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June Is Men’s Wellness Month: Time for the Tune Up

  • 1 day ago
  • 4 min read

Matthew Tilton, DO, ABFM



June is Men’s Wellness Month, which means it is the perfect time to talk about a subject many men approach with the enthusiasm of assembling furniture without instructions: going to the doctor.


And let’s be honest. There is a decent chance the person reading this right now is not the man who needs it most.


It may be his wife. His daughter. His coworker. His sister. His friend. The person who has watched him spend three hours researching the correct oil for a truck, but three years avoiding a basic checkup.


Men understand maintenance.


We change the oil in the truck. We sharpen the mower blades. We winterize the tractor. We clean the garage. We organize tools by size, purpose, or whatever mysterious system allows us to say, “Don’t touch that, I know exactly where everything is.”

We can hear a lawn mower make one strange noise and immediately say, “That doesn’t sound right.”

But chest pressure?“

Probably heartburn.”

Snoring like a chainsaw?“

I just sleep hard.”

Blood pressure running high?“

Must have been the coffee.”

Exhausted all the time?“

I’m just getting older.”


For many men, the body has to practically break down before we take it seriously.


Men Are Good at Fixing Things, Just Not Always Themselves


Men are often less likely to seek routine medical care and more likely to delay care until symptoms become harder to ignore. The problem is that a lot of men treat preventive health like optional equipment.

We do not want to be a bother. We do not want to miss work. We do not want to hear bad news. And sometimes, if we are being honest, we just do not want to sit on the exam table with the paper crinkling under us like a gas station sandwich wrapper.

But avoiding care does not make risk disappear. It just makes risk quieter.

High blood pressure can be silent. Diabetes can build gradually. Cholesterol problems do not usually cause symptoms until they have already contributed to damage. Colon cancer can develop before a person feels sick. Depression, anxiety, sleep apnea, alcohol misuse, and chronic stress can slowly become “normal” until life starts shrinking around them.

That should bother us.


Preventive Care Is Not Weakness


There is a strange idea that going to the doctor is something you do only when you are really sick. That is not toughness. That is the “wait until smoke comes out of the engine” approach.

Preventive care is responsibility.

It means checking blood pressure before the stroke. Checking blood sugar before the complications. Checking cholesterol before the heart attack. Screening for cancer before it spreads. Talking about stress before it becomes crisis. Treating sleep apnea before fatigue, blood pressure, and heart risk get worse.

Nobody thinks a farmer is weak for maintaining a tractor. Nobody thinks a contractor is dramatic for taking care of his tools. Nobody thinks a man is paranoid for replacing worn brake pads before they fail.

Your body deserves at least the same level of attention as the mower.

Preferably more.


The Basic Men’s Health Maintenance List


This does not need to be complicated. Most men do not need a complete life overhaul by next Tuesday. They need a starting point.

A routine men’s health visit may include checking blood pressure, cholesterol, blood sugar, weight, nutrition, activity, sleep, mental health, medications, supplements, tobacco use, alcohol use, vaccines, and age appropriate cancer screenings.

That is not a lecture. That is a maintenance schedule.

And just like every machine is a little different, every person’s plan should be individualized based on age, family history, symptoms, risk factors, and goals.


Listen to the Dashboard Lights


Men are famous for minimizing symptoms.

Chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, unexplained weight loss, blood in the stool or urine, changing moles, severe headaches, persistent fatigue, swelling, worsening mood, thoughts of self-harm, or a major change in physical ability should not be ignored.

These are dashboard lights. Some are harmless. Others mean, “Please stop driving before this gets much more expensive.”

The same principle applies to health. You do not have to panic, but you do have to pay attention.


The People Who Love You Want You Around


Men’s wellness is not just about men.

It is about families. Marriages. Children. Grandchildren. Friends. Churches. Workplaces. Teams. Farms. Communities.

The people who love you are not asking you to become perfect. They are asking you to be present.

They want you at the ballgame. At the wedding. At the fishing trip. At the birthday party. At the ordinary Tuesday night dinner where nothing dramatic happens, which is exactly what makes it precious.

You do not have to enjoy going to the doctor. Most people do not exactly put it on their hobby list.

But you can still go. You can still schedule the visit. You can still ask the question. You can still tell the truth. You can still get the labs. You can still follow up.


This June, Schedule the Tune Up


So here is the challenge for Men’s Wellness Month.

If your truck has had more preventive maintenance this year than you have, schedule the visit.

If your lawn mower has a sharper blade than your health plan, schedule the visit.

If your garage is organized but your blood pressure is a mystery, schedule the visit.

If your tractor, truck, mower, tools, and fishing gear all have a maintenance routine, but your body is running on “I’ll deal with it later,” schedule the visit.

You only get one body.

And unlike the mower, you cannot replace it at the hardware store.

 
 
 

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