with emotion and actual vulnerability. Argentine men can discourse on attachment theory at a dinner party but cannot tell their partners they feel like failures when inflation eats their salary for the fourth time in a decade.
The Dirty War (1976-1983) left approximately 30,000 desaparecidos — many of them young men — and the intergenerational trauma of state terrorism has never been fully metabolized by Argentine men. The Mothers and Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo became global symbols, but the fathers, brothers, and sons who also lost loved ones had no equivalent movement, no public space for male grief. Today, the barra brava (ultras) culture around football offers young men the intensity, belonging, and tribal identity that the broader culture doesn't — but it channels these into violence. The economic collapse under multiple administrations has created a generation of men who experienced downward mobility as a defining life event, where their fathers' middle-class stability became their own precarity.
Argentine culture uniquely embraces psychotherapy while still enforcing a passionate machismo — men can have a therapist but are still expected to never truly break.
Chronic economic crisis and hyperinflation destroy men's sense of stability
Therapy is culturally accepted but male emotional depth is still policed
Fútbol culture channels masculine emotion into tribalism and violence
Catholic guilt intersects with progressive gender politics in confusing ways
Generational trauma from the Dirty War remains largely unspoken among men
CITY COVERAGE IN ARGENTINA
160 city pages indexed
Buenos Aires
13.1M people
Córdoba
1.4M people
Rosario
1.2M people
Mendoza
877K people
San Miguel de Tucumán
781K people
La Plata
694K people
Mar del Plata
554K people
Salta
513K people
Santa Fe
490K people
San Juan
447K people
Resistencia
387K people
Santiago del Estero
355K people
Corrientes
339K people
Posadas
324K people
Morón
320K people
San Salvador de Jujuy
306K people
Bahía Blanca
277K people
Paraná
262K people
Merlo
244K people
Neuquén
242K people
José C. Paz
230K people
Quilmes
230K people
Pilar
227K people
Formosa
221K people
San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca
189K people
San Luis
184K people
Berazategui
167K people
La Rioja
163K people
San Miguel
158K people
Río Cuarto
154K people
Balvanera
152K people
Concordia
145K people
Comodoro Rivadavia
141K people
Belgrano
139K people
San Nicolás de los Arroyos
128K people
Villa Lugano
114K people
Santa Rosa
111K people
San Rafael
109K people
Tandil
104K people
Villa Mercedes
97K people
San Carlos de Bariloche
95K people
Trelew
93K people
Villa María
92K people
Reconquista
90K people
Zárate
89K people
Rafaela
89K people
Pergamino
88K people
Olavarría
86K people
Río Gallegos
86K people
Junín
85K people
San Martín
83K people
Presidencia Roque Sáenz Peña
82K people
Luján
82K people
Campana
82K people
Necochea
80K people
Gualeguaychú
79K people
Barracas
77K people
Cipolletti
75K people
Gobernador Gálvez
75K people
San Ramón de la Nueva Orán
74K people
DU BIST NICHT ALLEIN
Argentine culture uniquely embraces psychotherapy while still enforcing a passionate machismo — men can have a therapist but are still expected to never truly break.
Explore More.
Every page here was built for the same reason — to help you find what you need. Start wherever feels right.
Reach Out.
Write from the heart. Tell Elder X what you are going through — be specific about your situation. Sometimes one honest email exchange is all it takes to start seeing things differently.