young avoidant man on mobile phone by lake at sunset

Narcissistic. Avoidant. Or Armored?

We’re living in a time where the conversation about men feels charged.

With Trump in office, whether you support him or not, and with the release of the Epstein files bringing renewed attention to powerful men behaving badly, there is a cultural undercurrent that is hard to ignore.

A lot of men are taking a fall publicly.
Some absolutely deserve it.
And many innocent men are quietly sitting in discomfort.

Because when headlines are dominated by abuse, corruption, and power misused, the message can subtly become: men are the problem.

That narrative is too simple. And it’s not true.

Not all men are dangerous.
Not all men are narcissistic.
Not all men are emotionally unavailable.

But in this climate, many men feel scrutinized. Some feel defensive. Others feel ashamed for things they didn’t do. And in relationships, that tension often shows up in subtle ways, such as withdrawal, overcompensation, silence, or posturing.

Which is why this matters.

Because when cultural pressure rises, labels rise with it.

He doesn’t text back fast enough? Avoidant.
He struggles with vulnerability? Narcissistic.
He shuts down in conflict? Emotionally unavailable.

But here’s what I’ve learned after nearly two decades of working with men and women in relationships:

Many men who are labeled narcissistic aren’t arrogant. They’re armored.
Many men who are labeled avoidant aren’t cold. They’re cautious.

And labels don’t create change. Clarity does.

1. The Weight Men Are Carrying

In the Survival Patterns work within the PIVOT curriculum, the question isn’t:

“What’s wrong with you?”

It’s:

“What did you learn to do to survive?”

A man who has been called narcissistic is often operating from:

  • Unresolved shame
  • Performance-based worth
  • Fear of inadequacy
  • A survival strategy of control, grandiosity, or self-protection

A man called avoidant is often operating from:

  • Fear of engulfment
  • Fear of being exposed as not enough
  • Early experiences where emotional needs were ignored, criticized, or unsafe

Instead of defending against a label, he begins to see:

“Oh. This isn’t my identity. This is a pattern.”

That distinction restores a step toward dignity.

2. Structure Before Emotion

The Whole Perspective (Physical, Emotional, Spiritual, Financial, Intellectual) allows him to assess himself with clarity rather than emotion-driven chaos.

This is critical for men who:

  • Default to logic
  • Distrust emotional language
  • Shut down when conversations feel abstract or accusatory

He can see:

  • Where he’s strong
  • Where he’s compensating
  • Where his relational blind spots live

Structure reduces defensiveness.

3. Clarity Creates Boundaries — Not Blame

The Relational Circle Boundaries give him a system for defining commitment levels and expectations.

Men labeled “avoidant” often withdraw because:

  • They feel engulfed and confused.
  • Expectations are unclear.
  • Emotional demands feel overwhelming.

When boundaries are clear:

  • He doesn’t have to escape.
  • He can participate without drowning.
  • He can differentiate between healthy space and emotional shutdown.

Avoidance decreases when clarity increases.

4.  From Ego or Escape to Healthy Adulting

The pivot point is the development of the Healthy Adult.

This is not:

  • Ego-driven dominance (often labeled narcissism)
  • Emotional shutdown (often labeled avoidance)

It is:

  • Regulated thinking through a wider lens (Think)
  • Integrated feelings instead of ignoring or suppressing them (Feel)
  • Intentional action vs. habitual actions that cause self-harm in the long run (Do)

For men, this is powerful because:

  • It doesn’t shame their strength.
  • It channels their strength.
  • It builds secure attachment without making them feel weak.

5.  Moving Beyond Labels to a Roadmap 

As I write in my book, I believe we live in an “over-diagnosed and under-treated population.”

Many men experience the same thing in relationship language today.

They’ve been:

  • Diagnosed by a partner.
  • Labeled on TikTok.
  • Defined by pop-psych culture.

PIVOT offers something different:

  • Not a diagnosis.
  • Not a defense.
  • A roadmap.

And men respond to roadmaps.

6. Secure Attachment, Taught Practically

The curriculum explicitly teaches secure attachment and relational alignment in a grounded, actionable way.

For a man told he’s narcissistic or avoidant, this reframes the journey:

Not: “You need to fix your personality.”

But: “You need to learn secure alignment.”

That is doable.
That is empowering.
That is measurable.

7. From Power Struggles to Self-Leadership

Men labeled narcissistic often struggle with vulnerability, confuse control with safety, and fear of loss of status in the relationship.

Men labeled avoidant often fear engulfment, shut down under emotional pressure, and eventually exit relationships rather than repair.

In simple terms, for a man told he’s narcissistic or avoidant, the PIVOT Process:

  • Removes the shame by removing the label
  • Names the survival patterns and developmental parts unique to each individual
  • Provides a structured, easy-to-understand process to address the not-so-easy current challenges that need to be resolved.
  • Builds emotional regulation
  • Teaches secure attachment
  • Develops a Healthy Adult identity
  • Gives him agency instead of blame

It shifts him from: “I’m the problem.” or “You’re the problem.”

To: “I have wounds. I can change my patterns.”

A More Courageous Conversation About Men

If we’re honest, this cultural moment is asking something bigger of us.

Yes, there have been powerful men who abused power.
Yes, there are patterns in our society that must be addressed.
Yes, accountability matters.

But here’s the question we’re not asking:

What happens when good men start believing they are guilty simply for being men?

What happens when shame becomes the default tone of the conversation?

Shame does not create healthier men.
Shame creates silence.
Shame creates defensiveness.
Shame creates more armor.

And more armor does not lead to safer relationships. It leads to distance.

If we want better outcomes in families, in leadership, in culture, we cannot reduce men to headlines. We cannot collapse nuance into narrative.

We need to be able to hold two truths at once:

Some men have misused power.
And many men are trying to figure out how to use their power well.

Those are not the same group.

The men I work with are not asking to escape accountability. They’re asking for clarity. They’re asking for a roadmap. They’re asking how to lead themselves better in relationships, not how to defend themselves on the couch or in court.

There is a difference.

When we replace labels with understanding…
When we replace accusation with structure…
When we replace shame with responsibility…

Men don’t shrink. They mature. They regulate. They repair. They lead differently.

If we want a generation of men who are less reactive, less avoidant, less performative, then we need to stop flattening them into stereotypes and start teaching them alignment.

True strength is not the opposite of emotional intelligence. A man who must explode or withdraw to manage his feelings is not strong; this is control masking an underlying fragility.

Accountability and dignity are not mutually exclusive. Holding a man accountable for his actions should never mean stripping him of his dignity or humanity. Justice and humiliation are not the same; confusing them prevents growth and only teaches him to hide his behavior. It is possible and necessary to demand accountability while upholding his dignity.

Powerful and relationally safe are not competing traits. Real power is not domination; it is disciplined self-leadership in the presence of emotion.

If we keep defining masculinity by extremes, either villain or victim, we will keep producing men who swing between those extremes.

If we want emotionally mature men, we must stop flattening them into labels and start teaching them how to feel, tolerate, and manage their emotions.

If you want safer relationships, build stronger men, not smaller ones.
If you want accountability, teach self-leadership, not shame.
And if you want armor to come off, create an environment where strength and emotional depth are no longer at war.

Because the future of healthy relationships will not be built by shaming men into silence
It will be built by teaching them to stand tall without standing over others.

But none of that grows in an environment of blanket shame. It grows in clarity.

So if you’ve been labeled narcissistic, avoidant, or emotionally unavailable, here’s the truth:

You are not your headline.
You are not your defense mechanism.
You are not your worst coping strategy.

You may be armored. And armor can come off.

Not through humiliation.
Not through blame.
But through insight, structure, and the willingness to pivot.

That’s the conversation we need now.