I have spent decades in the high-stakes world of finance, in rooms with CEOs, politicians, and men who run major organizations. On paper, these men have everything figured out. But when the doors close and the room gets quiet, a surprising truth tends to surface: They feel profoundly alone.
They have golf partners, colleagues, and acquaintances. They can debate politics or dissect a balance sheet for hours. And they know who to rely on when it comes to resolving an issue in the business they know so well. But when life fractures, as it always does, these same capable men don’t know who to call.
We are living through what the former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declared a loneliness epidemic, a public health crisis whose toll on the body rivals smoking fifteen cigarettes a day. But for men, this crisis has a particular and largely silent character. Call it a “friendship recession.” Somewhere along the way, many men absorbed a dangerous lesson: Handle your problems alone. Never show weakness. Keep moving. For generations, we have mistaken this emotional isolation for strength. I call the result the Brotherhood Gap—the vast distance between the companions men appear to have and the true friends they actually need.
The ancient philosopher Aristotle described three distinct categories of friendship. Most men today are rich in what he called “friends of utility”—transactional relationships built on mutual benefit—and “friends of pleasure,” the buddies you grab a beer with or invite to a pickup basketball game. Both have their place, but both are ultimately shallow. What men are starving for is what Aristotle called “friends of the good”: enduring relationships rooted in mutual respect, shared virtue, and the willingness to be truly seen. These are the friendships that do not dissolve when you stop being useful or fun.
The challenge is that men are rarely taught how to cultivate this kind of depth. Research on male friendship consistently shows that men tend to bond side by side—focused on shared activity, looking outward at the game, the project, the deal—while the deeper bonds require something different: eye contact, stillness, and the willingness to say, I’m not okay. Many men can spend hours together without anyone asking, “How are you doing?”, and mean it.
The problem is that corporate America champions the hubris of the “self-made man,” conditioning us to believe that seeking help or admitting a flaw is a fatal weakness. I used to fall into this exact trap. Early in my career, while working at the White House for Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles during the Clinton administration, I relied heavily on my natural charisma to navigate high-stakes rooms by projecting a polished image that I had everything figured out.
I was commuting to DC from Alexandria, VA, coming in early and staying as late as needed. When my car broke down, I paid for a very expensive taxi ride even though my bank account was low in funds. Somehow, word got around to Erskine, who showed me what true brotherhood and sponsorship in the professional world actually look like. He offered me a place to stay in his home, cutting down my commute and the costs since I didn’t have a lot of financial resources. During our rides we bonded, I learned more about him and vice versa, showcasing all we had in common as men.
