The Lost Boys: Why a Generation of Young Men Is Giving Up in Silence
Introduction: a silent shipwreck
There is no cry. No spectacular collapse. There is just an empty chair in class. A son who no longer answers messages. A twenty-two-year-old who spends ten hours a day in front of a screen, with no job, no plans, no relationship -- and who, when asked how he is doing, answers "I am fine" with disarming conviction.
This is what the Lost Boys Report, published in March 2025 by the Centre for Social Justice, attempts to name. We may be raising a lost generation of young men.
1. What the numbers say
Boys are dropping out of the school system at a significantly higher rate than girls. They are overrepresented in statistics on suicide, addiction, incarceration. They are underrepresented in higher education. And they are increasingly likely to be not working, not studying, not training (NEET).
What is striking is the invisibility of the phenomenon. These boys disappear quietly into their screens, into online communities that offer them what the real world no longer provides: a sense of belonging.
2. Loneliness as the central wound
27% of 19-to-29-year-olds say they feel "very" or "fairly" lonely. Two out of three young Americans aged 18 to 23 say: "Nobody really knows me well."
This loneliness is the product of a socialization that taught boys that vulnerability is dangerous. In cognitive behavioral therapy, we recognize here classic early maladaptive schemas: "I must be strong," "others cannot understand me," "showing my difficulties will make me less respectable."
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3. The absence of male role models
Boys need to see adult men functioning, loving, working, failing and getting back up. When these models are absent -- from the home, from school, from the media -- boys look elsewhere. That is where manosphere figures step in.
4. The manosphere: a false answer to real pain
The manosphere monetizes male suffering. In cognitive psychology, this type of discourse is called an externalization of the locus of control -- attributing the cause of one's difficulties to external factors. It is comfortable in the short term, but destructive in the long run.
Behind the ideology, there is real suffering: lost young men looking for answers to their distress. In a spiral of loneliness and confusion, more than 40% of the young men concerned say they trust manosphere figures.
5. Dating and relationships
More and more young men are giving up on romantic relationships. Dating apps have created a generation that knows how to "swipe" but no longer knows how to engage in a real conversation or manage the emotional risk of an actual rejection.
Women are looking for partners capable of genuine emotional reciprocity. Yet young men who grew up without learning to identify their emotions find themselves at a real disadvantage.
6. Money as identity
The implicit equation "I do not produce = I am worthless" is a cognitive schema frequently encountered in therapy with struggling men. This belief explains why unemployed men are far more likely to develop severe depression.
7. Men's groups: an antidote
Men's groups create a space where a man can say "I am suffering," "I am lost" -- without fearing judgment. These spaces do not replace therapy but play a considerable preventive role.
8. What parents can do
- Talk about emotions from an early age
- Value effort rather than performance
- Offer diverse male role models
- Monitor online content consumption -- and discuss it without judgment
- Normalize therapy
9. To the lost boys
You are not broken. You are not a failure. Your suffering is real. Asking for help is an act of courage, not of weakness.
Assess your situation
If this article resonates with you or someone you care about, our free tests can help:
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Conclusion
A boy who is truly heard is a man who no longer needs to lose himself to exist.
Sources and references
- Lost Boys Report, Centre for Social Justice, March 2025
- The Diary Of A CEO, episode with Scott Galloway and Logan Ury (March 31, 2025) -- watch the episode
- Equimundo, State of American Men (2023) and What is the Manosphere? (2024)
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes -- Psychologie et Serenite
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